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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14072 ***
+
+PRIMITIVE CHRISTIAN WORSHIP
+
+OR,
+
+THE EVIDENCE
+
+OF
+
+HOLY SCRIPTURE AND THE CHURCH,
+
+AGAINST THE
+
+INVOCATION OF SAINTS AND ANGELS, AND THE
+BLESSED VIRGIN MARY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BY
+
+J. ENDELL TYLER, B.D.
+
+RECTOR OF ST. GILES-IN-THE-FIELDS,
+AND CANON RESIDENTIARY OF ST. PAUL'S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Speaking the truth in love.--EPH. iv. 15
+
+Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.--1 THESS. v. 21.
+
+SECOND EDITION
+
+LONDON
+
+Printed for the
+
+SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE;
+SOLD AT THE DEPOSITORY,
+GREAT QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS,
+NO. 4, ROYAL EXCHANGE;
+AND BY ALL BOOKSELLERS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+1847.
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+THE ONE
+
+HOLY, CATHOLIC, AND APOSTOLIC
+
+CHURCH,
+
+AS A TRIBUTE OF VENERATION AND LOVE,
+
+THIS WORK IS DEDICATED,
+
+BY HER DEVOTED SERVANT AND SON.
+
+Nov. 25, 1840.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PREFACE.
+
+Members of the Church of Rome, and members of the Church of England,
+have too long entertained towards each other feelings of hostility.
+Instead of being drawn together as brethren by the cords of that one
+faith which all Catholics hold dear, their sentiments of sympathy and
+affection have been absorbed by the abhorrence with which each body has
+regarded the characteristic tenets of its adversary; whilst the terms
+"heretic" on the one side, and "idolater" on the opposite, have rendered
+any attempt to bring about a free and friendly discussion of each
+other's views almost hopeless.
+
+Every Christian must wish that such animosities, always ill-becoming the
+servants and children of the God of love, should cease for ever. Truth
+indeed must never be sacrificed to secure peace; nor must we be tempted
+by the seductiveness of a liberality, falsely so called, to soften down
+and make light of those differences which keep the Churches of England
+and Rome asunder. But surely the points at issue may be examined without
+exasperation and rancour; and the results of inquiries carried on with a
+singleness of mind, in search only for the truth, may be offered on the
+one side without insult or offence, and should be received and examined
+without contempt and scorn on the other.
+
+The writer of this address is not one in whom early associations would
+foster sentiments of evil will against members of the Church of Rome; or
+encourage any feeling, incompatible with regard and kindness, towards
+the conscientious defenders of her creed. From his boyhood he has lived
+on terms of friendly intercourse and intimacy with individuals among her
+laity and of her priesthood. In his theological pursuits, he has often
+studied her ritual, consulted her commentators, and perused the homilies
+of her divines; and, withal, he has mourned over her errors and
+misdoings, as he would have sighed over the faults of a friend, who,
+with many good qualities still to endear him, had unhappily swerved from
+the straight path of rectitude and integrity.
+
+In preparing these pages, the author is not conscious of having been
+influenced by any motive in the least degree inconsistent with
+sentiments of charity and respect; at all events, he would hope that no
+single expression may have escaped from his pen tending to hurt
+unnecessarily the feelings of any sincere Christian. He has been
+prompted by a hope that he may perhaps induce some individuals to
+investigate with candour, and freedom, and with a genuine desire of
+arriving at the truth, the subjects here discussed; and that whilst
+some, even of those who may have hitherto acquiesced in erroneous
+doctrines and practices, may be convinced of their departure from
+Christian verity; others, if tempted to desert the straight path of
+primitive worship, may be somewhat strengthened and armed by the views
+presented to them here, against the captivating allurements of religious
+error.
+
+Whether the present work may, by the Divine favour, be made in some
+degree instrumental in forwarding these results, or in effecting any
+good, the author presumes not to anticipate; but he will hope for the
+best. He believes that the honest pursuit of the truth, undertaken with
+an humble zeal for God's glory, and in dependence on his guidance and
+light, is often made successful beyond our own sanguine expectations.
+
+With these views the following pages are offered, as the result of an
+inquiry into the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of Saints and
+Angels, and of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
+
+To prevent misconception as to the nature of this work, the author would
+observe, that since the single subject here proposed to be investigated
+is, "The Invocation of Saints and Angels and the Blessed Virgin Mary,"
+he has scrupulously avoided the discussion of many important and
+interesting questions usually considered to be connected with it. He has
+not, for example, discussed the practice of praying for the dead; he has
+investigated no theory relating to the soul's intermediate state between
+our dissolution and the final judgment; he has canvassed no opinion as
+to any power in the saints and the faithful departed to succour either
+by their prayers or by any other offices, those who are still on earth,
+and on their way to God. From these and such like topics he has
+abstained, not because he thinks lightly of their importance, nor
+because his own mind is perplexed by doubts concerning them; but because
+the introduction of such points would tend to distract the thoughts from
+the exclusive contemplation of the one distinct question to be
+investigated.
+
+He is also induced to apprise the reader, that in his work, as he
+originally prepared it, a far wider field, even on the single subject of
+the present inquiry, was contemplated than this volume now embraces. His
+intention was to present an historical survey of the doctrine and
+practice of the invocation of Saints and Angels, and the Virgin, tracing
+it from the first intimation of any thing of the kind through its
+various progressive stages, till it had reached its widest prevalence in
+Christendom. When, however, he had arranged and filled up the results of
+the inquiries which he made into the sentiments and habits of those
+later writers of the Church, whose works he considered it necessary to
+examine with this specific object in view, he found that the bulk of the
+work would be swollen far beyond the limits which he had prescribed to
+himself; he felt also that the protracted investigation would materially
+interfere with the solution of that one independent question which he
+trusts now is kept unmixed with any other. He has, consequently, in the
+present address limited the range of his researches on the nature of
+Primitive Christian Worship, to the writers of the Church Catholic who
+lived before the Nicene Council, or were members of it.
+
+In one department, however, he has been under the necessity of making,
+to a certain extent, an exception to this rule. Having found no allusion
+to the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin, on which much of the
+religious worship now paid to her seems to be founded, in any work
+written before the middle of the fifth century, he has been induced, in
+his examination of the grounds on which that doctrine professes to be
+built, to cite authors who flourished subsequently to the Nicene
+Council.
+
+The author would also mention, that although in substance he has
+prepared this work for the examination of all Christians equally, and
+trusts that it will be found not less interesting or profitable to the
+members of his own Church than to any other, yet he has throughout
+adopted the form of an address to his Roman Catholic countrymen. Such a
+mode of conveying his sentiments he considered to be less controversial,
+while the facts and the arguments would remain the same. His object is
+not to condemn, but to convince: not to hold up to obloquy those who are
+in error, but, as far as he may be allowed, to diminish an evil where it
+already exists, and to check its further prevalence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+PART I.--CHAPTER I.
+
+Introduction--The duty of examining the grounds of our Faith--Principles
+of conducting that examination--Errors to be avoided--Proposed plan of
+the present work.
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+§ 1. Evidence of Holy Scripture, how to be ascertained
+ 2. Direct Evidence of the Old Testament
+ 3. Evidence of the Old Testament, continued
+ 4. ------ New Testament
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+§ 1. Evidence of Primitive Writers
+ 2. ------ Apostolic Fathers
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+§ 1. Evidence of Justin Martyr
+ See also Appendix
+ 2. Evidence of Irenæus
+ 3. ------ Clement of Alexandria
+ 4. ------ Tertullian
+ ------ Methodius
+ 5. ------ Origen
+ See also Appendix
+ 6. Supplementary Section on Origen
+ See also Appendix
+ 7. Evidence of St. Cyprian
+ See also Appendix
+ 8. Evidence of Lactantius
+ 9. ------ Eusebius
+ See also Appendix
+ 10. Apostolical Canons and Constitutions
+ 11. Evidence of St. Athanasius
+ See also Appendix
+
+PART II.--CHAPTER I.
+
+State of Worship at the time of the Reformation
+§ 1. "Hours of the Virgin"
+ 2. Service of Thomas Becket
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Council of Trent
+ See also Appendix
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Present Service in the Church of Rome
+
+PART III.
+
+WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN MARY.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+§ 1. Introductory Remarks
+ 2. Evidence of Holy Scripture
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Evidence of Primitive Writers
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Assumption of the Virgin Mary
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Councils of Constantinople, Ephesus, and Chalcedon
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+§ 1. Present authorized Worship of the Virgin
+ 2. Worship of the Virgin, continued
+ 3. Bonaventura
+ 4. Biel, Damianus, Bernardinus de Bustis, Bernardinus Senensis,&c.
+ See also Appendix
+5. Modern Works of Devotion
+ See also Appendix
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+ * * * * * {1}
+
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE DUTY OF PRIVATE JUDGMENT.
+
+
+Fellow Christians,
+
+Whilst I invite you to accompany me in a free and full investigation of
+one of those tenets and practices which keep asunder the Roman and the
+Anglican Church, I am conscious in how thankless an undertaking I have
+engaged, and how unwelcome to some is the task in which I call upon you
+to join. Many among the celebrated doctors of the Roman Church have
+taught their disciples to acquiesce in a view of their religious
+obligation widely different from the laborious and delicate office of
+ascertaining for themselves the soundness of the principles in which
+they have been brought up. It has been with many accredited teachers a
+favourite maxim, that individuals will most acceptably fulfil their duty
+by abstaining {2} from active and personal inquiries into the
+foundations of their faith; and by giving an implicit credence to
+whatever the Roman Church pronounces to be the truth[1]. Should this
+book fall into the hands of any who have adopted that maxim for the rule
+of their own conduct as believers, its pages will of course afford them
+no help; nor can they take any interest in our pursuit, or its results.
+Whilst, however, I am aware, that until the previous question (involving
+the grounds on which the Church of Rome builds her claim to be the sole,
+exclusive, and infallible teacher of Christians in all the doctrines of
+religion,) shall have been solved, many members of her body would throw
+aside, as preposterous, any treatise which professed to review the
+soundness of her instructions; I have been at the same time assured,
+that with many of her communion the case is far otherwise; and that
+instead of their being averse to all investigation, a calm, candid, and
+friendly, but still a free and unreserved inquiry into the disputed
+articles of their creed, is an object of their sincere desire. On this
+ground I trust some preliminary reflections upon the duty of proving all
+things, with a view of holding the more fast {3} and sure what is good,
+may be considered as neither superfluous nor out of place.
+
+ [Footnote 1: It is sometimes curious to observe the language in
+ which the teachers and doctors themselves profess their entire,
+ unlimited, and implicit submission of all their doctrines, even
+ in the most minute particulars, to the judgment and will of the
+ authorities of Rome. Instances are of very frequent occurrence.
+ Thus Joannes de Carthagena, a very voluminous writer of
+ homilies, closes different parts of his work in these words,
+ "These and all mine I willingly subject to the judgment of the
+ Catholic Roman Church, ready, if there be written any thing in
+ any way in the very least point contrary to her doctrine, to
+ correct, amend, erase, and utterly abolish it." Hom. Cath. De
+ Sacris Arcanis Deiparæ et Josephi. Paris, 1615. page 921.]
+
+But just as it would belong to another and a separate province to
+examine, at such length as its importance demands, the claims of the
+Church of Rome to be acknowledged as that universal interpreter of the
+word and will of God, from whose decisions there is no appeal; so would
+it evidently be incompatible with the nature of the present address, to
+dwell in any way corresponding with the magnitude and delicacy of the
+subject, on the duty, the responsibility, and the privilege of private
+judgment; on the dangers to which an unchastened exercise of it may
+expose both an individual, and the cause of Christian truth; or on the
+rules which sound wisdom and the analogy of faith may prescribe to us in
+the government of ourselves with respect to it. My remarks, therefore,
+on this subject will be as few and brief as I believe to be consistent
+with an acknowledgment of the principles upon which this work has been
+conducted.
+
+The foundation, then, on which, to be safe and beneficial, the duty of
+private judgment, as we maintain, must be built, is very far indeed
+removed from that common and mischievous notion of it which would
+encourage us to draw immediate and crude deductions from Holy Scripture,
+subject only to the control and the colouring of our own minds,
+responsible for nothing further than our own consciousness of an honest
+intention. Whilst we claim a release from that degrading yoke which
+neither are we nor were our fathers able to bear, we deprecate for
+ourselves and for our fellow-believers that licentiousness which in
+doctrine and practice tempts a man to follow merely what is right in his
+own eyes, uninfluenced by the example, the precepts, {4} and the
+authority of others, and owning no submissive allegiance to those laws
+which the wise and good have established for the benefit of the whole
+body. The freedom which we ask for ourselves, and desire to see imparted
+to all, is a rational liberty, tending to the good, not operating to the
+bane of its possessors; ministering to the general welfare, not to
+disorder and confusion. In the enjoyment of this liberty, or rather in
+the discharge of the duties and trusts which this liberty brings with
+it, we feel ourselves under an obligation to examine the foundations of
+our faith, to the very best of our abilities, according to our
+opportunities, and with the most faithful use of all the means afforded
+to us by its divine Author and finisher. Among those means, whilst we
+regard the Holy Scriptures as paramount and supreme, we appeal to the
+witness and mind of the Church as secondary and subsidiary; a witness
+not at all competing with Scripture, never to be balanced against it;
+but competing with our own less able and less pure apprehension of
+Scripture. In ascertaining the testimony of this witness, we examine the
+sentiments and practice of the ancient teachers of the Church; not as
+infallible guides, not as uniformly holding all of them the same
+opinions, but as most valuable helps in our examination of the evidence
+of the Church, who is, after all, our appointed instructor in the truths
+of the Gospel,--fallible in her individual members and branches, yet the
+sure witness and keeper of Holy Writ, and our safest guide on earth to
+the mind and will of God. When we have once satisfied ourselves that a
+doctrine is founded on Scripture, we receive it with implicit faith, and
+maintain it as a sacred deposit, entrusted to our keeping, to be
+delivered down whole and entire without our adding {5} thereto what to
+us may seem needful, or taking away what we may think superfluous.
+
+The state of the Christian thus employed, in acting for himself in a
+work peculiarly his own, is very far removed from the condition of one
+who labours in bondage, without any sense of liberty and responsibility,
+unconscious of the dignity of a free and accountable agent, and
+surrendering himself wholly to the control of a task-master. Equally is
+it distant from the conduct of one who indignantly casting off all
+regard for authority, and all deference to the opinions of others,
+boldly and proudly sets up his own will and pleasure as the only
+standard to which he will submit. For the model which we would adopt, as
+members of the Church, in our pursuit of Christian truth, we find a
+parallel and analogous case in a well-principled and well-disciplined
+son, with his way of life before him, exercising a large and liberal
+discretion in the choice of his pursuits; not fettered by peremptory
+paternal mandates, but ever voluntarily referring to those principles of
+moral obligation and of practical wisdom with which his mind has been
+imbued; shaping his course with modest diffidence in himself, and
+habitual deference to others older and wiser than himself, yet acting
+with the firmness and intrepidity of conscious rectitude of principle,
+and integrity of purpose; and under a constant sense of his
+responsibility, as well for his principles as for his conduct.
+
+Against the cogency of these maxims various objections have been urged
+from time to time. We have been told, that the exercise of private
+judgment in matters of religion, tends to foster errors of every
+diversity of character, and leads to heresy, scepticism, and infidelity:
+it is represented as rending the Church of Christ, and totally {6}
+subverting Christian unity, and snapping asunder at once the bond of
+peace. So also it has been often maintained, that the same cause robs
+individual Christians of that freedom from all disquietude and
+perplexity and anxious responsibility, that peace of mind, satisfaction,
+and content, which those personally enjoy, who surrender themselves
+implicitly to a guide, whom they believe to be unerring and infallible.
+
+For a moment let us pause to ascertain the soundness of such objections.
+And here anticipating, for argument's sake, the worst result, let us
+suppose that the exercise of individual inquiry and judgment (such as
+the best teachers in the Anglican Church are wont to inculcate) may lead
+in some cases even to professed infidelity; is it right and wise and
+justifiable to be driven by an abuse of God's gifts to denounce the
+legitimate and faithful employment of them? What human faculty--which
+among the most precious of the Almighty's blessings is not liable to
+perversion? What unquestionable moral duty can be found, which has not
+been transformed by man's waywardness into an instrument of evil? Nay,
+what doctrine of our holy faith has not the wickedness or the folly of
+unworthy men employed as a cloke for unrighteousness, and a vehicle for
+blasphemy? But by a consciousness of this liability in all things human,
+must we be tempted to suppress the truth? to disparage those moral
+duties? or to discountenance the cultivation of those gifts and
+faculties? Rather would not sound philosophy and Christian wisdom
+jointly enforce the necessity of improving the gifts zealously, of
+discharging the moral obligation to the full, and of maintaining the
+doctrine in all its integrity; but guarding withal, to the utmost of our
+power and watchfulness, against the abuses to which {7} any of these
+things may be exposed? And we may trust in humble but assured
+confidence, that as it is the duty of a rational being, alive to his own
+responsibility, to inquire and judge for himself in things concerning
+the soul, with the most faithful exercise of his abilities and means; so
+the wise and merciful Ruler of our destinies will provide us with a sure
+way of escaping from all evils incident to the discharge of that duty,
+if, in reliance on his blessing, we honestly seek the truth, and
+perseveringly adhere to that way in which He will be our guide.
+
+It is a question very generally and very reasonably entertained among
+us, whether the implicit submission and unreserved surrender of
+ourselves to any human authority in matters of faith, (though whilst it
+lasts, it of course affords an effectual check to open scepticism,) does
+not ultimately and in very deed prove a far more prolific source of
+disguised infidelity. Doubts repressed as they arise, but not solved,
+silenced but not satisfied, gradually accumulate in spite of all
+external precaution; and at length (like streams pent back by some
+temporary barrier) break forth at once to an utter discarding of all
+authority, and an irrecoverable rejection of the Christian faith. From
+unlimited acquiescence in a guide whom our associations have invested
+with infallibility, the step is very short, and frequently taken, to
+entire apostasy and the renunciation of all belief.
+
+The state of undisturbed tranquillity and repose in one, who has
+divested himself of all responsibility in matters of religious belief
+and practice, enjoying an entire immunity from the anxious and painful
+labour of trying for himself the purity and soundness of his faith, is
+often painted in strong contrast with the {8} lamentable condition of
+those who are driven about by every wind of novelty. The condition of
+such a man may doubtless be far more enviable than theirs, who have no
+settled fixed principles, and who wander from creed to creed, and from
+sect to sect, just as their fickle and roving minds suggest some
+transitory preference. But the believer must not be driven by the evils
+of one extreme to take refuge in the opposite. The whirlpool may be the
+more perilous, but the Christian mariner must avoid the rock also, or he
+will equally make shipwreck of his faith. He must with all his skill,
+and all his might, keep to the middle course, shunning that presumptuous
+confidence which scorns all authority, and boldly constitutes itself
+sole judge and legislator; but equally rescuing his mind from the
+thraldom which prostrates his reason, and paralyzes all the faculties of
+his judgment in a matter of indefeasible and awful responsibility.
+
+Here, too, it is questioned, and not without cause, whether the
+satisfaction and comfort so often represented in warm and fascinating
+colours, be really a spiritual blessing; or whether it be not a
+deception and fallacy, frequently ending in lamentable perplexity and
+confusion; like guarantees in secular concerns, which as long as they
+maintain unsuspected credit afford a most pleasing and happy security to
+any one who depends upon them; but which, when adverse fortune puts
+their responsibility to the test, may prove utterly worthless, and be
+traced only by losses and disappointments. Such a blind reliance on
+authority may doubtless be more easy and more free from care, than it is
+to gird up the loins of our mind, and engage in toilsome spiritual
+labour. But with a view to our own ultimate safety, wisdom bids us look
+to our foundations in time, and assure ourselves {9} of them;
+admonishing us that if they are unsound, the spiritual edifice reared
+upon them, however pleasing to the eye, or abounding in present
+enjoyments, will at length fall, and bury our hopes in its ruin.
+
+On these and similar principles, we maintain that it well becomes
+Christians, when the soundness of their faith, and the rectitude of
+their acts of worship, are called in question, "to prove all things, and
+hold fast that which is good." Thus, when the unbeliever charges us with
+credulity in receiving as a divine revelation what he scornfully
+rejects, it behoves us all (every one to the extent of his means and
+opportunities) to possess ourselves of the accumulated evidences of our
+holy faith, so that we may be able to give to our own minds, and to
+those who ask it of us, a reason for our hope. The result can assuredly
+be only the comfort of a still more unshaken conviction. Thus, too, when
+the misbeliever charges us with an undue and an unauthorized ascription
+of the Divine attributes to our Redeemer and to our Sanctifier, which he
+would confine to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, exclusively of the
+Eternal Son and the Blessed Spirit, it well becomes every Catholic
+Christian to assure himself of the evidence borne by the Scriptures to
+the divinity of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, together with the
+inseparable doctrines of redemption by the blood of Christ, and
+sanctification by the Spirit of grace; appealing also in this
+investigation to the tradition of the Church, and the testimony of her
+individual members from the earliest times, as under God his surest and
+best guides. In both these cases, I can say for myself that I have acted
+upon my own principles, and to the very utmost of my faculties have
+scrutinized the foundations {10} of my faith, and from each of those
+inquiries and researches I have risen with a satisfaction increased far
+beyond my first anticipations. What I had taken up in my youth on
+authority, I have been long assured of by a moral demonstration, which
+nothing can shake; and I cling to it with an affection, which, guarded
+by God's good providence, nothing in this world can dissolve or weaken.
+
+It is to engage in a similar investigation that I now most earnestly but
+affectionately invite the members of the Church of Rome, in order to
+ascertain for themselves the ground of their faith and practice in a
+matter of vast moment, and which, with other points, involves the
+principle of separation between the Roman and Anglican branches of the
+universal Church. Were the subjects of minor importance, or what the
+ancient writers were wont to call "things indifferent," reason and
+charity would prescribe that we should bear with each other, allowing a
+free and large discretion in any body of Christians, and not severing
+ourselves from them because we deemed our views preferable to theirs. In
+such a case we might well walk in the house of God as friends, without
+any interruption of the harmony which should exist between those who
+worship the true God with one heart and one mind, ever striving to keep
+the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. But when the points at
+issue are of so vast moment; when two persons agreeing in the general
+principles of belief in the Gospel and its chief characteristic
+doctrines, yet find it impossible to join conscientiously in the same
+prayer, or the same acts of faith and worship, then the necessity is
+imperative on all who would not be parties to the utter breaking up of
+Christian unity, nor assist in propagating error, to make sure of their
+{11} foundations; and satisfy themselves by an honest inquiry and
+upright judgment, that the fault does not rest with them.
+
+Such appear to me both the doctrine and the practice of the INVOCATION
+OF SAINTS. I have endeavoured to conjecture in what light this doctrine
+and this practice would have presented itself to my mind, after a full
+and free inquiry into the nature and history and circumstances of the
+case, had I been brought up in communion with the Church of Rome; the
+question to be solved being, "Could I continue in her communion?" And
+the result of my inquiry is, that I must have either discarded that
+doctrine at once and for ever, or have joined with my lips and my knees
+in a worship which my reason condemned, and from which my heart shrunk.
+I must have either left the communion of Rome, or have continued to
+offer prayers to angels, and the spirits of departed mortals. Unless I
+had resolved at once to shut my eyes upon my own personal
+responsibility, and to surrender myself, mind and reason, soul and body,
+to the sovereign and undisputed control of others, never presuming to
+inquire into the foundation of what the Church of Rome taught; I must
+have sought some purer portion of the Catholic Church, in which her
+members addressed the One Supreme Being exclusively, without
+contemplating any other in the act of religious invocation. The
+distinction invented in comparatively late years, of the three kinds of
+worship; one for God, the second for the Virgin Mary, the third for
+Angels and Saints;--the distinction, too, between praying to a saint to
+give us good things, and praying to that saint to procure them for us at
+God's hand, (or, as the distinction {12} is sometimes made, into prayer
+direct, absolute, final, sovereign, confined to the Supreme Being on the
+one hand; and prayer oblique, relative, transitory, subordinate, offered
+to saints on the other,) would have appeared to me the ingenious and
+finely-drawn inventions of an advocate, not such a sound process of
+Christian simplicity as the mind could rest upon, with an undoubting
+persuasion that all was right.
+
+This, however, involves the very point at issue; and I now invite you,
+my Christian Brethren, to join with me, step by step, in a review of
+those several positions which have left on my mind the indelible
+conviction that I could never have passed my life in communion with that
+Church whose articles of fellowship maintained the duty of invoking
+saints and angels; and whose public offices were inseparably interwoven
+with addresses in prayer to other beings, than the Holy and undivided
+Trinity, the one only God.
+
+In pursuing this inquiry I have thought the most convenient and
+satisfactory division of our work would be--
+
+First, to ascertain what inference an unprejudiced study of the revealed
+will of God would lead us to make; both in the times of the elder
+covenant, when "holy men of old spake as they were moved by the Holy
+Ghost," and in that "fulness of time" when God spoke to us by his Son.
+
+Secondly, to examine into the belief and practice of the Primitive
+Church, beginning with the inspired Apostles of our Lord.
+
+Thirdly, to compare the results of those inquiries with the tenets and
+practice of the Church of Rome, with reference to three periods; the
+first immediately {13} preceding the Reformation; the second comprising
+the Reformation, and the proceedings of the Council of Trent; the third
+embracing the belief and practice of the present day.
+
+In this investigation, I purpose to reserve the worship of the Virgin
+Mary, called by Roman Catholic writers "Hyperdulia," and for various
+reasons the most important and interesting portion of the whole inquiry,
+for separate and distinct examination; except only so far as our review
+of any of the primitive writers may occasion some incidental departure
+from that rule.
+
+May God guide us to his truth! {14}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+SECTION I.--THE EVIDENCE OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.
+
+
+Here, Christian Brethren, bear with me if I briefly, but freely, recall
+to our thoughts on this first entrance upon a review of the inspired
+volume, the principles, and tone of mind, the temper and feelings, in a
+word, the frame both of the understanding and of the heart, with which
+we should study the sacred pages, on whatever subject we would try all
+things, and hold fast what should prove itself to be most in accordance
+with the will of God. Whether we would regard the two great parts into
+which the Holy Scriptures are divided, as the Old and the New Covenants;
+or whether we would prefer to call them the Old and the New Testaments,
+it matters not. Although different ideas and associations are suggested
+by those different names, yet, under either view, the same honest and
+good heart, the same patience of investigation, the same upright and
+unprejudiced judgment, the same exercise of our mental faculties, and
+the same enlightened conscience, must be brought to the investigation.
+In the one case we must endeavour to ascertain for ourselves the true
+intent and {15} meaning of the inspired word of God, on the very same
+principles with those on which we would interpret a covenant between
+ourselves, and a person who had made it in full and unreserved reliance
+on our integrity, and on our high sense of equity, justice, and honour.
+In the other case we must bring the selfsame principles and feelings to
+bear on our inquiry, as we should apply in the interpretation of the
+last will and testament of a kind father, who with implicit confidence
+in our uprightness and straightforward dealing and affectionate anxiety
+to fulfil his intentions to the very utmost, had assigned to us the
+sacred duty of executor or trustee.
+
+Under the former supposition, our sincere solicitude would be to
+ascertain the true intent and meaning of the contracting parties, not to
+seek out plausible excuses for departing from it; not to cull out and
+exaggerate beyond their simple and natural bearing, such expressions in
+the deed of agreement, as might seem to justify us in adopting the view
+of the contract most agreeable to our present wishes and most favourable
+to our own interests. Rather it would be our fixed and hearty
+resolution, at whatever cost of time, or labour, or pecuniary sacrifice,
+or personal discomfort, to apply to the instrument our unbiassed powers
+of upright and honest interpretation.
+
+Or adopting the latter analogy, we should sincerely strive to ascertain
+the chief and leading objects of our parent's will; what were his
+intentions generally; what ruling principles seemed to pervade his views
+in framing the testament; and in all cases of obscurity and doubt, in
+every thing approaching an appearance of inconsistency, we should refer
+to that paramount principle as our test and guide. We should not for a
+moment {16} suffer ourselves to be tempted to seek for ambiguous
+expressions, which ingenuity might interpret so as to countenance our
+departure from the general drift of our parent's will, in cases where it
+was at variance with our own inclination, and where we could have wished
+that he had made another disposition of his property, or given to us a
+different direction, or trusted us with larger discretion. Moreover, in
+any points of difficulty, we should apply for assistance, in solving our
+doubts, to such persons as were most likely to have the power of judging
+correctly, and whose judgment would be least biassed by partiality and
+prejudice;--not to those whose credit was staked on the maintenance of
+those principles which best accorded with our own inclination.
+Especially if in either case some strong feeling should have been raised
+and spread abroad on any point, we should seek the judgment and counsel
+of those who had been familiar with the testator's intentions, or with
+the views of the covenanting party, before such points had become matter
+of discussion.
+
+Now only let us act upon these principles in the interpretation of THAT
+COVENANT in which the Almighty has vouchsafed to make Himself one of the
+contracting parties, and man, the creature of his hand, is the other:
+only let us act on these principles in the interpretation of THAT
+TESTAMENT of which the Saviour of the world is the Testator; and with
+God's blessing on our labours (a blessing never denied to sincere prayer
+and faithful exertions) we need not fear the result. Any other principle
+of interpretation will only confirm us in our prejudices, and involve us
+more inextricably in error. {17}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--DIRECT EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
+
+
+The first step in our proposed inquiry is to ascertain what evidence on
+the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of Saints and Angels can be
+fairly drawn from the revealed word of God in the Old Testament.
+
+Now, let us suppose that a person of a cultivated and enlightened mind,
+and of a sound and clear judgment, but hitherto a stranger to
+revelation, were required to study the ancient Scriptures with the
+single view of ascertaining what one object more than any other,
+subordinate to the great end of preparing the world for the advent of
+Messiah, seemed to be proposed by the wisdom of the Almighty in
+imparting to mankind that revelation; could he fix upon any other point
+as the one paramount and pervading principle with so much reason, as
+upon this, the preservation in the world of a practical belief in the
+perfect unity of God, and the fencing of his worship against the
+admixture of any other, of whatever character or form; The announcement
+that the Creator and Governor of the universe is the sole Giver of every
+temporal and spiritual blessing; the one only Being to whom, his
+rational creatures on earth should pay any religious service whatever;
+the one only Being to whom mortals must seek by prayer and invocation
+for the supply of any of their wants? Through the entire volume the
+inquirer would find that the unity of God is announced in every variety
+of expression; and that the exclusive worship {18} of HIM alone is
+insisted upon and guarded with the utmost jealousy by assurances, by
+threats, and by promises, as the God who heareth prayer, alone to be
+called upon, alone to be invoked, alone to be adored. So to speak, he
+would find that recourse was had to every expedient for the express
+purpose of protecting God's people from the fatal error of embracing in
+their worship any other being or name whatever; not reserving supreme
+adoration for the Supreme Being, and admitting a sort of secondary
+honour and inferior mode of invocation to his exalted saints and
+servants; but banishing at once and for ever the most distant
+approximation towards religious honour--the veriest shadow of spiritual
+invocation to any other Being than Jehovah HIMSELF ALONE.
+
+In process of time, the heathen began to deify those mortals who had
+conferred signal benefits on the human race, or had distinguished
+themselves by their power and skill above their fellow-countrymen. Male
+and female divinities were multiplying on every side. Together with
+Jupiter, the fabled father of gods and men, worshipped under different
+names among the various tribes, were associated those "gods many and
+lords many," which ignorance and superstition, or policy and craft, had
+invented; and which shared some a greater, some a less portion of
+popular veneration and religious worship. To the people of God, the
+worshippers of Jehovah, it was again and again most solemnly and awfully
+denounced, that no such thing should be. "Thou shalt worship the Lord
+thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve," is a mandate repeated in every
+variety of language, and under every diversity of circumstance. In some
+passages, indeed, together with the most clear assurances, {19} that
+mankind need apply to no other dispenser of good, and can want no other
+as Saviour, advocate, or intercessor, that same truth is announced with
+such superabundance of repetition, that in the productions of any human
+writer the style would be chargeable with tautology. In the Bible, this
+repetition only the more forces upon the mind, and fixes there, that
+same principle as an eternal verity never to be questioned; never to be
+dispensed with; never to be diluted or qualified; never to be invaded by
+any service, worship, prayer, invocation, or adoration of any other
+being whatever. Let us take, for example, the forty-fifth chapter of
+Isaiah, in which the principle is most strongly and clearly illustrated.
+"I am the LORD, and there is none else: there is no God beside me; I
+girded thee, though thou hast not known me; that they may know from the
+rising of the sun and from the west, that there is none beside me: I am
+the Lord, and there is none else. They shall be ashamed, and also
+confounded, all of them; they shall go to confusion together, that are
+makers of idols. But Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an
+everlasting salvation: ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world
+without end: I am the Lord, and there is none else. I said not unto the
+seed of Jacob, Seek ye me in vain. They have no knowledge that set up
+the wood of their graven image, and pray unto a god that cannot save.
+There is no god beside me; a just God and a Saviour; there is none
+beside me. Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth; for
+I am God, and there is none else."
+
+But it is needless to multiply these passages; and members of the Church
+of Rome will say, that they themselves acknowledge, as fully as members
+of the Anglican Church can do, that there is but one supreme {20} God
+and Lord, to whom alone they intend to offer the worship due to God; and
+that the appeals which they offer by way of invocation to saints and
+angels for their services and intercession, do not militate against this
+principle. But here let us ask ourselves these few questions:--
+
+First, if it had been intended by the Almighty to forbid any religious
+application, such as is now professedly the invocation of saints and
+angels, to any other being than Himself alone, what words could have
+been employed more stringently prohibitory?
+
+Secondly, had such an address to saints and angels, as the Church of
+Rome now confessedly makes, been contemplated by our heavenly Lawgiver
+as an exception to the general rule, would not some saving clause, some
+expressions indicative of such an intended exception, have been
+discovered in some page or other of his revealed will?
+
+Thirdly, if such an appeal to the angels of heaven, or to the spirits of
+the just in heaven, had been sanctioned under the elder covenant, would
+not some example, some solitary instance, have been recorded of a
+faithful servant of Jehovah offering such a prayer with the Divine
+approbation?
+
+Lastly, when such strong and repeated declarations and injunctions
+interspersed through the entire volume of the Old Testament,
+unequivocally show the will of God to be, that no other object of
+religious worship should have place in the heart or on the tongue of his
+own true sons and daughters, can it become a faithful child of our
+Heavenly Father to be seeking for excuses and palliations, and to invent
+distinctions between one kind of worship and another?
+
+God Himself includes all in one universal prohibitory {21} mandate,
+"Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve." So
+far from according with those general rules for the interpretation of
+the revealed will of God, which we have already stated, and from which,
+in the abstract, probably few would dissent, an anxiety to force the
+word of God into at least an acquiescence in the invocation of saints
+and angels, indicates a disposition to comply with his injunctions,
+wherever they seem to clash with our own view, only so far as we cannot
+avoid compliance; and to seek how we may with any show of propriety
+evade the spirit of those commands. Instead of that full, free, and
+unstinted submission of our own inclinations and propensities to the
+Almighty's will wherever we can discover it, which those entertain whom
+the Lord seeketh to worship Him; to look for exceptions and to act upon
+them, bears upon it the stamp of a reserved and grudging service. After
+so many positive warnings, enactments, and denunciations, against
+seeking by prayer the aid of any other being whatever, surely a positive
+command would have been absolutely necessary to justify a mortal man in
+preferring any prayer to any being, saint, angel, or archangel, save
+only the Supreme Deity alone. Instead of any such command or even
+permission appearing, not one single word occurs, from the first
+syllable in the Book of Genesis to the last of the prophet Malachi,
+which could even by implication be brought to countenance the practice
+of approaching any created being in prayer.
+
+But let us now look to the examples on this subject afforded in the Old
+Testament. Many, very many a prayer is recorded of holy men, of inspired
+men, of men, to whose holiness and integrity and acceptance {22} the
+Holy Spirit bears witness; yet among these prayers there is not found
+one invocation addressed to saint or angel. I will not here anticipate
+the observations which it will be necessary to make in consequence of
+the extraordinary argument which has been devised, to account for the
+absence of invocations to saints before the resurrection of Christ,
+namely, that before that event the saints were not admitted into heaven.
+Although pressed forward with such unhesitating confidence in its
+validity, that argument is so singular in its nature, and so important
+in its consequences, and withal so utterly groundless, as to call for a
+separate examination, on which we will shortly enter: meanwhile, we are
+now inquiring into the matter of fact.
+
+The whole Book of Psalms is a manual of devotion, consisting
+alternately, or rather intermixedly, of prayers and praises, composed
+some by Moses, some by other inspired Israelites of less note, but the
+greater part by David himself; and what is the force and tendency of
+their example? Words are spoken in collaudation of "Moses and Aaron
+among the saints of the Lord," and of "Samuel among such as called upon
+his name;" and mention is made with becoming reverence of the holy
+angels; but not one word ever falls from the pen of the Psalmist,
+addressed, by way of invocation, to saint or angel. In the Roman Ritual
+supplication is made to Abel and Abraham as well as to Michael and all
+angels. If it is now lawful, if it is now the duty of the worshippers of
+the true God to seek his aid through the mediation of those holy men,
+can we avoid asking, Why the inspired patriarchs did not appeal to Abel
+for his mediation? Why did not the inspired David invoke the father of
+the faithful to intercede for him with God? If the departed spirits {23}
+of faithful men may be safely addressed in prayer; if those who in their
+lifetime have, to their fellow-mortals, (who can judge only from outward
+actions, and cannot penetrate the heart,) appeared accepted servants and
+honoured saints of our Creator, may now be invoked by an act of
+religious supplication either to grant us aid, or to intercede with God
+for aid in our behalf, why did not men whom God declared to be partakers
+of his Spirit of truth, offer the same supplication to those departed
+spirits, who, before and after their decease, had this testimony from
+Omniscience itself, that they pleased God? Why is no intimation given in
+the later books of the Old Testament that such supplications were
+offered to Moses, or Aaron, or Abraham, or Noah? When wrath was gone out
+from the presence of the Lord, and the plague was begun among the
+people, Aaron took a censer in his hand, and stood between the living
+and the dead, and the plague was stayed. If the soul of Aaron was
+therefore to be regarded as a spirit influential with God, one whose
+intercession could avail, one who ought to be approached in prayer, were
+it only for his intercession, could a stronger motive be conceived for
+suggesting that invocation, than David must have felt, when the
+pestilence was destroying its thousands around him, and all his glory
+and strength, and his very life too, were threatened by its resistless
+ravages? But no! neither Abel, nor Abraham, nor Moses, nor Aaron, must
+be petitioned to intercede with God, and to pray that God would stay his
+hand. To God and God alone, for his own mercy's sake, must his afflicted
+servant turn in supplication. We find among his prayers no "Holy
+Abraham, pray for us,"--"Holy Abel, pray for us." His own Psalm of
+thanksgiving describes full well the object and the nature of his {24}
+prayer: "When the waves of death compassed me, the floods of ungodly men
+made me afraid, the sorrows of hell compassed me about, the snares of
+death prevented me; in my distress I called upon the Lord, and cried to
+my God; and He did hear my voice out of his temple, and my cry did enter
+into his ears." [2 Sam. (2 Kings Vulg.) xxii. 5. or Ps. xviii.] Abraham,
+when on earth, prayed God to spare the offending-people; but he invoked
+neither Noah, nor Abel, nor any of the faithful departed, to join their
+intercessions with his own. Isaac prayed to God for his son Jacob, but
+he did not ask the mediation of his father Abraham in his behalf; and
+when Jacob in his turn supplicated an especial blessing upon his
+grandsons Ephraim and Manasseh, though he called with gratitude to his
+mind, and expressed with his tongue, the devotedness both of Abraham and
+of Isaac to the Almighty, yet we do not find him appealing to them, or
+invoking their intercession with Jehovah.
+
+When the conscience-struck Israelites felt that they had exposed
+themselves to the wrath of Almighty God, whose sovereign power, put
+forth at the prayer of Samuel, they then witnessed, distrusting the
+efficacy of their own supplication, and confiding in the intercession of
+that man of God, they implored him to intercede for them; and Samuel
+emphatically responded to their appeal, with an assurance of his
+earnestly undertaking to plead their cause with heaven: "And all the
+people said unto Samuel, Pray for thy servants unto the Lord thy God,
+that we die not. And Samuel said unto the people, Fear not.... The Lord
+will not forsake his people, for his great name's {25} sake....
+Moreover, God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing to
+pray for you." [1 Sam. (1 Kings Vulg.) xii. 19.] Samuel is one whom the
+Holy Spirit numbers among those "who called upon God's name;" and when
+Samuel died, all Israel gathered together to lament and to bury
+him,--but we read of no petition being offered to him to carry on the
+same intercessory office, when he was once removed from them. As long as
+he was entabernacled in the flesh and sojourned on earth with his
+brethren, they besought him to pray for them, to intercede with their
+God and his God for blessings at his hand, (just as among ourselves one
+Christian asks another to pray for him,) but when Samuel's body had been
+buried in peace, and his soul had returned to God who gave it, the Bible
+never records any further application to him; we no where read, "Holy
+Samuel, pray for us."
+
+Again, what announcement could God Himself make more expressive of his
+acceptance of the persons of any, than He actually and repeatedly made
+to Moses with regard to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob? How could He more
+clearly intimate that if the spirits of the faithful departed could
+exercise intercessory or mediatorial influence with Him, those three
+holy patriarchs would possess such power above all others who had ever
+lived on the earth? "I am the God of your fathers; the God of Abraham,
+the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob: and Moses hid his face, for he was
+afraid to look upon God." "Thus shalt thou say unto the children of
+Israel, The God of thy fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac,
+the God of Jacob, hath sent me unto you. This is my name for ever, and
+this is my memorial throughout all generations." [Exod. iii. 6. 15.] Did
+Moses in his alarm and dread, when he was afraid {26} to look upon God,
+call upon those holy and accepted servants to aid him in his perplexity,
+and intercede for him and his people with the awful Eternal Being on
+whose majesty he dared not to look? Did he teach his people to invoke
+Abraham? That was far from him. When Moses, that saint of the Lord, was
+himself called hence and was buried, (though no mortal man was allowed
+to know the place of his sepulture,) did the surviving faithful pray to
+him for his help and intercession with God? He had wrought so many and
+great miracles as never had been before witnessed on earth; whilst in
+the tabernacle of the flesh he had talked with God as a man talketh with
+his friend; and yet the sacred page records no invocation ever breathed
+to his departed spirit. The same is the result of our inquiry
+throughout.
+
+I will specify only one more example--Hezekiah, who "trusted in the Lord
+God of Israel, and clave to the Lord, and departed not from following
+him, but kept his commandments," when he and his people were in great
+peril, addressed his prayer only to God. He offered no invocation to
+holy David to intercede with the Almighty for his own Jerusalem; he made
+his supplication directly and exclusively to Jehovah; and, yet, the very
+answer made to that prayer would surely have seemed to justify Hezekiah
+in seeking holy David's mediation, if prayer for the intercession of any
+departed mortal could ever have been sanctioned by Heaven: "Thus saith
+the Lord, the God of David thy father; I have heard thy prayer, I have
+seen thy tears; _I_ will heal thee. I will save this city for mine own
+sake, and for my servant David's sake." [2 Kings (Vulg. 4 Kings) xix.
+15. and xx. 6.] Of what saint in the calendar was ever such a thing as
+this spoken? {27}
+
+I have already intimated my intention of referring, with somewhat more
+than a cursory remark, to the position assumed, and the argument built
+upon it by writers in communion with Rome, for the purpose of nullifying
+or escaping from the evidence borne by the examples of the Old Testament
+against the invocation of saints. The writers to whom I refer, with
+Bellarmin at their head, openly confess that the pages of the Old
+Testament afford no instance of invocation being offered to the spirits
+of departed mortals; and the reason which they allege is this, No one
+can be invoked who is not admitted to the presence of God in heaven; but
+before Christ went down to hell[2] and released the spirits from prison,
+no mortal was admitted into heaven; consequently, before the
+resurrection of Christ the spirit of no mortal was invoked. The
+following are the words of Bellarmin at the close of the preface to his
+"Church Triumphant:"--"The spirits of the patriarchs and prophets before
+the coming of Christ were for this reason not worshipped and invoked, as
+we now worship and invoke the Apostles and martyrs, because they were
+yet shut up and detained in prisons below[3]." Again, he says, "Because
+before {28} the coming of Christ the saints who died did not enter
+heaven and saw not God, nor could ordinarily know the prayers of
+suppliants, therefore, it was not customary in the Old Testament to say,
+'Holy Abraham, pray for me,' &c.; but the men of that time prayed to God
+only, and alleged the merits of the saints who had already departed,
+that their own prayers might be aided by them."
+
+ [Footnote 2: The word Hell, signifying, in Saxon, a
+ hidden-place, altogether corresponding in its etymology with
+ "hades," is now used for the place of torment called by the
+ Hebrews "Gehennah;" and we must perhaps regret that the same
+ Saxon word is employed to signify also the unseen region of
+ departed spirits. This circumstance has been the source of much
+ difficulty and confusion.]
+
+ [Footnote 3: "Nam idcirco ante Christi adventum non ita
+ colebantur neque invocabantur spiritus patriarcharum atque
+ prophetarum, quemadmodum nunc Apostolos et martyres colimus et
+ invocamus, quod illi adhuc infernis carceribus clausi
+ detinebantur."--Ingolstadii, 1601. vol. ii. p. 833. "The last
+ edition, enlarged and corrected by the Author."]
+
+Now let us inquire into this statement thus broadly made, and ascertain
+for ourselves whether the point assumed and the argument built upon it
+can stand the test of examination. Is this argument such as ought to
+satisfy the mind of one, who would humbly but honestly follow the
+apostolic rule, "Prove all things: hold fast that which is good?" Is
+this such an exposition as that the reason of a cultivated mind, and the
+faith of an enlightened Christian, can acquiesce in it? Let it be
+examined neither with prejudice in its favour, nor with any undue
+suspicion of its soundness, but with candour and impartiality
+throughout.
+
+It is not necessary to dwell at any length on the inconsistencies and
+perplexities involved in this assumed abstract theory with regard to the
+souls of the faithful who died before the resurrection of Christ, and
+which require to be cleared away before its advocates can reasonably
+expect to obtain for it any general acceptance among thinking men. I do
+not wish to contravene the theory, far less to substitute another in its
+stead. On the contrary, I am fully content, in company with some of the
+most valuable among Roman Catholic writers, following the example of
+Augustin [Aug. De Pecc. Orig. c. 23. tom. vii. p. 338.--Quoted by De
+Sacy. 2 Kings (Vulg. 4 Kings) ii.], to leave the subject where Scripture
+has left it. To the arguments {29} alleged, I would wish to reply
+independently of any opinion, as a matter of Christian belief, with
+regard to the place, the condition, and the circumstances of the souls
+of the patriarchs and prophets before our blessed Lord's resurrection.
+It may, nevertheless, materially facilitate an inquiry into the
+soundness of the reasons alleged for the total absence of invocation to
+those souls, if we briefly contemplate some of the difficulties which
+surround this novel theory. At all events, such a process will incline
+us to abstain from bold assumptions on a point upon which the Almighty
+has been pleased to throw so little light in his Holy Word, or at least
+avoid all severity of condemnation towards those who may differ from our
+views.
+
+It is very easy to assert, that all the souls of the faithful departed
+were kept in the prison-house of Hades, and to allege in its behalf an
+obscure passage of St. Peter, to which many of the most learned and
+unprejudiced Christian teachers assign a meaning totally unconnected
+with the subject of departed spirits. But surely the case of Enoch's
+translation from this life to heaven, making, as it has been beautifully
+expressed, but one step from earth to glory, which St. Paul, in his
+Epistle to the Hebrews, cites with a most important comment of his own,
+requires to be well and patiently weighed. He was taken from the earth
+by an immediate act of Providence, that he should not see death; and
+before his translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God.
+Surely the case of Elijah too, when we would ascertain the soundness of
+this theory, must not be dismissed summarily from our thoughts, of whom
+the book of eternal truth declares, that Jehovah took him {30} in a
+whirlwind into heaven; his ascent being made visible to mortal eyes, as
+was afterwards the ascension of the blessed Saviour Himself. Indeed the
+accounts of Elijah's translation, and of our Lord's ascension, whether
+in the Septuagint and Greek Testament, the Vulgate, or our own
+authorized version, present a similarity of expression very striking and
+remarkable.
+
+On this subject we are strongly reminded, first, with what care and
+candour and patience the language of Holy Scripture should be weighed,
+which so positively declares, that Moses and Elijah, both in glory,
+appeared visibly to the Apostles at the transfiguration of our blessed
+Saviour, and conversed with Him on the holy mount: "And behold there
+talked with Him two men, who were Moses and Elias, who appeared in glory
+(in majesty, as the Vulgate renders the word), and spake of his decease
+which He should accomplish at Jerusalem;" [Luke ix. 30.]--and, secondly,
+how unwise it is to dogmatize on such subjects beyond the plain
+declaration of the sacred narrative. Moreover, how very unsatisfactory
+is the theory which we are examining as to the state of the souls of the
+faithful who died before Christ, even the words of Jerome himself prove,
+who, commenting on the transfiguration of the blessed Jesus, is
+unhappily led to represent the Almighty as having summoned Elijah to
+descend from heaven, and Moses to ascend from Hades, to meet our Lord in
+the Mount[4].
+
+ [Footnote 4: "Elia inde descendente quo conscenderat, et Moyse
+ ab inferis resurgente."--Hieron. in Matt. xvii. 1. Paris, 1706.
+ vol. iv. p. 77.]
+
+Strange and startling as is this sentiment of Jerome, it is, you will
+observe, utterly irreconcileable with the theory, that the reason why
+the ancient Church did not {31} pray to the saints departed, was because
+they were not yet in heaven.
+
+On this point, among Roman Catholic writers themselves, there prevails a
+very great diversity of opinion, arising probably from the difficulty
+which they have experienced in their endeavours to make all facts and
+doctrines square with the present tenets and practices of their
+Church[5]. Thus, whilst some maintain that Elijah was translated to the
+terrestrial paradise in which Adam had been placed, not enjoying the
+immediate divine presence; others cite the passage as justifying the
+belief that the saints departed pray for us[6]. But not only are
+different authors at variance with each other on very many points here;
+the same writer in his zeal is betrayed into great and palpable
+inconsistency. Bellarmin, anxious to enlist the account given by our
+Lord of the rich man and Lazarus, to countenance the invocation of
+saints by the example of the rich man appealing to Abraham, maintains
+that section of Holy Writ to be not a parable, but a true history of a
+matter of fact which took place between two real individuals; and of his
+assertion he adduces this proof, that "the Church worships that Lazarus
+as verily a holy man[7];" and yet he denies that any of the holy men
+were in heaven before the {32} death of Christ. Either Abraham was in
+heaven in the presence of God, or not; if he was in heaven, why did not
+his descendants invoke his aid? if he was not in heaven, the whole
+argument drawn from the rich man's supplication falls to the ground.
+
+ [Footnote 5: See De Sacy on 4 Kings i. 1. See also Estius, 1629.
+ p. 168. Pope Gregory's Exposition; Rome, 1553. p. 99. Stephen's
+ Bible in loc. 1557, &c. The Vulgate ed. Antwerp, 1624, cites a
+ note, "Thy prayers are stronger than chariots and horsemen."]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Gaspar Sanctius, Antwerp, 1624. p. 1360, considers
+ the fable not improbable, that Elijah, living in the terrestrial
+ paradise, wrote there the letters to Joram (mentioned 2 Chron.
+ xxi. 12), and sent them by angels.]
+
+ [Footnote 7: Colit Lazarum ilium ut vere sanctum
+ hominem.--Bellarm. De Ecd. Triumph, p. 864.]
+
+Another very extraordinary inconsistency, arising from the same
+solicitude, forces itself upon our notice, when the same author urges a
+passage in Leviticus [Levit. xix. 13.] to prove, that the saints are now
+admitted at once into the enjoyment of the presence of God in heaven,
+without waiting for the day of final judgment. [Bell vol. ii. p. 865.]
+"God (such are his words) commanded it to be written, 'The work of the
+hireling shall not remain with thee till the morning;' therefore, unless
+God would appear inconsistent with Himself, He will not keep back the
+reward of his saints to the end of the world." How strange, that in the
+same treatise [Ibid. p. 833.] this author should expressly maintain,
+that the reward of Abel and Abraham, and the holy prophet and lawgiver
+Moses, the very man who was commanded to write that law in Leviticus,
+was kept back,--the last for a longer period than a thousand years; the
+first well nigh four thousand years.
+
+I mention these particulars merely to point out how very unsatisfactory
+and unsound is the attempted solution of the difficulties which surround
+on every side the theory of those who maintain, that the reason why we
+have no instance of the righteous departed being invoked in the times of
+the elder covenant is, that they were not as yet admitted into heaven,
+but were kept in prison till the resurrection of Christ. I would also
+observe, even at the risk {33} of repetition, that I am here not
+maintaining any opinion as to the appointed abiding-place, the
+condition, and circumstances, the powers of consciousness, volition or
+enjoyment of the departed, before Christ's resurrection; on the
+contrary, I am rather urging the consideration of the great and serious
+caution requisite before we espouse, as an article of faith, any opinion
+which rests on so questionable a foundation, and which involves such
+interminable difficulties.
+
+But while we need not dwell longer on this immediate point, yet there
+are two considerations which appear to be altogether decisive as to the
+evidence borne against the Invocation of Saints by the writers of the
+Old Testament. If the spirits of the saints departed were not invoked
+before the resurrection of Christ, purely because they were not then
+admitted into heaven; the first consideration I would suggest is this:
+Why did the faithful and inspired servants of Jehovah not invoke the
+angels and archangels who were in heaven? The second is this: Why did
+not the inspired Apostles and faithful disciples of our Lord invoke the
+spirits of those saints after his resurrection; that is (according to
+the theory before us), after those saints had been taken by Christ with
+him into his Father's presence? I wish not to anticipate here our
+inquiry into the testimony borne by the writers of the New Testament as
+to the doctrine and practice of the Roman Church in this particular; and
+I will only add, that whatever be the cause of the absence from the Old
+Testament of all worship and invocation of Abel and Abraham, whom the
+Roman Church now invokes, the alleged reason that it was because they
+were not in heaven till after Christ's resurrection, is utterly set
+aside by the conduct of the Apostles and disciples of our Lord recorded
+in the New {34} Testament, for more than half a century after his return
+to his Father's glory.
+
+This, however, seems to be the proper place for entertaining the first
+consideration, Why did not the holy men of old, under the elder
+covenant, invoke angels and archangels, as the Roman Church now does?
+Writers, indeed, who have declared themselves the defenders of that
+doctrine and practice, refer us to passages, which they cite, as
+affording examples of the worship of angels; and we will not knowingly
+allow any one of those sections of Holy Writ to remain unexamined. We
+must first endeavour to ascertain the testimony borne by the books of
+the Old Testament: and that presents to us such a body of evidence as
+greatly increases our surprise at the perseverance with which the
+invocation of angels has been maintained by any community of men
+acknowledging the inspiration of the sacred volume.
+
+The inspired writers of the Old Testament, and those to whom through
+their mouth and pen the Divine word was addressed, were as fully as
+ourselves acquainted with the existence of angelic beings. They were
+aware of the station of those angels in the court of heaven, of their
+power as God's ambassadors, and agents for good. Either their own eyes
+had seen the mighty operations of God by the hands of those celestial
+messengers; or their ears had heard their fathers tell what HE had done
+by their instrumentality in times of old. Why then did not God's chosen
+people offer to the angels the same worship and invocation which the
+Church of Rome now addresses to them in common with the patriarchs and
+prophets of the elder covenant, and with saints and martyrs under the
+new? In the condition of the holy angels no one ever suggests that {35}
+any change, affecting the argument, has taken place since the time when
+man was created and made. And as the angels of heaven were in themselves
+the same, equally in the presence of God, and equally able to succour
+men through that long space of four thousand years, which intervened
+between Adam's creation and the birth of HIM who was Son of Adam and Son
+of God, so was man in the same dependent state, needing the guidance and
+protection of a power above his own. Nay, surely, if there was in man
+any difference affecting the argument, it would all add weight to the
+reason against the invocation of angels by Christians. The Israelites of
+old had no clear knowledge, as we have, of one great Mediator, who is
+ever making intercession for us; and yet they sought not the mediation
+and intercession and good offices of those superhuman beings, of whose
+existence and power, and employment in works of blessing to man, they
+had no doubt[8]. This is a point of great importance to our argument,
+and I will refer to a few passages in support of it.
+
+ [Footnote 8: A small section indeed of their countrymen in our
+ Saviour's time denied the reality of a future state, and the
+ existence of angels and spirits; but the sect was of then recent
+ origin, and the overwhelming majority believed as their fathers
+ had believed.]
+
+When David, who had, as we know [1 Chron. xxi. 16.], visible
+demonstration afforded him of the existence and ministration of the
+angels, called upon them to unite with his own soul, and with all the
+works of creation through all places of God's dominion, in praising
+their merciful, glorious, and powerful Creator, he thus conveys to us
+the exalted ideas with which he had been filled of their nature, their
+excellence, and their ministration. "The Lord hath prepared his throne
+in the heavens, and his {36} kingdom ruleth over all: Bless the Lord, ye
+his angels that excel in strength, that do his commandments, hearkening
+unto the voice of his word. Bless ye the Lord, all ye his hosts, ye
+ministers of his that do his pleasure." [Ps. ciii. 19-21.] David knew
+moreover that one of the offices, in the execution of which the angels
+do God's pleasure, is that of succouring and defending us on earth. For
+example, in one of the psalms used by the Church of Rome at complin, and
+with the rest repeated in the Church of England, and prophetic of the
+Redeemer, David, to whom this psalm is probably to be ascribed, declares
+of the man who had made the Most High his refuge and strength, "There
+shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy
+dwelling; for he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in
+all thy ways; they shall bear thee up in their hands lest thou dash thy
+foot against a stone." [Ps. xci. 10-12.] And again, with exquisitely
+beautiful imagery, he represents those same blessed servants of heaven
+as an army, as a host of God's spiritual soldiers keeping watch and ward
+over the poorest of the children of men, who would take refuge in his
+mercy: "The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him,
+and delivereth them[9]." And yet David, the prophet of the Lord, never
+addresses to these beings, high and glorious though they are, one single
+invocation: he neither asks them to assist him, nor to pray for him, nor
+to pray with him in his behalf.
+
+ [Footnote 9: Ps. xxxiv. 7. (Vulg. xxxiii. 8.) "Immittet angelus
+ Domini in circuitu timentium eum, et eripiet eos." In the
+ Vulgate the beauty of the figure is lost; which, however, Roman
+ Catholic writers restore in their comments. Basil makes a
+ beautiful use of the metaphor. See De Sacy in loc.] {37}
+
+Isaiah was admitted by the Holy Spirit to witness in the fulness of its
+glory the court and the throne of heaven; and he heard the voices of the
+seraphim proclaiming their Maker's praise; he experienced also
+personally the effect of their ministration, when one of them said, "Lo,
+this hath touched thy lips, and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy
+sin purged." [Isaiah vi. 7.] Still, though Isaiah must have regarded
+this angel as his benefactor under God, yet neither to this seraph, nor
+to any of the host of heaven, does he offer one prayer for their good
+offices, even by their intercession. He ever ascribes all to God alone;
+and never joins any other name with His either in supplication or in
+praise. Let us also take the case of Daniel. He acknowledges not only
+that the Lord's omnipotent hand had rescued him from the jaws of the
+lions, but that the deliverance was brought about by the ministration of
+an angel. "My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut the lions' mouths,
+that they have not hurt me." [Dan. vi. 22.] Yet when we look through
+Daniel's prayers, we find no allusion to any of the highest angels. He
+had seen Gabriel before his prayer; he had heard the voice and felt the
+hand of that heavenly messenger who was commissioned to reveal to him
+what should be done in the latter end; and immediately after the
+offering of his prayer, the same Gabriel announces himself as one who
+was come forth to give the prophet skill and understanding. And yet
+neither towards Gabriel, nor any other of the angels of God, does one
+word of invocation fall from the lips of Daniel. In the supplications of
+that holy, intrepid, and blessed servant and child of God, we search in
+vain for any thing approaching in spirit to the invocation, "Sancte
+Gabriel, ora pro nobis." {38}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT (continued)
+
+
+We must now briefly refer to those passages, by which Roman Catholic
+writers have endeavoured to maintain that religious adoration was paid
+to angels by the faithful sons of God. The two principal instances cited
+are, first, the case of Abraham bowing down before three men, whom he
+recognizes as messengers from heaven; and, secondly, the words of Jacob
+when he gave his benediction to his grandsons.
+
+With regard to the first instance, how very far the prostration of
+Abraham was in itself from implying an act of religious worship, being
+as it was the ordinary mode of paying respect to a fellow mortal, is
+evident from the very words of Scripture. The Hebrew word, which we
+translate by "bowed himself," and which the Vulgate unhappily renders
+"adoravit" ("adored"), is, letter for letter, the same in the case of
+Abraham saluting his three heavenly visitors, and in the case of Jacob
+saluting his brother Esau. The parallelism of the two passages is very
+striking.
+
+GEN. xviii. 2. GEN. xxxiii. 1 and 3.
+
+And he [Abraham] lift up his And Jacob lifted up his eyes,
+eyes, and lo! three men stood and looked, and behold! Esau
+by him; and when he saw them, came ... And he passed over, and
+he ran to meet them from the _bowed himself to the ground_ seven
+tent door; and _bowed himself_ times until he came near to his
+_toward the ground_. brother. {39}
+
+By rendering the Hebrew word[10], which means to "bow or bend oneself,"
+by the word "adoravit," which is literally "to pray to," the Latin
+Vulgate has laid the foundation for much unsound and misleading
+criticism. But suppose the word had meant, what it does not mean, an act
+of solemn religious worship; and let it be granted (as I am not only
+ready to grant, but prepared to maintain) that Abraham paid religious
+adoration at that time, what inference can fairly and honestly be drawn
+from that circumstance in favour of the invocation of angels? The
+ancient writers of the Christian Church, and those whom the Church of
+Rome habitually holds in great respect, are full and clear in
+maintaining that the person whom Abraham then addressed, was no created
+being, neither angel nor seraph; but the Angel of the Covenant; the
+Word, the eternal Son of God, Himself God[11]. Before the visible and
+miraculous presence of the God of heaven, who for his own glory and in
+carrying on the work of man's salvation, sometimes deigned so to reveal
+Himself, the patriarchs of old bowed themselves to the earth. Can this,
+with any shadow of {40} reason, be employed to sanction the invocation
+of Michael and all the myriads of angels who fill the court of heaven?
+
+ [Footnote 10: Not only is the Hebrew word precisely the same,
+ letter for letter, and point for point, [Hebrew: shahah], but
+ the Septuagint in each case employs the same, [Greek:
+ prosekunaesen]; and the Vulgate in each case renders it by the
+ same word, "adoravit." The Roman Catholic commentator De Sacy
+ renders it in each case, "se prosternavit," which corresponds
+ exactly with our English version. The Douay Bible in each case
+ renders it "adored."]
+
+ [Footnote 11: Many early Christian writers may be cited to the
+ same purpose: it is enough, however, to refer to Justin Martyr
+ and to Athanasius; who are very full and elaborate in
+ maintaining, that the angel here mentioned was no created being,
+ but was the Angel of the Covenant, God, in the fulness of time
+ manifested in the flesh. The passage from Athanasius will be
+ quoted at some length, when we come to examine that father's
+ testimony. For Justin Martyr, see Dial. cum Tryph. ch. 56, &c.
+ p. 150, &c. (Paris, 1742.)]
+
+The only other instance to which it will be necessary to call your
+attention, occurs in the forty-eighth chapter of Genesis. The passage,
+however, is so palpably and on the very face of it inapplicable, that
+its examination needs not detain us long. "And he [Jacob] blessed
+Joseph, and said, God, before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac did
+walk, the God who fed me all my life long unto this day, the ANGEL which
+redeemed me from all evil, bless the lads." [Gen. xlviii. 15.] Here the
+patriarch speaks of God as the Angel, and the Angel as God: being the
+Angel or Messenger of the Covenant--God manifested to man. He speaks not
+of Michael or Gabriel, or archangel or seraph, or any created being; but
+of the Lord Himself, who appeared to him, agreeably to the revelation of
+God Himself recorded in a previous chapter, and thus communicated by the
+patriarch to Rachel and Leah: "And the ANGEL of God spake unto me in a
+dream, saying, Jacob; and I said, Here am I. And he said ... _I_ am the
+GOD of Bethel, where thou anointedst the pillar, and vowedst a vow unto
+me." [Gen. xxxi. 11.] The Angel whose blessing he desired for the lads
+was the God[12], to whom he had vowed a vow in Bethel, the Lord Himself.
+
+ [Footnote 12: It may not be superfluous to add, that this is the
+ interpretation of the passage adopted by primitive writers,
+ Among others see Eusebius Demonstr. Evan. lib. v. ch. 10: who
+ declares that the Angel spoken of by Jacob was God the Son.]
+
+Independently, however, of this conclusive consideration, if the latter
+member of this sentence had merely expressed a wish, that an angel might
+be employed as {41} an instrument of good in behalf of Ephraim and
+Manasseh, I could readily offer such a prayer for a blessing on my own
+children. My prayer would be addressed to the angel neither immediately
+nor transitively, but exclusively to God alone, supplicating Him
+graciously to employ the service of those ministering spirits for our
+good. Such a prayer every Catholic in communion with the Church of
+England is taught and directed to offer. Such a prayer is primitive and
+scriptural; and such is offered in the Church on the anniversary of
+Saint Michael and all angels:
+
+"O Everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services of
+angels and men in a wonderful order, mercifully grant that as Thy holy
+angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by Thy appointment they may
+succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."
+
+Such is the prayer of the Church Catholic, whether of the Roman or the
+Anglican branch; it is in spirit and in truth a Christian prayer, fit
+for faithful mortals to offer on earth to the Lord of men and of angels
+in heaven. Would that the Church of Rome, preserving, as she has
+preserved, this prayer in all its original purity, had never been
+successfully tempted to mingle in the same service, supplications, which
+rob the one only God of his exclusive honour and glory, as the God "who
+heareth prayer;" and to rob Christ of his exclusive honour and glory, as
+our only Mediator and Advocate!
+
+Here, though unwilling, by departing from the order of our argument, to
+anticipate our examination in its place of the Roman ritual, I cannot
+refrain from contrasting this prayer, the genuine offspring of Christian
+faith, with some forms of invocation contained in {42} the Roman service
+on St. Michael's day, in which I could not join, and the adoption of
+which I deeply lament. The first is appointed to be said at the part of
+the Mass called "The Secret:" "We offer to Thee, O Lord, the sacrifice
+of praise, humbly beseeching Thee, That by the intervention of the
+prayers of the angels for us, Thou, being appeased, mayest both accept
+the same, and make them profitable for our salvation. Through ..." The
+second is offered at the Post Communion: "Supported [propped up,
+suffulti] by the intercession of Thy blessed archangel Michael, we
+humbly beseech Thee, O Lord, that what with honour we follow[13], we may
+obtain also in mind. Through ..."
+
+ [Footnote 13: I do not understand the exact meaning of these
+ words, which however contain no portion of that sentiment, the
+ presence of which in this prayer I deplore. The original is
+ this: "Beati archangeli tui Michaelis intercessione suffulti,
+ supplices te Domine deprecamur, ut quod honore prosequimur,
+ contingamus et in mente. Per ..." Probably the general sense is,
+ that what we reverently seek we may actually realize.]
+
+Still, though here the Christian seems to be taught to rest on a broken
+reed, to support and prop himself up by a staff which must bend and
+break; yet I acknowledge that so much violence is not done to my
+Christian principles, nor do my feelings, as a believer in God and his
+ever-blessed Son, meet with so severe a shock by either of these
+prayers, as by the invocation addressed to the archangel himself in the
+"Gradual" on that same day:
+
+"O holy Michael, O archangel, defend us in battle, that we perish not in
+the dreadful judgment."
+
+Christians of the Church of Rome! for one moment meditate, I beseech
+you, on this prayer. It is not addressed to God; in it there is no
+mention made of {43} Christ: having called upon the angels, and on your
+own soul in the words of the psalmist, to praise the Lord, you address
+your supplication to Michael himself; not even invoking him for his
+intercession, but imploring of him his protection. If it be said, that
+his intercession is all that is meant, with most unfeigned sincerity I
+request you to judge for yourselves, whether any prayer from poor sinful
+man, putting his whole trust in the Lord and imploring his help, could
+be addressed to our God and Saviour more immediate and direct than this?
+In the place of the name of his servant Michael, substitute the highest
+and the holiest name ever uttered in heaven or on earth, and can words
+form a prayer more direct to God? "O Lord God Almighty, O Lord Jesus our
+only Saviour, defend us in battle, that we perish not in the dreadful
+judgment. Hallelujah!"--Can this be right? Were the archangel allowed
+now, by his Lord and ours, to make his voice heard upon earth by
+Christians offering to him this prayer, would he utter any other words,
+than the angel, his fellow-servant and ours, once addressed to Saint
+John, when he fell down to worship before him, "See thou do it not; for
+I am thy fellow-servant: worship God."
+
+Such then is the evidence borne by the writers of the Old Testament. No
+prayer to angel or beatified spirit occurs from its first to its last
+page. The theory which would have us account for the absence of all
+prayer to the saints before the advent of Messiah, by reason of their
+not having been then admitted into their everlasting habitations, and
+the immediate presence of God proves to be utterly groundless. The holy
+angels were confessedly in heaven [Matt. xviii. 10.], beholding the face
+of {44} God; but no invocation was ever addressed to them, by patriarch,
+or prophet, or people, as mediators or intercessors. God, and God alone,
+the one eternal Jehovah, is proclaimed by Himself throughout, and is
+acknowledged throughout to be the only object of any kind of spiritual
+worship; the only Being who heareth prayer, to whom alone therefore all
+mankind should approach with the words and with the spirit of
+invocation. It has been argued by some writers, that in the times of the
+Old Testament, prayer was not offered to God through a mediator at all;
+and that as the one Mediator was not then revealed in his person and his
+offices, the subsidiary intercessors could not of course act; and
+therefore could not be invoked by man. The answer to this remark is
+conclusive. That Mediator has been revealed in his person and his
+offices; and has been expressly declared to be the one Mediator between
+God and man: we therefore seek God's covenanted mercies through Him.
+Those subsidiary intercessors have never been revealed; and therefore we
+do not seek their aid. To assure us that it was the mind and will of our
+Heavenly Father that we should approach Him by secondary and subsidiary
+mediators and intercessors, the same clear and unquestionable revelation
+of their persons and their offices as mediators would have been
+required, as He has vouchsafed of the mediation of his Son. Had God
+willed that the faithful should approach Him by the intercessions of the
+saints and martyrs, is it conceivable that He would not have given some
+intimation of his will in this respect? If believers in the Gospel were
+to have unnumbered mediators of intercession in heaven, as well as the
+one Mediator of redemption, would not the {45} Gospel itself have
+announced it? Could such declarations as these have remained on record
+without any qualifying or limiting expression, "He[14] is able also to
+save to the uttermost them who come unto God by Him, seeing He ever
+liveth to make intercession for them." "There is one God, and one
+Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." But this involves
+the question to which the next section must be devoted. All I would
+anticipate here is, that if the irresistible argument from the Old
+Testament is sought to be evaded on the ground that no mediator at all
+was then revealed, we must require a distinct revelation of the
+existence and offices of other mediators and intercessors, before we can
+be justified in applying to them for their intervention in our behalf.
+And the question now is. Are they so revealed?
+
+ [Footnote 14: Heb. vii. 25. I Tim. ii. 5.--Unde et salvare in
+ perpetuum potest accedentes per semetipsum ad Deum, semper
+ vivens ad interpellandum pro nobis.--_Vulg._]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.--EVIDENCE OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+
+
+Though such is the evidence borne against the invocation of saints and
+angels by the Old Testament, yet it has been said that we are living
+neither under the patriarchal, nor the Mosaic dispensation, but under
+the Gospel, to whom therefore as Christians neither the precepts nor the
+examples of those ancient times are applicable: {46} the injunctions
+consequently given of old to preserve the chosen people from idolatry
+and paganism, cannot be held to prohibit Christians from seeking the aid
+of those departed saints who are now reigning with Christ. But, surely,
+those precepts, and denunciations, and commands, are still most strictly
+applicable, as conveying to us a knowledge of the will of our Heavenly
+Father, that his sons and daughters on earth should associate no name,
+however exalted among the principalities and powers in heavenly places,
+with his own holy name in prayer, and spiritual invocation. I am
+throughout this address supposing myself to be speaking to those whose
+heart's desire is to fulfil the will of God in all things; not those who
+are contented to depart from the spirit of that will, whenever they can
+devise plausible arguments to countenance such departure.
+
+The cases both of precept and example through the Old Testament
+affording so stringent and so universal a rule against the association
+of any name with the name of the Almighty in our prayers; before we can
+conclude that Christians have a liberty denied to believers under the
+former dispensations, we must surely produce a declaration to that
+effect, clear, unequivocal, and precisely in point. Nothing short of an
+enactment, rescinding in terms the former prohibitory law, and
+positively sanctioning supplications and prayers to saints and angels,
+seems capable of satisfying any Christian bent on discovering the will
+of God, and resolved to worship Him agreeably to the spirit of that will
+as it has been revealed. But let us read the New Testament from its
+first to its very last word, and we shall find, that the doctrines, the
+precepts, and the examples, the pervading reigning spirit of the entire
+{47} volume, combine in addressing us with voices loud and clear. Pray
+to God Almighty solely in the name and for the sake of his dear and only
+Son Jesus Christ our Lord, and offer no prayer, no supplication, no
+intreaty, to any other being or power, saint or angel, though it be only
+to ask for their intercession with the great God. But this involves the
+whole question, and must be sifted thoroughly. Let us then review the
+entire volume with close and minute scrutiny, and ask ourselves, Is
+there a single passage, interpreted to the best of our skill, with the
+aid of those on whose integrity and learning we can rely, which directly
+and unequivocally sanctions any religious invocation of whatever kind to
+any being except God alone? And then let us calmly and deliberately
+resolve this point: In a matter of so vital importance, of so immense
+interest, and of so sacred a character as the worship of the Supreme
+Being, who declares Himself to be a jealous God, ought we to suffer any
+refinements of casuistry to entice us from the broad, clear light of
+revelation? If it were God's good pleasure to make exceptions to his
+rule--a rule so repeatedly, and so positively enacted and
+enforced--surely the analogy of his gracious dealings with mankind would
+have taught us to look for an announcement of the exceptions in terms
+equally forcible and explicit. Instead, however, of this, we find no
+single act, no single word, nothing which even by implication can be
+forced to sanction any prayer or religious invocation, of whatever kind,
+to any other being save to God alone.
+
+Let us first look to the language and conduct of our blessed Lord, whose
+prayers to his Father are upon record for our instruction and comfort,
+and whose precepts and example form the best rule of a Christian's {48}
+life. So far from repealing the ancient law, he repeats in his own
+person its solemn announcement, "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one
+Lord." [Mark xii. 29.] While the same heavenly Teacher commands us with
+authority, "When thou prayest, pray to thy Father which is in secret,
+and thy Father, who seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly." [Matt.
+vi. 6.] No allusion in any word of His do we find to any prayer from a
+mortal on this earth to an angel or saint in heaven. And yet occasions
+were multiplied on which a reference to the invocation of angels would
+have been natural, and apparently called for. He again and again places
+beyond all doubt the reality of their good services towards mankind, but
+it is as God's servants, and at God's bidding; not in answer to any
+supplication or invoking of ours. The parable of the rich man and
+Lazarus has been cited [Bellarmin, p. 895.] to bear contrary evidence;
+but, in the first place, that parable does not offer a case in point; in
+the second place, were it in point, it might be fairly and strongly
+urged against the practice of invoking the spirit of any departed
+mortal, even the father of the faithful himself. For what are the
+circumstances of the parabolic representation? A lost spirit in the
+regions of torment prays to Abraham in the regions of the blessed, and
+the spirit of the departed patriarch professes himself to have no power
+to grant the request of the departed and condemned spirit. [Luke xvi.
+19.] The practice indeed of our Roman Catholic brethren would have been
+exemplified, had our blessed Lord represented the rich man's five
+brethren still on earth as pious men, and as supplicating Abraham in
+heaven to pray for themselves, or to mitigate {49} their lost brother's
+punishment and his woes. But then it would have afforded Christians
+little encouragement to follow their example, when they found Abraham
+declaring himself unable to aid them in attaining the object of their
+prayer, or in any way to assist them at all. Without one single
+exception, we find our blessed Lord's example, precepts, and doctrines
+to be decidedly against the practice of invoking saint or angel; whilst
+not one solitary act or word of His can be cited to countenance or
+palliate it.
+
+Next it follows, that we inquire into the conduct and the writings of
+Christ's Apostles and immediate followers, to whom He graciously
+promised that the Holy Spirit should guide them into all truth. In the
+Acts of the Apostles, various instances of prayer attract our notice,
+but not one ejaculation is found there to any other being save God
+alone. Neither angel nor saint is invoked. The Apostles prayed for
+guidance in the government of Christ's infant Church, but it was, "Thou,
+Lord, who knowest the hearts of all men." [Acts i. 24.] They prayed for
+their own acceptance, but it was "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." [Acts
+vii. 59.] They prayed for each other, as in behalf of St. Peter when in
+prison; but we are expressly told, that the prayer which was made
+without ceasing by the Church for him was addressed to GOD. [Acts xii.
+5.]
+
+To deliver St. Peter from his chains, an angel was sent on an especial
+mission from heaven; but though St. Peter saw him, and heard his voice,
+and followed him, and knew of a surety that the Almighty had employed
+the ministration of an angel to liberate him from his bonds, yet we do
+not hear thereafter of {50} Peter having himself prayed to an angel to
+secure his good offices, and his intercession with God, nor has he once
+indirectly intimated to others that such supplications would be of
+avail, or were even allowable. He exhorts his fellow-Christians to pray,
+"Watch unto prayer," but it is because "The eyes of the LORD are over
+the righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers." [1 Pet. iv. 7;
+iii. 12.] He Himself prays for them, but it is, that the God of all
+grace might make them perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle them. He
+suggests no invocation of saint or angel to intercede with God for them.
+He bids them cast all their care upon GOD, on the assurance that God
+Himself careth for them.
+
+Precisely the same result issues from a contemplation of the acts and
+exhortation of St. Paul. He too experienced in his own person the
+comfort of an angel's ministration, bidding him cast off all fear when
+in the extreme of imminent peril. [Acts xxvii. 23, 24.] Many a prayer of
+that holy Apostle is upon record; many an earnest exhortation to prayer
+was made by him; we find many a declaration relative to his own habits
+of prayer. But with him God and God alone is the object of prayer
+throughout: by him no saint or angel or archangel is alluded to, as one
+whose intercession might be sought by himself or by us. He could speak
+in glowing language of patriarchs, prophets, and angels, but unto none
+of these would he turn. "Be careful for nothing, but in every thing by
+prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made
+known unto God." [Phil. iv. 6.] And let any one receive, in the plain
+meaning of his words, his prohibitory monition [Col. ii. 18.], and say,
+could St. Paul have {51} uttered these words without any qualifying
+expression, had he worshipped angels by invocation, even asking them
+only to aid him by their prayers. "Let no one beguile you of your reward
+in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels; not holding the
+Head," which Head he had in the first chapter (v. 18) declared to be the
+dear Son of God, "in whom we have redemption through his blood, even the
+forgiveness of our sins."
+
+The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews could bring before our minds
+with most fervent uplifting eloquence Abel and Abraham and David,--that
+goodly fellowship of the prophets, that holy army of martyrs; he could
+speak as though he were an eye-witness of what he describes, of the
+general assembly and church of the first-born, whose names are written
+in heaven. And, surely, had the thought of seeking the support or
+intercession of saint or angel by invocation addressed to them, been
+familiar to him; had the thought even occurred to his mind with
+approbation, he would not have allowed such an occasion to pass by,
+without even alluding to any benefit that might arise from our invoking
+such friends of God. So far from that allusion, the utmost which he says
+at the close of his eulogy is this, "These all, having obtained a good
+report through faith, received not the promise; God having provided some
+better thing for us, that they without us should not be made perfect."
+[Heb. xi. 39, 40.]
+
+The beloved Apostle who could look forward in full assurance of faith to
+the day of Christ's second coming, and knew that "when He shall appear
+we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is," has left us this
+record of his sentiments concerning prayer: {52} "This is the confidence
+that we have in HIM, that, if we ask any thing according to his will, he
+heareth us; and if we know that he hear us, whatsoever we ask, we know
+that we have the petitions that we desired of him." [1 John v. 14, 15.]
+St. John alludes to no intercessor, to no advocate, save only that
+"Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, who is also the
+propitiation for our sins." [1 John ii. 1.] St. John never suggests to
+us the advocacy or intercession of saint or angel; with him God in
+Christ is all in all.
+
+I will only refer to one more example, that of St. James: the instance
+is equally to the point, and is strongly illustrative of the truth. This
+Apostle is anxious to impress on his fellow-Christians a due sense of
+the efficacy of our intercessions: "The effectual fervent prayer of a
+righteous man availeth much." [James v. 16.] He instances its power with
+God by the case of Elijah, a man so holy, that the Almighty suffered him
+not to pass through the regions of death and the grave, but translated
+him at once from this life to glory: "Elias was a man subject to like
+passions as we are, and he prayed that it might not rain; and it rained
+not on the earth by the space of three years and six months; and he
+prayed again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth brought forth her
+fruit." [James v. 17, 18.] And yet St. James is very far from suggesting
+the lawfulness or efficacy of any invocation to the hallowed spirit of
+this man, to whose prayer the elements and natural powers of the sky and
+the earth had been made obedient. He exhorts all men to pray, but it
+must be to God alone, and directly to God, without applying for the
+intervention of any mediators or intercessors from among angels or men.
+{53} "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth
+liberally to all men, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him; but
+let him ask in faith, nothing wavering." [James i. 5, 6.] Like the
+writer to the Hebrews, he would have us come ourselves "boldly" and
+directly "to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find
+grace to help in time of need."
+
+Surely, these Apostles, chosen vessels for conveying the truths of
+salvation throughout the world, knew well how the Almighty could best be
+approached by his children on earth; and had the invocation of saint or
+angel found a place in their creed, they would not have kept so
+important a truth from us.
+
+Before leaving this part of our inquiry, I would propose the patient and
+unprejudiced weighing of the import of two passages in the New
+Testament, often quoted on this subject; one in the Acts of the
+Apostles, the other in the Apocalypse.
+
+The holy Apostles Barnabas and Paul, by the performance of a striking
+miracle, had excited feelings of religious reverence and devotion among
+the people of Lystra, who prepared to offer sacrifice to them as two of
+their fabled deities. [Acts xiv. 11-18.] The indignant zeal with which
+these two holy men rushed forward to prevent such an act of impiety,
+however admirable and affecting, does not constitute the chief point for
+which reference is here made to this incident. They were men, still
+clothed with the tabernacle of the flesh, and the weakness of human
+nature; and the priests and people were ready to offer to them the
+wonted victims, the abomination of the heathen. Now, I am fully aware of
+the wide difference, in many {54} particulars, between such an act and
+the act of a Christian praying to their spirits after their departure
+hence, and supplicating them to intercede with the true God in his
+behalf: and on this difference Roman Catholic writers have maintained
+the total inapplicability of this incident to the present state of
+things. But, surely, if any such prayer to departed saints had been
+familiar to their minds, instead of repelling the religious address of
+the inhabitants of Lystra at once and for ever, they would have altered
+the tone of their remonstrance, and not have suppressed the truth when a
+good opportunity offered itself for imparting it. And, supposing that it
+was part of their commission to announce and explain the invocation of
+saints at all, on what occasion could an explanation of the just and
+proper invocation of angels and saints departed have been more
+appropriate in the Apostles, than when they were denouncing the
+unjustifiable offering of sacrifice to themselves while living? But
+whether the more appropriate place for such an announcement were at
+Lystra, in Corinth, at Athens, or at Rome, it matters not; nor whether
+it would have been more advantageously communicated by their oral
+teaching, or in their epistles. Doubtless, had the Apostles, by their
+example or teaching, sanctioned the invocation of saints and angels, in
+the course of fifty years or more after our blessed Saviour's
+resurrection, it would infallibly have appeared in some page or other of
+the New Testament. Instead of this the whole tenor of the Holy Volume
+breathes in perfect accordance with the spirit of the apostolical
+remonstrance at Lystra, to the fullest and utmost extent of its meaning,
+"We preach unto you that ye should turn from these vanities to serve the
+living God." {55}
+
+Of the other instance, it well becomes every Catholic Christian to
+ponder on the weight and cogency. John, the beloved disciple of our
+Lord, when admitted to view with his own eyes and hear with his mortal
+ears the things of heaven, rapt in amazement and awe, fell down to
+worship before the feet of the angel who showed him these things. [Rev.
+xxii. 8, 9.] If the adoration of angels were ever justifiable, surely it
+was then; and what a testimony to the end of the world would have been
+put upon record, had the adoration of an angel by the blessed John at
+such a moment, when he had the mysteries and the glories of heaven
+before him, been received and sanctioned. But what is the fact? "Then
+saith he to me, See thou do it not. I am thy fellow-servant, and of thy
+brethren the prophets, and of them who keep the sayings of this book.
+Worship God." I cannot understand the criticism by which the
+conclusiveness of this direct renouncement of all religious adoration
+and worship is attempted to be set aside. To my mind these words,
+uttered without any qualification at such a time, by such a being, to
+such a man, are conclusive beyond gainsaying. The interpretation put
+upon this transaction, and the words in which it is recorded, and the
+inference drawn from them by a series of the best divines, with St.
+Athanasius at their head, presents so entirely the plain common-sense
+view of the case to our minds, that all the subtilty of casuists, and
+all the ingenuity of modern refinements, will never be able to
+substitute any other in its stead. "The angel (such are the words of
+that ancient defender of the true faith), in the Apocalypse, forbids
+John, when desiring to worship him, saying, 'See thou {56} do it not; I
+am thy fellow-servant, and of thy brethren the prophets, and of them who
+keep the sayings of this book. Worship God.' Therefore, to be the object
+of worship belongs to God only; and this even the angels themselves
+know: though they surpass others in glory, but they are all creatures,
+and are not among objects of worship, but among those who worship the
+sovereign Lord." [Athan. Orat. 2. Cont. Ar. vol. i. p. 491.] To say that
+St. John was too fully illuminated by the Holy Spirit to do, especially
+a second time, what was wrong; and thence to infer that what he did was
+right, is as untenable as to maintain, that St. Peter could not,
+especially thrice, have done wrong in denying our Lord. He did wrong, or
+the angel would not have chided and warned him. And to say that the
+angel here forbade John personally to worship him, because he was a
+fellow-servant and one of the prophets; and thus that the prohibition
+only tended to exalt the prophetic character, not to condemn the worship
+of angels, is proved to be also a groundless assumption, from the
+angel's own words, who reckons himself as a fellow-servant with not St.
+John only, but all those also who keep the words of the book of
+God,--thus equally forbidding every faithful Christian to worship their
+fellow-servants the angels. They are almost the last words in the volume
+of inspired truth, and to me, together with those last words, they seem
+with "the voice of a great multitude, and of many waters, and of mighty
+thunderings," from the very throne itself of the Most High, to proclaim
+to every inhabiter of the earth, Fall down before no created being;
+adore no created being; pray to, invoke, call upon no created being,
+whether saint or angel: worship {57} and adore God only; pray to God
+only. Trust to his mercy; seek no other mediator or intercessor than his
+own only and blessed Son. "He who testifieth these things saith, Surely,
+I come quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus. The grace of our Lord
+Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen." [Rev. xxii. 20, 21.]
+
+Thus the New Testament, so far from mitigating the stringency of the
+former law, so far from countenancing any departure from the obligation
+of that code which limits religious worship to God alone, so far from
+suggesting to us invocation to sainted men, and to angels as
+intercessors with the eternal Giver of all good, reiterates the
+injunction, and declares, that invocation in order to be Christian must
+be addressed to God alone; and that there is one and only one Mediator
+between God and men, the man Jesus Christ, who is at the right hand of
+his Father, a merciful High Priest sympathizing with us in our
+infirmities, ever making intercession for us, able to save to the
+uttermost those who come unto God through Him.
+
+The present seems to be a convenient place for observing, that however
+the distinction is strongly insisted upon, or rather implicitly
+acquiesced in by many, which would admit of a worship or service called
+dulia (the Greek [Greek: douleia]) to saints and angels, and would limit
+the worship or service called latria ([Greek: latreia]) to the supreme
+God only, yet that such distinction has no ground whatever to rest upon
+beyond the will and the imagination of those who draw it. The two words
+are used in the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament, and in the
+original Greek of the {58} New promiscuously, without any such
+distinction whatever. The word which this distinction would limit to the
+supreme worship of the Most High, is used to express the bodily service
+paid by the vanquished to their conquerors, as well as the religious
+service paid by idolaters to their fabled deities, and by the true
+worshippers to the Most High. The word which this distinction would
+reserve for the secondary worship paid to saints and angels, is employed
+to express not only the service paid by man to man, but also the service
+and worship paid to God alone, even when mentioned in contradistinction
+to other worship. It will be necessary to establish this by one or two
+instances; and first as to "latria." One single chapter in the Book of
+Deuteronomy supplies us with instances of the word used in the three
+senses, of service to men, service to idols, and service to God, xxviii.
+36. 47, 48: "Because thou servedst [Greek: elatreusas] not the Lord thy
+God with joyfulness and gladness of heart; Therefore thou shalt serve
+[Greek: latreuseis] thine enemies which the Lord shall send against thee
+in hunger and in thirst and nakedness." "The Lord shall bring thee unto
+a nation which neither thou nor thy fathers have known; and there shalt
+thou serve [Greek: latreuseis] other gods, wood and stone." Next as to
+the word "dulia." The First Book of Samuel (called also the First of
+Kings) alone supplies us with instances of this word being used in each
+of the same three senses of service from man to man, from man to idols,
+and from man to his Maker and God. 1 Sam. xvii. 9. "Ye shall be our
+servants and serve [Greek: douleusite haemin] us." xii. 24. "Only fear
+the Lord, and serve [Greek: douleusate] him in truth with all your
+heart." xxvi. 19. {59} "They have driven me out from the inheritance of
+the Lord, saying, Go, serve[15] other gods."
+
+ [Footnote 15: [Greek: douleue]. In this case also the Vulgate
+ translates all the three passages alike by the same verb,
+ "servire."]
+
+It is worthy of remark, that the same word "dulia[16]" is employed, when
+the Lord by his prophet speaks of the most solemn acts of religious
+worship; not in general obedience only, but in the offerings and
+oblations of their holy things. Ezek. xx. 40. "In mine holy mountain, in
+the mountain of the height of Israel, saith the Lord God, there shall
+all the house of Israel, all of them in the land, serve me [Greek:
+douleusousi. Vulg: serviet.]; there will I accept them, and there will I
+require your offerings, and the first-fruits of your oblations, with all
+your holy things." St. Matthew also uses the same word when he records
+the saying of our blessed Lord, "Ye cannot serve God and mammon." [Matt.
+vi. 24.; Greek: douleuein. Vulg: servire.]
+
+ [Footnote 16: It is also remarkable that in all these cases,
+ whether the Septuagint employs the word "dulia," or "latria,"
+ the word in the Hebrew is precisely the same, [Hebrew: avad].
+ That in the fifth century the words were synonymous is evident
+ from Theodoret. I. 319. See Edit. Halle.--Index.]
+
+I will only detain you by one more example, drawn from two passages,
+which seems the more striking because each of the two words "dulia" and
+"latria" is used to imply the true worship of God in a person, who was
+changed from a state of alienation to a state of holiness. The first is
+in St. Paul's 1st Epistle to the Thessalonians, i. 9. "How ye turned to
+God from idols, to serve [Greek: douleuein theo zonti] the living and
+true God." The second is in Heb. ix. 14. "How much more shall the blood
+of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself {60} without
+spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve[17] the
+living God."
+
+ [Footnote 17: [Greek: latoeuein theo zonti.] In each of these
+ two cases the Vulgate uses "servire."]
+
+The word "hyperdulia," now used to signify the worship proper to the
+Virgin Mary, as being a worship of a more exalted character than the
+worship offered to saints and angels, archangels, and cherubim and
+seraphim, will not require a similar examination. The word was invented
+in later times, and has been used chiefly to signify the worship of the
+Virgin, and is of course found neither in the Scriptures, nor in any
+ancient classical or ecclesiastical author. {61}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SECTION I.--THE EVIDENCE OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.
+
+
+Before we enter upon the next branch of our proposed inquiry, allow me
+to premise that I am induced to examine into the evidence of Christian
+antiquity not by any misgiving, lest the testimony of Scripture might
+appear defective or doubtful; far less by any unworthy notion that God's
+word needs the additional support of the suffrages of man[18]. On the
+contrary, the voice of God in his revealed word is clear, certain, and
+indisputable, commanding the invocation of Himself alone in acts of
+religious worship, and condemning any such departure from that
+singleness of adoration, as they are {62} seduced into, who invoke
+saints and angels. And it is a fixed principle in our creed, that where
+God's written word is clear and certain, human evidence cannot be
+weighed against it in the balance of the sanctuary. When the Lord hath
+spoken, well does it become the whole earth to be silent before him;
+when the eternal Judge Himself hath decided, the witness of man bears on
+its very face the stamp of incompetency and presumption.
+
+ [Footnote 18: While some authors seem to go far towards the
+ substitution of the fathers for the written word of God, others
+ in their abhorrence of that excess have run into the opposite,
+ fancying, as it would seem, that they exalt the Divine oracles
+ just in the same proportion as they disparage the uninspired
+ writers of the Church. The great body of the Church of England
+ adhere to a middle course, and adopt that golden mean, which
+ ascribes to the written Word its paramount authority, from which
+ is no appeal, and yet honours Catholic tradition as the handmaid
+ of the truth.]
+
+For myself I can say (what I have good hope these pages will of
+themselves evince) that no one can value the testimony of Christian
+tradition within its own legitimate sphere more sincerely, or more
+highly, than the individual who is now soliciting your attention to the
+conclusions which he has himself drawn from it. When Scripture is
+silent, or where its meaning is doubtful, Catholic tradition is to me a
+guide, which I feel myself bound to follow with watchful care and
+submissive reverence.
+
+Now let it be for the present supposed, that instead of the oracles of
+God having spoken, as we believe them to have spoken, with a voice
+clear, strong, and uniform against the doctrine and practice of the
+invocation of saints and angels, their voices had been weak, doubtful,
+and vague; in other words, suppose in this case the question had been
+left by the Holy Scriptures an open question, then what evidence would
+have been deducible from the writings of the primitive Church? What
+testimony do the first years and the first ages after the canon of
+Scripture was closed, bear upon this point? And here I would repeat the
+principle of inquiry, proposed above for our adoption in the more
+important and solemn examination of the Holy Volume itself.--We ought to
+endeavour to ascertain what may {63} fairly and honestly be regarded as
+the real bearing of each author's remains, and not suffer the general
+tone and spirit of a writer to be counterbalanced by single expressions,
+which may be so interpreted as to convey an opposite meaning. Rather we
+should endeavour to reconcile with that general spirit and pervading
+tendency of a writer's sentiments any casual expressions which may admit
+of two acceptations. We adopt this principle in our researches into the
+remains of classical antiquity; we adopt the same principle in
+estimating the testimony of a living witness. In the latter case,
+indeed, the ingenuity of the adverse advocate is often exercised in
+magnifying the discrepancies between some minor facts or incidental
+expressions with the broad and leading assertions of the witness, with a
+view to invalidate his testimony altogether, or at least to weaken the
+impression made by it. But then a wise and upright judge, assured of the
+truth of the evidence in the main, and of the integrity of the
+individual, will not suffer unessential, apparent inconsistencies to
+stifle and bury the body of testimony at large, but will either extract
+from the witness what may account for them, or show them to be
+immaterial. Inviting, therefore, your best thoughts to this branch of
+our subject, I ask you to ascertain, by a full and candid process of
+induction, this important and interesting point,--Whether we of the
+Anglican Church, by religiously abstaining from the presentation, in
+word or in thought, of any thing approaching prayer or supplication,
+entreaty, request, or any invocation whatever, to any other being except
+God alone, do or do not tread in the steps of the first Christians, and
+adhere to the very pattern which they set; and whether members of the
+Church of Rome by addressing angel or saint in any form of invocation
+seeking {64} their aid, either by their intercession or otherwise, have
+not unhappily swerved decidedly and far from those same footsteps, and
+departed widely from that pattern?
+
+In one point of view it might perhaps be preferable to enter at once
+upon our investigation, without previously stating the conclusions to
+which my own inquiries have led; but, on the whole, I think it more fair
+to make that statement, in order, that having the inferences already
+drawn placed before the mind, the inquirer may in each case weigh the
+several items of evidence bearing upon them separately, and more justly
+estimate its whole weight collectively at the last.
+
+After then having examined the passages collected by the most celebrated
+Roman Catholic writers, and after having searched the undisputed
+original works of the primitive writers of the Greek and Latin Churches,
+the conclusion to which I came, and in which every day of further
+inquiry and deliberation confirms me more and more in this:--
+
+In the first place, negatively, that the Christian writers, through the
+first three centuries and more, never refer to the invocation of saints
+and angels as a practice with which they were familiar: that they have
+not recorded or alluded to any forms of invocation of the kind used by
+themselves or by the Church in their days; and that no services of the
+earliest times contain hymns, litanies, or collects to angels, or to the
+spirits of the faithful departed.
+
+In the second place, positively, that the principles which they
+habitually maintain and advocate are irreconcileable with such a
+practice.
+
+In tracing the history of the worship of saints and angels, we proceed
+(gradually, indeed, though by no {65} means at all periods, and through
+every stage, with equal rapidity,) from the earliest custom established
+and practised in the Church,--of addressing prayers to Almighty God
+alone for the sake of the merits of his blessed Son, the only Mediator
+and Intercessor between God and man,--to the lamentable innovation both
+of praying to God for the sake of the merits, and through the mediation
+of departed mortals, and of invoking those mortals themselves as the
+actual dispensers of the spiritual blessings which the suppliant seeks
+from above. It is not only a necessary part of our inquiry for
+ascertaining the very truth of the case; it is also curious and
+painfully interesting, to trace the several steps, one after another,
+beginning with the doctrine maintained by various early writers, both
+Greek and Latin, that the souls of the saints are not yet reigning with
+Christ in heaven, and ending with the anathema of the Council of Trent,
+against all who should maintain that doctrine; beginning with prayer and
+thanksgiving to Almighty God alone, and ending with daily prayers both
+to saints and angels; one deviation from the strict line of religious
+duty, and the pure singleness of Christian worship, successively gliding
+into another, till at length the whole of Christendom, with a few
+remarkable exceptions, was seen to acquiesce in public and private
+devotions, which, if proposed, the whole of Christendom would once with
+unanimity have rejected.
+
+Before I offer to you the result of my inquiries as to the progressive
+stages of degeneracy and innovation in the worship of Almighty God, I
+would premise two considerations:
+
+First, I would observe, that the soundness of my conclusion on the
+general points at issue does not depend at all on the accuracy of the
+arrangement of those stages {66} which I have adopted. Should any one,
+for example, think there is evidence that two or more of those
+progressive steps, which I have regarded as consecutive, were
+simultaneous changes, or that any one which I have ranked as subsequent
+took rather the lead in order of time, such an opinion would not tend in
+the least to invalidate my argument; the substantial and essential point
+at issue being this: Is the invocation of saints and angels, as now
+practised in the Church of Rome, agreeable to the primitive usage of the
+earliest Christians?
+
+Secondly, I would observe, that the places and occasions most favourable
+for witnessing and correctly estimating the changes and gradual
+innovations in the worship of those early times, are the tombs of the
+martyrs, and the Churches in which their remains were deposited; and at
+the periods of the annual celebration of their martyrdom, or in some
+instances at what was called their translation,--the removal, that is,
+of their mortal remains from their former resting-place to a church, for
+the most part dedicated to their memory. On these occasions the most
+extraordinary enthusiasm prevailed; sometimes the ardour of the
+worshippers, as St. Chrysostom [St. Chrys. Paris, 1718. Vol. xii. p.
+330.] tells us, approaching madness. But even at times of less
+excitement, by contemplating, immediately after his death, the acts and
+sufferings of the martyr, and recalling his words, and looks, and
+stedfast bearing, and exhorting each other to picture to themselves his
+holy countenance then fixed on them, his tongue addressing them, his
+sufferings before their eyes, encouraging all to follow his example,
+they began habitually to consider him as actually himself one of the
+faithful assembled round {67} his tomb. Hence they believed that he was
+praying with them as well as for them; that he heard their eulogy on his
+merits, and was pleased with the honours paid to his memory: hence they
+felt sure of his goodwill towards them, and his ability, as when on
+earth, to promote their welfare. Hence they proceeded, by a fatal step,
+first, to implore him to give them bodily relief from some present
+sufferings; then invoking him to plead their cause with God, and to
+intercede for the supply of their spiritual wants, and the ultimate
+salvation of their souls; and, lastly, they prayed to him generally as
+himself the dispenser of temporal and spiritual blessings.
+
+The following then is the order in which the innovations in Christian
+worship seem to have taken place, being chiefly introduced at the annual
+celebrations of the martyrs:--
+
+1st. In the first ages confession and prayer and praise were offered to
+the Supreme Being alone, and that for the sake of his Son our only
+Saviour and Advocate: when mention was made of saint or martyr, it was
+to thank God for the graces bestowed on his departed holy ones when on
+earth, and to pray to God for grace that we might follow their good
+examples, and attain, through Christ, to the same end and crown of our
+earthly struggles. This act of worship was usually accompanied by a
+homily setting forth the Christian excellences of the saint, and
+encouraging the survivors so to follow him, as he followed Christ.
+
+2nd. The second stage seems to have been a prayer to Almighty God, that
+He would suffer the supplications and intercessions[19] of angels and
+saints to prevail {68} with him, and bring down a blessing on their
+fellow-petitioners on earth; the idea having spread among enthusiastic
+worshippers, as I have already observed, that the spirits of the saints
+were suffered to be present around their tombs, and to join with the
+faithful in their addresses to the throne of grace.
+
+ [Footnote 19: The Greek word [Greek: presbeia], "embassy,"
+ employed on such occasions, is still used in some eastern
+ Churches in the same sense.]
+
+3rd. The third stage seems to have owed its origin to orators constantly
+dwelling upon the excellences of the saints in the panegyrics delivered
+over their remains, representing their constancy and Christian virtues
+as superhuman and divine, and as having conferred lasting benefits on
+the Church. By these benefits at first was meant the comfort and
+encouragement of their good example, and the honour procured to the
+religion of the cross by their bearing witness to its truth even unto
+death; but in process of time the habit grew of attaching a sort of
+mysterious efficacy to their merits; hence this third gradation in
+religious worship, namely, prayers to God that "He would hear his
+suppliants, and grant their requests for the sake of his martyred
+servant, and by the efficacy of that martyr's merits."
+
+4th. Hitherto, unauthorized and objectionable as the two last forms of
+prayer are, still the petitions in each case were directed to God alone.
+The next step swerved lamentably from that principle of worship, and the
+petitioners addressed their requests to angels and sainted men in
+heaven; at first, however, confining their petitions to the asking for
+their prayers and intercessions with Almighty God.
+
+5th. The last stage in this progressive degeneracy of Christian worship
+was to petition the saints and angels, directly and immediately
+themselves, at first for the temporal, and afterwards for the spiritual
+benefits which the petitioners desired to obtain from heaven. For it
+{69} is very curious, but not more curious than evident, that the
+worshippers seem for some time to have petitioned their saints for
+temporal and bodily benefits, before they proceeded to ask for spiritual
+blessings at their hands, or by their prayers. (See Basil. Oral. in
+Mamanta Martyrem.)
+
+Of these several gradations and stages we find traces in the records of
+Christian antiquity, after superstition and corruption had spread
+through Christian worship, and leavened the whole. Of all of them we
+have lamentable instances in the present ritual of the Church of Rome,
+as we shall see somewhat at large when we reach that division of our
+inquiry. But from the beginning it was not so. In the earliest ages we
+find only the first of these forms of worship exemplified, and it is the
+only form now retained in the Anglican Ritual; of which, among other
+examples, the following passage in the prayer for Christ's Church
+militant on earth supplies a beautiful specimen: "We bless Thy holy name
+for all Thy servants departed this life in Thy faith and fear;
+beseeching Thee to give us grace so to follow their good examples, that
+with them we may be partakers of Thy heavenly kingdom: Grant this, O
+Father, for Jesus Christ's sake, our only Mediator and Advocate. Amen."
+
+We now proceed to examine the invaluable remains of Christian antiquity,
+not for the purpose of testing the accuracy of the above catalogue of
+gradations _seriatim_ and in order of time; but to satisfy ourselves on
+the question, whether the invocation of saints and angels prevailed from
+the first in the Christian Church; or whether it was an innovation
+introduced after pagan superstition had begun to mingle its poisonous
+corruptions with the pure worship of {70} Almighty God. And here, I
+conceive, few persons will be disposed to doubt, that if the primitive
+believers were taught by the Apostles to address the saints reigning in
+heaven and the holy angels, and the Virgin Mother of our Lord, with
+adoration and prayers, the earliest Christian records must have
+contained clear and indisputable references to the fact, and that
+undesigned allusions to the custom would inevitably be found offering
+themselves to our notice here and there. I do not mean that we should
+expect to meet with full and explicit statements either of the doctrine
+or the practice of the primitive Church in this particular; much less
+such apologies and elaborate defences of the practice as abound to the
+overflow in later times. But, what is more satisfactory in proof of the
+general and established prevalence of any opinions or customs, we should
+surely find expressions incidentally occurring, which implied an
+habitual familiarity with such opinions or customs. In every record, for
+example, of primitive antiquity, from the very earliest of all,
+expressions are constantly meeting us which involve the doctrine of the
+ever-blessed Trinity, the atoning sacrifice of Christ's death, the
+influences of the Holy Spirit; habitual prayer and praise offered to the
+Saviour of the world, as very and eternal God; the holy Sacraments of
+Baptism and the Lord's Supper; with other tenets and practices of the
+Apostolic Church. It is impossible to study the remains of Christian
+antiquity without being assured beyond the reach of doubt, that such
+were the doctrines and practice of the universal Church from the days of
+the Apostles. Is the invocation of saints and angels and the blessed
+Virgin to be made an exception to this rule? Can it stand this test? The
+great anxiety and labour of Roman Catholic {71} writers to press the
+authors of every age to bear witness on their side in this behalf,
+proves that in their judgment no such exception is admissible. It is
+clearly beyond gainsaying, that if the present doctrine of the Church of
+Rome, with respect to the worship of angels and saints, as propounded by
+the Council of Trent; and if her present practice as set forth in her
+authorized liturgies and devotional services, and professed by her
+popes, bishops, clergy, and people, had been the doctrine and practice
+of the primitive Church, we should have found evident and indisputable
+traces of it in the earliest works of primitive antiquity, in the
+earliest liturgies, and in the forms of prayer and exhortations to
+prayer with which those works abound. It by no means follows that if
+some such allusions were partially discoverable, therefore the doctrines
+and practice must forthwith be pronounced to be apostolical; but if no
+such traces can be found, their absence bears witness that neither did
+those doctrines nor that practice exist. If, for example, through the
+remains of the first three centuries we could have discovered no trace
+of the doctrine or practice of holy Baptism and the Eucharist, we must
+have concluded that the doctrine and the practice were the offspring of
+later years. But when we read every where, in those remains,
+exhortations to approach those holy mysteries with a pure heart and
+faith unfeigned; when we find rules prescribed for the more orderly
+administration of the rites; in a word, when we perceive throughout as
+familiar references to these ordinances as could be now made by
+Catholics either of Rome or of England, while this would not of itself
+necessarily prove their divine origin, we should with equal plausibility
+question the existence of Jerusalem or Constantinople, or of David or
+Constantine, as we {72} should doubt the prevalence both of the doctrine
+and practice of the Church in these particulars, even from the Apostles'
+days.
+
+With these principles present to our minds, I now invite you to
+accompany me in a review of the testimonies of primitive Christian
+antiquity with regard to supplications and invocations of saints and
+angels, and of the blessed Virgin Mary.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II--CENTURY I.--THE EVIDENCE OF THE APOSTOLIC FATHERS.
+
+
+It will be necessary for the satisfaction of all parties, that we
+examine, in the first place, those ancient writings which are ascribed
+to an Apostle, or to fellow-labourers of the Apostles; familiarly known
+as the writings of the Apostolic Fathers. They are five in number,
+Barnabas, Clement, Hermas, Ignatius, and Polycarp. Many able writers, as
+well of the Roman as of the Anglican communion, have discussed at large
+the genuineness of these writings; and have come to very different
+results. Some critics are of opposite and extreme opinions, others
+ranging between them with every degree and shade of variation. Some of
+these works have been considered spurious; others have been pronounced
+genuine; though, even these have been thought to be, in many parts,
+interpolated. The question, however, of their genuineness, though deeply
+interesting in itself, will not affect their testimony with {73} regard
+to the subject before us[20]. They were all in existence before the
+Council of Nicæa; and we shall probably not be wrong in assigning to the
+first two a date at the very lowest computation not less remote than the
+middle of the second century; somewhere, it may be, at the furthest,
+about one hundred years after the death of our Lord. (A.D. 130-150.)
+With all their errors and blemishes and interpolations taken at the
+worst, after every reasonable deduction for defects in matter, taste,
+and style, the writings which are ascribed to the Apostolic Fathers are
+too venerable for their antiquity, too often quoted with reverence and
+affection by some who have been the brightest ornaments of the Christian
+Church, and possess too copious a store of genuine evangelical truth,
+sound principle, primitive simplicity, and pious sentiment, to be passed
+over with neglect by any Catholic Christian. The few extracts {74} made
+here will, I am assured, be not unacceptable to any one, who holds dear
+the religion of Christ[21].
+
+ [Footnote 20: I do not think it suitable in this address to
+ enter upon the difficult field of inquiry, whether all or which
+ of these works were the genuine productions of those whose names
+ they bear; and whether the Barnabas, Clement, and Hermas to
+ which three of them are ascribed, were the Barnabas, Clement,
+ and Hermas of whom express mention is made in the pages of Holy
+ Scripture. I have determined, in conducting my argument, to
+ affix to them in each case the lowest proposed antiquity. The
+ edition of Archbishop Wake, (who maintains the highest antiquity
+ for these works, though I have not here adopted his
+ translation,) may be consulted with much profit.
+
+ Did the question before us relate to the genuineness and dates
+ of these works, they could not, with any approach to fairness,
+ be all five placed without distinction under the same category.
+ The evidence for the genuineness of Clement, Ignatius in the
+ shorter copy, and Polycarp, is too valuable to be confounded
+ with that of the others, which are indisputably subject to much
+ greater doubt. But this question has only an incidental bearing
+ on our present inquiry, and will be well spared.]
+
+ [Footnote 21: The edition of the works of these Apostolic
+ Fathers used here is that of Cotelerius as revised by Le Clerc,
+ Antwerp, 1698.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE EPISTLE OF ST. BARNABAS.
+
+In the work entitled The Catholic Epistle of Barnabas, which was written
+probably by a Jew converted to the Christian faith, about the close of
+the first century, or certainly before the middle of the second[22], I
+have searched in vain for any thing like the faintest trace of the
+invocation of saint or angel. The writer gives directions on the subject
+of prayer; he speaks of angels as the ministers of God; he speaks of the
+reward of the righteous at the day of judgment; but he suggests not the
+shadow of a supposition, that he either held the doctrine himself which
+the Church of Rome now holds, or was aware of its existence among
+Christians. In his very beautiful but incomplete summary of Christian
+duty [Sect. 18, 19. p. 50, 51, 52.], which he calls "The Way of Light,"
+we perceive more than one most natural opening for reference to that
+doctrine, had it been familiar to his mind. In the midst indeed of his
+brief precepts of religious and moral obligation, he directs the
+Christian to seek out every day "the persons of the saints," but they
+are our fellow-believers on earth; those saints or holy ones, for
+administering to whose necessities, the Scripture assures us that God
+will not forget our work and labour of love [Heb. vi. 10.]: these the
+author bids the Christians {75} search out daily, for the purposes of
+religious intercourse, and of encouragement by the word.
+
+ [Footnote 22: Archbishop Wake considers this Epistle to have
+ been written by St. Barnabas to the Jews, soon after the
+ destruction of Jerusalem.]
+
+The following interesting extracts shall conclude our reference to this
+work:--
+
+"There are two ways of doctrine and authority, one of light, the other
+of darkness; and the difference between the two ways is great. Over the
+one are appointed angels of God, conductors of the light; over the
+other, angels of Satan: and the one (God) is Lord from everlasting to
+everlasting; the other (Satan) is ruler of the age of iniquity. The way
+of light is this ... Thou shalt love Him that made thee; thou shalt
+glorify Him that redeemed thee from death. Thou shalt be single in
+heart, and rich in spirit. Thou shalt not join thyself to those who are
+walking in the path of death. Thou shalt hate to do what is displeasing
+to God; thou shalt hate all hypocrisy. Thou shalt entertain no evil
+counsel against thy neighbour. Thou shalt not take away thy hand from
+thy son or thy daughter, but shalt teach them the fear of the Lord from
+their youth. Thou shalt communicate with thy neighbour in all things,
+and call not things thine own. Thou shalt not be of a froward tongue,
+for the mouth is the snare of death. To the very utmost of thy power
+keep thy soul chaste. Do not open thine hand to receive, and close it
+against giving. Thou shalt love as the apple of thine eye every one who
+speaketh to thee the word of the Lord. Call to remembrance the day of
+judgment, night and day. Thou shalt search out every day the persons of
+the saints [23]; both meditating by the word, {76} and proceeding to
+exhort them, and anxiously caring to save a soul by the word. Thou shalt
+preserve what thou hast received, neither adding thereto, nor taking
+therefrom. Thou shalt not come with a bad conscience to thy prayer."
+
+ [Footnote 23: There is much obscurity in the phraseology of this
+ passage: [Greek: ekzaetaeseis kath hekastaen haemeran ta prosopa
+ ton hagion kai dia logou skopion kai poreuomenos eis to
+ parakalesai, kai meleton eis sosai psuchaen to logo]. In the
+ corresponding exhortation among the Apostolical Constitutions
+ (book vii. ch. 9), the expression is, "Thou shalt seek the
+ person ([Greek: prosopon]) of the saints, that thou mayest find
+ rest (or find refreshment, or refresh thyself) ([Greek: in
+ epanapanae tois logois auton]) in their words." The author seems
+ evidently to allude to the reciprocal advantage derived by
+ Christians from religious intercourse.]
+
+The closing sentences contain this blessing: "Now God, who is the Lord
+of all the world, give to you wisdom, skill, understanding, knowledge of
+his judgments, with patience. And be ye taught of God; seeking what the
+Lord requires of you, and do it, that ye may be saved in the day of
+judgment.... The Lord of glory and of all grace be with your spirit.
+Amen."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SHEPHERD OF HERMAS.
+
+This work, which derives its title from the circumstance of an angelic
+teacher being represented as a shepherd, is now considered by many to
+have been the production of Hermas, a brother of Pius, Bishop of
+Rome[24] though others are persuaded that the work is of a much earlier
+date[25]. The author speaks of guardian angels and of evil angels, and
+he speaks much of prayer; but not the faintest hint shows itself
+throughout the three books, of which the work consists, that he had {77}
+any idea of prayer being addressed to any created being, whether saint
+or angel. On the evidence of this writer I will not detain you much
+longer than by the translation of a passage as it is found in the Greek
+quotation from Hermas, made by Antiochus (Homil. 85), on a point the
+most nearly, of all that I can find, connected with the immediate
+subject of our inquiry. The Latin is found in the second book, ninth
+mandate. It contains sound spiritual advice, of universal application.
+
+ [Footnote 24: Ecclesiastical writers refer the appointment of
+ Pius, as Bishop of Rome, to the year 153.]
+
+ [Footnote 25: Archbishop Wake thinks it not improbable that this
+ book was written by the same Hermas, of whom mention is made by
+ St. Paul.]
+
+"Let us then remove from us double-heartedness and faint-heartedness,
+and never at all doubt of supplicating any thing from God; saying within
+ourselves, 'How can I, who have been guilty of so many sins against Him,
+ask of the Lord and receive?' But with thine whole heart turn to the
+Lord, and ask of Him without doubting; and thou shalt know his great
+mercy, that He will not forsake thee, but will fulfil the desire of thy
+soul. For God is not as men are, a rememberer of evil, but is Himself
+one who remembers not evil, and is moved with compassion towards his
+creature. Do thou, therefore, cleanse thy heart of doubt, and ask of
+Him, and thou shalt receive thy request. But when thou doubtest, thou
+shalt not receive. For they who doubt towards God are the
+double-hearted, and shall receive nothing whatever of their desires. For
+those who are whole in the faith, ask every thing, trusting in the Lord,
+and they receive because they ask nothing doubting. [See St. James i.
+6.] And if thou shouldest be tardy in receiving, do not doubt in thy
+mind because thou dost not receive soon the request of thy soul. For the
+cause of the tardiness of thy receiving is some trial, or some
+transgression which thou knowest not of. Do thou then {78} not cease to
+offer the request of thy soul, and thou shalt receive it. But if thou
+grow faint in asking, accuse thyself, and not the Giver. For
+double-heartedness is a daughter of the devil, and works much mischief
+towards the servants of God. Do thou, therefore, take to thyself the
+faith that is strong."
+
+In the twelfth section of the ninth Similitude, in the third book, in
+the midst of much to the same import, and of much, too, which is strange
+and altogether unworthy of the pen from which the previous quotation
+proceeded, he thus writes, as the Latin records his words, the Greek of
+this passage having been lost.
+
+"These all are messengers to be reverenced for their dignity. By these,
+therefore, as it were by a wall, the Lord is girded round. But the gate
+is the Son of God, who is the only way to God. For no one shall enter in
+to God except by his Son." [Book iii. Simil. 2.]
+
+On the subject of prayer, I cannot refrain from referring you to a
+beautiful similitude, illustrative of the powerful and beneficial
+effects of the intercession of Christians for each other. The author
+compares a rich man, abounding in deeds of charity, to a vine full of
+fruit supported by an elm. The elm seems not to bear fruit at all; but
+by supporting the vine, which, without that support, would bear no fruit
+to perfection, it may be said to bear fruit itself. So the poor man, who
+has nothing to give in return for the rich man's fruits of charity,
+beyond the support which his prayers and praises ascending to God in his
+behalf will obtain, confers a far more substantial benefit on the rich
+man than the most liberal outpouring of alms from the rich can confer on
+the poor. [Ibid.] Yet the writer, who {79} had formed such strong
+notions of the benefits mutually obtained by the prayers of Christians
+for each other, says not a word about the intercession of saints and
+angels, nor of our invoking them. He will not suffer us to be deterred
+by any consciousness of our own transgressions from approaching God
+Himself, directly and immediately ourselves; but He bids us draw near
+ourselves to the throne and mercy seat of our heavenly Father.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ST. CLEMENT, BISHOP OF ROME.
+
+It is impossible to read the testimony borne by Eusebius, and other most
+ancient writers, to the character and circumstances of Clement, without
+feeling a deep interest in whatever production of his pen may have
+escaped the ravages of time. "Third from the Apostles," says Eusebius,
+"Clement obtained the bishopric of Rome; one who had seen the Apostles
+and conversed with them, and had still the sound of their preaching in
+his ears, and their tradition before his eyes;--and not he alone, for
+many others[26] at that time were still living, who had been taught by
+the Apostles. In the time of this Clement, no small schism having arisen
+among the brethren in Corinth, the Church in Rome sent a most important
+letter to the Corinthians, urging them to return to peace, renewing {80}
+their faith, and [reminding them of] the tradition which had been so
+lately received from the Apostles." [Euseb. Eccl. Hist. v. c. 6.]
+
+ [Footnote 26: See St. Paul to the Philippians, iv. 3. "And I
+ entreat thee also, true yoke-fellow, help those women which
+ laboured with me in the gospel, with Clement also, and with
+ other my fellow-labourers, whose names are in the book of
+ life."]
+
+Of the many works which have been attributed to Clement, it is now
+generally agreed, that one, and only one, can be safely received as
+genuine, whilst some maintain that even that one is not altogether free
+from interpolations, if not itself spurious[27]. But though we must
+believe the other works to have been assigned improperly to Clement; yet
+I have not thought it safe to pass them by unexamined, both because some
+of them are held in high estimation by writers of the Church of Rome,
+and especially because whatever pen first composed them, of their very
+great antiquity there can be entertained no reasonable doubt. Indeed,
+the Apostolical Canons, and the Apostolical Constitutions, both ascribed
+to Clement as their author, acting under the direction of the Apostolic
+Council, stand first among the records of the Councils received by the
+Church of Rome.
+
+ [Footnote 27: Archbishop Wake concludes that this first Epistle
+ was written shortly after the end of Nero's persecution, and
+ before A.D. 70.]
+
+To Clement's first Epistle to the Corinthians, now regarded by many as
+the only genuine work of that primitive writer, the date of which is
+considered by many to be about A.D. 90, Jerome bears this very
+interesting testimony in his book on illustrious men:
+
+"He, Clement, wrote in the person of the Church of Rome, to the Church
+in Corinth, a very useful epistle, which is publicly read in some
+places; in its character agreeing with St. Paul's Epistle to the
+Hebrews, not only in the sense, but even in the words: and indeed the
+resemblance is very striking in each." [Catalogus Scriptorum
+Ecclesiasticorum, Jeron., vol. iv, part ii. p. 107, edit. Benedict.
+Paris, 1706.] {81}
+
+It is impossible to read this Epistle of one of the earliest bishops of
+Christ's flock in the proper frame of mind, without spiritual
+edification. A tone of primitive simplicity pervades it, which is quite
+delightful. His witness to the redemption by the atoning sacrifice of
+Christ's death, and to the life-giving influences of the Spirit of
+grace, is clear, repeated, and direct. His familiar acquaintance with
+the ancient Scriptures is very remarkable; though we might not always
+acquiesce in the critical accuracy of his application. His reference to
+the Epistles written by St. Paul to the same Church at Corinth that he
+was then addressing, affords one of those unobtrusive and undesigned
+collateral evidences to the Holy Scriptures, which are as abundant in
+the primitive writings, as they are invaluable. No one can read this
+Epistle of Clement, without acquiescing in the expression of Jerome,
+that it is "very admirable."
+
+Perhaps in the present work the Epistle of Clement becomes even more
+interesting from the circumstance of his having been a bishop of the
+Church founded by the Apostles themselves in the very place where that
+Church exists, to whose members this inquiry is more especially
+addressed. In his writings I have searched diligently for every
+expression which might throw light upon the opinions and practice either
+of the author or of the Church in whose name he wrote; of the Church
+which he addressed, or of the Catholic Church at large to which he
+refers, on the subject of our inquiry. So far, however, from any word
+occurring, which could be brought to bear in favour of the adoration of
+saints and angels, or of any supplication to them for their succour or
+their prayers, the peculiar turn and character of his Epistle in many
+parts seems to supply {82} more than negative evidence against the
+prevalence of any such belief or practice. Clement speaks of angels; he
+speaks of the holy men of old, who pleased God, and were blessed, and
+were taken to their reward; he speaks of prayer; he urges to prayer; he
+specifies the object of our prayers; he particularizes the subjects of
+our prayers; but there is not the most distant allusion to the saints
+and angels as persons to whom supplications could be addressed. Pray for
+yourselves (such are the sentiments of this holy man); pray for your
+brethren who have fallen from their integrity; pray to God Almighty, for
+the sake of his Son, and your prayer will be heard and granted. Of any
+other intercessor or advocate, angel, saint, or Virgin Mother; of any
+other being to whom the invocations of the faithful should be offered,
+Clement seems to have had no knowledge. Could this have been so, if
+those who received the Gospel from the very fountain-head had been
+accustomed to pray to those holy men who had finished their course on
+earth, and were gone to their reward in heaven? Clement invites us to
+contemplate Enoch, and Abraham, and David, and Elijah, and Job, with
+many of their brethren in faith and holiness; he bids us look to them
+with reverence and gratitude, but it is only to imitate their good
+examples. He tells us to think of St. Paul and St. Peter and their
+brethren in faith and holiness; but it is in order to listen to their
+godly admonitions, and to follow them in all pious obedience to the will
+of our heavenly Father, as they followed Christ. I must content myself
+with a very few brief extracts from this Epistle[28]:
+
+ [Footnote 28: I am induced to mention here that two Epistles,
+ ascribed to St. Clement, written in Arabic, and now appended to
+ Wetstein's Greek Testament (Amsterdam, 1751), are believed by
+ many to be genuine, whilst others say they are spurious. At all
+ events they are productions of the earliest times. The
+ manuscript was procured at Constantinople. I have examined the
+ Latin translation carefully, and in some points submitted my
+ doubts to a very learned Syriac scholar. The general subject is
+ the conduct of those who have professed celibacy, whilst of the
+ invocation of saints no trace whatever is to be found. The
+ passages most closely bearing on the point before us are to the
+ following effect:
+
+ The writer urges Christians to be careful to maintain good
+ works, especially in the cause of charity, visiting the sick and
+ afflicted, praying with them, and praying for them, and
+ persevering always in prayer; asking and seeking of God in joy
+ and watchfulness, without hatred or malice. In the Lord's
+ husbandry, he says, it well becomes us to be good workmen, who
+ are like the Apostles, imitating the Father, the Son, and the
+ Holy Ghost, who are ever anxious for the salvation of men.
+
+ "Therefore (he adds, at the close of the first of these
+ Epistles) let us look to and imitate those faithful ones, that
+ we may behave ourselves as is meet in the Lord. So shall we
+ serve the Lord, and please him, in righteousness and justice
+ without a stain. Finally, farewell in the Lord, and rejoice in
+ the Lord, all ye holy ones. Peace and joy be with you from God
+ the Father, by Jesus Christ our Lord."] {83}
+
+Ch. 21. "Take heed, beloved, lest the many loving-kindnesses of the Lord
+prove our condemnation, if we do not live as is worthy of him, nor do
+with one accord what is good and well-pleasing in his sight.... Let us
+consider how nigh to us he is, and that nothing of our thoughts or
+reasonings is concealed from him. Justice it is that we should not
+become deserters from his will.... Let us venerate the Lord Jesus, whose
+blood was given for us."
+
+Ch. 29. "Let us then approach him in holiness of soul, lifting up holy
+and undefiled hands towards him; loving our merciful and tender Father
+who hath made us a portion of his elect." {84}
+
+Ch. 36. "This is the way, beloved, in which we find Jesus Christ our
+salvation, the chief-priest of our offerings, our protector, and the
+succourer of our weakness. By him let us look stedfastly to the heights
+of heaven; by him let us behold his most high and spotless face: by him
+the eyes of our heart are opened; by him our ignorant and darkened minds
+shoot forth into his marvellous light; by him the Supreme Governor
+willed that we should taste immortal knowledge: who, being the
+brightness of his magnificence, is so much greater than the angels, as
+he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they."
+
+Ch. 49. "He who hath love in Christ, let him keep the commandments of
+Christ. Who can tell of the bond of the love of God? The greatness of
+his goodness who can adequately express?... Love unites us to God.... By
+love the Lord took us; by the love which he had for us Christ our Lord
+gave his blood for us by the will of God, and his flesh for our flesh,
+and his life for our lives."
+
+Ch. 56. "Let us pray for those who are in any transgression, that
+meekness and humility may be granted to them; that they may submit, not
+to us, but to the will of God; for thus to them will the remembrance
+towards God and the saints, with mercies, be fruitful and perfect[29]."
+
+ [Footnote 29: The original is obscure, and has been variously
+ rendered, [Greek: outos gar estai autois egkarpos kai teleia hae
+ pros ton theon kai tous hagious met oiktirmon mneia.] The Editor
+ refers his readers to Rom. xii. 13. "Distributing to the
+ necessity of saints." The received translation is this, "Sic
+ enim erit ipsis fructuosa et perfecta quæ est apud Deum et
+ sanctos cum misericordia recordatio."]
+
+Ch. 58. "The all-seeing God, the Sovereign Ruler {85} of spirits, and
+the Lord of all flesh, who hath chosen the Lord Jesus, and us through
+him, to be a peculiar people; grant to every soul that calleth on his
+glorious and holy name, faith, fear, peace, patience, long-suffering,
+self-control, purity, and temperance, to the good pleasure of his name,
+through our high-priest and protector Jesus Christ; through whom to him
+be glory and majesty, dominion and honour, now and for ever and ever,
+world without end. Amen."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT IGNATIUS.
+
+This martyr to the truth as it is in Jesus sealed that truth with his
+blood about seventy years after the death of our Lord. From Antioch in
+Syria, of which place he was bishop, he was sent to the imperial city,
+Rome; and there he ended his mortal career by a death which he had long
+expected, and which he was prepared to meet not only with resignation to
+the Divine will, but even with joy and gladness. His Epistles are
+written with much of the florid colouring of Asiatic eloquence; but they
+have all the raciness of originality, and they glow with that Christian
+fervour and charity which compels us to love him as a father and a
+friend, a father and friend in Christ. The remains of this apostolic
+father I have carefully studied, with the single view of ascertaining
+whether any vestige, however faint, might be traced in him of the
+invocation of saints and angels; but I can find none. Neither here, nor
+in the case of any of the apostolical fathers, whose remains we are
+examining, have I contented myself with merely ascertaining that they
+bear no direct and palpable evidence; I have always endeavoured to find,
+and then thoroughly to sift, any expressions which might with {86} the
+slightest plea of justification be urged in testimony of primitive
+belief and practice sanctioning the invocation of saints. I find none.
+Brethren of the Church of Rome, search diligently for yourselves; "I
+speak as to wise men: Judge ye what I say."
+
+The remains of Ignatius offer to us many a passage on which a Christian
+pastor would delight to dwell: but my province here is not to recommend
+his works to the notice of Christians; I am only to report the result of
+my inquiries touching the matter in question; and as bearing on that
+question, the following extracts will not be deemed burdensome in this
+place:--
+
+In his Epistle to the Ephesians, exhorting Christians to united prayer,
+he says, "For if the prayer of one or two possesses such strength, how
+much more shall the prayer both of the bishop and of the whole Church?"
+[Page 13. § 5-7.] "For there is one physician of a corporeal and a
+spiritual nature, begotten and not begotten; become God in the flesh,
+true life in death, both from Mary and from God; first liable to
+suffering, and then incapable of suffering." [In the majority of the
+manuscripts the reading is, "in an immortal true life."]
+
+Here we must observe that these Epistles of Ignatius have come down to
+us also in an interpolated form, abounding indeed with substitutions and
+additions, but generally resembling paraphrases of the original text. Of
+the general character of that supposititious work, two passages
+corresponding with our quotations from the genuine productions of
+Ignatius may give a sufficiently accurate idea. The first passage above
+quoted is thus paraphrased: "For if the prayer of one or two possesses
+{87} such strength that Christ stands among them, how much more shall
+the prayer both of the bishop and of the whole Church, ascending with
+one voice to God, induce him to grant all their requests made in Jesus
+Christ?" [Page 47. c. 5.] The paraphrase of the second is more full:
+"Our physician is the only true God, ungenerated and unapproachable; the
+Lord of all things, but the Father and Generator of the only-begotten
+Son. We have also as our physician our Lord God, Jesus Christ, who was
+before the world, the only-begotten Son and the Word, but also
+afterwards man of the Virgin Mary; 'for the Word was made flesh.' He who
+was incorporeal, now in a body; he who could not suffer, now in a body
+capable of suffering; he who was immortal in a mortal body, life in
+corruption--in order that he might free our immortal souls from death
+and corruption, and heal them, diseased with ungodliness and evil
+desires as they were." [Page 48. c. 7.]
+
+It must here be observed, that though these are indisputably not the
+genuine works of Ignatius, but were the productions of a later age, yet
+no trace is to be found in them of the doctrine, or practice, of the
+invocation of saints. In this point of view their testimony is nothing
+more nor less than that of an anonymous paraphrast, who certainly had
+many opportunities of referring to that doctrine and practice; but who
+by his total silence seems to have been as ignorant of them as the
+author himself whose works he is paraphrasing.
+
+To return to his genuine works: In his Epistle to the Magnesians we find
+these expressions: "For as the Lord did nothing without the Father,
+being one with {88} him, neither by himself, nor by his Apostles; so
+neither do ye any thing without the bishop and priests, nor attempt to
+make any thing appear reasonable to yourselves individually. But at one
+place be there one prayer, and one supplication, one mind, one hope in
+love, in blameless rejoicing: Jesus Christ is one; than which nothing is
+better. All, then, throng as to one temple, as to one altar, as to one
+Jesus Christ, who proceeded from one Father, and is in one, and returned
+to one." [Page 19. § 7.] Again he says, "Remember me in your prayers,
+that I may attain to God. I am in need of your united prayer in God, and
+of your love."
+
+In his Epistle to the Trallians, he expresses himself in words to which
+no Anglican Catholic would hesitate to respond: "Ye ought to comfort the
+bishop, to the honour of God, and of Jesus Christ, and of the Apostles."
+[Page 25. § 12.] He speaks in this Epistle with humility and reverence
+of the powers and hosts of heaven; but he makes no allusion to any
+religious worship or invocation of them.
+
+The following extract is from his Epistle to the Philadelphians: "My
+brethren, I am altogether poured forth in love for you; and in exceeding
+joy I make you secure; yet not I, but Jesus Christ, bound in whom I am
+the more afraid, as being already seized[30]; but your prayer to God
+will perfect me, that I may obtain the lot mercifully assigned to me.
+Betaking myself to the Gospel as to the flesh of Jesus, and to the
+Apostles as the presbytery of the Church; let us also love the prophets,
+because they also have proclaimed the Gospel, and hoped in him, and
+waited for him; in whom also {89} trusting, they were saved in the unity
+of Jesus Christ, being holy ones worthy of love and admiration, who have
+received testimony from Jesus Christ, and are numbered together in the
+Gospel of our common hope." [Page 32. § 5.]
+
+ [Footnote 30: This clause is very obscure, and perhaps
+ imperfect.]
+
+I am induced to add the paraphrase on this passage also. "My brethren, I
+am very much poured out in loving you, and with exceeding joy I make you
+secure; not I, but by me, Jesus Christ, in whom bound I am the more
+afraid. For I am yet not perfected, but your prayer to God will perfect
+me; so that I may obtain that to which I was called, flying to the
+Gospel as the flesh of Jesus Christ, and to the Apostles as the
+presbytery of the Church. And the prophets also I love, as persons who
+announce Christ, as partaking of the same spirit with the Apostles. For
+just as the false prophets and false apostles have drawn one and the
+same wicked and deceitful and seducing spirit, so also the prophets and
+the apostles, one and the same holy spirit, good, leading, true, and
+instructing. For one is the God of the Old and the New Testament. One is
+Mediator between God and man, for the production of the creatures endued
+with reason and perception, and for the provision of what is useful, and
+adapted to them: and one is the Comforter who wrought in Moses and the
+prophets and the apostles. All the saints therefore were saved in
+Christ, hoping in him, and waiting for him; and through him they
+obtained salvation, being saints worthy of love and of admiration,
+having obtained a testimony from Jesus Christ in the Gospel of our
+common hope." [Page 81. § 5.]
+
+In his Epistle to the Romans he speaks to them of his own prayer to God,
+and repeatedly implores them {90} to pray for him. "Pray to Christ for
+me, that by these instruments [the teeth of the wild beasts] I may
+become a sacrifice of God. I do not, as Peter and Paul, command you:
+they were Apostles, I am a condemned man. They were free; but I am still
+a servant. Yet if I suffer, I shall become the freedman of Jesus Christ,
+and shall rise again free: and now in my bonds I learn to covet
+nothing." [Page 28. § 4.] Again he says, "Remember the Church in Syria
+in your prayers." [Page 30. § 9.] He prays for his fellow-labourers in
+the Lord: he implores them to approach the throne of grace with
+supplications for mercy on his own soul. Of prayer to saint or angel he
+says nothing. Of any invocation offered to them by himself or his
+fellow-believers, Ignatius appears entirely ignorant.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT POLYCARP.
+
+The only remaining name among those, whom the Church has reverenced as
+apostolical fathers, is the venerable Polycarp. He suffered martyrdom by
+fire, at a very advanced age, in Smyrna, about one hundred and thirty
+years after his Saviour's death. Of Polycarp, the apostolical bishop of
+the Catholic Church of Smyrna, only one Epistle has survived. It is
+addressed to the Philippians. In it he speaks to his brother Christians
+of prayer, constant, incessant prayer; but the prayer of which he speaks
+is supplication addressed only to God [31]. He marks out for our
+imitation the good example of St. Paul and the other Apostles; assuring
+us that they had not run in vain, {91} but were gone to the place
+prepared for them by the Lord, as the reward of their labours. But not
+one word does he utter bearing upon the invocation of saints in prayer;
+he makes no allusion to the Virgin Mary.
+
+ [Footnote 31: [Greek: deaesesin aitoumenoi ton pantepoptaen
+ Theon]. Sect. 7.]
+
+Before we close our examination of the recorded sentiments of the
+apostolical fathers on the immediate subject of our inquiry, we must
+refer, though briefly, to the Epistle generally received as the genuine
+letter from the Church of Smyrna to the neighbouring Churches, narrating
+the martyrdom of Polycarp. It belongs, perhaps, more strictly to this
+place than to the remains of Eusebius, because, together with the
+sentiments of his contemporaries who witnessed his death and dictated
+the letter, it purports to contain the very words of the martyr himself
+in the last prayer which he ever offered upon earth. With some
+variations from the copy generally circulated, this letter is preserved
+in the works of Eusebius. [Euseb. Paris, 1628, dedicated to the
+Archbishop by Franciscus Vigerus.] On the subject of our present
+research the evidence of this letter is not merely negative. So far from
+countenancing any invocation of saint or martyr, it contains a
+remarkable and very interesting passage, the plain common-sense
+rendering of which bears decidedly against all exaltation of mortals
+into objects of religious worship. The letter, however, is too well
+known to need any further preliminary remarks; and we must content
+ourselves with such references and extracts as may appear to bear most
+directly on our subject.
+
+"The Church of God, which is in Smyrna, to the Church in Philomela, and
+to all the branches [Greek: paroikais] {92} of the holy Catholic Church
+dwelling in any place, mercy, peace, and love of God the Father, and our
+Lord Jesus Christ be multiplied." [Book i. Hist. iv. c. xv. p. 163.]
+
+"The Proconsul, in astonishment, caused it to be proclaimed thrice,
+Polycarp has confessed himself to be a Christian. On this they all
+shouted, that the Proconsul should let a lion loose on Polycarp. But the
+games were over, and that could not be done: they then with one accord
+insisted on his being burnt alive."
+
+Polycarp, before his death, offered this prayer, or rather perhaps we
+should call it this thanksgiving, to God for his mercy in thus deeming
+him worthy to suffer death for the truth, "Father of thy beloved and
+blessed Son Jesus Christ, by whom we have received our knowledge
+concerning thee, the God of angels and power, and of the whole creation,
+and of the whole family of the just, who live before thee; I bless thee
+because thou hast deemed me worthy of this day and this hour to receive
+my portion among the number of the martyrs, in the cup of Christ, to the
+resurrection both of soul and body in the incorruption of the Holy
+Ghost; among whom may I be received before thee this day in a rich and
+acceptable sacrifice, even as thou, the true God, who canst not lie,
+foreshowing and fulfilling, hast beforehand prepared. For this, and for
+all I praise thee, I bless thee; I glorify thee, through the eternal
+high-priest Jesus Christ thy beloved Son, through whom to thee, with him
+in the Holy Ghost, be glory both now and for future ages. Amen."
+
+(I cannot help suggesting a comparison between the prayer of this
+primitive martyr bound to the stake, with the prayer of Thomas Becket,
+of Canterbury, as stated in the ancient services for his day, when he
+was murdered in his own cathedral, to which we shall hereafter refer at
+length. The comparison will impress us with the difference between
+religion and superstition, between the purity of primitive Christian
+worship, and the unhappy corruptions of a degenerate age. "To God and
+the Blessed Mary, and Saint Dionysius, and the holy patrons of this
+Church, I commend myself and the Church.") {93}
+
+After his death, the narrative proceeds, "But the envious adversary of
+the just observed the honour put upon the greatness of his testimony,
+[or of his martyrdom [Greek: to megethos autou taes marturias],] and his
+blameless life from the first, and knowing that he was now crowned with
+immortality, and the prize of undoubted victory, resisted, though many
+of us desired to take his body, and have fellowship with his holy flesh.
+Some then suggested to Nicetes, the father of Herod, and brother of
+Dalce, to entreat the governor not to give his body, 'Lest,' said he,
+'leaving the crucified One they should begin to worship this man [Greek:
+sebein];' and this they said at the suggestion and importunity of the
+Jews, who also watched us when we would take the body from the fire.
+This they did, not knowing that we can never either leave Christ, who
+suffered for the salvation of all who will be saved in all the world, or
+worship any other." [The Paris translation adds "ut Deum."] "For him
+being the Son of God we worship [Greek: proskunumen], but the martyrs,
+as disciples and imitators of our Lord, we worthily love[32], because of
+their pre-eminent [Greek: anuperblaeton] good-will towards their {94}
+own king and teacher, with whom may we become partakers and
+fellow-disciples."
+
+ [Footnote 32: [Greek: axios agapomen]. Ruffinus translates it by
+ "diligimus et veneramur," and it is so quoted by Bellarmin.]
+
+"The centurion, seeing the determination of the Jews, placed him in the
+midst, and burnt him as their manner is. And thus we collecting his
+bones, more valuable than precious stones, and more esteemed than gold,
+we deposited them where it was meet. There, as we are able, collecting
+ourselves together in rejoicing and gladness, the Lord will grant to us
+to observe the birth-day of his martyrdom, for the remembrance of those
+who have before undergone the conflict, and for exercise and preparation
+of those who are to come." [Greek: hos dunaton haemin sunagomenois en
+agalliasei kai chara parexei ho Kurios epitelein taen tou martyriou
+autou haemeran genethlion, eis te ton proaethlaekoton mnaemaen, kai ton
+mellonton askaesin te kai hetoimasian.]
+
+In this relic of primitive antiquity, we have the prayer of a holy
+martyr, at his last hour, offered to God alone, through Christ alone.
+Here we find no allusion to any other intercessor; no commending of the
+dying Christian's soul to saint or angel. Here also we find an explicit
+declaration, that Christians offered religious worship to no one but
+Christ, whilst they loved the martyrs, and kept their names in grateful
+remembrance, and honoured even their ashes when the spirit had fled.
+Polycarp pleads no other merits; he seeks no intercession; he prays for
+no aid, save only his Redeemer's. Here too we find, that the place of a
+martyr's burial was the place which the early Christians loved to
+frequent; but then we are expressly told with what intent they met
+there,--not, as in later times, to invoke the departed spirit of the
+martyr, but to call to mind, in grateful remembrance, the sufferings of
+those who had already endured the awful struggle; and by {95} their
+example to encourage and prepare other soldiers of the cross thereafter
+to fight the good fight of faith; assured that they would be more than
+conquerors through Him who loved them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have now examined those works which are regarded by us all, whether
+of the Roman or Anglican Church, as the remains of apostolical
+fathers,--Christians who, at the very lowest calculation, lived close
+upon the Apostles' time, and who, according to the firm conviction of
+many, had all of them conversed with the Apostles, and heard the word of
+truth from their mouths. I do from my heart rejoice with you, that these
+holy men bear direct, clear, and irrefragable testimony to those
+fundamental truths which the Church of Rome and the Church of England
+both hold inviolate--the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, with its
+essential and inseparable concomitants, the atonement by the blood of a
+crucified Redeemer, and the vivifying and sanctifying influences of the
+Holy Spirit.
+
+Supposing for a moment no trace of such fundamental doctrines could be
+discovered in these writings, would not the absence of such vestige have
+been urged by those who differ from us, as a strong argument that the
+doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity was an innovation of a later date;
+and would not such an argument have been urged with reason? How, in
+plain honesty, can we avoid coming to the same conclusion on the subject
+of the invocation of saints? If the doctrine and the practice of praying
+to saints, or to angels, for their succour, or even their intercession,
+had been known {96} and recognised, and approved and acted upon by the
+Apostles, and those who were the very disciples of the Apostles, not
+only deriving the truth from their written works, but having heard it
+from their own living tongue,--in the nature of things would not some
+plain, palpable, intelligible, and unequivocal indications of it have
+appeared in such writings as these; writings in which much is said of
+prayer, of intercessory prayer, of the one object of prayer, of the
+subjects of prayer, of the nature of prayer, the time and place of
+prayer, the spirit in which we are to offer prayer, and the persons for
+whom we ought to pray? Does it accord with common sense, and common
+experience, with what we should expect in other cases, with the analogy
+of history, and the analogy of faith, that we should find a profound and
+total silence on the subject of any prayer or invocation to saints and
+angels, if prayer or invocation of saints and angels had been
+recognised, approved, and practised by the primitive Church?
+
+At the risk of repetition, or surplusage, I would beg to call your
+attention to one point in this argument. I am far from saying that no
+practice is apostolical which cannot be proved from the writings of
+these apostolical fathers: that would be a fallacy of an opposite kind.
+I ground my inference specifically and directly on the fact, that these
+writers are full, and copious, and explicit, and cogent on the nature
+and duty of prayer and supplications, as well for public as for private
+blessings; and of intercessions by one Christian for another, and for
+the whole race of mankind no less than for mercy on himself; and yet
+though openings of every kind palpably offered themselves for a natural
+introduction of the subject, there is in no one single instance any
+reference or allusion to the {97} invocation of saint or angel, as a
+practice either approved or even known.
+
+When indeed I call to mind the general tendency of the natural man to
+multiply to himself the objects of religious worship, and to create, by
+the help of superstition, and the delusive workings of the imagination,
+a variety of unearthly beings whose wrath he must appease, or whose
+favour he may conciliate; when I reflect how great is the temptation in
+unenlightened or fraudulent teachers to accommodate the dictates of
+truth to the prejudices and desires of those whom they instruct, my
+wonder is rather that Christianity was so long preserved pure and
+uncontaminated in this respect, than that corruptions should gradually
+and stealthily have mingled themselves with the simplicity of Gospel
+worship. That tendency is plainly evinced by the history of every nation
+under heaven: Greek and Barbarian, Egyptian and Scythian, would have
+their gods many, and their lords many. From one they would look for one
+good; on another they would depend for a different benefit, in mind,
+body, and estate. Some were of the highest grade, and to be worshipped
+with supreme honours; others were of a lower rank, to whom an inferior
+homage was addressed; whilst a third class held a sort of middle place,
+and were approached with reverence as much above the least, as it fell
+short of the greatest. In the heathen world you will find exact types of
+the dulia, the hyperdulia, and the latria, with which unhappily the
+practical theology of modern Christian Rome is burdened. Indeed, my
+wonder is, that under the Christian dispensation, when the household and
+local gods, the heathen's tutelary deities, and the genii, had been
+dislodged by the light of the Gospel, saints and angels had not at a
+much {98} earlier period been forced by superstition to occupy their
+room.
+
+We shall be led to refer to some passages in the earliest Christian
+writers, especially in Origen, which bear immediately on this point,
+representing in strong but true colours the futility of deeming a
+multitude of inferior divinities necessary for the dispensation of
+benefits throughout the universe, whose good offices we must secure by
+acts of attention and worship. I anticipate the circumstance in this
+place merely to show that the tendency of the human mind, clinging to a
+variety of preternatural protectors and benefactors, was among the
+obstacles with which the first preachers of the Gospel had to struggle.
+In the proper place I shall beg you to observe how hardly possible it
+would have been for those early Christian writers, to whom I have
+referred above, to express themselves in so strong, so sweeping, and so
+unqualified a manner, had the practice of applying by invocation to
+saints and angels then been prevalent among the disciples of the Cross.
+
+We may, I believe, safely conclude, that in these primitive writings,
+which are called the works of the Apostolical Fathers, there is no
+intimation that the present belief and practice of the Church of Rome
+were received, or even known by Christians. The evidence is all the
+other way. Indeed, Bellarmin, though he appeals to these remains for
+other purposes, and boldly asserts that "all the fathers, Greek and
+Latin, with unanimous consent, sanction and teach the adoration of
+saints and angels," yet does not refer to a single passage in any one of
+these remains for establishing this point. He cites a clause from the
+spurious work strangely ascribed to Dionysius the Areopagite, which was
+the forged production, as the learned are all {99} agreed, of some
+centuries later; and he cites a pious sentiment of Ignatius, expressing
+his hope that by martyrdom he might go to Christ, and thence he infers
+that Ignatius believed in the immediate transfer of the soul from this
+life to glory and happiness in heaven, though Ignatius refers there
+distinctly to the resurrection. [Epist. ad Rom. c. iv. See above, p.
+90.] But Bellarmin cites no passage whatever from these remains to
+countenance the doctrine and practice of the adoration of saints and
+angels. {100}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+SECTION I.--THE EVIDENCE OF JUSTIN MARTYR.
+
+
+Justin, who flourished about the year 150, was trained from his early
+youth in all the learning of Greece and of Egypt. He was born in
+Palestine, of heathen parents; and after a patient examination of the
+evidences of Christianity, and a close comparison of them with the
+systems of philosophy with which he had long been familiar, he became a
+disciple of the Cross. In those systems he found nothing solid, or
+satisfactory; nothing on which his mind could rest. In the Gospel he
+gained all that his soul yearned for, as a being destined for immortal
+life, conscious of that destiny, and longing for its accomplishment. His
+understanding was convinced, and his heart was touched; and regardless
+of every worldly consideration, and devoted to the cause of truth, he
+openly embraced Christianity; and before kings and people, Jews and
+Gentiles, he pleaded the religion of the crucified One with unquenchable
+zeal and astonishing power. The evidence of such a man on any doctrine
+{101} connected with our Christian faith must be looked to with great
+interest.
+
+In the volumes which contain Justin's works we find "Books of
+Questions," in which many inquiries, doubts, and objections, as well of
+Jews as of Gentiles, are stated and answered. It is agreed on all sides
+that these are not the genuine productions of Justin, but the work of a
+later hand. Bellarmin appeals to them, acknowledging at the same time
+their less remote origin. The evidence, indeed, appears very strong,
+which would lead us to regard them as the composition of a Syrian
+Christian, and assign to them the date of the fifth century; and as
+offering indications of the opinions of Christians at the time of their
+being put together, they are certainly interesting documents. When
+fairly quoted, the passages alleged in defence of the invocation of
+saints, so far from countenancing the practice, assail irresistibly that
+principle, which, with other writers, Bellarmin himself confesses to be
+the foundation of that doctrine. For these Books of Questions assert
+that the souls of the faithful are not yet in glory with God, but are
+reserved in a separate state, apart from the wicked, awaiting the great
+day of final and universal doom. In answer to Question 60, the author
+distinctly says:--"Before the resurrection the recompense is not made
+for the things done in this life by each individual." [Quæstiones et
+Responsiones ad Orthodoxos, p. 464.]
+
+In reply to the 75th Question, inquiring into the condition of man after
+death, this very remarkable answer is returned:--
+
+"The same relative condition which souls have with the body now, they
+have not after the departure from the body. For here all the
+circumstances of the union {102} are in common to the just and the
+unjust, and no difference is in them in this respect,--as to be born and
+to die, to be in health and to be in sickness, to be rich and to be
+poor, and the other points of this nature. But after the departure from
+the body, forthwith takes place the distinction of the just and the
+unjust: for they are conducted by the angels to places corresponding
+with their deserts: the souls of the just to paradise, where is the
+company and the sight of angels and archangels, and also, by vision, of
+the Saviour Christ, according to what is said, 'Being absent from the
+body, and present with the Lord;' and the souls of the unjust to the
+places in hades, according to what is said of Nebucodonosor king of
+Babylon, 'Hades from beneath hath been embittered, meeting thee.'--And
+in the places corresponding with their deserts they are kept in ward
+unto the day of the resurrection and of retribution." [Page 469.]
+
+I much regret to observe that Bellarmin omits to quote the latter part
+of this passage, stopping short with an "&c." at the words _hades_, or
+_inferorum loca_, although the whole of the writer's testimony in it
+turns upon the very last clause. [Bellarmin, c. iv. p. 851. "Improborum
+autem ad inferorum loca."]
+
+The next question (76) runs thus: "If the retribution of our deeds does
+not take place before the resurrection, what advantage accrued to the
+thief that his soul was introduced into paradise; especially since
+paradise is an object of sense, and the substance of the soul is not an
+object of sense?
+
+"Answer. It was an advantage to the thief entering into paradise to
+learn by fact the benefits of the faith by which he was deemed worthy of
+the assembly of the {103} saints, in which he is kept till the day of
+judgment and restitution; and he has the perception of paradise by that
+which is called intellectual perception, by which souls see both
+themselves and the things under them, and moreover also the angels and
+demons. For a soul doth not perceive or see a soul, nor an angel an
+angel, nor a demon a demon; except that according to the said
+intellectual perception they see both themselves and each other, and
+moreover also all corporeal objects." [Page 470.]
+
+On this same point I must here subjoin a passage from one of Justin's
+own undisputed works. In his Dialogue with Trypho the Jew, sect. 5, he
+says, "Nevertheless I do not say that souls all die; for that were in
+truth a boon to the wicked. But what? That the souls of the pious remain
+somewhere in a better place, and the unjust and wicked in a worse,
+waiting for the time of judgment, when it shall be: thus the one
+appearing worthy of God do not die any more; and the others are punished
+as long as God wills them both to exist and to be punished." [Page 107.]
+
+Not only so; Justin classes among renouncers of the faith those who
+maintain the doctrine which is now acknowledged to be the doctrine of
+the Church of Rome, and to be indispensable as the groundwork of the
+adoration of saints. In his Trypho, sect. 80, he states his sentiment
+thus strongly: "If you should meet with any persons called Christians,
+who confess not this, but dare to blaspheme the God of Abraham, the God
+of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, and say there is no resurrection of the
+dead ([Greek: nekron]), but that their souls, at the very time of their
+death, are taken up into heaven; do not regard them as Christians."
+[Page 178.] {104}
+
+This, according to Bellarmin's own principle, is fatal evidence: if the
+redeemed and the saints departed are not in glory with God already, they
+cannot intercede with him for men. On the subject, however, of worship
+and prayer, Justin Martyr has left us some testimonies as to the
+primitive practice, full of interest in themselves, independently of
+their bearing on the points at issue. At the same time I am not aware of
+a single expression which can be so construed as to imply the doctrine
+or practice among Christians of invoking the souls of the faithful. He
+speaks of public and private prayer; he offers prayer, but the prayer of
+which he speaks, and the prayer which he offers are to God alone; and he
+alludes to no advocate or intercessor in heaven, except only the eternal
+Son of God himself. In his first Apologia (or Defence addressed to the
+Emperor Antoninus Pius) he thus describes the proceedings at the baptism
+of a convert:--
+
+"Now, we will explain to you how we dedicate ourselves to God, being
+made new by Christ.... As many as are persuaded, and believe the things
+which by us are taught and declared to be true, and who promise that
+they can so live, are taught to pray and implore, with fasting,
+forgiveness of God for their former sins, we ourselves joining with them
+in fasting and prayer; and then they are taken by us to a place where
+there is water, and by the same manner of regeneration as we ourselves
+were regenerated, they are regenerated; for they undergo this washing in
+the water in the name of God the Father and Lord of all, and of our
+Saviour Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Ghost." [Apol. i. sect 61, page
+79.]
+
+The following is his description of the Christian {105} Eucharist,
+subsequently to the baptism of a convert: "Afterwards we conduct him to
+those who are called brethren, where they are assembled together to
+offer earnestly our united prayers for ourselves and for the enlightened
+one [the newly baptized convert], and for all others every where, that
+we, having learned the truth, may be thought worthy to be found in our
+deeds good livers, and keepers of the commandments, that we may be saved
+with the everlasting salvation. Having ceased from prayers, we salute
+each other with a kiss; and then bread is brought to him who presides
+over the brethren, and a cup of water and wine; and he taking it, sends
+up prayer and praise to the Father of all, through the name of the Son
+and the Holy Spirit; and offers much thanksgiving for our being thought
+by him worthy of these things. When he has finished the prayers and
+thanksgivings, all the people present respond, saying, 'Amen.' Now, Amen
+in the Hebrew tongue means, 'So be it.' And when the presider has given
+thanks, and all the people have responded, those who are called Deacons
+among us give to every one present to partake of the bread and wine and
+water that has been blessed, and take some away for those who were not
+present." [Sect. 65. p. 82.]
+
+The following is Justin's account of their worship on the Lord's day:
+"In all our oblations we bless the Creator of all things, through his
+Son Jesus Christ, and through the Holy Spirit. And upon the day called
+Sunday, there is an assembly of all who dwell in the several cities or
+in the country, in one place where the records of the apostles, or the
+writings of the prophets are read, as time allows. When the reader has
+ceased, {106} the presider makes a discourse for the edification of the
+people, and to animate them to the practice of such excellent things [or
+the imitation of such excellent persons]. At the conclusion we all rise
+up together and pray; and, as we have said, when we have ceased from
+prayer, the bread and wine and water are brought forward, and the
+presider sends up prayer and thanksgiving alike, to the utmost of his
+power. And the people respond, saying, Amen. And then is made to each
+the distribution and participation of the consecrated elements ([Greek:
+eucharistauthenton]). And of those who have the means and will, each
+according to his disposition gives what he will; and the collected sum
+is deposited with the presider, and he aids the orphans and widows, and
+those who through sickness or other cause are in need, and those in
+bonds, and strangers; and, in a word, he becomes the reliever of all who
+are in want." [Sect. 67. p. 83.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In Justin Martyr I am unable to find even a single vestige of the
+invocation of Saints. With regard to Angels, however, there is a very
+celebrated passage, to which Bellarmin and others appeal, as conclusive
+evidence that the worship of them prevailed among Christians in his
+time, and was professed by Justin himself.
+
+Justin, in his first Apology, having stated that the Christians could
+never be induced to worship the demons, whom the heathen worshipped and
+invoked, proceeds thus[33]: "Whence also we are called Atheists, {107}
+[men without God]; and we confess that with regard to such supposed gods
+we are atheists, but not so with regard to the most true God, the Father
+of justice and temperance, and of the other virtues without any mixture
+of evil. But both HIM and the SON, who came from Him, and taught these
+things to us, and THE HOST OF THE OTHER GOOD ANGELS ACCOMPANYING AND
+MADE LIKE, and THE PROPHETIC SPIRIT, we reverence and worship, honouring
+them in reason and truth; and without grudging, delivering the doctrine
+to every one who is willing to learn as we were taught." [Page 47.]
+Governing the words "the host of the other good angels," as much as the
+words "Him" and "His Son," and "the prophetic Spirit," by the verbs "we
+reverence and worship," Bellarmin and others[34] maintain, that Justin
+bears testimony in this passage to the worship of angels. That this
+cannot be the true interpretation of Justin's words will be
+acknowledged, I think, by every Catholic, whether Anglican or Roman,
+when he contemplates it in all its naked plainness; all will revolt from
+it as impious and contrary to the principles professed by the most
+celebrated and honoured among Roman Catholic writers. This
+interpretation of the passage, when analysed, implies the awful thought,
+that we Christians pay to the host of angels, God's ministers and our
+own fellow-servants, the same reverence, worship, and honour which we
+pay to the supreme Father, and his ever-blessed Son, and the Holy
+Spirit, without any difference or inequality. No principles of
+interpretation can avoid that inference.
+
+ [Footnote 33: The genuineness of this passage has been doubted.
+ But I see no ground for suspicion that it is spurious. It is
+ found in the manuscripts of Justin's works; of which the most
+ ancient perhaps are in the King's Library in Paris. I examined
+ one there of a remote date.]
+
+ [Footnote 34: The Benedictine Editor puts this note in the
+ margin, "Justin teaches that angels following the Son are
+ worshipped by Christians."--Preface, p. xxi.] {108}
+
+"Him the most true Father of righteousness we reverence and worship,
+honouring him in reason and truth."
+
+"The Son who came from him, and taught us these things, we reverence and
+worship, honouring him in reason and truth."
+
+"The army of the other good angels accompanying and assimilated, we
+reverence and worship, honouring them in reason and truth."
+
+"The Prophetic Spirit we reverence and worship, honouring him in reason
+and truth."
+
+Is it possible to conceive that any Christian would thus ascribe the
+same religious worship to a host of God's creatures, which he would
+ascribe to God, as GOD? "We are accused," said Justin, "of being
+atheists, of having no God. How can this be? We do not worship your
+false gods, but we have our own most true God. We are not without a God.
+We have the Father, and the Son, and the Good Angels, and the Holy
+Spirit." If Justin meant that they honoured the good angels, but not as
+GOD, that would be no answer to those who called the Christians
+atheists. The charge was, that "they had no God." The answer is, "We
+have a God;" and then Justin describes the God of Christians. Can the
+army of angels be included in that description? If they are, then they
+are made to share in the adoration, worship, homage, and reverence of
+the one only God Most High; if they are not, then Justin does not answer
+the objectors[35].
+
+ [Footnote 35: And surely if Justin had intended to represent the
+ holy angels as objects of religious worship, he would not so
+ violently have thrust the mention of them among the Persons of
+ the ever-blessed Trinity, assigning to them a place between the
+ second and third Persons of the eternal hypostatic union.] {109}
+
+To evade this charge of impiety, some writers (among others, M. Maran,
+the Benedictine editor of Justin,) have attempted to draw a distinction
+between the two verbs in this passage, alleging that the lower degree of
+reverence expressed by the latter applies to the angels; whilst the
+former verb, implying the higher degree of worship, alone relates to the
+Godhead. But this distinction rests on a false assumption; the two words
+being used equally to convey the idea, of the highest religious
+worship[36].
+
+ [Footnote 36: For example, the first word ([Greek: sebometha]),
+ "we reverence," is used to mean the whole of religious worship,
+ as well with regard to the true God, as with reference to Diana
+ [Acts xviii. 7. 13; xix. 27.]; whilst the second word ([Greek:
+ proskunoumen]), "we worship," is constantly employed in the same
+ sense of divine worship, throughout the Septuagint [Exod. xxxiv.
+ 14. Ps. xciv. (xcv.) 6. I Sam. (1 Kings) xv. 25. 2 Kings (4
+ Kings) xvii. 36. Heb. i. 6.], (with which Justin was most
+ familiar,) and is used in the Epistle to the Hebrews to signify
+ the worship due from the angels themselves to God, "Let all the
+ angels of God worship him." The very same word is also soon
+ after employed by Justin himself (sect. xvi. p. 53) to mean the
+ whole entire worship of the Most High God: "That we ought to
+ worship ([Greek: proskumein]) God alone, Christ thus proves,"
+ &c. Moreover, the word which Justin uses at the close of the
+ sentence, "honouring them" ([Greek: timontes]), is the identical
+ word four times employed by St. John [John v. 23.], in the same
+ verse, to record our Saviour's saying, "That all men might
+ honour the Son, even as they honour the Father; he that
+ honoureth not the Son, honoureth not the Father, who hath sent
+ him."]
+
+But in determining the true meaning of an obscure passage, grammatically
+susceptible of different acceptations, the author himself is often his
+own best interpreter. If he has expressed in another place the same
+leading sentiment, yet without the same obscurity, and free from all
+doubt, the light borrowed from that passage {110} will frequently fix
+the sense of the ambiguous expression, and establish the author's
+consistency. On this acknowledged principle of criticism, I would call
+your attention to a passage in the very same treatise of Justin, a few
+pages further on, in which he again defends the Christians against the
+same charge of being atheists, and on the self-same ground, "that they
+worship the Father who is maker of all; secondly, the Son proceeding
+from Him; and thirdly, the Holy Spirit." In both cases he refers to the
+same attributes of the Son as the teacher of Christian truth, and of the
+Holy Ghost, as the Prophetic Spirit. His language throughout the two
+passages is remarkably similar, and in the expressions on the true
+meaning of which we have already dwelt, it is most strikingly identical;
+but by omitting all allusion to the angels after the Son, his own words
+proving that the introduction of them could have no place there, (for he
+specifies that the third in order was the Holy Spirit,) Justin has left
+us a comment on the passage under consideration conclusive as to the
+object of religious worship in his creed. The whole passage is well
+worth the attention of the reader. The following extracts are the only
+parts necessary for our present purpose:--
+
+"Who of sound mind will not confess that we are not Atheists,
+reverencing as we do the Maker of the Universe.... and Him, who taught
+us these things, and who was born for this purpose, Jesus Christ,
+crucified under Pontius Pilate.... instructed, as we are, that He is the
+Son of the True God, and holding Him in the second place; and the
+Prophetic Spirit in the third order, we with reason honour." [Sect.
+xiii. p. 50.] {111}
+
+The impiety apparently inseparable from Bellarmin's interpretation has
+induced many, even among Roman Catholic writers, to discard that
+acceptation altogether, and to substitute others, which, though
+involving no grammatical inaccuracy, are still not free from
+difficulty.[37] After weighing the passage with all the means in my
+power, and after testing the various interpretations offered by writers,
+whether of the Church of Rome or not, by the sentiments of Justin
+himself, and others of the same early age, I am fully persuaded that the
+following is the only true rendering of Justin's words:
+
+"Honouring in reason and truth, we reverence and worship HIM, the Father
+of Righteousness, and the Son (who proceeded from Him, and instructed in
+these things both ourselves and the host of the other good angels
+following Him and being made like unto Him), and the Prophetic Spirit."
+
+ [Footnote 37: Le Nourry (Apparatus ad Bibliothecam Maximam
+ Veterum Patrum. Paris, 1697. vol. ii. p. 305), himself a
+ Benedictine, rejects Bellarmin's and his brother Benedictine
+ Maran's interpretation, and conceives Justin to mean, that the
+ Son of God not only taught us those truths to which he was
+ referring, with regard to the being and attributes of God, but
+ also taught us that there were hosts of spiritual beings, called
+ Angels; good beings, opposed to the demons of paganism. Bishop
+ Kaye, in his excellent work on Justin Martyr, which the reader
+ will do well to consult (p. 53), tells us he was sometimes
+ inclined to think that Justin referred to the host of good
+ angels who should surround the Son of God when he should come to
+ judge the world. The view adopted by myself here was recommended
+ by Grabe and by Langus, called The Interpreter of Justin; whilst
+ Petavius, a Jesuit, though he does not adopt it, yet
+ acknowledges that the Greek admits of our interpretation. Any
+ one who would pursue the subject further may with advantage
+ consult the preface to the Benedictine edition referred to in
+ this work. Lumper Hist. Part ii. p. 225. Augustæ Vindelicorum,
+ 1784. Petavius, Theologicorum Dogmatum tom. vi. p. 298. lib. xv.
+ c. v. s. 5. Antwerp, 1700.
+
+ The whole passage is thus rendered by Langus (as read in
+ Lumper), "Verum hunc ipsum, et qui ab eo venit, atque ista nos
+ et aliorum obsequentium exæquatorumque ad ejus voluntatem
+ bonorum Angelorum exercitura docuit, Filium, et Spiritum ejus
+ propheticum, colimus et adoramus."]
+
+This interpretation is strongly confirmed by the professed sentiments
+both of Justin and of his contemporaries, {112} with regard to the Son
+of God and the holy angels.
+
+It was a principle generally received among the early Christians, that
+whatever the Almighty did, either by creation or by the communication of
+his will, on earth or in heaven, was done by the Eternal Word. It was
+God the Son, the Logos, who created the angels[38], as well as
+ourselves; it was He who spoke to Moses, to Abraham, and to Lot; and it
+was He who conveyed the Supreme will, and the knowledge of the only true
+God, to the inhabitants of the world of spirits. Agreeably to this
+principle, in the passage under consideration, Justin affirms (not that
+Christians revered and worshipped the angels, but), that God the Son,
+whom Christians worshipped as the eternal Prophet, Angel, and Apostle,
+of the Most High, instructed not only us men on earth, but also the host
+of heavenly angels[39], in these eternal verities, {113} which embrace
+God's nature and the duty of his creatures. [Trypho, § 141. p. 231.]
+
+ [Footnote 38: Thus Tatian (p. 249 in the same edition of
+ Justin), "Before men were prepared, the Word was the Maker of
+ angels."]
+
+ [Footnote 39: "The OTHER good angels." Justin (Apol. i. sect.
+ lxiii. p. 81.) reminds us that Christ, the first-begotten of the
+ Father, Himself God, was also an Angel (or Messenger), and an
+ Apostle; and here Christ, as the Angel of the Covenant and the
+ chief Apostle, is represented as instructing THE OTHER ANGELS in
+ the truths of the economy of grace, just as he instructed his
+ Apostles on earth,--"As my Father hath sent me, even so send I
+ you."]
+
+It is evident that Justin himself considered the host of angels to be
+equally with ourselves in a state of probation, requiring divine
+instruction, and partaking of it. It is also evident that many of his
+contemporaries entertained the same views; among others, Irenæus and
+Origen. [Irenæus, book ii. c. 30. p. 163. Origen, Hom. xxxii. in Joann.
+§ 10. vol. iv. p. 430.] I will not swell this dissertation by quoting
+the passages at length; though the passages referred to in the margin
+will well repay any one's careful examination. But I cannot refrain from
+extracting the words in which each of those writers confirms the view
+here taken of Justin's sentiments.
+
+Irenæus, for example, says distinctly, "The Son ever, anciently and from
+the beginning co-existing with the Father, always reveals the Father
+both to angels and archangels, and powers, and excellencies, and to all
+to whom God wishes to make a revelation[40]." And not less distinctly
+does Origen assert the same thing,--"Our Saviour therefore teaches, and
+the Holy Spirit, {114} who spake in the prophets, teaches not only men,
+but also angels and invisible excellencies."
+
+ [Footnote 40: So far did some of the early Christians include
+ the hosts of angels within the covenant of the Gospel, that
+ Ignatius (Epist. ad Smyrn. § 6. p. 36.) does not hesitate to
+ pronounce that the angels incur the Divine judgment, if they do
+ not receive the doctrine of the atonement: "Let no one be
+ deceived. The things in heaven, and the glory of angels, and the
+ powers visible and invisible, if they do not believe on the
+ blood of Christ--for them is judgment." They seem to have
+ founded their opinion on the declaration of St. Paul (Eph. iii.
+ 10): "That now to the principalities and powers in heavenly
+ places might be made known through the Church the manifold
+ wisdom of God."]
+
+I will only add one more ancient authority, in confirmation of the view
+here taken of Justin's words. The passage is from Athenagoras[41] and
+seems to be the exact counterpart of Justin's paragraph.
+
+ [Footnote 41: Athenagoras presented his defence, in which these
+ words occur, to the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, and his son
+ Commodus, in the year 177.]
+
+"Who would not wonder on hearing us called Atheists? we who call the
+Father God, and the Son God, and the Holy Ghost, showing both their
+power in the unity, and their distinction in order. Nor does our
+theology rest here; but we say, moreover, that there is a multitude of
+angels and ministers whom God, the Maker and Creator of the world, BY
+THE WORD PROCEEDING FROM HIM, distributed and appointed, both about the
+elements, and the heavens, and the world, and the things therein, and
+the good order thereof." [Sect. 10. p. 287. edit. Just. Mart.]
+
+I have already stated my inability to discover a single word in Justin
+Martyr which could be brought to sanction the invocation of saints; but
+his testimony is far from being merely negative. He admonishes us
+strongly against our looking to any other being for help or assistance,
+than to God only. Even when speaking of those who confide in their own
+strength, and fortune, and other sources of good, he says, in perfect
+unison with the pervading principles and associations of his whole mind,
+as far as we can read them in his works, without any modification or any
+exception in favour of saint or angel: "In that Christ {115} said, 'Thou
+art my God, go not far from me,' He at the same time taught, that all
+persons ought to hope in God, who made all things, and seek for safety
+and health from Him alone" [Trypho, § 102, p. 197.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--IRENÆUS.
+
+
+Justin sealed his faith by his blood about the year 165; and next to
+him, in the noble army of martyrs, we must examine the evidence of
+Irenæus, Bishop of Lyons. Of this writer's works a very small proportion
+survives in the original Greek; but that little is such as might well
+make every scholar and divine lament the calamity which theology and
+literature have sustained by the loss of the author's own language. It
+is not perhaps beyond the range of hope that future researches may yet
+recover at least some part of the treasure. Meanwhile we must avail
+ourselves with thankfulness of the nervous though inelegant copy of that
+original, which the Latin translation affords; imperfect and corrupt in
+many parts, as that copy evidently is. This, however, is not the place
+for recommending a study of the remains of Irenæus; and every one at all
+acquainted with the literature of the early Church, knows well how
+valuable a store of ancient Christian learning is preserved even in the
+wreck of his works.
+
+On the subject of the invocation of saints, an appeal {116} has been
+made only to a few passages in Irenæus. With regard, indeed, to one
+section, I would gladly have been spared the duty of commenting upon the
+unjustifiable mode of citing his evidence adopted by Bellarmin. It
+forces upon our notice an example either of such inaccuracy of quotation
+as would shake our confidence in him as an author, or of such
+misrepresentation as must lower him in our estimation as a man of
+integrity.
+
+Bellarmin asserts, building upon it as the very foundation-stone of his
+argument for the invocation of saints, that the souls of the saints are
+removed immediately on their dissolution by death, without waiting for
+the day of judgment, into the presence of God, and the enjoyment of HIM
+in heaven. This point, he says, must first be established; for if they
+are not already in the presence of God, they cannot pray for us, and
+prayer to them would be preposterous. [Bell. lib. i. c. 4. vol. ii. p.
+851.] Among the authorities cited by him to establish this point is the
+evidence of Irenæus (book i. c. 2). [See Benedictine ed, Paris, 1710.
+book i. c. 10. p. 48.] Bellarmin quotes that passage in these words: "To
+the just and righteous, and to those who keep his commandments, and
+persevere in his love, some indeed from the beginning but some from
+repentance, he giving life CONFERS by way of gift incorruption, and
+CLOTHES them with eternal glory." To the quotation he appends this note
+"Mark '_to some_' that is, to those who presently after baptism die, or
+who lay down their life for Christ; or finally to the perfect is given
+immediately life and eternal glory; to others not, except after
+repentance, that is, satisfaction made in another world[42]."
+
+ [Footnote 42: Agreeably to the principles laid down in my
+ preface, I will not here allude to the doctrine of purgatory, on
+ which Bellarmin considers this passage to bear; nor will I say
+ one word on the intermediate state of the soul between death and
+ the resurrection, on which I am now showing that the words of
+ Irenæus cannot at all be made to bear.] {117}
+
+Here I am compelled to confess that I never found a more palpable
+misquotation of an author than this. I will readily grant that Bellarmin
+may have quoted from memory, or have borrowed from some corrupt version
+of the passage; and that he has unintentionally changed the moods of two
+verbs from the subjunctive to the indicative, and inadvertently changed
+the entire construction and the sense of the passage. But then what
+becomes of his authority as a writer citing testimony?
+
+Irenæus in this passage is speaking not of what our Lord does now, but
+what he will do at the last day; he refers only to the second coming of
+Christ to judgment at the final consummation of all things, not using a
+single expression which can be made by fair criticism to have any
+reference whatever to the condition of souls on their separation from
+the body. I have consulted the old editions, some at least published
+before the date of Bellarmin's work; the suggestion offering itself to
+my mind, that perhaps the ancient translation was in error, from which
+he might have quoted. But I cannot find that to have been the case. The
+old Latin version of this passage agreeing very closely with the Greek
+still preserved in Epiphanius, and quoted by Roman Catholic writers as
+authentic, conveys this magnificent though brief summary of the
+Christian faith:
+
+"The Church spread throughout the whole world, even to the ends of the
+earth, received both from the Apostles and their disciples that faith
+which is in one {118} God omnipotent, who made heaven and earth, the
+sea, and all things therein, and in one Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
+for our salvation made flesh, and in the Holy Ghost, who by the prophets
+announced the dispensations (of God[43]), and the Advent, and the being
+born of a Virgin, and the suffering, and the resurrection from the dead,
+and the bodily ascension into heaven of the beloved Jesus Christ our
+Lord, and his coming from heaven in the glory of the Father for the
+consummation of all things, and for raising again all flesh of the human
+race, THAT, in order that ([Greek: ina]), to Christ Jesus our Lord and
+God, and Saviour and King, according to the good pleasure of the
+invisible Father, every knee should bow of things in heaven and in
+earth, and under the earth, and that every tongue should confess to Him,
+and that he should execute just judgment on all: that he should send the
+spirits of wickedness, and the transgressing and rebel angels, and the
+impious and unjust, and wicked and blaspheming men into eternal fire;
+but to the just and righteous, and to those who keep his commandments,
+and persevere in his love,--some indeed from the beginning, and some
+from their repentance,--he granting life, by way of gift, SHOULD CONFER
+incorruption, and SHOULD CLOTHE them with eternal glory." [Hæres. xxxi.
+c. 30.]
+
+ [Footnote 43: The words "of God" are in the Latin, but not in
+ the Greek.]
+
+The words, "some from the beginning," "others from their repentance,"
+can refer only to the two conditions of believers; some of whom have
+grace to keep the commandments, and persevere in the love of God from
+the beginning of their Christian course, whilst others, for a time,
+transgress and wax cold in love, but by repentance, through God's grace,
+are renewed and {119} restored to their former state of obedience and
+love. On both these classes of Christians, according to the faith as
+here summed up by Irenæus, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, when He
+comes in glory for the consummation of all things, and for the
+resurrection of the dead, will confer glory and immortality. No
+ingenuity of criticism can extract from this passage any allusion to the
+intercession of saints, or to their being with God before the end of the
+world[44]. But I am not {120} here condemning Bellarmin's untenable
+criticism: what I lament is the negligence or the disingenuousness with
+which he misquotes the words of Irenæus, and makes him say what he never
+did say. To extract from an author's words, correctly reported, a
+meaning which he did not intend to convey, however reprehensible and
+unworthy a follower of truth, is one act of injustice: to report him,
+whether wilfully or carelessly, as using words which he never did use,
+is far worse.
+
+ [Footnote 44: It will be well to see the words of Bellarmin and
+ those of the translation side by side:
+
+ (Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the other.)
+
+ _Bellarmin_ lib. i. c. iv. p. 851.
+
+ "Quartus Irenæus, lib. i. c. 2. 'Justis, inquit, et æquis, et
+ præcepta ejus servantibus et in dilectione perseverantibus,
+ quibusdam quidem ab initio, quibusdam autem ex poenitentia,
+ vitam donans, incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERT, et claritatem
+ æternam CIRCUMDAT.' Nota '_quibusdam_,' id est, iis qui mox a
+ Baptismo moriuntur, vel qui pro Christo vitam ponunt; vel
+ denique perfectis statim donari vitam et claritatem æternam;
+ aliis non nisi post poenitentiam, id est, satisfactionem in
+ futuro sæculo actam."
+
+ _Latin Translation_.
+
+ "Et de coelis in gloria Patris adventum ejus ad recapitulanda
+ universa et resuscitandam omnem carnem humani generis, UT
+ Christo Jesu Domino nostro et Deo, et Salvatori, et Regi,
+ secundum placitum Patris invisibilis, 'omne genu curvet
+ coelestium, et terrestrium, et infernorum, et omnis lingua
+ confiteatur ei,' et judicium justum in omnibus faciat;
+ spiritalia quidem nequitiæ, et angelos transgresses, atque
+ apostatas factos, et impios et injustos et iniquos, et
+ blasphemos homines in æternum ignem mittat;--Justis autem et
+ æquis et præcepta ejus servantibus et in dilectione ejus
+ perseverantibus, quibusdam quidem ab initio, quibusdam autem ex
+ poenitentia, vitam donans, incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERAT,
+ et claritatem æternam CIRCUMDET."--Irenæi liber i. cap. x. p.
+ 48. Interpretatio Vetus.]
+
+Another expression of Irenæus is appealed to by Bellarmin, and continues
+to be cited at the present day in defence of the invocation of saints;
+the precise bearing of which upon the subject I confess myself unable to
+see, whilst I am very far from understanding the passage from which it
+is an extract. Bellarmin cites the passage not to show that the saints
+in glory pray for us,--that argument he had dismissed before,--but to
+prove that they are to be invoked by us. The insulated passage as quoted
+by him is this: "And as she (Eve) was induced to fly from God, so she
+(Mary) was persuaded to obey God, that of the Virgin Eve the Virgin Mary
+might become the advocate." After the quotation he says, "What can be
+clearer?" [Benedict, lib. v. cap. xix. p. 316.]
+
+In whatever sense we may suppose Irenæus to have employed the word here
+translated "advocata," it is difficult to see how the circumstance of
+Mary becoming the advocate of Eve, who lived so many generations before
+her, can bear upon the question, Is it lawful and right for us, now
+dwelling on the earth, to invoke those saints whom we believe to be in
+heaven? I will not dwell on the argument urged very cogently by some
+critics on this passage, that the word "advocata," found {121} in the
+Latin version of Irenæus, is the translation of the original word, now
+lost [[Greek: paraklaetos]--paraclete], which, by the early writers, was
+used for "comforter and consoler," or "restorer;" because, as I have
+above intimated, whatever may have been the word employed by Irenæus,
+the passage proves nothing as to the lawfulness of our praying to the
+saints. If the angels at God's bidding minister unto the heirs of
+salvation; or further, if they plead our cause with God, that would be
+no reason why we should invoke them and pray to them. This distinction
+between what they may do for us, and what we ought to do with regard to
+them, is an essential distinction, and must not be lost sight of. We
+shall have occasion hereafter to refer to it repeatedly, especially in
+the instances of Origen and Cyprian. I will now do no more than copy in
+a note the entire passage from which the sentence now under
+consideration has been extracted, that the reader may judge whether on
+such a passage, the original of which, in whatever words Irenæus may
+have expressed himself, is utterly lost, any reliance can satisfactorily
+be placed.
+
+("Manifeste itaque in sua propria venientem Dominum et sua propria eum
+bajulantem conditione quæ bajulatur ab ipso, et recapitulationem ejus
+quæ in ligno fuit inobedientiæ per eam quæ in ligno est obedientiam
+facientem, et seductionem illam solutam qua seducta est male illa, quæ
+jam viro destinata erat virgo Eva, per veritatem evangelizata est bene
+ab angelo jam sub viro virgo Maria. Quemadmodum enim illa per angeli
+sermonem seducta est ut effugeret Deum prævaricata verbum ejus, ita et
+hæc per angelicum sermonem evangelizata est ut portaret Deum obediens
+ejus verbo. Et si ea inobedierat Deo, sed hæc suasa est obedire Deo, uti
+virginis Evæ virgo Maria fieret advocata. Et quemadmodum astrictum est
+morti genus humanum per virginem, salvatur per virginem, æqua lance
+disposita virginalis inobedientia per virginalem obedientiam. Adhuc enim
+protoplasti peccatum per correptionem primogeniti emendationem
+accipiens, et serpentis prudentia devicta in columbæ simplicitate,
+vinculis autem illis resolutis, per quæ alligati eramus morti." St.
+Augustin (Paris, 1690. vol. x. p. 500.) refers to the latter part of
+this passage, as implying the doctrine of original sin; but since his
+quotation does not embrace any portion of the clause at present under
+our consideration, no additional light from him is thrown on the meaning
+of Irenæus.) {122}
+
+But passages occur in Irenæus, which seem to leave doubt, that neither
+in faith nor in practice would he countenance in the very lowest degree
+the adoration of saints and angels, or any invocation of them.
+
+For example, in one part of his works we read, "Nor does it [the Church]
+do any thing by invocations of angels, nor by incantations, nor other
+depraved and curious means, but with cleanliness, purity, and openness,
+directing prayers to the Lord who made all things, and calling upon the
+name of Jesus Christ our Lord, it exercises its powers for the benefit,
+and not for the seducing, of mankind." [Benedictine Ed. lib. ii. c. 32.
+§ 5. p. 166.] It has been said that, by angelic invocations, Irenæus
+means the addresses to evil angels and genii, such as the heathen
+superstitiously made. Be it so; though that is a mere assumption, not
+warranted by the passage or its context. But, surely, had Irenæus known
+that Christians prayed to angels, as well as to their Maker and their
+Saviour, he would not have used such an unguarded expression; he would
+have cautioned his readers against so serious, but so natural, a
+misapprehension of his meaning.
+
+With one more reference, we must bring our inquiry into the testimony of
+Irenæus to a close. The passage occurs in the fifth book, chapter 31.
+[Benedict. lib. v. c. 32. § 2. p, 331.] The principal and most
+important, though not the longest, part of {123} the passage is happily
+still found in the original Greek, preserved in the "Parallels" of
+Damascenus. In its plain, natural, and unforced sense, this passage is
+so decidedly conclusive on the question at issue, that various attempts
+have been made to explain away its meaning, so as not to represent
+Irenæus as believing that the souls of departed saints, between their
+death and the day of judgment, exist otherwise than in bliss and glory
+in heaven. But those attempts have been altogether unsuccessful. I
+believe the view here presented to us by the plain and obvious sense of
+the words of Irenæus, is the view at present acquiesced in by a large
+proportion of our fellow-believers. The Anglican Church has made no
+article of faith whatever on the subject. The clause within brackets is
+found both in the Latin and the Greek.
+
+"Since the Lord[45] in the midst of the shadow of death went where the
+souls of the dead were, and then afterwards rose bodily, and after his
+resurrection was taken up, it is evident that of his disciples also, for
+whom the Lord wrought these things, [the souls go into the unseen[46]
+place assigned to them by God, and there remain till the resurrection,
+waiting for the resurrection; afterwards receiving again their bodies
+and rising perfectly [[Greek: holoklaeros], perfecte], that is, bodily,
+even as the Lord also rose again, so will they come into the presence of
+God.] {124} For no disciple is above his master; but every one that is
+perfect shall be as his master. As, therefore, our Master did not
+immediately flee away and depart, but waited for the time of his
+resurrection appointed by his Father (which is evident, even by the case
+of Jonah); after the third day, rising again, he was taken up; so we too
+must wait for the time of our resurrection appointed by God, and
+fore-announced by the prophets; and thus rising again, be taken up, as
+many as the Lord shall have deemed worthy of this."
+
+ [Footnote 45: Bellarmin, rather than allow the testimony of
+ Irenæus to weigh at all against the doctrine which he is
+ defending, seems determined to combat and challenge that father
+ himself. "Non ausus est dicere," "He has not dared to say, that
+ the souls go to the regions below," &c.]
+
+ [Footnote 46: There is no word in the Greek copy corresponding
+ with the Latin "invisibilem."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA--ABOUT THE YEAR 180.
+
+
+Contemporary with Irenæus, and probably less than twenty years his
+junior, was Clement, the celebrated Christian philosopher of Alexandria.
+I am not aware that any Roman Catholic writer has appealed to the
+testimony of Clement in favour of the invocation of saints, nor have I
+found a single passage which the defenders of that practice would be
+likely to quote; and yet there are many passages which no one, anxious
+to trace the Catholic faith, would willingly neglect. The tendency of
+Clement's mind to blend with the simplicity of the Gospel of Christ the
+philosophy in which he so fully abounded, renders him far less valuable
+as a Christian teacher; but his evidence as to the matter of fact, is
+even rendered more cogent and pointed by this tendency of his mind. I
+would {125} willingly have transferred to these pages whole passages of
+Clement, but the very nature of my address forbids it. Some sentences
+bearing on the subject immediately before us, we must not omit.
+
+Clement has left on record many of his meditations upon the efficacy,
+the duty, and the blessed comfort of prayer. When he speaks of God, and
+of the Christian in prayer, (for prayer he defines to be "communion or
+intercourse with God,") his language becomes often exquisitely
+beautiful, and sometimes sublime. It is impossible by a few detached
+passages to convey an adequate estimate of the original; and yet a few
+sentences may show that Clement is a man whose testimony should not be
+slighted.
+
+"Therefore, keeping the whole of our life as a feast every where, and on
+every part persuaded that God is present, we praise him as we till our
+lands; we sing hymns as we are sailing. The Christian is persuaded that
+God hears every thing; not the voice only, but the thoughts.... Suppose
+any one should say, that the voice does not reach God, revolving as it
+does in the air below; yet the thoughts of the saints cut not only
+through the air, but the whole world. And the divine power like the
+light is beforehand in seeing through the soul.... He" (the Christian
+whom he speaks of throughout as the man of divine knowledge) "prays for
+things essentially good.
+
+"Wherefore it best becomes those to pray who have an adequate knowledge
+of God, and possess virtue in accordance with Him--who know what are
+real goods, and what we should petition for, and when, and how in each
+case. But it is the extreme of ignorance to ask {126} from those who are
+not gods as though they were gods.... Whence since there is one only
+good God, both we ourselves and the angels supplicate from Him alone,
+that some good things might be given to us, and others might remain with
+us. In this way he (the Christian) is always in a state of purity fit
+for prayer. He prays with angels, as being himself equal with angels;
+and as one who is never beyond the holy protecting guard. And if he pray
+alone he has the whole choir of angels with him." [Stromata, lib. vii. §
+7. p. 851, &c.; Section xii. p. 879.]
+
+Clement has alluded to instances alleged by the Greeks of the effects of
+prayer, and he adds, "Our whole Scripture is full of instances of God
+hearing and granting every request according to the prayers of the
+just." [Lib. vi. § iii. p. 753.]
+
+Having in the same section referred to the opinion of some Greeks as to
+the power of demons over the affairs of mortals, he adds, "But they
+think it matters nothing whether we speak of these as gods or as angels,
+calling the spirits of such 'demons,' and teaching that they should be
+worshipped by men, as having, by divine providence, on account of the
+purity of their lives, received authority to be conversant about earthly
+places, in order that they may minister to mortals." [Lib. vi. § iii. p.
+755.]
+
+Is it possible to suppose that this teacher in Christ's school had any
+idea of a Christian praying to saints or angels? In the last passage,
+the language in which he quotes the errors of heathen superstition to
+refute them, so nearly approaches the language of the Church of Rome
+when speaking of the powers of saints and angels to assist the
+suppliant, that if Clement had entertained {127} any thought whatever of
+a Christian praying for aid and intercession to saint or angel, he must
+have mentioned it, especially after the previous passage on the
+absurdity and gross ignorance of praying for any good at the hands of
+any other than the one true God.
+
+In common with his contemporaries, Clement considered the angels to be,
+as we mortals are, in a state requiring all the protection and help to
+be obtained by prayer; he believed that the angels pray with us, and
+carry our prayers to God: but the thought of addressing them by
+invocation does not appear to have occurred to his mind. At the close of
+his Pædagogus he has left on record a form of prayer to God alone very
+peculiar and interesting. He closes it by an ascription of glory to the
+blessed Trinity. But there is no allusion to saint, or angel, or virgin
+mother.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.--TERTULLIAN.
+
+
+Tertullian, of Carthage, was a contemporary of Clement of Alexandria,
+and so nearly of the same age, that doubts have existed, which of the
+two should take priority in point of time. There is a very wide
+difference in the character and tone of their works, as there was in the
+frame and constitution of their minds. The lenient and liberal views of
+the erudite and accomplished master of the school of Alexandria, stand
+out in prominent and broad contrast with the harsh and austere doctrines
+of Tertullian.
+
+Tertullian fell into errors of a very serious kind by joining himself to
+the heretic Montanus; still on his {128} mind is discoverable the
+working of that spirit which animated the early converts of
+Christianity; and his whole soul seems to have been filled with a desire
+to promote the practical influence of the Gospel.
+
+Jerome, the oracle on such subjects, from whom the Roman Catholic Church
+is unwilling to allow any appeal, expressly tells us that Cyprian[47],
+who called Tertullian the Master, never passed a single day without
+studying his works; and that after Tertullian had remained a presbyter
+of the Church to middle age, he was driven, by the envy and revilings of
+the members of the Roman Church, to fall from its unity, and espouse
+Montanism. Bellarmin calls him a heretic, and says he is the first
+heretic who denied that the saints went at once and forthwith to glory.
+[Hieron. edit. 1684. tom. i. p. 183.]
+
+ [Footnote 47: The words of Jerome, who refers to the
+ circumstance more than once, are very striking: "I saw one
+ Paulus, who said that he had seen the secretary (notarium) of
+ Cyprian at Rome, who used to tell him that Cyprian never passed
+ a single day without reading Tertullian; and that he often said
+ to him, 'Give me the Master,' meaning Tertullian."--Hieron. vol.
+ iv. part ii. p. 115.]
+
+A decided line of distinction is drawn by Roman Catholic writers between
+the works of Tertullian written before he espoused the errors of
+Montanus, and his works written after that unhappy step. The former they
+hold in great estimation, the latter are by many considered of far less
+authority. I do not see how such a distinction ought to affect his
+testimony on the historical point immediately before us. If indeed he
+had held the doctrine of the invocation of saints whilst he continued in
+the full communion of the Church, and rejected it afterwards, no honest
+and sensible writer would quote his later opinions against the practice.
+But we are only seeking in his works for evidence of the {129} matter of
+fact,--Is there any proof in the works of Tertullian that the invocation
+of saints formed a part of the doctrine and practice of the Catholic
+Church in his time[48]? His works will be found in the note, arranged
+under those two heads, as nearly as I can ascertain the preponderating
+sentiments of critics[49].
+
+ [Footnote 48: The reader, who may be induced to consult the work
+ of the present Bishop of Lincoln, entitled, "The Ecclesiastical
+ History of the second and third Centuries, illustrated from the
+ writings of Tertullian," will there find, in the examination and
+ application of Tertullian's remains, the union of sound
+ judgment, diligence in research, clearness of perception,
+ acuteness in discovery, and great erudition mingled with
+ charity.]
+
+ [Footnote 49: Works of Tertullian before he became a
+ Montanist:--
+
+ Adversus Judæos.
+ The Tract ad Martyres.
+ The two Books ad Nationes.
+ The Apology, and the Tract de Præscriptione Hæreticorum.
+ The Tract de Testimonio Animæ.
+ The Tracts de Patientia, de Oratione, de Baptismo, de
+ Poenitentia.
+ The two books ad Uxorem.
+
+ Works written after he espoused Montanism:--
+
+ The Tracts de Spectaculis and de Idololatria, though others say
+ these should be ranked among the first class.
+ The Tracts de Corona, and de Fuga in persecutione, Scorpiace,
+ and ad Scapulam.
+ The Tracts de Exhortatione Castitatis, de Monogamia, de
+ Pudicitia, de Jejuniis, de Virginibus Velandis, de Pallio, the
+ five books against Marcion, the Tracts adversus Valentinianos,
+ de Carne Christi, de Resurrectione Carnis, adversus Hermogenem,
+ de Anima, adversus Praxeam, de Cultu Foeminarum.]
+
+I will detain you only by a very few quotations from this father.
+
+In his Apology, sect. 30, we read this very remarkable passage, "We
+invoke the eternal God, the true God, the living God, for the safety of
+the emperor.... {130} Thither (heavenward) looking up, with hands
+extended, because they are innocent; with our head bare, because we are
+not ashamed; in fine, without a prompter, because it is from the heart;
+we Christians pray for all rulers a long life, a secure government, a
+safe home, brave armies, a faithful senate, a good people, a quiet
+world.... For these things I cannot ask in prayer from any other except
+Him from whom I know that I shall obtain; because both He is the one who
+alone grants, and I am the one whom it behoveth to obtain by
+prayer;--his servant, who looks to him alone, who for the sake of his
+religion am put to death, who offer to him a rich and a greater victim,
+which He has commanded; prayer from a chaste frame, from a harmless
+soul, from a holy spirit.... So, let hoofs dig into us, thus stretched
+forward to God, let crosses suspend us, let fires embrace us, let swords
+sever our necks from the body, let beasts rush upon us,--the very frame
+of mind of a praying Christian is prepared for every torment. This do,
+ye good presidents; tear ye away the soul that is praying for the
+emperor." [Page 27.]
+
+In the opening of his reflections on the Lord's Prayer, he says,--
+
+"Let us consider therefore, beloved, in the first place, the heavenly
+wisdom in the precept of praying in secret, by which he required, in a
+man, faith to believe that both the sight and the hearing of the
+Omnipotent God is present under our roofs and in our secret places; and
+desired the lowliness of faith, that to Him alone, whom he believed to
+hear and to see every where, he would offer his worship." [Page 129.]
+
+The only other reference which I will make, is to {131} the solemn
+declaration of Tertullian's Creed; the last clause of which, though in
+perfect accordance with the sentiments of his contemporaries, seems to
+have been regarded with hostile eyes by modern writers of the Church of
+Rome, because it decidedly bids us look to the day of judgment for the
+saints being taken to the enjoyment of heaven; and consequently implies
+that they cannot be properly invoked now.
+
+"To profess now what we defend: By the rule of our faith we believe that
+God is altogether one, and no other than the Creator of the world, who
+produced all things out of nothing by his Word first of all sent down.
+That that Word, called his Son, was variously seen by the patriarchs in
+the name of God; was always heard in the prophets; at length, borne by
+the spirit and power of God the Father into the Virgin Mary, was made
+flesh in her womb, was born of her, and was Jesus Christ. Afterwards He
+preached a new law and a new promise of the kingdom of heaven; wrought
+miracles, was crucified, rose again the third day, and, being taken up
+into heaven, sat on the right hand of the Father; and He sent in his own
+stead the power of the Holy Ghost, to guide believers; that He shall
+come with glory to take the saints to the enjoyment of eternal life and
+the heavenly promises, and to condemn the impious to eternal fire,
+making a reviving of both classes with the restoration of the body." [De
+Præscriptione Hæreticorum, § 13. p. 206.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some notice must here be taken of METHODIUS, a pious Christian, of the
+third century. A work (Methodius, Gl. Combes. Paris, 1644) {132}
+formerly attributed to him has been quoted in proof of the early
+invocation of saints; but the work, among many others, has been long ago
+allowed by the best Roman Catholic critics to be the production of a
+later age. (Fabricius, vol. vii. p. 268, and vol. x. p. 241.) Many
+homilies, purporting to have been delivered on the festival of our
+Lord's presentation in the temple, at so early a period, must be
+received as the works of a later age, because that feast began to be
+observed in the Church so late as the fifteenth year of Justinian, in
+the sixth century. Evidently, moreover, the theological language of the
+homily is of a period long subsequent to the date assigned to Methodius.
+In speaking of our blessed Saviour, for example, he employs expressions
+to guard against the Arian heresy, and makes extracts apparently from
+the Nicene creed, "God of himself, and not by grace," "Very God of very
+God, very light of very light, who for us men and our salvation, &c."
+The general opinion indeed seems to be that this, and many other
+writings formerly ascribed to the first Methodius, were written by
+persons of a subsequent age, who either were of the same name or assumed
+his. Even were the work genuine, it would afford just as strong a
+demonstration that Methodius believed that the city of Jerusalem could
+hear his salutation, as that the saints could hear his prayer; for he
+addresses the same "Hail" to Mary, Symeon, and the Holy City alike,
+calling it the "earthly heaven." [Greek: Chairois hae polis, ho epigeios
+ouranos.] {133}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION V.--THE EVIDENCE OF ORIGEN.
+
+
+Jerome informs us that Tertullian, whose remains we have last examined,
+lived to a very advanced age. Long, therefore, before his death
+flourished Origen, one of the most celebrated lights of the primitive
+Church. He was educated a Christian. Indeed his father is said to have
+suffered martyrdom about the year 202. Origen was a pupil of Clement of
+Alexandria. His virtues and his labours have called forth the admiration
+of all ages; and though he cannot be implicitly followed as a teacher,
+what still remains of his works will be delivered down as a rich
+treasure to succeeding times. He was a most voluminous writer; and
+Jerome asked the members of his church, "Who is there among us that can
+read as many books as Origen has composed?" [Vol. iv. epist. xli. p.
+346.] A large proportion of his works are lost; and of those which
+remain, few are preserved in the original Greek. We are often obliged to
+study Origen through the medium of a translation, the accuracy of which
+we have no means of verifying. A difficult and delicate duty also
+devolves upon the theological student to determine which of the works
+attributed to Origen are genuine and which are spurious; and what parts,
+moreover, of the works received on the whole as genuine came from his
+pen. Of {134} the spurious works, some are so palpably written in a much
+later age, and by authors of different religious views, that no one,
+after weighing the evidence, can be at a loss what decision to make
+concerning them; in the case of others, claims and objections may appear
+to be more evenly balanced. I trust on the one hand to refer to no works
+for Origen's testimony which are not confessedly his, nor on the other
+to exclude any passage which is not decidedly spurious; whilst in one
+particular case more immediately connected with our subject, I am
+induced to enter further in detail into a critical examination of the
+genuineness and value of a passage than the character of this work
+generally requires. The great importance attached to the testimony of
+that passage by some defenders of the worship paid to angels, may be
+admitted to justify the fulness of the criticism. Lest, however, its
+insertion in the body of the work might seem inconveniently to interfere
+with the reader's progress in our argument, I have thought it best to
+include it in a supplementary section at the close of our inquiry into
+the evidence of Origen.
+
+Coccius, in his elaborate work, quotes the two following passages as
+Origen's, without expressing any hesitation or doubt respecting their
+genuineness, in which he is followed by writers of the present day. The
+passages are alleged in proof that Origen held and put in practice the
+doctrine of the invocation of saints; and they form the first quotations
+made by Coccius under the section headed by this title: "That the saints
+are to be invoked, proved by the testimony of the Greek Fathers."
+
+The first passage is couched in these words: "I will {135} begin to
+throw myself upon my knees, and pray to all the saints to come to my
+aid; for I do not dare, in consequence of my excess of wickedness, to
+call upon God. O Saints of God, you I pray with weeping full of grief,
+that ye would propitiate his mercies for me miserable. Alas me! Father
+Abraham, pray for me, that I be not driven from thy bosom, which I
+greatly long for, and yet not worthily, because of the greatness of my
+sins."
+
+Coccius cites this passage as from "Origen in Lament," and it has been
+recently appealed to under the title of "Origen on the Lamentations."
+Here, however, is a very great mistake. Origen's work on the
+Lamentations, called also "Selecta in Threnos," and inserted in the
+Benedictine edition (Vol. iii. p. 321.), is entirely a different
+production from the work which contains the above extract. This
+apocryphal work, on the other hand, does not profess to be the comment
+of Origen on the Lamentations, but the Lament or Wailing of Origen
+himself; or, as it used to be called, the Penitence of Origen. (In the
+Paris edition of 1519 it is called "Planctus, seu Lamentum Origenis."
+Pope Gelasius refers to it as "Poenitentia Origenis.") That this work
+has no pretensions whatever to be regarded as Origen's, has been long
+placed beyond doubt. Even in the edition of 1545, this treatise is
+prefaced by Erasmus in these words, "This Lamentation was neither
+written by Origen nor translated by Jerome, but is the fiction of some
+unlearned man, who attempted, under colour of this, to throw disgrace
+upon Origen." [Basil, 1545. vol. i. p. 498.] In the Benedictine edition
+(Paris, 1733.) no trace of this work is to be found. They do not admit
+it among the doubtful, or even the spurious works; they do not so {136}
+much as give room for it in the appendix; on the contrary, they drop it
+altogether as utterly unworthy of being any longer preserved. Instead,
+however, of admitting the work itself, these editors have supplied
+abundant reason for its exclusion, by inserting the sentiments of
+Huetius, or Huet, the very learned bishop of Avranches. He tells us,
+that formerly to Origen's work on Principles used to be appended a
+treatise called, the Lament of Origen, the Latin translation of which
+Guido referred to Jerome. After quoting the passage of Erasmus (as above
+cited from the edition of 1545) in proof of its having been "neither
+written by Origen nor translated by Jerome, but the fabrication of some
+unlearned man, who attempted, under colour of this, to throw disgrace on
+Origen, just as they forged a letter in Jerome's name, lamenting that he
+had ever thought with Origen," Huet proceeds thus: "And Gelasius in the
+Roman Council writes, 'The book which is called The Repentance of
+Origen, apocryphal.' It is wonderful, therefore, that without any mark
+of its false character, it should be sometimes cited by some theologians
+in evidence. Here we may smile at the supineness of a certain heterodox
+man of the present age, who thought the 'Lament,' ascribed to Origen, to
+be something different from the Book of Repentance." [Vol. iv. part ii.
+p. 326.]
+
+The Decree here referred to of Pope Gelasius, made in the Roman Council,
+A.D. 494, by that pontiff, in conjunction with seventy bishops, contains
+these strong expressions, before enumerating some few of the books then
+condemned: "Other works written by heretics and schismatics, the
+Catholic and Apostolic Church by {137} no means receives; of them we
+think it right to subjoin a few which have occurred to our memory, and
+are to be avoided by Catholics." [Conc. Labb. vol. iv. p. 1265.] Then
+follows a list of prohibited works, among which we read, "the book
+called The Repentance of Origen, apocryphal," the very book which Huet
+identifies with the "Lament of Origen," still cited as evidence even in
+the present day. (See Appendix A.)
+
+The second passage cited by Coccius, and also by writers of the present
+time, as Origen's, without any allusion to its spurious and apocryphal
+character, is from the second book of the work called Origen on Job. The
+words cited run thus: "O blessed Job, who art living for ever with God,
+and remainest conqueror in the sight of the Lord the King, pray for us
+wretched, that the mercy of the terrible God may protect us in all our
+afflictions, and deliver us from all oppressions of the wicked one; and
+number us with the just, and enrol us among those who are saved, and
+make us rest with them in his kingdom, where for ever with the saints we
+may magnify him."
+
+This work, like the former, has no claim whatever to be regarded as
+Origen's. It has long been discarded by the learned. Indeed so far back
+as 1545, Erasmus, in his Censura, proved that it was written long after
+the time of Origen by an Arian. (Basil, 1545. vol. i. p. 408; and
+"Censura.") By the Benedictine editors it is transferred to an appendix
+as the Commentary of an anonymous writer on Job; and they thus express
+their judgment as to its being a forgery: "The Commentary of an
+anonymous writer on Job, in previous editions, is ascribed to Origen;
+{138} but that it is not his, Huet proves by unconquerable arguments.
+This translation is assigned to Hilary, the bishop; but although it is
+clear from various proofs of Jerome, that St. Hilary translated the
+tracts or homilies of Origen on Job, yet there is no reason why that man
+who wrote with the highest praise against the Arians, should be
+considered as the translator of this work, which is infected with the
+corruption of Arianism, and which is not Origen's." [Vol. ii. p. 894.]
+Erasmus calls the prologue to this treatise on Job "the production of a
+silly talkative man, neither learned nor modest."
+
+It is impossible not to feel, with regard to these two works, the
+sentiments which, as we have already seen, the Bishop of Avranches has
+so strongly expressed on one. "It is wonderful, that they should be
+sometimes cited in evidence by some theologians, without any mark of
+their being forgeries."
+
+Proceeding with our examination of the sentiments of Origen, I would
+here premise, that not the smallest doubt can be entertained that Origen
+believed the angels to be ministering spirits, real, active, zealous
+workmen and fellow-labourers with us in the momentous and awful business
+of our eternal salvation. He represents the angels as members of the
+same family with ourselves, as worshippers of the same God, as servants
+of the same master, as children of the same father, as disciples of the
+same heavenly teacher, as learners of one and the same heavenly
+doctrine. He contemplates them as members of our Christian
+congregations, as joining with us in prayer to our heavenly Benefactor,
+as taking pleasure when they hear in our {139} assemblies what is
+agreeable to the will of God, and as being present too not only
+generally in the Christian Church, but also with individual members of
+it[50]. But does Origen, therefore, countenance any invocation of them?
+Let us appeal to himself.
+
+ [Footnote 50: One or two references will supply abundant proof
+ of this: "I do not doubt that in our congregation angels are
+ present, not only in general to the whole Church, but also
+ individually with those of whom it is said, 'Their angels do
+ always behold the face of my Father who is in heaven.' A twofold
+ Church is here: one of men, the other of angels. If we say any
+ thing agreeably to reason and the mind of Scripture, the angels
+ rejoice to pray with us." And a little above, "Our Saviour,
+ therefore, as well as the Holy Spirit, who spoke by the
+ prophets, instructs not only men, but angels and invisible
+ powers."--Hom, xxiii. in Luc. vol. iii. p. 961.
+
+ "Whoever, therefore, confessing his sins, repents, or confesses
+ Christ before men in persecutions, is applauded by his brethren.
+ For there is joy and gladness to the angels in heaven over one
+ sinner that repenteth. By them, therefore, as by brethren (for
+ both men and angels are sons of the same Creator and Father)
+ they are praised."--In Genes. Hom. xvii. p. 110.]
+
+Celsus accused the Christians of being atheists, godless, men without
+God, because they would not worship those gods many and lords many, and
+those secondary, subordinate, auxiliary, and ministering divinities with
+which the heathen mythology abounded: Origen answers, we are not
+godless, we are not without an object of our prayer; we pray to God
+Almighty alone through the mediation only of his Son.
+
+"We must pray to God alone ([Greek: Mono gar proseukteon to epi pasi
+Theo]), who is over all things; and we must pray also to the
+only-begotten and first-born of every creature, the Word of God; and we
+must implore him as our High Priest to carry our prayer, first coming to
+him, to his God and our {140} God, to his Father and the Father of those
+who live agreeably to the word of God." [Cont. Cels. § 8. c. xxvi. vol.
+i. p. 761.]
+
+But Celsus, in this well representing the weakness and failings of human
+nature, still urged on the Christian the necessity, or at all events the
+expediency, of conciliating those intermediate beings who executed the
+will of the Supreme Being, and might haply have much left at their own
+will and discretion to give or to withhold; and therefore the
+desirableness of securing their good offices by prayer. To this Origen
+answers:
+
+"The one God ([Greek: Hena oun ton epi pasi theon haemin
+exenmenisteon])--the God who is over all, is to be propitiated by us,
+and to be appeased by prayer; the God who is rendered favourable by
+piety and all virtue. But if he (Celsus) is desirous, after the supreme
+God, to propitiate some others also, let him bear in mind, that just as
+a body in motion is accompanied by the motion of its shadow, so also by
+rendering the supreme God favourable, it follows that the person has all
+his (God's) friends, angels, souls, spirits, favourable also; for they
+sympathize with those who are worthy of God's favour; and not only do
+they become kindly affected towards the worthy, but they also join in
+their work with those who desire to worship the supreme God; and they
+propitiate him, and they pray with us, and supplicate with us; so that
+we boldly say, that together with men who on principle prefer the better
+part, and pray to God, ten thousands of holy powers join in prayer
+UNASKED ([Greek: aklaetoi])," [UNBIDDEN, UNCALLED upon.] [Cont. Cels.
+lib. viii. § 64. vol. i. p. 789.]
+
+What an opportunity was here for Origen to have stated, that though
+Christians do not call upon demons and the subordinate divinities of
+heathenism to aid {141} them, yet that they do call upon the ministering
+spirits, the true holy angels, messengers and servants of the most High
+God! But whilst speaking of them, and magnifying the blessings derived
+to man through their ministry, so far from encouraging us to ask them
+for their good offices, his testimony on the contrary is not merely
+negative; he positively asserts that when they assist mankind, it is
+without any request or prayer from man. Could this come from one who
+invoked angels?
+
+Another passage, although it adds little to the evidence of the above
+extract, I am unwilling to pass by, because it beautifully illustrates
+by the doctrine and practice of Origen the prayer, the only one adopted
+by the Anglican Church, offered by the Church to God for the succour and
+defence of the holy angels. Speaking of the unsatisfactory slippery road
+which they tread, who either depend upon the agency of demons for good,
+or are distressed by the fear of evil from them, Origen adds, "How far
+better ([Greek: poso Beltion]) were it to commit oneself to God who is
+over all, through Him who instructed us in this doctrine, Jesus Christ,
+and OF HIM to ask for every aid from the holy angels and the just, that
+they may rescue us from the earthly demons." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii. §
+60. vol. i. p. 786.]
+
+In the following passage Origen answers the question of Celsus: "If you
+Christians admit the existence of angels, tell us what you consider
+their nature to be?" [Cont. Cels. lib. v. § 4. p. 579.]
+
+"Come," replies Origen, "let us consider these points. Now we
+confessedly say, that the angels are ministering spirits, and sent to
+minister on account of those who are to be heirs of salvation; that they
+ascend, bearing with them the supplications of men into the most pure
+{142} heavenly places of the world; and that they again descend from
+thence, bearing to each in proportion to what is appointed by God for
+them to minister to the well-doers. And learning that these are, from
+their work, called angels ([Greek: aggeloi], messengers, ministers sent
+to execute some commission), we find them, because they are divine,
+sometimes called even gods in the Holy Scriptures; but not so, as for
+any injunction to be given to us to worship and adore, instead of God,
+those who minister, and bring to us the things of God. For every request
+and prayer, and supplication and thanksgiving, must be sent up to Him
+who is God above all, through the High Priest, who is above all angels,
+even the living Word of God. And we also make our requests to the Word,
+and supplicate Him, and moreover offer our prayer to Him; if we can
+understand the difference between the right use and the abuse of prayer.
+For it is not reasonable for us to call upon angels, without receiving a
+knowledge concerning them which is above man. But supposing the
+knowledge concerning them, wonderful and unutterable as it is, had been
+received; that very knowledge describing their nature, and those to whom
+they are respectively assigned, would not give confidence in praying to
+any other than to Him who is sufficient for every thing, God who is
+above all, through our Saviour, the Son of God, who is the word, and
+wisdom, and the truth, and whatsoever else the writings of the prophets
+of God, and the Apostles of Jesus say concerning Him. But for the angels
+of God to be favourable to us, and to do all things for us, our
+disposition towards God is sufficient; we copy them to the utmost of
+human strength, {143} as they copy God. And our conception concerning
+his Son, the Word, according to what is come to us, is not opposed to
+the more clear conception of the holy angels concerning Him, but is
+daily approximating towards it in clearness and perspicuity."
+
+Again, he thus writes: "But Celsus wishes us to dedicate the
+first-fruits unto the demons; but we to Him who said, Let the earth
+bring forth grass, &c. But to whom we give the first-fruits, to him we
+send up also our prayers; having a great High Priest who is entered into
+the heavens, Jesus the Son of God; and this confession we hold fast as
+long as we live, having God favourable unto us, and his only-begotten
+Son being manifested among us, Jesus Christ. But if we wish to have a
+multitude favourable unto us, we learn that thousand thousands stand by
+Him, and ten thousand thousands minister unto Him; who, regarding those
+as kinsfolks and friends who imitate their piety to God, work together
+for the salvation of them who call upon God and pray sincerely;
+appearing also, and thinking that they ought to listen to them, and as
+if upon one watchword to go forth for the benefit and salvation of those
+who pray to God, to whom they also pray." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii. § 34.
+(Benedict, p. 766.)]
+
+After these multiplied declarations of Origen, not only confessing that
+Christians did not pray to the angels, but vindicating them from the
+charge of impiety brought against them by their enemies for their
+neglect of the worship of angels, is it possible to regard him as a
+witness in favour of prayer to angels?
+
+But it has been said that Origen in another passage (Cont. Cels. lib.
+viii. § 13. p. 751.) {144} plainly implies, that he would not be
+unwilling to discuss the question of some worship being due to angels
+and archangels, provided the idea of that worship, and the acts of the
+worshippers, were first cleared of all misapprehension. And I would not
+that any Catholic, whether in communion with the Church of England or of
+Rome, should make any other answer than Origen here gave to Celsus. Let
+me speak freely on this point. I should not respect the memory of Origen
+as I do, had he taught differently. The word which he uses is the Greek
+word "therapeusis," precisely the same word with that which the learned
+in medicine now use to describe the means of healing diseases. It is a
+word of very wide import. It signifies the care which a physician takes
+of his patient; the service paid to a master; the attention given to a
+superior; the affectionate attendance of a friend; the allegiance of a
+subject; the worship of the Supreme Being. Origen says, Provided Celsus
+will specify what kind of "therapeusis" he would wish to be paid to
+those angels and archangels whose existence we acknowledge, I am ready
+to enter upon the subject with him. This is all he says. And we of the
+Anglican Church are ready from our hearts to join him. Call it by what
+name we may, we are never backward in acknowledging ourselves bound to
+render it. We pay to the angels and archangels, and all the company of
+heaven, the homage of respect, and veneration, and love. They are indeed
+our fellow-servants; they are, like ourselves, creatures of God's hand;
+but they are exalted far above us in nature and in office. By the grace
+of God, we would daily endeavour to become less distant from {145} them
+in purity, in zeal, in obedience. Origen here speaks not one word of
+adoration, of invocation, of prayer. He speaks of a feeling and a
+behaviour, which the Greeks called "therapeusis," and which we best
+render by "respect, veneration, and love." Far from us be the thought of
+lowering the holy angels in the eyes of our fellow-creatures; equally
+far from us be the thought of invoking them, of asking them even for
+their prayers. They are holy creatures and holy messengers: we will
+think and speak of them with reverence, and gratitude, and affection;
+but they are creatures and messengers still, and when we think or speak
+of the object of prayer, we think and speak solely and exclusively of
+God.
+
+With regard to Origen's opinion, as to the invocation of the souls of
+saints departed, a very few words will suffice. He clearly records his
+opinion that the faithful are still waiting for us, and that till we all
+rejoice together, their joy will not be full: he leaves among the
+mysteries not to be solved now the question whether the departed can
+benefit the human race at all; and he has added reflections, full of
+edifying and solemn admonition, which would dissuade his
+fellow-believers from placing their confidence in any virtues, or
+intercessions, or merits of saints, and in any thing except the mere
+mercy of God, through Jesus Christ, and our own individual labour in the
+work of the Lord.
+
+In his seventh homily on Leviticus, in a passage partly quoted by
+Bellarmin, we read[51]--"Not even the Apostles have yet received their
+joy, but even they are waiting, in order that I also may become a
+partaker of {146} their joy. For the saints departing hence do not
+immediately receive all the rewards of their deserts; but they wait even
+for us, though we be delaying and dilatory[52]. For they have not
+perfect joy as long as they grieve for our errors, and mourn for our
+sins." Then, having quoted the Epistle to the Hebrews, he
+proceeds,--"You see, therefore, that Abraham is yet waiting to obtain
+those things that are perfect; so is Isaac and Jacob; and so all the
+prophets are waiting for us, that they might obtain eternal blessedness
+with us. Wherefore, even this mystery is kept, to the last day of
+delayed judgment."
+
+ [Footnote 51: Vol. ii. p. 222. Nondum enim receperunt lætitiam
+ suam, ne apostoli quidem, &c. But see Huetius on Origen, lib.
+ ii. q. 11. No. 10.]
+
+ [Footnote 52: He thinks it probable, that the saints departed
+ feel an interest in the welfare of men on earth. See vol. iv. p.
+ 273.]
+
+Modern Roman Catholic writers tell us, that we must consider Origen here
+as only referring to the reunion of the soul with the body; but his
+words cannot be so interpreted. The cause of the saints still waiting
+for their consummation of bliss, is stated to be the will of God, that
+all the faithful should enter upon their full enjoyment of blessedness
+together.
+
+Again: it may be asked, whether the following passage could have come
+from the pen of one who prayed to the saints, as already reigning with
+Christ in heaven.
+
+"But now whether the saints who are removed from the body and are with
+Christ, act at all, and labour for us, like the angels who minister to
+our salvation; or whether, again, the wicked removed from the body act
+at all according to the purpose of their own mind, like the bad angels,
+with whom, it is said by Christ, that they will be sent into eternal
+fires;--let this too be {147} considered among the secret things of God,
+mysteries not to be committed to writing." [Epist. ad Rom. lib. ii.
+(Benedict. vol. iv. p. 479.) "Jam vero si etiam," &c.]
+
+In a passage found in Origen's Comment on Ezekiel's text, "Though Noah,
+Daniel, and Job, were in it, they should deliver neither son nor
+daughter, they should deliver only their own souls by their
+righteousness," [Hom. iii. vol. iii. p. 372.] independently of the
+testimony borne to the point before us, we read a very interesting and
+awakening lesson of general application:--
+
+"First, let us expound the passage agreeably to its plain sense, in
+consequence of the ignorance of some who maintain the ideas of their own
+mind to be the truth of God, and often say, 'Every one of us will be
+able by his prayers to snatch whomsoever he will from hell,' and
+introduce iniquity to the Lord; not seeing that the righteousness of the
+righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be
+upon him; so that each shall die in his own sin, and each live in his
+own person. My father being a martyr profits me nothing, if I shall not
+live well, and adorn the nobleness of my race,--that is, his testimony
+and confession, by which he was glorified in Christ. It profiteth not
+the Jews to say, 'We were not born of fornication, we have one father,
+the Lord;' and, a little after, 'Abraham is our father.' Whatever they
+may say, whatever they will assume, if they have not the faith of
+Abraham they make their boast in vain; for they will not be saved on
+account of their being children of Abraham. Since, therefore, some have
+formed incorrect notions, we have necessarily brought in the plain sense
+of the passage as to the letter, saying, Noah, Daniel, and Job will not
+rescue sons or daughters; they only will be saved. Let no {149} one of
+us put his trust in a just father, a holy mother, chaste brethren.
+Blessed is the man who hath his hope in himself, and in the right way.
+But to those who place confident trust in the saints, we bring forward
+no improper example,--'Cursed is the man whose hope is in man;' and
+again, 'Trust ye not in man.' And this also, 'It is good to trust in the
+Lord rather than in princes[53].' If we must hope in some object,
+leaving all others, let us hope in the Lord, saying, 'Though a host of
+men were set against me, yet shall not my heart be afraid.'"
+
+ [Footnote 53: These observations may perhaps refer more
+ especially to the saints still on earth; but they apply to all
+ helpers, save God alone.]
+
+He finishes the homily thus: "The righteous see three periods; the
+present, the period of change when the Lord will judge, and that which
+will be after the resurrection,--that is, the eternity of life in heaven
+in Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen."
+
+Can this confessor of the Christian faith have ever taught his
+fellow-believers to plead the merits of the saints, or to pray for their
+intercessions? How strongly are the above sentiments contrasted with a
+passage in the third of the spurious homilies called In Diversos; the
+first clause of which is referred to by Bellarmin, as containing
+Origen's approbation of giving honour to the saints[54].
+
+ [Footnote 54: I hardly need detain the reader by any proof of
+ the spuriousness of this passage; the whole work from which it
+ is taken is rejected altogether by the Benedictine editors:
+ "Reliqua ejusmodi spuria omittenda censuimus, qualia sunt ...
+ Homiliæ in diversos;" and they have not allowed a single line of
+ it to appear in their volumes, not even in the small
+ character.--Vol. iv. p. 1.]
+
+"The memory of these (the Innocents) is always {149} celebrated, as is
+right, in the Churches. These, therefore, since they were unjustly or
+impiously put to death in peace and rest, having suffered much for the
+name of the Lord, were taken from this world, to remain in the eternal
+Church for ever in Christ. But their parents for the merits of their
+suffering will receive a worthy recompense of reward from the just and
+eternal Lord God." Here we have strongly marked indeed the difference
+between Origen himself, and the errors fastened upon him by the design
+or ignorance of subsequent times.
+
+Were not his testimony a subject of great moment, I should plead guilty
+to having detained my readers too long on Origen; and yet I cannot
+dismiss him without first refreshing our minds with the remembrance of
+some of his beautiful reflections on a Christian's prayer. We need not
+read them with a controversial eye, and they may be profitable to us
+all.
+
+"I think, then, (says this early teacher in Christ's school) that when
+proceeding to prayer, a Christian will be more readily disposed, and be
+in a better tone for the general work of prayer, if he will first tarry
+a little, and put himself into the right frame, casting off every
+distracting and disturbing thought, and with his best endeavour
+recalling to mind the vastness of HIM to whom he is drawing near, and
+how unholy a thing it is to approach him with a carelessness and
+indifference, and, as it were, contempt; laying aside also every thing
+foreign to the subject;--so to come to prayer as one who stretcheth
+forth his soul first, before his hands; and lifts up his mind first,
+before his eyes, to God; and before he stands up, raising from the
+ground the leading [150} principle of his nature, and lifting that up to
+the Lord of all. So far casting away all remembrance of evil towards any
+of those who may seem to have injured him, as he wishes God not to
+remember evil against him, who has himself been guilty, and has
+trespassed against many of his neighbours, or in whatever he is
+conscious to have done contrary to right reason." [De Oratione, vol. i.
+§ 31. p. 267.]
+
+"Having divided prayer into its several parts" (he continues), "I may
+bring my work to a close. There are then four parts of prayer requiring
+description, which I have found scattered in the Scriptures, all of
+which every one should embody in his prayer:--
+
+"First, we must offer glory (doxologies) to the best of our ability in
+the opening and commencement of our prayer, to God through Christ who is
+glorified with Him in the Holy Spirit, who is praised together. After
+this each person should offer general thanksgivings both for the
+blessings granted to all, and for those which he has individually
+obtained from God. After the thanksgiving, it appears to me right, that
+becoming, as it were, a bitter accuser of his own sins to God, he should
+petition first of all for a remedy to release him from the habit which
+impels him to transgress, and then for remission of the past. And after
+the confession, I think he ought in the fourth place, to add a
+supplication for great and heavenly things, both individual and
+universal, and for his relations and friends. After all, he should close
+his prayer with an ascription of glory to God through Christ in the Holy
+Ghost." [Sect. 33. p. 271.] {151}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION VI.--SUPPLEMENTARY SECTION ON ORIGEN.
+
+
+I have above intimated my intention of reserving for a separate section
+our examination of a passage ascribed to Origen, in which he is
+represented as having invoked an angel to come down from heaven, to
+succour him and his fellow-creatures on earth. The passage purports to
+be part of Origen's comment on the opening verse of the prophecy of
+Ezekiel, "The heavens were opened." After the fullest investigation, and
+patient weighing of the whole section, I am fully persuaded, first, that
+the passage is an interpolation, never having come from the pen of
+Origen; and secondly, that, whoever were its author, it can be regarded
+only as an instance of those impassioned apostrophes, which are found in
+great variety in the addresses of ancient Christian orators. But since
+some of the most respected writers of the Church of Rome have regarded
+it as genuine, and deemed it worthy of being cited in evidence, I feel
+it incumbent to state at length, for those readers who may desire to
+enter at once fully into the question, the reasons on which my judgment
+is founded; whilst others, who may perhaps consider the discussion of
+the several points here as too great an interruption to the general
+argument, may for the present pass this section, and reserve it for
+subsequent inquiry.
+
+It will be, in the first place, necessary to quote the whole passage
+entire, however long; for the mere extract of that portion which is
+cited as Origen's prayer to an {152} angel, might leave a false
+impression as to the real merits of the case.
+
+"The heavens are opened. The heavens were closed, and at the coming of
+Christ they were opened, IN ORDER THAT THEY BEING LAID OPEN THE HOLY
+GHOST MIGHT COME UPON HIM in the appearance of a dove. For he could not
+come to us unless he had first descended on one who partook of his own
+nature. Jesus ascended up on high, he led captivity captive, he received
+gifts for men. He who descended is the same who ascended above all
+heavens, that he might fill all things; and he gave some as apostles,
+some as prophets, some as evangelists, some as pastors and masters, for
+the perfecting of the saints." [Vol. iii. p. 358. Hom. i. in Ezek.]
+
+"[The heavens were opened. It is not enough for one heaven to be opened:
+very many are opened, that not from one, but from all, angels may
+descend to those who are to be saved; angels who ascended and descended
+upon the Son of man, and came to him, and ministered to him. Now the
+angels descended because Christ first descended, fearing to descend
+before the Lord of all powers and things commanded. But when they saw
+the chieftain of the army of heaven dwelling in earthly places, then
+they entered through the opened road, following their Lord, and obeying
+his will, who distributes them as guardians of those that believe on his
+name. Thou yesterday wast under a devil, to-day thou art under an angel.
+Do not ye, saith the Lord, despise one of the least of those who are in
+the Church? Verily, I say unto you, that their angels through all things
+see the face of the Father who is in heaven. The angels attend on thy
+salvation; they were granted for the ministry of the Son of God, and
+{153} they say among themselves, If he descended, and descended into a
+body, if he is clothed in mortal flesh, and endured the cross, and died
+for man, why are we resting idle? Why do we spare ourselves? Haste away!
+Let all of us angels descend from heaven! Thus also was there a
+multitude of the heavenly host praising and blessing God when Christ was
+born. All things are full of angels. COME, ANGEL, take up one who by the
+word is converted from former error, from the doctrine of demons, from
+iniquity speaking on high, and taking him up like a good physician,
+cherish him, and instruct him. He is a little child, to-day he is born,
+an old man again growing young; and undertake him, granting him the
+baptism of the second regeneration; and summon to thyself other
+companions of thy ministry, that you all may together train for the
+faith those who have been sometime deceived. For there is greater joy in
+heaven over one sinner repenting, than over ninety and nine just persons
+who need no repentance. Every creature exults, rejoices with, and with
+applause addresses those who are to be saved; for the expectation of the
+creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God. And although
+those who have interpolated the apostolical writings are unwilling that
+such passages should be in their books as may prove Christ to be the
+Creator, yet every creature waiteth for the sons of God when they shall
+be freed from sin, when they shall be taken away from the hand of
+Zabulon[55], when they shall be regenerated by Christ. But now it is
+time that we touch somewhat on the present place. The Prophet sees not a
+vision, but visions of God. {154} Why did he see not one, but many
+visions? Hear the Lord promising and saying, I have multiplied visions.
+8. 'The fifth month.' This was the fifth year of the captivity of king
+Joachim. In the thirtieth year of Ezekiel's age, and the fifth of the
+captivity of Joachim, the prophet is sent to the Jews. The most merciful
+Father did not despise the people, nor leave them a long time
+unadmonished. It is the fifth year. How much time intervened? Five years
+elapsed since they were captives in bondage.]
+
+(The portion between brackets is what I regard as an interpolation.)
+
+ [Footnote 55: This word is frequently used for "Diabolum." Thus
+ in a hymn used in the Roman ritual on Michaelmas-day we read,
+ "Michaelem in virtute conterentem Zabulum."]
+
+"Immediately the Holy Spirit descends. He opened the heavens, that they
+who were oppressed by the yoke of bondage might see those things which
+were seen by the prophet. For when he says, The heavens were opened, in
+some measure they see with the eyes of their heart what he had seen even
+with the eyes of his flesh."
+
+Now the question is, Can this apostrophe to an angel be admitted as
+evidence that Origen held, and in his own person acted upon the doctrine
+of the Invocation of Angels?
+
+The nature of the present work precludes us from entering at length on
+the broad question, how far we can with safety regard the several
+writings which now purport to be translations of Origen's compositions,
+as on the whole the works of that early Christian writer. A multitude of
+those works which, until almost the middle of the sixteenth century,
+were circulated as Origen's, have long been by common consent excluded
+from the catalogue of his works[56]. On this subject I {155} would refer
+any one, who desires to enter upon the inquiry, to the several prefaces
+of the Benedictine editors, who point out many sources of information,
+as well from among their friends as from those with whom they differ.
+Our inquiry must be limited within far narrower bounds, though I trust
+our arguments may assist somewhat in establishing the principles on
+which the student may at first guide himself in the wider range of
+investigation.
+
+ [Footnote 56: See preface to vol. iv. of the Benedictine
+ edition.]
+
+We will first look to the external evidence bearing on the passage in
+question, and then to the internal character of the passage itself.
+
+Origen's Commentaries on Ezekiel were divided into no fewer than
+twenty-five volumes, which he is said to have begun in Cæsarea of
+Palestine, and to have finished in Athens. Of these only one single
+fragment remains, namely, part of the twenty-first volume[57]. Jerome
+says that he translated fourteen of Origen's homilies on Ezekiel. Of
+these not one passage in the original language of Origen is known to be
+in existence. We must now, therefore, either receive the existing
+translations generally as Origen's, (whether they are Jerome's
+translations or not,) or we must consider Origen's homilies on Ezekiel
+as altogether lost to us. But supposing that we receive these works as
+containing, on the whole, traditionary translations of Origen, the
+genuineness of any one passage may yet become the subject of fair
+criticism. And whilst some persons reject whole masses of them
+altogether, the history of his works cannot but suggest some very
+perplexing points of suspicion and doubt.
+
+ [Footnote 57: See Benedictine edition, vol. iii. p. 351. and
+ Eusebius, Eccl. Hist. lib. vi. c. 6. there referred to.] {156}
+
+The great body of his homilies, Origen probably delivered extempore in
+the early part of his ministry to the Christians of Cæsarea. Eusebius
+tells us, that not before Origen had reached his sixtieth year did he
+sanction the notaries (persons well known to history and corresponding
+to the short-hand writers[58] of the present day) in publishing any of
+his homilies. [Eccles. Hist. lib. vi. c. 36.] But the Benedictine
+editor, De la Rue, conceives that those men might surreptitiously and
+against the preacher's wishes have published some of Origen's homilies.
+Be this as it may. Suppose that the homilies on Ezekiel were published
+by Origen himself, and were translated by Jerome himself, our doubts are
+not removed even by that supposition. The same editor in the same
+preface tells us, "It is known to the learned that it was Jerome's
+habit, in translating Greek, sometimes to insert some things of his
+own[59]." Not that I for a moment conceive the passage under
+consideration to have come in its Latin dress from the pen of Jerome;
+for my conviction being that it is an interpolation of a much later
+date, I mention the circumstance to show, that even when Jerome, with
+his professed accuracy, is the translator, we can in no case feel sure
+that we are reading the exact and precise sentiments of Origen.
+
+ [Footnote 58: The Latin word "notarius" (notary) does not come
+ so near as our own English expression, "short-hand writer," to
+ the Greek word used by Eusebius,--"tachygraphus,"
+ "quick-writer." The report of Eusebius as to the homilies of
+ Origen having been delivered extempore, and taken down by these
+ "quick-writers," is confirmed by Pamphilus the martyr, as quoted
+ by Valesius, in the annotations on this passage of
+ Eusebius.--Apol. Orig. lib. i.]
+
+ [Footnote 59: Cui in vertendis Græcis sciunt eruditi solemne
+ esse nonnulla interdum de suo inserere.] {157}
+
+Ruffinus, his celebrated contemporary, accused Jerome of many
+inaccuracies in his translations; and yet what were the principles of
+translation adopted by Ruffinus himself, as his own, we are not left to
+infer; for we learn it from his own pen. His voluntary acknowledgment in
+the peroration which he added to Origen's Comment on the Epistle of St.
+Paul to the Romans, strongly and painfully exhibits to us how little
+dependence can safely be placed on such translations whenever the
+original is lost; how utterly insufficient and unsatisfactory is any
+evidence drawn from them, as to the real genuine sentiments and
+expressions of the author. Ruffinus informs us, that with regard to many
+of the various works of Origen, he changed the preacher's extemporary
+addresses, as delivered in the Church, into a more explanatory form,
+"adding, supplying, filling up what he thought wanting[60]."
+
+ [Footnote 60: Dum supplere cupimus ea quæ ab Origene in
+ auditorio Ecclesiæ extempore (non tam explanationis quam
+ ædificationis intentione) perorata sunt.... Si addere quod
+ videar, et explere quæ desunt.--Orig. vol. iv. p. 688.]
+
+Moreover, he proceeds so far as to tell us[61] that his false {158}
+friends had remonstrated with him for not publishing the works under his
+own name, instead of retaining Origen's, his changes having been so
+great; a point, which he was far from unwilling to acknowledge. This
+must appear to every one unsatisfactory in the extreme, and to shake
+one's confidence in any evidence drawn from such a source. Indeed, the
+Benedictine editor, with great cause and candour, laments this course of
+proceeding on the part of Ruffinus, as throwing a doubt and uncertainty,
+and suspicion, over all the works so tampered with. "This one thing
+(observes that honest editor) would the learned desire, that Ruffinus
+had spared himself the labour of filling up what he thought deficient.
+For since the Greek text has perished, it can scarcely with certainty be
+distinguished, where Origen himself speaks, or where Ruffinus obtrudes
+his own merchandise upon us." This is more than enough to justify our
+remarks. I must, however, refer to the conduct of another editor and
+translator of Origen, of a similar tendency. It unhappily shows the
+disposition to sacrifice every thing to the received opinions of the
+Church of Rome, rather than place the whole evidence of antiquity before
+the world, and abide by the result. How many works this principle, in
+worse hands, may have mutilated, or utterly buried in oblivion, and left
+to perish, it is impossible to conjecture; that the principle is
+unworthy the spirit of Christianity will not now be questioned. That
+editor and translator, in his advertisement on the Commentary upon St.
+John, thus professes the principles which he had adopted: "Know,
+moreover, that I have found nothing in this book which {159} seemed to
+be inconsistent with the decrees of holy Mother Church: for had I found
+any, I would not have translated the book, or would have marked the
+suspected place." [Quoted by the Benedictine, vol. iv. p. viii.] The
+Benedictine proceeds to say, that the writer had not kept his word, but
+had allowed many heterodox passages to escape, whilst he had
+deliberately withdrawn others.
+
+ [Footnote 61: His words, as indicative of his principles of
+ translation, and bearing immediately on the question, as to the
+ degree of authority which should be assigned to the remains of
+ Origen, when the original is lost, deserve a place here: "I am
+ exposed to a new sort of charge at their hands; for thus they
+ address me,--In your writings, since very many parts in them
+ (plurima in eis) are considered to be of your own production,
+ give the title of your own name, and write, for example, The
+ Books of Explanations of Ruffinus on the Epistle to the
+ Romans,--but the whole of this they offer me, not from any love
+ of me, but from hatred to the author. But I, who consult my
+ conscience more than my fame, even if I am seen to add some
+ things, and to fill up what are wanting, or to shorten what are
+ too long, yet I do not think it right to steal the title of him,
+ who laid the foundations of the works, and supplied the
+ materials for the buildings. Yet, in truth, it may be at the
+ option of the reader, when he shall have approved of the work,
+ to ascribe the merits to whom he will."]
+
+Many works probably, of the earliest ages, have been wholly or in part
+lost to us from the working of the same principle in its excess. Rather
+than perpetuate any sentiments at variance with the received doctrines
+of the Church, it was considered the duty of the faithful to let works,
+in themselves valuable, but containing such sentiments, altogether
+perish, or to exclude the objectionable passages.
+
+I would now invite you to examine the passage itself, and determine
+whether it does not bear within it internal evidence of its having been
+altogether interpolated.
+
+In the first place, on the words upon which it professes to be a
+comment, the author had already given his comment, and assigned to them
+another meaning. "The heavens were opened," he says: "Before the time of
+Christ the heavens were shut; but at his advent they were opened, THAT
+THE HOLY SPIRIT MIGHT DESCEND FIRST ON HIM;" quoting also among others
+the passage which speaks of Christ taking captivity captive. And then
+after the passage in question, in which he assigns a totally different
+reason for the opening of the heavens; without any allusion to the
+intervening ideas, he carries on, and concludes the comment which he had
+begun,--in words which fit on well with the close of that comment, but
+which, as they stand now at the close of the intervening passage about
+the angels, are abrupt and incoherent--"Forthwith the Holy Spirit {160}
+descended;" recurring also again to the idea which he had before
+introduced of Christ benefiting those who were in captivity. A passage
+which affixes to the words commented upon, a different interpretation
+from one already given in the same paragraph; and which forces itself
+abruptly and incoherently in the middle of a brief comment, must offer
+itself to our examination under strong grounds of suspicion, that it has
+been interpolated. But when we examine the substance of the passage, its
+sentiments, the ideas conveyed, and the associations suggested, and then
+think of the author to whom it is ascribed, few probably will be
+disposed to regard it as a faithful mirror in which to contemplate the
+real sentiments of Origen.
+
+How utterly unworthy of the sublime burst of Christian eloquence which
+now delights us in undoubted works of Origen, is this strange and
+degrading fiction! The true Origen THERE represents the tens of
+thousands of angelic spirits ten thousand times told, as ever
+surrounding the throne of God, and ministering for the blessing of those
+in whose behalf God himself wills them to serve. [Vol. i. p. 767. Contr.
+Cels. viii. 34.] Here he represents the revelation of the holiest of
+holies as a throwing open of the various divisions or compartments of
+the celestial kingdom for all the angels to hasten forth together, from
+their several places of indolence and carelessness and self-indulgence,
+(for such he represents their state to have been,) to visit this earth.
+Surely such a comment would better suit the mythology of the cave and
+dens of Æolus and his imprisoned winds (velut agmine facto qua data
+porta ruunt) than the awfully sublime revelation vouchsafed to the
+prophet Ezekiel. And how unworthy and degrading is that representation
+of the {161} heavenly host, resting inactive, and sparing themselves
+from toil, until they witnessed Christ's descent and humiliation; and
+then when chid and put to shame and rebuke, and mutually roused to
+action by their fellows, coming down to visit this earth, and rushing
+through the opened portals of heaven.
+
+Again, we see how incoherent is the whole section which contains the
+alleged prayer to angels: "Thou wast yesterday under a demon, to-day
+thou art under an angel: the angels minister to thy salvation; they are
+granted for the ministry of the Son of God, &c. All things are full of
+angels. Come, Angel, take up one who is converted from his ancient
+error, &c. And call to thee other companions of thy ministry, that all
+of you alike may train up to the faith those who were once deceived."
+Indeed the passage seems to carry within itself its own condemnation so
+entirely, that what we have before alleged, both of internal and
+external evidence, may appear superfluous. Surely the conceit of a
+preacher of God's word addressing an angel, (which of them he thus
+individually addresses does not appear; for he says not "My Angel," as
+though he were appealing to one whom he regarded as his guardian, the
+view gratuitously suggested in the marginal note of the Benedictine
+editor, "the invocation of a guardian angel,") and bidding some one
+angel, as a sort of summoner, to go and call to himself all the angels
+of heaven to come in one body, and instruct those who are in error, is,
+even as a rhetorical apostrophe, as unworthy the mind of a Christian
+philosopher, as it is in the light of a prayer totally inconsistent with
+the plain sentiments of Origen on the very subject of angelic
+invocation. Even had Origen not left us his deliberate opinions in works
+of undoubted genuineness, such a {162} strange, incoherent, and childish
+rhapsody could never be relied upon by sober and upright men as a
+precedent sanctioning a Christian's prayer to angels; no one would rely
+upon such evidence in points of far less moment, even were it
+uncontradicted by the same witness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION VII.--ST. CYPRIAN.
+
+
+In the middle of the third century, Cyprian [Jerom, vol. iv. p. 342.], a
+man of substance and a rhetorician of Carthage, was converted to
+Christianity. He was then fifty years of age; and his learning, virtues,
+and devotedness to the cause which he had espoused, very soon raised him
+to the dignity, the responsibility, and, in those days, the great
+danger, of the Episcopate. (Cyprian is said to have been converted about
+A.D. 246, to have been consecrated A.D. 248, and to have suffered
+martyrdom A.D. 258.) Many of his writings of undoubted genuineness are
+preserved, and they have been appealed to in every age as the works of a
+faithful son of the Catholic Church. On the subject of prayer he has
+written very powerfully and affectingly; but I find no expression which
+can by possibility imply that he practised or countenanced the
+invocation of saints and angels. I have carefully examined every
+sentence alleged by its most strenuous defenders, and I cannot extract
+from them one single grain of evidence which can bear the test of
+inquiry. Even did the passages quoted require to be taken in the sense
+affixed to them {163} by those advocates, they prove nothing; they do
+not bear even remotely upon the subject, whilst I am persuaded that to
+every unprejudiced mind a meaning will appear to have been attached to
+them which the author did not intend to convey.
+
+The first quotation to which our attention is called is from the close
+of his treatise De Habitu Virginum, which contains some very edifying
+reflections. In the last clause of that treatise the advocates for the
+invocation of saints represent Cyprian as requesting the virgins to
+remember him in their prayers at the throne of grace when they shall
+have been taken to heaven. "As we have borne the image of Him who is of
+the earth, let us also bear the image of him who is from heaven. This
+image the virgin-state bears,--integrity bears it, holiness and truth
+bear it; rules of discipline mindful of God bear it, retaining justice
+with religion, firm in the faith, humble in fear, strong to endure all
+things, gentle to receive an injury, readily disposed to pity, with one
+mind and with one heart in brotherly peace. All which ye ought, O good
+virgins, to observe, to love and fulfil; ye who, retired for the service
+of God and Christ, with your greater and better part are going before
+towards the Lord to whom you have devoted yourselves. Let those who are
+advanced in age exercise rule over the younger; ye younger, offer to
+your equals a stimulus; encourage yourselves by mutual exhortations; by
+examples emulous of virtue invite each other to glory; remain firm;
+conduct yourselves spiritually; gain the end happily. Only remember us
+then, when your virgin-state shall begin to be honoured." [Tantum
+mementote tunc nostri, cum incipiet in vobis virginitas honorari.--Page
+180.] {164}
+
+The second instance, from the close of his letter to Cornelius, puts
+before us a beautiful act of friendship and brotherly affection worthy
+of every Christian brother's and friend's imitation. But how it can be
+applied in supporting the cause of the invocation of saints, I cannot
+see. The supporters of that doctrine say that Cyprian suggests to his
+friend, still living on earth, that whichever of the two should be first
+called away, he should continue when in heaven to pray for the survivor
+on earth. Suppose it to be so. That has not any approximation to our
+praying to one who is already dead and gone to his reward. But Cyprian
+surely intended to convey a very different meaning, namely this, that
+the two friends should continue to pray, each in his place, mutually for
+each other and for their friends, and relieve each other's wants and
+necessities whilst both survived; and whenever death should remove the
+one from earth to happiness, the survivor should not forget their bond
+of friendship, but should still continue to pray to God for their
+brothers and sisters. The passage translated to the letter, runs thus:
+"Let us be mutually mindful of each other, with one mind and one heart.
+On both sides, let us always pray for each other; let us by mutual love
+relieve each other's pressures and distresses; and if either of us from
+hence, by the speed of the Divine favour, go on before the {165} other,
+let our love persevere before the Lord; for our brothers and sisters
+with the Father's mercy let not prayer cease. My desire, most dear
+brother, is that you may always prosper." [Epist. 57. Benedict, p.
+96.--Memores nostri invicem simus concordes atque unanimes: utrobique
+pro nobis semper oremus, pressuras et angustias mutua caritate
+relevemus, et si quis istinc nostrum prior divinæ dignationis celeritate
+præcesserit, perseveret apud Dominum nostra dilectio; pro fratribus et
+sororibus nostris apud misericordiam Patris non cesset oratio. Opto te,
+frater carissime, semper bene valere.--This epistle is by some editors
+numbered as the 60th, by others as the 61st, the 7th, and the 69th, &c.]
+
+Whether the above view of this passage be founded in reason or not, it
+matters little to the point at issue. Let both these passages be
+accepted in the sense assigned to them by some Roman Catholic writers,
+yet there is not a shadow of analogy between the language and conduct of
+Cyprian, and the language and conduct of those who now invoke saints
+departed. In each case Cyprian, still in the body, was addressing
+fellow-creatures still sojourning on earth. The very utmost which these
+passages could be forced to countenance would be, that the righteous,
+when in heaven, may be mindful in their prayers of their friends, who
+are still exposed to the dangers from which they have themselves finally
+escaped, and who, when both were on earth, requested them to remember
+the survivors in their prayers. But this is a question totally different
+from our addressing them in supplication and prayer; a difference which
+I am most anxious that both myself and my readers should keep in mind
+throughout.
+
+In the extract from Cyprian's letter, a modern author having rendered
+the single word "utrobique," by the words "in this world and the next" I
+am induced to add a few further observations on the passage. (The Latin
+original and the version here referred to, will be placed side by side
+in the Appendix.) It will, I think, appear to most readers on a careful
+examination of the passage, that the expression "utrobique[62]" "on both
+sides," or "on both parts," whatever be its precise {166} meaning, so
+far from referring to "this world and the next," must evidently be
+confined to the condition of both parties now in this life, because it
+stands in direct contradistinction to what follows, the supposed case of
+the death of either of the two; and because it applies no less to the
+mutual relief of each other's sufferings and afflictions during their
+joint lives, than to their mutual prayers: it cannot mean that all the
+mutual benefits to be derived from their mutual remembrance of each
+other, were to come solely through the means of their prayers. They were
+doubtless mutually to pray for each other; but, in addition to their
+prayers, they were also to relieve each other's pressures and
+difficulties with mutual love, and that too before the event afterwards
+contemplated, namely, the removal of one of them by death.
+
+ [Footnote 62: Utrobique is rendered by Facciolati [Greek:
+ hekaterothi]--"in utraque parte, utrimque."]
+
+Bishop Fell thus comments on the passage: "The sense seems to be, When
+either of us shall die; whether I, who preside at Carthage, or you, who
+are presiding at Rome, shall be the survivor, let the prayer to God of
+him whose lot shall be to remain the longest among the living,
+persevere, and continue." "Meanwhile," continues the Bishop[63], "we by
+no means doubt that souls admitted into heaven apply to God, the best
+and greatest of Beings, that he would have compassion on those who are
+dwelling on the earth. But it does not thence follow, that prayers
+should be offered to the saints. THE MAN WHO PETITIONS THEM MAKES THEM
+GODS (Deos qui rogat ille facit)." [Oxford, 1682, p. 143.] Rigaltius,
+himself {167} a Roman Catholic, doubts whether, when Cyprian wrote this
+letter, he had any idea before his mind of saints departed praying for
+the living. He translates "utrobique" very much as I have done, "with
+reciprocal love, with mutual charity." His last observations on this
+passage are very remarkable. After having confessed the sentiments to be
+worthy of a Christian, that the saints pray for us, and having argued
+that Cyprian could not have thought it necessary to ask a saint to
+retain his brotherly kindness in heaven, for he could not be a saint if
+he did not continue to love his brethren, he thus concludes: "In truth
+it is a pious and faithful saying, That of those who having already put
+off mortality are made joint-heirs with Christ, and of those who
+surviving on earth will hereafter be joint-heirs with Christ, the Church
+is one, and is by the Holy Spirit so well joined together as not to be
+torn asunder by the dissolution of the body. They pray to God for us,
+and we praise God for them, and thus with mutual affection (utrobique)
+we always pray for each other." [Paris, 1666. p. 92.]
+
+ [Footnote 63: See the note of the Benedictine editors on this
+ passage (p. 467), in which they refer to the sentiments of
+ Rigaltius, Pamelius, and Bishop Fell, whom they call "the most
+ illustrious Bishop of Oxford."]
+
+I will detain you only by one or two more extracts from Cyprian; one
+forming part of the introduction to his Comment on the Lord's Prayer,
+which is fitted for the edification of Christians in every age; the
+other closing his treatise on Mortality, one of those beautiful
+productions by which, during the plague which raged at Carthage in the
+year 252, he comforted and exhorted the Christians, that they might meet
+death without fear or amazement, in sure and certain hope of eternal
+blessedness in heaven. The sentiments in the latter passage will be
+responded to by every good Catholic, whether in communion with the
+Church of Rome or {168} with the Church of England; whilst in the former
+we are reminded, that to pray as Cyprian prayed, we must address
+ourselves to God alone in the name and trusting to the merits only of
+his blessed Son.
+
+"He who caused us to live, taught us also to pray, with that kindness
+evidently by which He deigns to give and confer on us every other
+blessing; that when we speak to the Father in the prayer and
+supplication which his Son taught, we might the more readily be heard.
+He had already foretold, that the hour was coming when the true
+worshippers should worship the Father in spirit and in truth; and He
+fulfilled what He before promised, that we, who have received the spirit
+and truth from his sanctification, may from his instruction offer
+adoration truly and spiritually. For what prayer can be more spiritual
+than that which is given to us by Christ, by whom even the Holy Spirit
+is sent to us? What can be a more true prayer with the Father than that
+which came from the lips of the Son, who is Truth? So that to pray
+otherwise than He taught, is not only ignorance, but a fault; since He
+has himself laid it down and said, Ye reject the Commandment of God to
+establish your own traditions. Let us pray then, most beloved brethren,
+as our teacher, God, has instructed us. It is a welcome and friendly
+prayer to petition God from his own, to mount up to his ears by the
+prayer of Christ. Let the Father recognize the words of his Son. When we
+offer a prayer let Him who dwelleth inwardly in our breast, Himself be
+in our voice; and since we have Him as our advocate with the Father for
+our sins, when as sinners we are petitioning for our sins let us put
+forth the words of our Advocate." [De Orat. Dom. p. 204.]
+
+"We must consider, (he says at the close of his {169} treatise on the
+Mortality [Page 236.],) most beloved brethren, and frequently reflect
+that we have renounced the world, and are meanwhile living here as
+strangers and pilgrims. Let us embrace the day which assigns each to his
+own home ... which restores us to paradise and the kingdom of heaven,
+snatched from hence and liberated from the entanglements of the world.
+What man, when he is in a foreign country, would not hasten to return to
+his native land?... We regard paradise as our country.... We have begun
+already to have the patriarchs for our parents. Why do we not hasten and
+run that we may see our country, and salute our parents? There a large
+number of dear ones are waiting for us, of parents, brothers, children;
+a numerous and full crowd are longing for us; already secure of their
+own immortality, and still anxious for our safety. To come to the sight
+and the embrace of these, how great will be the mutual joy to them and
+to us! What a pleasure of the kingdom of heaven is there without the
+fear of dying, and with an eternity of living! How consummate and
+never-ending a happiness! There is the glorious company of the apostles;
+there is the assembly of exulting prophets; there is the unnumbered
+family of martyrs crowned for the victory of their struggles and
+suffering; there are virgins triumphing, who, by the power of chastity,
+have subdued the lusts of the flesh and the body; there are the merciful
+recompensed, who with food and bounty to the poor have done the works of
+righteousness, who keeping the Lord's commands have transferred their
+earthly inheritance into heavenly treasures. To these, O most dearly
+beloved brethren, let us hasten with most eager longing; {170} let us
+desire that our lot may be to be with these speedily; to come speedily
+to Christ. Let God see this to be our thought; let our Lord Christ
+behold this to be the purpose of our mind and faith, who will give more
+abundant rewards of his glory to them, whose desires for himself have
+been the greater."
+
+Such is the evidence of St. Cyprian.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION VIII.--LACTANTIUS.
+
+
+Cyprian suffered martyrdom about the year 260. Towards the close of this
+century, and at the beginning of the fourth, flourished Lactantius. He
+was deeply imbued with classical learning and philosophy. Before he
+became a writer (as Jerome informs us [Jerom, vol. iv. part ii. p. 119.
+Paris, 1706]) he taught rhetoric at Nicomedia; and afterwards in extreme
+old age he was the tutor of Cæsar Crispus, son of Constantine, in Gaul.
+Among many other writings which Jerome enumerates, he specifies the
+book, "On the Anger of God," as a most beautiful work. Bellarmin,
+however, speaks of him disparagingly, as one who had fallen into many
+errors, and was better versed in Cicero than in the Holy Scriptures. His
+testimony is allowed by the supporters of the adoration of spirits and
+angels to be decidedly against them; they do not refer to a single
+passage likely to aid their cause; and they are chiefly anxious to
+depreciate his evidence. I will call your attention only to two passages
+in his works. The {171} one is in his first book on False Religion: "God
+hath created ministers, whom we call messengers (angels);... but neither
+are these gods, nor do they wish to be called gods, nor to be
+worshipped, as being those who do nothing beyond the command and will of
+God." [Vol. i. p. 31.]
+
+The other passage is from his work on a Happy Life: "Nor let any one
+think that souls are judged immediately after death. For all are kept in
+one common place of guard, until the time come when the great Judge will
+institute an inquiry into their deserts. Then those whose righteousness
+shall be approved, will receive the reward of immortality; and those
+whose sins and crimes are laid open shall not rise again, but shall be
+hidden in the same darkness with the wicked--appointed to fixed
+punishments." [Chap. xxi. p. 574.]
+
+This composition is generally believed to have been written about the
+year 317.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IX.--EUSEBIUS.
+
+
+The evidence of Eusebius, on any subject connected with primitive faith
+and practice, cannot be looked to without feelings of deep interest. He
+flourished about the beginning of the fourth century, and was Bishop of
+Caesarea, in Palestine. His testimony has always been appealed to in the
+Catholic Church, as an authority not likely to be gainsaid. He was a
+voluminous writer, and his writings were very diversified in their
+character. {172} Whatever be our previous sentiments we cannot too
+carefully examine the remains of this learned man. But in his writings,
+historical, biographical, controversial, or by whatever name they may be
+called, overflowing as they are with learning, philosophical and
+scriptural, I can find no one single passage which countenances the
+decrees of the Council of Trent; not one passage which would encourage
+me to hope that I prayed as the primitive Church was wont to pray, if by
+invocation I requested an angel or a saint to procure me any favour, or
+to pray for me. The testimony of Eusebius has a directly contrary
+tendency.
+
+Among the authorities quoted by the champions of the invocation of
+saints, I can find only three from Eusebius; and I sincerely lament the
+observations which truth and justice require me to make here, in
+consequence of the manner in which his evidence has been cited. The
+first passage to which I refer is quoted by Bellarmin from the history
+of Eusebius, to prove that the spirit of a holy one goes direct from
+earth to heaven. This passage is not from the pen of Eusebius; and if it
+were, it would not bear on our inquiry. The second is quoted by the same
+author, from the Evangelica Præparatio, to prove that the primitive
+Christians offered prayers to the saints. Neither is this from the pen
+of Eusebius. The third Extract, from the account of the martyrdom of
+Polycarp, is intended to prove that the martyrs were worshipped. Even
+this, one of the most beautiful passages in ancient history, as it is
+represented by Bellarmin and others, is interpolated.
+
+The first passage, which follows a description of the {173} martyr
+Potamiæna's sufferings, is thus quoted by Bellarmin: "In this manner the
+blessed virgin, Potamniæna, emigrated from earth to heaven." [Hoc modo
+beata Virgo emigravit e terris ad coelum. Vol. ii. p. 854.] And such,
+doubtless, is the passage in the translation of Eusebius, ascribed to
+Ruffinus [Basil, 1535. p. 134]; but the original is, "And such a
+struggle was thus accomplished by this celebrated virgin;" ([Greek: kai
+ho men taes aoidimou koraes toioutos kataegoisisto athlos]; Tale
+certamen ab hac percelebri et gloriosa virgine confectum fait.); and
+such is the Parisian translation of 1581.
+
+The second misquotation is far more serious. Bellarmin thus quotes
+Eusebius: "These things we do daily, who honouring the soldiers of true
+religion as the friends of God, approach to their respective monuments,
+and make OUR PRAYERS TO THEM, as holy men, by whose intercession to God,
+we profess to be not a little aided." [Hæc nos, inquit, quotidie
+factitamus qui veras pietatis milites ut Dei amicos honorantes, ad
+monumenta quoque eorum accedimus, votaque ipsis facimus tanquam viris
+sanctis quorum intercessione ad Deum non parum juvari profitemur.--p.
+902. He quotes it as c. 7.]
+
+By one who has not by experience become familiar with these things it
+would scarcely be believed, that whilst the readers of Bellarmin have
+been taught to regard these as the words of Eusebius, in the original
+there is no mention whatever made of the intercession of the saints;
+that there is no allusion to prayer to them; that there is no admission
+even of any benefit derived from them at all. This quotation Bellarmin
+makes from the Latin version, published in Paris in 1581, or from some
+common source: it is word for word the same. We must either allow him to
+be ignorant of the truth, or to have designedly preferred error. {174}
+The copy which I have before me of the "Evangelica Præparatio," in Greek
+and Latin, was printed in 1628, and dedicated by Viger Franciscus, a
+priest of the order of Jesuits, to the Archbishop of Paris.
+
+Eusebius, marking the resemblance in many points between Plato's
+doctrine and the tenets of Christianity, on the reverence which,
+according to Plato, ought to be paid to the good departed, makes this
+observation: "And this corresponds with what takes place on the death of
+those lovers of God, whom you would not be wrong in calling the soldiers
+of the true religion. Whence also it is our custom to proceed to their
+tombs, and AT THEM [the tombs] to make our prayers, and to honour their
+blessed souls, inasmuch as these things are with reason done by us."
+[Greek: kai tauta de armozei epi tae ton theophilon teleutae ous
+stratiotas taes alaethous eusebeius ouk an hamartois eipon
+paralambanesthai othen kai epi tas thaekas auton ethos haemin parienai
+kai tas euchas para tautais poieisthai, timan te tas makarias auton
+psychas, os eulogos kai touton uph haemon giguomenon.] This translation
+agrees to a certain extent with the Latin of Viger's edition ("Quæ
+quidem in hominum Deo carissimorum obitus egregie conveniunt, quos veræ
+pietatis milites jure appellaris. Nam et eorum sepulchra celebrare et
+preces ibi votaque nuncupare et beatas illorum animas venerari
+consuevimus, idque a nobis merito fieri statuimus"); though the
+translator there has employed words more favourable to the doctrine of
+the saints' adoration, than he could in strictness justify.
+
+The celebrated letter from the Church of Smyrna (Euseb. Cantab. 1720.
+vol. i. p. 163), relating the martyrdom of Polycarp, one of the most
+precious relics of Christian antiquity, has already been examined by us,
+when we were inquiring into the recorded {175} sentiments of Polycarp;
+and to our reflections in that place we have little to add. The
+interpolations to which we have now referred, are intended to take off
+the edge of the evidence borne by this passage of Eusebius against the
+invocation of saints. First, whereas the Christians of Smyrna are
+recorded by Eusebius to have declared, without any limitation or
+qualification whatever, that they could never worship any fellow-mortal
+however honoured and beloved, the Parisian edition limits and qualifies
+their declaration by interpolating the word "as God," implying that they
+would offer a secondary worship to a saint. Again, whereas Eusebius in
+contrasting the worship paid to Christ, with the feelings of the
+Christians towards a martyr, employs only the word "love," Bellarmin,
+following Ruffinus, interpolates the word "veneramur" after "diligimus,"
+a word which may be innocently used with reference to the holy saints
+and servants of God, though it is often in ancient writers employed to
+mean the religious worship of man to God. Still how lamentable is it to
+attempt by such tampering with ancient documents to maintain a cause,
+whatever be our feelings with regard to it!
+
+With two more brief quotations we will close our report of Eusebius.
+They occur in the third chapter of the third book of his Demonstratio
+Evangelica, and give the same view of the feelings and sentiments of the
+primitive Christians towards the holy angels, which we have found Origen
+and all the other fathers to have acknowledged.
+
+"In the doctrine of his word we have learned that there exists, after
+the most high God, certain powers, {176} in their nature incorporeal and
+intellectual, rational and purely virtuous, who ([Greek: choreuousas])
+keep their station around the sovereign King,--the greater part of whom,
+by certain dispensations of salvation, are sent at the will of the
+Father even as far as to men; whom, indeed, we have been taught to know
+and to honour, according to the measure of their dignity, rendering to
+God alone, the sovereign King, the honour of worship." ([Greek:
+gnorizein kai timain kata to metron taes axias edidachthaemen, mono toi
+pambasilei Theoi taen sebasmion timaen aponemontes]) Again: "Knowing the
+divine, the serving and ministering powers of the sovereign God, and
+honouring them to the extent of propriety; but confessing God alone, and
+Him alone worshipping." ([Greek: theias men dynameis hypaeretikas tou
+pambasileos Theou kai leitourgikas eidotes, kai kata to prosaekon
+timontes monon de Theon homologountes, kai monon ekeinon sebontes])
+[Demonst. Evang. Paris, 1628. p. 106.; Præpar. Evang. lib. vii. c. 15.
+p. 237.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION X.--APOSTOLICAL CANONS AND CONSTITUTIONS.
+
+
+The works known by the name of the Apostolical Constitutions and
+Apostolical Canons, though confessedly not the genuine productions of
+the Apostles, or of their age, have been always held in much veneration
+by the Church of Rome. The most learned writers fix their date at a
+period not more remote than the beginning of the fourth century. (See
+Cotelerius; vol. i. p. 194 and 424. Beveridge, in the same vol. p. 427.
+Conc. Gen. Florence, 1759, tom. i. p. 29 and 254.) I invite the reader
+{177} to examine both these documents, but especially the Constitutions,
+and to decide whether they do not contain strong and convincing
+evidence, that the invocation of saints was not practised or known in
+the Church when they were written. Minute rules are given for the
+conducting of public worship; forms of prayer are prescribed to be used
+in the Church, by the bishops and clergy, and by the people; forms of
+prayer and of thanksgiving are recommended for the use of the faithful
+in private, in the morning, at night, and at their meals; forms, too,
+there are of creeds and confessions;--but not one single allusion to any
+religious address to angel or saint; whilst occasions most opportune for
+the introduction of such doctrine and practice repeatedly occur, and are
+uniformly passed by. Again and again prayer is directed to be made to
+the one only living and true God, exclusively through the mediation and
+intercession of the one only Saviour Jesus Christ. Honourable mention is
+made of the saints of the Old Testament, and the apostles and martyrs of
+the New; directions are also given for the observance of their festivals
+[Book viii. p. 415]; but not the shadow of a thought appears that their
+good offices could benefit us; much less the most distant intimation
+that Christians might invoke them for their prayers and intercessions.
+There is indeed very much in these early productions of the Christian
+world to interest every Catholic Christian; and although a general
+admiration of the principles for the most part pervading them does not
+involve an entire approbation of them all, yet perhaps few would think
+the time misapplied which they should devote to the examination of these
+documents. {178}
+
+In book v. c. 6. of the Constitutions, the martyr is represented as
+"trusting in the one only true God and Father, through Jesus Christ, the
+great High Priest, the Redeemer of souls, the Dispenser of rewards; to
+whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen." [Cotel. vol. i. p. 304.]
+
+In the same book and in the following chapter we find an exceedingly
+interesting dissertation on the general resurrection, but not one word
+of saint or martyr being beforehand admitted to glory; on the contrary,
+the declaration is distinct, that not the martyrs only, but all men will
+rise. Surely such an opportunity would not have been lost of stating the
+doctrine of martyrs being now reigning with Christ, had such been the
+doctrine of the Church at that early period.
+
+In the eighth chapter is contained an injunction to honour the martyrs
+in these words: "We say that they should be in all honour with you, as
+the blessed James the bishop and our holy fellow-minister Stephen were
+honoured with us. For they are blessed by God and honoured by holy men,
+pure from all blame, never bent towards sins, never turned away from
+good,--undoubtedly to be praised. Of whom David spake, 'Honourable
+before God is the death of his saints;' and Solomon, 'The memory of the
+just is with praise.' Of whom the prophet also said, 'Just men are taken
+away.'" [p. 309.]
+
+And in book viii. c. 13. we read this exhortation,--"Let us remember the
+holy martyrs, that we may be counted worthy to be partakers of their
+conflict." [p. 404.]
+
+Does this sound any thing at all like adoration or invocation? The word
+which is used in the above {179} passage, _honour_ [[Greek: timê] p.
+241], is employed when (book ii. c. 28.) the respect is prescribed which
+the laity ought to show to the clergy.
+
+To the very marked silence as to any invocation or honour, to be shown
+to the Virgin Mary, I shall call your attention in our separate
+dissertation on the worship now offered to her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION XI.--SAINT ATHANASIUS.
+
+
+The renowned and undaunted defender of the Catholic faith against the
+errors which in his day threatened to overwhelm Gospel-truth, Athanasius
+(the last of those ante-Nicene writers into whose testimony we have
+instituted this inquiry), was born about the year 296, and, after having
+presided in the Church as Bishop for more than forty-six years, died in
+373, on the verge of his eightieth year. It is impossible for any one
+interested in the question of primitive truth to look upon the belief
+and practice of this Christian champion with indifference. When I first
+read Bellarmin's quotations from Athanasius, in justification of the
+Roman Catholic worship in the adoration of saints, I was made not a
+little anxious to ascertain the accuracy of his allegations. The inquiry
+amply repaid me for my anxiety and the labour of research; not merely by
+proving the unsoundness of Bellarmin's representation, but also by
+directing my thoughts more especially, as my acquaintance with his {180}
+works increased, to the true and scriptural views taken by Athanasius of
+the Christian's hope and confidence in God alone; the glowing fervour of
+his piety centering only in the Lord; his sure and certain hope in life
+and in death anchored only in the mercies of God, through the merits and
+mediation of Jesus Christ alone.
+
+Bellarmin, in his appeal to Athanasius as a witness in behalf of the
+invocation of saints, cites two passages; the one of which, though
+appearing in the edition of the Benedictines, amongst the works called
+doubtful, has been adjudged by those editors [Vol. ii. p. 110 and 122]
+to be not genuine; the other is placed by them among the confessedly
+spurious works, and is treated as a forgery.
+
+The first passage is from a treatise called De Virginitate, and even
+were that work the genuine production of Athanasius, would make against
+the religious worship of the saints rather than in its favour, for it
+would show, that the respect which the author intended to be paid to
+them, was precisely the same with what he would have us pay to holy men
+in this life, who might come to visit us. "If a just man enter into
+thine house, thou shalt meet him with fear and trembling, and shalt
+worship before his feet to the ground: for thou wilt not worship him,
+but God who sent him."
+
+The other passage would have been decisive as to the belief of
+Athanasius, had it come from his pen. "Incline thine ear, O Mary, to our
+prayers, and forget not thy people. We cry to thee. Remember us, O Holy
+Virgin. Intercede for us, O mistress, lady, queen, and mother of God."
+[Vol. ii. p. 390-401.]
+
+Had Bellarmin been the only writer, or the last who cited this passage
+as the testimony of St. Athanasius, {181} it would have been enough for
+us to refer to the judgment of the Benedictine editors, who have classed
+the homily containing these words among the spurious works ascribed to
+Athanasius; or rather we might have appealed to Bellarmin himself. For
+it is very remarkable, that though in his anxiety to enlist every able
+writer to defend the cause of the invocation of saints, he has cited
+this passage in his Church Triumphant as containing the words of
+Athanasius, without any allusion to its decided spuriousness, or even to
+its suspicious character; yet when he is pronouncing his judgment on the
+different works assigned to Athanasius, declaring the evidence against
+this treatise to be irresistible, he condemns it as a forgery. [Bellarm.
+de Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis, Cologne, 1617, vol. vii. p. 50.]
+
+Since, however, this passage has been cited in different Roman Catholic
+writers of our own time as containing the words of Athanasius, and in
+evidence of his genuine belief and practice, and that without an
+allusion even to any thing doubtful and questionable in its character,
+it becomes necessary to enter more in detail into the circumstances
+under which the passage is offered to our notice.
+
+The passage is found in a homily called The Annunciation of the Mother
+of God. How long this homily has been discarded as spurious, or how long
+its genuineness had been suspected before the time of Baronius, I have
+not discovered; but certainly two centuries and a half ago, and
+repeatedly since, it has been condemned as totally and indisputably
+spurious, and has been excluded from the works of Athanasius as a
+forgery, not by members of the Reformed Church, but {182} by most
+zealous and steady adherents to the Church of Rome, and the most
+strenuous defenders of her doctrines and practice.
+
+The Benedictine editors[64], who published the remains of St. Athanasius
+in 1698, class the works contained in the second volume under two heads,
+the doubtful and the spurious; and the homily under consideration is
+ranked, without hesitation, among the spurious. In the middle of that
+volume they not only declare the work to be unquestionably a forgery,
+assigning the reasons for their decision, but they fortify their
+judgment by quoting at length the letter written by the celebrated
+Baronius, more than a century before, to our countryman, Stapleton. Both
+these documents are very interesting.
+
+ [Footnote 64: Here I would observe, that though the Benedictine
+ editors differ widely from each other in talent, and learning,
+ and candour, yet, as a body, they have conferred on Christendom,
+ and on literature, benefits for which every impartial and
+ right-minded man will feel gratitude. In the works of some of
+ these editors, far more than in others, we perceive the same
+ reigning principle--a principle which some will regard as an
+ uncompromising adherence to the faith of the Church; but which
+ others can regard only in the light of a prejudice, and a rooted
+ habit of viewing all things through the eyes of Rome.]
+
+The Benedictine editors begin their preface thus: "That this discourse
+is spurious, there is NO LEARNED MAN WHO DOES NOT NOW ADJUDGE ... The
+style proves itself more clear than the sun, to be different from that
+of Athanasius. Besides this, very many trifles show themselves here
+unworthy of any sensible man whatever, not to say Athanasius ... and a
+great number of expressions unknown to Athanasius ... so that it savours
+of inferior Greek. And truly his subtle disputation {183} on the
+hypostasis of Christ, and on the two natures in Christ, persuades us,
+that he lived after the councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon; of which
+councils moreover he uses the identical words, whereas his dissertation
+on the two wills in Christ seems to argue, that he lived after the
+spreading of the error of the Monothelites. But (continue these
+Benedictine editors) we would add here the dissertation of Baronius on
+this subject, sent to us by our brethren from Rome. That illustrious
+annotator, indeed, having read only the Latin version of Nannius, which
+is clearer than the Greek, did not observe the astonishing perplexity of
+the style[65]."
+
+ [Footnote 65: Even in the Bibliotheca Patrum Concionatoria the
+ homily is declared to be not the work of Athanasius, but to have
+ been written after the sixth general council. "It is evident,"
+ say the editors, "that it is the monument of a very learned man,
+ though he has his own blemishes, on which, for the most part, we
+ have remarked in the margin." Paris, 1662. p. 336.]
+
+The dissertation which the Benedictine editors append, was contained in
+a letter written by Baronius to Stapleton, in consequence of some
+animadversions which Stapleton had communicated to Cardinal Allen on the
+judgment of Baronius. The letter is dated Rome, November, 1592. The
+judgment of Baronius on the spurious character of this homily had been
+published to the world some time previously; for after some preliminary
+words of kindness and respect to his correspondent, Baronius proceeds to
+say, that when he previously published his sentiments on this homily, it
+was only cursorily and by the way, his work then being on another
+subject. Nevertheless he conceived, {184} that the little he had then
+stated would be sufficient to show, that the homily was not the
+production of Athanasius, and that all persons of learning, WHO WERE
+DESIROUS OF THE TRUTH, would freely agree with him; nor was he in this
+expectation disappointed; for very many persons expressed their
+agreement with him, congratulating him on separating legitimate from
+spurious children. He then states the arguments which the Benedictine
+editors adopted after him, and which we need not repeat. But he also
+urges this fact, that though Cyril had the works of Athanasius in his
+custody, and though both the disputing parties ransacked every place for
+sentiments of Athanasius countenancing their tenets, yet neither at
+Ephesus nor at Chalcedon was this homily quoted, though it must have
+altogether driven Eutyches and Nestorius from the field, so exact are
+its definitions and statements on the points then at issue. Baronius
+then adds, that so far from reversing the judgment which he had before
+passed against the genuineness of this homily, he was compelled in
+justice to declare his conviction, that it could not have been written
+till after the heresy of the Monothelites had been spread abroad. This
+we know would fix its date, at the very earliest, subsequently to the
+commencement of the SEVENTH century, three hundred years after
+Athanasius attended the Council of Nice. Among the last sentiments of
+Baronius in this letter, is one which implies a principle worthy of
+Christian wisdom, and which can never be neglected without injury to the
+cause of truth. "These sentiments concerning Athanasius I do not think
+are affirmed with any detriment to the Church; for the Church does not
+suffer a loss on this account; who being the pillar {185} and ground of
+the truth, very far shrinks from seeking, like Æsop's Jackdaw, helps and
+ornaments which are not her own: the bare truth shines more beautiful in
+her own naked simplicity." Were this principle acted upon uniformly in
+our discussions on religious points of faith or practice, controversy
+would soon be drawn within far narrower limits; and would gradually be
+softened into a friendly interchange of sentiments, and would well-nigh
+be banished from the world. No person does the cause of truth so much
+injury, as one who attempts to support it by arguments which will not
+bear the test of full and enlightened investigation. And however an
+unsound principle may be for a while maintained by unsound arguments,
+the momentary triumph must ultimately end in disappointment.
+
+Coccius also cites two passages as conveying the evidence of Athanasius
+on this same point; one from the spurious letter addressed to Felix, the
+pope; the other from the treatise to Marcellus, on the interpretation of
+the Psalms. On the former, I need not detain you by any observation; it
+would be fighting with a shadow. The latter, which only recognises what
+I have never affirmed or denied here,--the interest in our welfare taken
+by holy souls departed, and their co-operation with us when we are
+working out our own salvation,--contains a valuable suggestion on the
+principles of devotion.
+
+"Let no one, however, set about to adorn these Psalms for the sake of
+effect with words from without, [artificial and secular phrases,] nor
+transpose, nor alter the expressions. But let every one inartificially
+read and repeat what is written, that those holy persons who employed
+themselves in their production, recognising their own works, may join
+with us in prayer; or {186} rather that the Holy Spirit, who spake in
+those holy men, observing the words with which his voice inspired them,
+may assist us. For just as much as the life of those holy men is more
+pure than ours, so far are their words preferable to any production of
+our own."
+
+But whilst there is not found a single passage in Athanasius to give the
+faintest countenance to the invocation of saints, there are various
+arguments and expressions which go far to demonstrate that such a belief
+and such practices as are now acknowledged and insisted upon by the
+Church of Rome, were neither adopted nor sanctioned by him. Had he
+adopted that belief and practice for his own, he would scarcely have
+spoken, as he repeatedly has, of the exclusion of angels and men from
+any share in the work of man's restoration, without any expressions to
+qualify it, and to protect his assertions from being misunderstood.
+Again, he bids us look to the holy men and holy fathers as our examples,
+in whose footsteps we should tread, if we would be safe; but not a hint
+escapes him that they are to be invoked.
+
+I must detain you by rather a long quotation from this father, and will,
+therefore, now do nothing more than refer you to two passages expressive
+of those sentiments to which I have above alluded. In the thirteenth
+section of his Treatise on the Incarnation of the Word of God, he
+argues, that neither could men restore us to the image of God, nor could
+angels, but the word of God, Jesus Christ, &c. [Vol. i. part i. p. 58.]
+In his Epistle to Dracontius, he says, "We ought to conduct ourselves
+agreeably to the principles of the saints and fathers, and to imitate
+them,--assured that if we {187} swerve from them, we become alienated
+also from their communion." [Vol. i. part i, p. 265.]
+
+The passage, however, to which I would invite the reader's patient and
+impartial thoughts, occurs in the third oration against the Arians, when
+he is proving the unity of the Father and the Son, from the expression
+of St. Paul in the eleventh verse of the third chapter of his first
+Epistle to the Thessalonians.
+
+"Thus then again ([Greek: outo g' oun palin]), when he is praying for
+the Thessalonians, and saying, 'Now our God and Father himself and the
+Lord Jesus Christ direct our way to you,' he preserves the unity of the
+Father and the Son. For he says not 'may THEY direct ([Greek:
+kateuthunoien]),' as though a twofold grace were given from Him AND Him,
+but 'may HE direct ([Greek: katenthunai]),' to show that the Father
+giveth this through the Son. For if there was not an unity, and the Word
+was not the proper offspring of the Father's substance, as the
+eradiation of the light, but the Son was distinct in nature from the
+Father,--it had sufficed for the Father alone to have made the gift, no
+generated being partaking with the Maker in the gifts. But now such a
+giving proves the unity of the Father and the Son. Consequently, no one
+would pray to receive any thing from God AND the angels, or from any
+other created being; nor would any one say 'May God AND the angels give
+it thee;' but from the Father and the Son, because of their unity and
+the oneness of the gift. For whatever is given, is given through the
+Son,--nor is there any thing which the Father works except through the
+Son; for thus the receiver has the gracious favour without fail. But if
+the patriarch Jacob, blessing his descendants Ephraim and Manasseh,
+said, 'The God who nourished {188} me from my youth unto this day, the
+Angel who delivered me from all the evils, bless these lads;' he does
+not join one of created beings, and by nature angels, with God who
+created them; nor dismissing Him who nourished him, God, does he ask the
+blessing for his descendants from an angel, but by saying 'He who
+delivered me from all the evils,' he showed that it was not one of
+created angels, but the WORD OF GOD; and joining him with the Father, he
+supplicated him through whom also God delivers whom he will. For he used
+the expression, knowing him who is called the Messenger of the great
+counsel of the Father to be no other than the very one who blessed and
+delivered from evil. For surely he did not aspire to be blessed himself
+by God, and was willing for his descendants to be blessed by an angel.
+But the same whom he addressed, saying, I will not let Thee go, except
+thou bless me (and this was God, as he says, 'I saw God face to face'),
+Him he prayed to bless the sons of Joseph. The peculiar office of an
+angel is to minister at the appointment of God; and often he went
+onwards to cast out the Amorite, and is sent to guard the people in the
+way; but these are not the doings of him, but of God, who appointed him
+and sent him,--whose also it is to deliver whom he will." [Vol i. p.
+561.]
+
+"For this cause David addressed no other on the subject of deliverance
+but God Himself. But if it belongs to no other than God to bless and
+deliver, and it was no other who delivered Jacob than the Lord Himself,
+and the patriarch invoked for his descendants Him who delivered him, it
+is evident that he connected no one in his prayer except His Word, whom
+for this reason he called an angel, because he alone reveals the
+Father." {189}
+
+"But this no one would say of beings produced and created; for neither
+when the Father worketh does any one of the angels, or any other of
+created beings, work the things; for no one of such beings is an
+effective cause, but they themselves belong to things produced. The
+angels then, as it is written, are ministering spirits sent to minister;
+and the gifts given by Him through the Word they announce to those who
+receive them."
+
+Now if the invocation of angels had been practised by the Church at that
+time, can it be for a moment believed, that a man of such a mind as was
+the mind of Athanasius, a mind strong, clear, logical, cultivated with
+ardent zeal for the doctrines of the Church, and fervent piety, would
+have suffered such passages as these to fall from him, without one
+saving clause in favour of the invocation of angels? He tells us in the
+most unqualified manner, that they act merely as ministers; ready
+indeed, and rejoicing to be employed on errands of mercy, but not going
+one step without the commands of the Lord, or doing one thing beyond his
+word. Had the idea been familiar to the mind of Athanasius, of the
+lawfulness, the duty, the privilege, the benefit of invoking them, would
+he have avoided the introduction of some words to prevent his
+expressions from being misunderstood and misapplied, as subsequent
+writers did long before the time when the denial of the doctrine might
+seem to have made such precaution more necessary?
+
+I close then the catalogue of our witnesses before the Council of Nicæa
+with the testimony of St. Athanasius; whose genuine and acknowledged
+works afford not one jot or tittle in support of the doctrine and
+practice of the invocation of angels and saints, as now insisted upon by
+the Church of Rome; and the direct {190} tendency of whose evidence is
+decidedly hostile both to that doctrine and that practice.
+
+I have seen it observed by some who are satisfied, that the records of
+primitive antiquity do not contain such references to the invocation of
+saints and angels, as we might have expected to find had the custom then
+prevailed, that the earliest Christians kept back the doctrine and
+concealed it, though they held it; fearing lest their heathen neighbours
+should upbraid them with being as much polytheists as themselves[66].
+This is altogether a gratuitous assumption, directly contrary to
+evidence, and totally inconsistent with their conduct. Had those first
+Christians acted upon such a debasing principle, they would have kept
+back and concealed their worship of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, as
+exposing them to a similar charge. They were constantly upbraided with
+worshipping a crucified {191} mortal; but instead of either meeting that
+charge by denying that they worshipped Jesus as their God, or of
+concealing the worship of Him, lest they should expose themselves again
+to such upbraidings, they publicly professed, that He whom the Jews had
+murdered, they believed in as the Son of God, Himself their God. They
+gloried in the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, and did not fear
+what men might do to them, or say of them in consequence. Had they
+believed in the duty of invoking saints and angels, the high principle
+of Christian integrity would not have suffered them to be ashamed to
+confess it, or to practise openly what they believed.
+
+ [Footnote 66: Bishop Morley, (London, 1683,) in a letter written
+ whilst he was in exile at Breda, to J. Ulitius, refers to
+ Cardinal Perron, "Réplique à la Resp. du Roy de la Grande Bret."
+ p. 1402 and 4, for this sentiment: "The Fathers do not always
+ speak what they think, but conceal their real sentiments, and
+ say that which best serves the cause which they sustain, so as
+ to protect it against the objections of the gentiles. The
+ Fathers, as much as in them lies, and as far as they can, avoid
+ and decline all occasions of speaking about the invocation of
+ saints then practised in the Church, fearing lest to the
+ gentiles there might appear a sort of similarity, although
+ untrue and equivocal, between the worship paid to the saints by
+ the Church, and by the Pagans to their false divinities; and
+ lest the Pagans might thence seize a handle, however unfair, of
+ retorting upon them that custom of the Church." Had a member of
+ the Anglican Church thus spoken of the Fathers, and thus pleaded
+ in their name guilty of subterfuge and duplicity, he would have
+ been immediately charged with irreverence and wanton insult, and
+ that with good reason. These sentiments of the Cardinal are in
+ p. 982 of the Paris edition of 1620.] {192}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART II.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+STATE OF WORSHIP AT THE TIME OF THE REFORMATION.
+
+
+One of the points proposed for our inquiry was the state of religious
+worship, with reference to the invocation of saints, at the time
+immediately preceding the reformation. Very far from entertaining a wish
+to fasten upon the Church of Rome now, what then deformed religion among
+us, in any department where that Church has practically reformed her
+services, I would most thankfully have found her ritual in a more
+purified state than it is. My more especial object in referring to this
+period is twofold: first, to show, that consistently with Catholic and
+primitive principles, the Catholic Christians of England ought not to
+have continued to participate in the worship which at that time
+prevailed in our country; and, secondly, by that example both to
+illustrate the great danger of allowing ourselves to countenance the
+very first stages of superstition, and also to impress upon our minds
+the duty of checking in its germ any the least deviation from the
+primitive principles of faith and worship; convinced that by the general
+tendency of human nature, one wrong step will, though imperceptibly, yet
+almost inevitably lead to another; and that only whilst we adhere with
+uncompromising steadiness {193} to the Scripture as our foundation, and
+to the primitive Church, under God, as a guide, can we be saved from the
+danger of making shipwreck of our faith.
+
+On this branch of our subject I propose to do no more than to lay before
+my readers the witness borne to the state of religion in England at that
+time, by two works, which have been in an especial manner forced upon my
+notice. Many other testimonies of a similar tendency might readily be
+adduced; but these will probably appear sufficient for the purposes
+above mentioned; and to dwell longer than is necessary on this point
+would be neither pleasant nor profitable.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION I.
+
+
+The first book to which I shall refer is called The Hours of the most
+blessed Virgin Mary, according to the legitimate use of the Church of
+Salisbury. This book was printed in Paris in the year 1526. The prayers
+in this volume relate chiefly to the Virgin: and I should, under other
+circumstances, have reserved all allusion to it for our separate inquiry
+into the faith and practice of the Church of Rome with regard to her.
+But its historical position and general character seemed to recommend
+our reference to it here. Without anticipating, therefore, the facts or
+the arguments, which will hereafter be submitted to the reader's
+consideration on the worship of the Virgin, I refer to this work now
+solely as illustrative of the lamentable state of superstition which
+three centuries ago overran our country.
+
+The volume abounds with forms of prayer to the Virgin, many of them
+prefaced by extraordinary notifications of indulgences promised to those
+who duly utter {194} the prayers. These indulgences are granted by Popes
+and by Bishops; some on their own mere motion, others at the request of
+influential persons. They guarantee remission of punishment for
+different spaces of time, varying from forty days to ninety thousand
+years; they undertake to secure freedom from hell; they promise pardon
+for deadly sins, and for venial sins to the same person for the same
+act; they assure to those who comply with their directions a change of
+the pain of eternal damnation into the pain of purgatory, and the pain
+of purgatory into a free and full pardon.
+
+It may be said that the Church of Rome is not responsible for all these
+things. But we need not tarry here to discuss the question how far it
+was then competent for a church or nation to have any service-book or
+manual of devotion for the faithful, without first obtaining the papal
+sanction. For clear it is beyond all question, that such frightful
+corruptions as these, of which we are now to give instances, were spread
+throughout the land; that such was the religion then imposed on the
+people of England; and it was from such dreadful enormities, that our
+Reformation, to whatever secondary cause that reformation is to be
+attributed--by the providence of Almighty God rescued us. No one laments
+more than I do, the extremes into which many opponents of papal Rome
+have allowed themselves to run; but no one can feel a more anxious
+desire than myself to preserve our Church and people from a return of
+such spiritual degradation and wretchedness; and to keep far from us the
+most distant approaches of such lamentable and ensnaring superstitions.
+In this feeling moreover I am assured that I am joined by many of the
+most respected and influential members of the Roman Catholic Church
+among us. {195} Still what has been may be; and it is the bounden duty
+of all members of Christ's Catholic Church, to whatever branch of it
+they belong, to join in guarding his sanctuary against such enemies to
+the truth as it is in HIM.
+
+At the same time it would not be honest and candid in me, were I to
+abstain from urging those, who, with ourselves, deprecate these
+excesses, to carry their reflections further; and determine whether the
+spirit of the Gospel does not require a total rejection, even in its
+less startling forms, of every departure from the principle of invoking
+God alone; and of looking for acceptance with Him solely to the
+mediation of his Son, without the intervention of any other merits. As
+we regard it, it is not a question of degree; it is a question of
+principle: one degree may be less revolting to our sense of right than
+another, but it is not on that account justifiable.
+
+The following specimens, a few selected from an overabundant supply,
+will justify the several particulars in the summary which I have above
+given:
+
+1. "The Right Reverend Father in God, Laurence[67], Bishop of Assaven,
+hath granted forty days of pardon to all them that devoutly say this
+prayer in the worship of our blessed Lady, being penitent, and truly
+confessed of all their sins. Oratio, 'Gaude Virgo, Mater Christi,' &c.
+Rejoice, Virgin, Mother of Christ. [Fol. 35.]
+
+ [Footnote 67: This was Laurence Child, who, by papal provision,
+ was made Bishop of St. Asaph, June 18, 1382. He is called also
+ Penitentiary to the Pope. Le Neve, p. 21. Beatson, vol. i. p.
+ 115.]
+
+2. "To all them that be in the state of grace, that daily say devoutly
+this prayer before our blessed Lady of Pity, she will show them her
+blessed visage, and warn them the day and the hour of death; and in
+their last {196} end the angels of God shall yield their souls to
+heaven; and[68] he shall obtain five hundred years, and so many Lents of
+pardon, granted by five holy fathers, Popes of Rome. [Fol. 38.]
+
+ [Footnote 68: The language in many of these passages is very
+ imperfect; but I have thought it right to copy them verbatim.]
+
+3. "This prayer showed our Lady to a devout person, saying, that this
+golden prayer is the most sweetest and acceptablest to me: and in her
+appearing she had this salutation and prayer written with letters of
+gold in her breast, 'Ave Rosa sine spinis'--Hail Rose without thorns.
+[Fol. 41.]
+
+4. "Our holy Father, Sixtus the fourth, pope, hath granted to all them
+that devoutly say this prayer before the image of our Lady the sum of
+XI.M. [eleven thousand] years of pardon. 'Ave Sanctissima Maria, Mater
+Dei, Regina Coeli,' &c. Hail most holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of
+Heaven. [Fol. 42.]
+
+5. "Our holy Father, Pope Sixtus, hath granted at the instance of the
+highmost and excellent Princess Elizabeth, late Queen of England, and
+wife to our sovereign liege Lord, King Henry the Seventh, (God have
+mercy on her sweet soul, and on all Christian souls,) that every day in
+the morning, after three tollings of the Ave bell, say three times the
+whole salutation of our Lady Ave Maria gratia; that is to say, at 6 the
+clock in the morning 3 Ave Maria, at 12 the clock at noon 3 Ave M., and
+at 6 the clock at even, for every time so doing is granted of the
+SPIRITUAL TREASURE OF HOLY CHURCH 300 days of pardon totiens quotiens;
+and also our holy father, the Archbishop of Canterbury and York, with
+other nine Bishops of this realm, have {197} granted 3 times in the day
+40 days of pardon to all them that be in the state of grace able to
+receive pardon: the which begun the 26th day of March, Anno MCCCCXCII.
+Anno Henrici VII.[69] And the sum of the indulgence and pardon for every
+Ave Maria VIII hondred days an LX totiens quotiens, this prayer shall be
+said at the tolling of the Ave Bell, 'Suscipe,' &c. Receive the word, O
+Virgin Mary, which was sent to thee from the Lord by an angel. Hail,
+Mary, full of grace: the Lord with thee, &c. Say this 3 times, &c. [Fol.
+42.]
+
+ [Footnote 69: Henry VII. began to reign in 1485.]
+
+6. "This prayer was showed to St. Bernard by the messenger of God,
+saying, that as gold is the most precious of all other metals, so
+exceedeth this prayer all other prayers, and who that devoutly sayeth it
+shall have a singular reward of our blessed Lady, and her sweet Son
+Jesus. 'Ave,' &c. Hail, Mary, most humble handmaid of the Trinity, &c.
+Hail, Mary, most prompt Comforter of the living and the dead. Be thou
+with me in all my tribulations and distresses with maternal pity, and at
+the hour of my death take my soul, and offer it to thy most beloved Son
+Jesus, with all them who have commended themselves to our prayers. [Fol.
+46.]
+
+7. "Our holy father, the Pope Bonifacius, hath granted to all them that
+devoutly say this lamentable contemplation of our blessed Lady, standing
+under the Cross weeping, and having compassion with her sweet Son Jesus,
+7 years of pardon and forty Lents, and also Pope John the 22 hath
+granted three hondred days of pardon. 'Stabat Mater dolorosa.' [Fol.
+47.]
+
+8. "To all them that before this image of Pity devoutly say 5 Pat. Nos.,
+and 5 Aves, and a Credo, piteously beholding these arms of Christ's
+passion, are {198} granted XXXII.M.VII hondred, and LV (32755) years of
+pardon; and Sixtus the 4th, Pope of Rome hath made the 4 and the 5
+prayer, and hath doubled his aforesaid pardon. [Fol. 54.]
+
+9. "Our holy Father the Pope John 22 hath granted to all them that
+devoutly say this prayer, after the elevation of our Lord Jesu Christ,
+3000 days of pardon for deadly sins. [Fol. 58.]
+
+10. "This prayer was showed to Saint Augustine by revelation of the Holy
+Ghost, and who that devoutly say this prayer, or hear read, or beareth
+about them, shall not perish in fire or water, nother in battle or
+judgment, and he shall not die of sudden death, and no venom shall
+poison him that day, and what he asketh of God he shall obtain if it be
+to the salvation of his soul; and when thy soul shall depart from thy
+body it shall not enter hell." This prayer ends with three invocations
+of the Cross, thus: "O Cross of Christ [cross] save us, O Cross of
+Christ [cross] protect us, O Cross of Christ [cross] defend us. In the
+name of the [cross] Father, [cross] Son, and Holy [cross] Ghost. Amen."
+[Fol. 62.]
+
+11. "Our holy Father Pope Innocent III. hath granted to all them that
+say these III prayers following devoutly, remission of all their sins
+confessed and contrite. [Fol. 63.]
+
+12. "These 3 prayers be written in the Chapel of the Holy Cross, in
+Rome, otherwise called Sacellum Sanctæ Crucis septem Romanorum; who that
+devoutly say them shall obtain X.C.M. [ninety thousand] years of pardon
+for deadly sins granted of our holy Father, John 22, Pope of Rome. [Fol.
+66.]
+
+13. "Who that devoutly beholdeth these arms of {199} our Lord Jesus
+Christ, shall obtain six thousand years of pardon of our holy Father
+Saint Peter, the first pope of Rome, and of XXX [thirty] other popes of
+the Church of Rome, successors after him; and our holy Father, Pope John
+22, hath granted unto all them very contrite and truly confessed, that
+say these devout prayers following in the commemoration of the bitter
+passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, 3000 years of pardon for DEADLY SINS,
+and other 3000 for venial sins." [Fol. 68.]
+
+I will only add one more instance. The following announcement
+accompanies a prayer of St. Bernard: "Who that devoutly with a contrite
+heart daily say this orison, if he be that day in a state of eternal
+damnation, then this eternal pain shall be changed him in temporal pain
+of purgatory; then if he hath deserved the pain of purgatory it shall be
+forgotten and forgiven through the infinite mercy of God."
+
+It is indeed very melancholy to reflect that our country has witnessed
+the time, when the bread of life had been taken from the children, and
+such husks as these substituted in its stead. Accredited ministers of
+the Roman Catholic Church have lately assured us that the pardons and
+indulgences granted now, relate only to the remission of the penances
+imposed by the Church in this life, and presume not to interfere with
+the province of the Most High in the rewards and punishments of the
+next. But, I repeat it, what has been in former days may be again; and
+whenever Christians depart from the doctrine and practice of prayer to
+God alone, through Christ alone, a door is opened to superstitions and
+abuses of every kind; and we cannot too anxiously and too jealously
+guard and fence about, with all our power and skill, the fundamental
+principle, one God and one Mediator. {200}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET, ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS
+MARTYRDOM, DEC. 29.
+
+
+The other instance by which I propose to illustrate the state of
+religion in England before the reformation, is the service of Thomas
+Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, a canonized saint and martyr of the
+Church of Rome. The interest attaching to so remarkable a period in
+ecclesiastical history, and to an event so intimately interwoven with
+the former state of our native land, appears to justify the introduction
+of the entire service, rather than extracts from it, in this place.
+Whilst it bears throughout immediately on the subject of our present
+inquiry, it supplies us at the same time with the strong views
+entertained by the authors of the service, on points which gave rise to
+great and repeated discussion, not only in England, but in various parts
+also of continental Europe, with regard to the moral and spiritual
+merits or demerits of Becket, as a subject of the realm and a Christian
+minister. It is, moreover, only by becoming familiar in all their
+details with some such remains of past times, that we can form any
+adequate idea of the great and deplorable extent to which the legends
+had banished the reading and expounding of Holy Scriptures from our
+churches; and also how much the praises of mortal man had encroached
+upon those hours of public worship, which should be devoted to
+meditations on our Maker, Redeemer, and Sanctifier; to the exclusive
+praises of his holy name; and to supplications {201} to Him alone for
+blessings at his hand, and for his mercy through Christ.
+
+There is much obscurity in the few first paragraphs. The historical or
+biographical part begins at Lesson the First, and continues throughout,
+only interspersed with canticles in general referring to the incidents
+in the narrative preceding each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET[70].
+
+ [Footnote 70: The copies which I have chiefly consulted for the
+ purposes of the present inquiry, are two large folio
+ manuscripts, in good preservation, No. 1512 and No. 2785 of the
+ Harleian MSS. in the British Museum. The service commences about
+ the 49th page, B. of No. 2785. This MS. is considered to be of a
+ date somewhere about 1430. The first parts of the service are
+ preserved also in a Breviary printed in Paris in 1556, with some
+ variations and omissions. There are various other copies in the
+ British Museum, as well printed as in manuscript.]
+
+Let them without change of vestments and without tapers in their hands,
+proceed to the altar of St. Thomas the Martyr, chanting the requiem, the
+chanter beginning,
+
+ _Req._ The grain lies buried beneath the straw;
+ The just man is slain by the spear of the wicked;
+ The guardian of the vine falls in the vineyard,
+ The chieftain in the camp, the husbandman in the threshing-floor.
+
+Then the prose is said by all who choose, in surplices before the altar.
+
+ "Let the Shepherd sound his trumpet of horn."
+
+Let the choir respond to the chant of the prose after every verse, upon
+the letter [super litteram]. {202}
+
+ That the vineyard of Christ might be free,
+ Which he assumed under a robe of flesh,
+ He liberated it by the purple cross.
+ The adversary, the erring sheep,
+ Becomes bloodstained by the slaughter of the shepherd.
+ The marble pavements of Christ
+ Are wetted, ruddy with sacred gore;
+ The martyr presented with the laurel of life.
+ Like a grain cleansed from the straw,
+ Is translated to the divine garners.
+
+But whilst the prose is being sung, let the priest incense the altar,
+and then the image of the blessed Thomas the Martyr; and afterwards
+shall be said with an humble voice: Pray for us, Blessed Thomas.
+
+_The Prayer[71]._ O God for whose Church the glorious {203} high-priest
+and martyr Thomas fell beneath the swords of the wicked, grant, we
+beseech thee, that all who implore his aid may obtain the salutary
+effect of their petition, through Christ.
+
+ [Footnote 71: This Collect is still preserved in the Roman
+ ritual, and is offered on the anniversary of Becket's death. In
+ a very ancient pontifical, preserved in the chapter-house of
+ Bangor, and which belonged to Anianus, who was Bishop of that
+ see (1268), among the "Proper Benedictions for the circuit of
+ the year," are two relating to Thomas Becket; one on the
+ anniversary of his death, the other on the day of his
+ translation. The former is couched in these words: "O God, who
+ hast not without reason mingled the birthday of the glorious
+ high-priest, Thomas, with the joys of thy nativity, by the
+ intervention of his merits" (ipsius mentis intervenientibus),
+ "make these thy servants venerate thy majesty with the reverence
+ of due honour. Amen. And as he, according to the rule of a good
+ shepherd, gave his life for his sheep, so grant thou to thy
+ faithful ones, to fear no tyrannical madness to the prejudice of
+ Catholic truth. Amen. We ask that they, by his example, for
+ obedience to the holy laws, may learn to despise persons, and by
+ suffering manfully to triumph over tyrannical madness. Amen."
+ The latter runs thus: "May God, by whose pity the bodies of
+ saints rest in the sabbath of peace, turn your hearts to the
+ desire of the resurrection to come. Amen. And may he who orders
+ us to bury with honour due the members of the saints whose death
+ is precious, by the merits of the glorious martyr, Thomas,
+ vouchsafe to raise you from the dust of vanity. Amen. Where at
+ length by the power of his benediction ye may be clothed with
+ doubled festive robes of body and soul. Amen."]
+
+ The shepherd slain in the midst of the flock,
+ Purchased peace at the price of his blood.
+ O joyous grief, in mournful gladness!
+ The flock breathes when the shepherd is dead;
+ The mother wailing, sings for joy in her son,
+ Because he lives under the sword a conqueror.
+ The solemnities of Thomas the Martyr are come.
+ Let the Virgin Mother, the Church, rejoice;
+ Thomas being raised to the highest priesthood,
+ Is suddenly changed into another man.
+ A monk, under [the garb of?] a clerk, secretly clothed with haircloth,
+ More strong than the flesh subdues the attempts of the flesh;
+ Whilst the tiller of the Lord's field pulls up the thistles,
+ And drives away and banishes the foxes from the vineyard.
+
+_The First Lesson._
+
+Dearest Brethren, celebrating now the birth-day of the martyr Thomas,
+because we have not power to recount his whole life and conversation,
+let our brief discourse run through the manner and cause of his passion.
+The blessed Thomas, therefore, as in the office of Chancellor, or
+Archdeacon, he proved incomparably strenuous {204} in the conduct of
+affairs, so after he had undertaken the office of pastor, he became
+devoted to God beyond man's estimation. For, when consecrated, he
+suddenly is changed into another man: he secretly put on the hair shirt,
+and wore also hair drawers down to the knee. And under the respectable
+appearance of the clerical garb, concealing the monk's dress, he
+entirely compelled the flesh to obey the spirit; studying by the
+exercise of every virtue without intermission to please God. Knowing,
+therefore, that he was placed a husbandman in the field of the Lord, a
+shepherd in the fold, he carefully discharged the ministry entrusted to
+him. The rights and dignities of the Church, which the public authority
+had usurped, he deemed it right to restore, and to recall to their proper
+state. Whence a grave question on the ecclesiastical law and the customs
+of the realm, having arisen between him and the king of the English, a
+council being convened, those customs were proposed which the king
+pertinaciously required to be confirmed by the signatures as well of the
+archbishop as of his suffragans. The archbishop with constancy refused,
+asserting that in them was manifest the subversion of the freedom of the
+Church. He was in consequence treated with immense insults, oppressed
+with severe losses, and provoked with innumerable injuries. At length,
+being threatened with death, (because the case of the Church had not yet
+become fully known, and the persecution seemed to be personal,) he
+determined that he ought to give place to malice. Being driven,
+therefore, into exile, he was honourably received by our lord the pope
+Alexander[72] at Senon, and recommended {205} with especial care to the
+Monastery of Pontinea (Pontigny).
+
+ [Footnote 72: Pope Alexander III. was at this time residing as a
+ refugee at Sens, having been driven from Italy a few years
+ before by Frederick Barbarossa.]
+
+ Malice, bent on the punishment of Thomas,
+ Condemns to banishment the race of Thomas.
+ The whole family goes forth together.
+ No order, sex, age, or condition
+ Here enjoys any privilege.
+
+_Lesson the Second._
+
+Meanwhile in England all the revenues of the archbishop are confiscated,
+his estates are laid waste, his possessions are plundered, and by the
+invention of a new kind of punishment, the whole kin of Thomas is
+proscribed together. For all his friends or acquaintance, or whoever was
+connected with him, by whatever title, without distinction of state or
+fortune, dignity or rank, age or sex, were alike exiled. For as well the
+old and decrepit, as infants in the cradle and women lying in
+childbirth, were driven into banishment; whilst as many as had reached
+the years of discretion were compelled to swear upon the holy
+[Gospels][73] that immediately on crossing the sea they would present
+themselves to the Archbishop of Canterbury; in order that being so
+oftentimes pierced even by the sword of sympathy, he would bend his
+strength of mind to the king's pleasure. But the man of God, putting his
+hand to deeds of fortitude, with constancy bore exile, reproaches,
+insults, the proscription of parents and friends, for the name of
+Christ; he was never, by any injury, at all broken or changed. For so
+great was the firmness of this confessor of Christ, that he seemed to
+teach all his fellow exiles, that every soil is the brave man's country.
+
+ [Footnote 73: Tactis sacrosanctis. It may mean reliques, or
+ other sacred things.] {206}
+
+ Thomas put his hands to deeds of fortitude,
+ He despised losses, he despised reproaches,
+ No injury breaks down Thomas:
+ The firmness of Thomas exclaimed to all,
+ "Every soil is the brave man's country."
+
+_Third Lesson._
+
+The king therefore hearing of his immoveable constancy, having directed
+commendatory letters by some abbots of the Cistertian order to the
+General Chapter, caused him to be driven from Pontinea. But the blessed
+Thomas fearing that, by occasion of his right, injury would befal the
+saints, retired of his own accord. Yet before he set out from thence he
+was comforted by a divine revelation: a declaration being made to him
+from heaven, that he should return to his Church with glory, and by the
+palm of martyrdom depart to the Lord. When he was disturbed and sent
+from his retreat at Pontinea, Louis, the most Christian king of the
+French, received him with the greatest honour, and supported him most
+courteously till peace was restored. But even he too was often, though
+in vain, urged not to show any grace of kindness towards a traitor to
+the king of England. The hand of fury proceeded further, and a cruelty
+dreadful for pious ears to hear. For whereas the Catholic Church prays
+even for heretics, and schismatics, and faithless Jews, it was forbidden
+that any one should assist him by the supplications of prayer. Exiled,
+then, for six continuous years, afflicted with varied and unnumbered
+injuries, and like a living stone squared by various cuttings and
+pressures for the building of the heavenly edifice, the more he was
+thrust at that he might fall, the more firm and immoveable was he
+enabled to stand. {207} For neither could gold so carefully tried be
+burned away, nor a house, founded on a firm rock, be torn down. Neither
+does he suffer the wolves to rage against the lambs, nor the vineyard to
+pass into a garden of herbs.
+
+ The best of men, holy, and renowned is banished,
+ Lest the dignity of the Church should yield to the unworthy.
+ The estates of the exiled man are the spoil of the malignant,
+ But when placed in the fire, the fire burns him not.
+
+_Fourth Lesson._
+
+At length by the exertions, as well of the aforesaid pontiff as of the
+king of the French, many days were appointed for re-establishing peace:
+and because the servant of God would not accept of peace, unless with
+safety to the honour of God, and the character of the Church, they
+departed in discord from each other. At length the supreme Pontiff,
+pitying the desolation of the Anglican Church, with difficulty at the
+last extorted by threatening measures, that peace should be restored to
+the Church. The realms indeed rejoiced, that the King had been
+reconciled to the Archbishop, whilst some believed that the affair was
+carried on in good faith, and others formed different conjectures.
+Consequently in the seventh year of his exile the noble pastor returned
+into England, that he might either rescue the sheep of Christ from the
+jaws of the wolves, or sacrifice himself for the flock intrusted to his
+care. He is received by the clergy and the people with incalculable joy;
+all shedding tears, and saying, Blessed is he who cometh in the name of
+the Lord. But after a few days he was again afflicted by losses and
+miseries beyond measure and number. Whoever offered to him, {208} or to
+any one connected with him, a cheerful countenance was reckoned a public
+enemy. In all these things his mind was unbroken; but his hand was still
+stretched out for the liberation of the Church. For this he incessantly
+sighed; for this he persevered in watchings, fastings, and prayers; to
+obtain this he ardently desired to sacrifice himself.
+
+ From the greatest joy of affairs,
+ The greatest wailing is in the Church,
+ For the absence of so great a patron.
+ But when the miracles return,
+ Joy to the people returns.
+ The crowd of sick flock together,
+ And obtain the grace of benefits.
+
+_Fifth Lesson._
+
+Now on the fifth day after the birth-day of our Lord, four persons of
+the palace came to Canterbury, men indeed of high birth, but famous for
+their wicked deeds; and having entered, they attack the archbishop with
+reproachful words, provoke him with insults, and at length assail him
+with threats. The man of God modestly answered, to every thing, whatever
+reason required, adding that many injuries had been inflicted upon him
+and the Church of God, since the re-establishment of peace, and there
+was no one to correct what was wrong; that he neither could nor would
+dissemble thereafter, so as not to exercise the duties of his function.
+The men, foolish in heart, were disturbed by this, and having loudly
+given utterance to their iniquity they forthwith went out. On their
+retiring, the prelate proceeded to the Church, to offer the evening
+praises to Christ. The mail-clad satellites of Satan followed him from
+behind with drawn swords, a {209} large band of armed men accompanying
+them. On the monks barring the entrance to the Church, the priest of
+God, destined soon to become a victim of Christ, running up re-opened
+the door to the enemy; "For," said he, "a Church must not be barricaded
+like a castle." As they burst in, and some shouted with a voice of
+phrenzy, "Where is the traitor?" others, "Where is the Archbishop?" the
+fearless confessor of Christ went to meet them. When they pressed on to
+murder him, he said, "For myself I cheerfully meet death for the Church
+of God; but on the part of God I charge you to do no hurt to any of
+mine"--imitating Christ in his passion, when he said, "If ye seek me,
+let these go their way." Then rush the ravening wolves on the pious
+shepherd, degenerate sons on their own father, cruel lictors on the
+victim of Christ, and with fatal swords cut off the consecrated crown of
+his head; and hurling down to the ground the Christ [the anointed] of
+the Lord, in savage manner, horrible to be said, scattered the brains
+with the blood over the pavement.
+
+ Thus does the straw press down the grain of corn;
+ Thus is slain the guard of the vineyard in the vineyard;
+ Thus the general in the camp, the shepherd in the fold, the
+ husbandman in the threshing-floor.
+ Thus the just, slain by the unjust, has changed his house of
+ clay for a heavenly palace.
+ Rachel, weeping, now cease thou to mourn
+ That the flower of the world is bruised by the world.
+ When the slain Thomas is borne to his funeral,
+ A new Abel succeeds to the old.
+ The voice of blood, the voice of his scattered brains,
+ Fills heaven with a marvellous cry. {210}
+
+_Sixth Lesson._
+
+But the last words of the martyr, which from the confused clamour could
+scarcely be distinguished, according to the testimony of those who stood
+near, were these,--"To God, and the blessed Mary, and Saint Dionysius,
+and the holy patrons of this Church, I commend myself and the cause of
+the Church[74]." Moreover, in all the torments which this unvanquished
+champion of God endured, he sent forth no cry, he uttered no groan, he
+opposed neither his arm nor his garment to the man who struck him, but
+held his head, which he had bent towards the swords, unmoved till the
+consummation came; prostrated as if for prayer, he fell asleep in the
+Lord. The perpetrators of the crime, returning into the palace of the
+holy prelate, that they might make the passion of the servant more fully
+resemble the passion of his Lord, divided among them his garments, the
+gold and silver and precious vessels, choice horses, and whatever of
+value they could find, allotting what each should take. These things
+therefore the soldiers did. Who, without weeping, can relate the rest?
+So great was the sorrow of all, so great the laments of each, that you
+would think the prophecy were a second time fulfilled, "A voice is heard
+in Rama, lamentation and great mourning." Nevertheless the divine mercy,
+when temptation was multiplied, made a way to escape; and by certain
+visions, giving as it were a prelude to the future miracles, [declared
+that] the martyr was thereafter to be glorified by wonders, that joy
+would return after sorrow, {211} and a crowd of sick would obtain the
+grace of benefits.
+
+ [Footnote 74: I have already suggested a comparison between this
+ prayer and the commendatory prayer of the Martyr Polycarp, page
+ 92.]
+
+ O Christ Jesus[75], BY THE WOUNDS OF THOMAS,
+ Loosen the sins which bind us;
+ Lest the enemy, the world, or the works of the flesh.
+ Bear us captive to hell.
+ By[76] THEE, O Thomas ...
+ Let the right hand of God embrace us.
+
+ The satellites of Satan rushing into the temple
+ Perpetrate an unexampled, unheard-of, crime.
+ Thomas proceeds to meet their drawn swords:
+ He yields not to threats, to swords, nor even to death.
+
+ Happy place! Happy Church,
+ In which the memory of Thomas lives!
+ Happy the land which gave the prelate!
+ Happy the land which supported him in exile!
+ Happy Father! succour us miserable,
+ That we may be happy, and joined with those above!
+
+ [Footnote 75:
+
+ Christe Jesu per Thomæ vulnera,
+ Quæ nos ligant relaxa scelera
+ Ne captivos ferant ad infera
+ Hostis, mundus, vel carnis opera.
+ ]
+
+ [Footnote 76:
+
+ Per te, Thoma, post lævæ munera
+ Amplexetur nos Dei dextera.
+ ]
+
+_Seventh Lesson._
+
+Jesus said unto his disciples, I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd
+layeth down his life for the sheep.
+
+THE HOMILY OF S. GREGORY, POPE.
+
+Ye have heard, most dear brethren, from the reading of the Gospel, your
+instruction; ye have heard also {212} your danger. For behold! he who is
+not from any gift happening to him, but who is essentially good, says, I
+am the good shepherd; and he adds the character of the same goodness,
+which we may imitate, saying, The good shepherd layeth down his life for
+his sheep. He did what he taught; he showed what he commanded. The good
+shepherd laid down his life for his sheep; that in our sacrament he
+might change his body and blood, and satisfy, by the nourishment of his
+flesh, the sheep which he had redeemed. Here is shown to us the way,
+concerning the contempt of death, which we should follow; the character
+is placed before us to which we should conform. [In the first place, we
+should of our pity sacrifice our external good for his sheep; and at
+last, if it be necessary, give up our own life for the same sheep. From
+that smallest point we proceed to this last and greater. But since the
+soul by which we live is incomparably better than the earthly substance
+which we outwardly possess, who would not give for the sheep his
+substance, when he would give his life for them? And there are some who,
+whilst they love their earthly substance more than the sheep, deservedly
+lose the name of shepherd: of whom it is immediately added, But the
+hireling who is not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the
+wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep and fleeth. He is called not a
+shepherd, but a hireling, who feeds the Lord's sheep not for inward
+love, but with a view to temporal wages. He is a mercenary who seeks
+indeed the place of shepherd, but seeks not the gain of souls.]
+
+(The sentences between brackets are not in MS. No. 1512.)
+
+ To Thomas all things yield and are obedient:
+ Plagues, diseases, death, and devils, {213}
+ Fire, air, land, and seas.
+ Thomas filled the world with glory.
+ The world offers obeisance to Thomas[77].
+
+ [Footnote 77:
+
+ Thomæ cedunt et parent omnia:
+ Pestes, morbi, mors, et dæmonia,
+ Ignis, aer, tellus, et maria.
+ Thomas mundum replevit gloria.
+ Thomæ mundus præstat obsequia.
+ ]
+
+_Eighth Lesson._
+
+In good truth, the holy Thomas, the precious champion of God, was to be
+worthily glorified. For if the cause, yea, forasmuch as the cause makes
+the martyr, did ever a title of holy martyrs exist more glorious?
+Contending for the Church, in the Church he suffered; in a holy place,
+at the holy time of the Lord's nativity, in the midst of his
+fellow-priests and the companies of the religious: since in the agony of
+the prelate all the circumstances seemed so to concur, as perpetually to
+illustrate the title of the sufferer, and reveal the wickedness of his
+persecutors, and stain their name with never-ending infamy. But so did
+the divine vengeance rage against the persecutors of the martyr, that in
+a short time, being carried away from the midst, they nowhere appeared.
+And some, without confession, or the viaticum, were suddenly snatched
+away; others tearing piecemeal their own fingers or tongues; others
+pining with hunger, and corrupting in their whole body, and racked with
+unheard-of tortures before their death, and broken up by paralysis;
+others bereft of their intellects; others expiring with madness;--left
+manifest proofs that they were suffering the penalty of unjust
+persecution and premeditated murder. Let, therefore, the Virgin Mother,
+the Church, rejoice that the new martyr has borne away the triumph over
+the {214} enemies. Let her rejoice that a new Zacharias has been for her
+freedom sacrificed in the temple. Let her rejoice that a new Abel's
+blood hath cried unto God for her against the men of blood. For the
+voice of his blood shed, the-voice of his brain scattered by the swords
+of those deadly satellites, hath filled heaven at once and the world
+with its far-famed cry.
+
+ Thomas shines with new miracles;
+ He adorns with sight those who had lost their eyes;
+ He cleanses those who were stained with the spots of leprosy;
+
+ He looses those that were bound with the bonds of death.
+
+_Ninth Lesson._
+
+For at the cry of this blood the earth was moved and trembled. Nay,
+moreover, the powers of the heavens were moved; so that, as if for the
+avenging of innocent blood, nation rose against nation, and kingdom
+against kingdom; nay, a kingdom was divided against itself, and terrors
+from heaven and great signs took place. Yet, from the first period of
+his martyrdom, the martyr began to shine forth with miracles, restoring
+sight to the blind, walking to the lame, hearing to the deaf, language
+to the dumb. Afterwards, cleansing the lepers, making the paralytic
+sound, healing the dropsy, and all kinds of incurable diseases;
+restoring the dead to life; in a wonderful manner commanding the devils
+and all the elements: he also put forth his hand to unwonted and
+unheard-of signs of his own power; for persons deprived of their eyes
+merited by his merits to obtain new members. But some {215} who presumed
+to disparage his miracles, struck on a sudden, were compelled to publish
+them even unwillingly. At length, against all his enemies the martyr so
+far prevailed, that almost every day you might see that to be repeated
+in the servant which is read of the Only-begotten: "They who spoke evil
+of thee shall come unto thee, and adore the traces of thy feet." Now the
+celebrated champion and martyr of God, Thomas, suffered in the year from
+the incarnation of the Lord, according to Dionysius, 1171, on the fourth
+of the kalends of January, on the third day of the week, about the
+eleventh hour, that the birth-day of the Lord might be for labour, and
+his for rest; to which rest the same our God and Lord Jesus Christ
+vouchsafe to bring us; who with the Father and the Holy Spirit liveth
+and reigneth God, for ever and ever. Amen.
+
+ O good Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS,
+ Forgive us our debts;
+ Visit the house, the gate, the grave;
+ And raise us from the threefold death.
+ What has been lost by act, in mind, or use,
+ Restore with thy wonted pity.
+ Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.
+
+N.B. This appears to be the end of the first service in honour of Thomas
+Becket[78]; and at this point {216} another service seems to commence,
+with a kind of new heading, "In the commemoration of St. Thomas[79]."
+
+ [Footnote 78: All the Lessons between this passage and "In
+ Lauds," are wanting in MS. 1512.]
+
+ [Footnote 79: Another Feast was kept in honour of his
+ translation, on the 7th of July.]
+
+_The First Lesson._
+
+When Archbishop Theobald, of happy memory, in a good old age, slept with
+his fathers, Thomas, archdeacon of the Church of Canterbury, is solemnly
+chosen, in the name of the Holy Trinity, to be archbishop and primate of
+all England, and afterwards is consecrated. Then pious minds entertained
+firm hope and confidence in the Lord[80].
+
+ [Footnote 80: There is much of obscurity in the next paragraph.
+ Reference seems to be made to his twofold character of a regular
+ and a secular clergyman, and to his improved state morally. The
+ Latin is this: "Erat autem piis mentibus spes firma et fiducia
+ in Domino, quod idem consecratus utriusque hominis, habitu
+ mutato moribus melioratus præsideret. Probatissimum siquidem
+ tenebatur sedem illam sedem sanctorum esse sanctam recipere aut
+ facere, vel citius et facile indignum abicere, quod et in beato
+ Thoma Martyre misericorditer impletum est."]
+
+_Second Lesson._
+
+Therefore the chosen prelate of God being elected, and anointed with the
+sanctifying of the sacred oil, immediately obtained a most hallowed
+thing, and was filled with manifold grace of the Holy Spirit. For
+walking in newness of life, a new man, he was changed into another man,
+all things belonging to whom were changed for the better; and with so
+great grace did he consecrate the commencement of his bishopric, that
+clothing himself with a monk's form secretly, he fulfilled the work and
+merit of a monk. {217}
+
+_Third Lesson._
+
+But he, who after the example of the Baptist, with constancy had
+conceived in a perfect heart that the zeal of righteousness should be
+purified, studied also to imitate him in the garb of penitence. For
+casting off the fine linen which hitherto he had been accustomed to use,
+whilst the soft delicacies of kings pleased him, he was clothed on his
+naked body with a most rough hair shirt. He added, moreover, hair
+drawers, that he might the more effectually mortify the flesh, and make
+the spirit live. But these, as also the other exercises of his spiritual
+life, very few indeed being aware of it, he removed from the eyes and
+knowledge of men by superadding other garments, because he sought glory
+not from man, but from God. Even then the man of virtue entering upon
+the justifications of God, began to be more complete in abstinence, more
+frequent in watching, longer in prayer, more anxious in preaching. The
+pastoral office intrusted to him by God, he executed with so great
+diligence, as to suffer the rights neither of the clergy nor of the
+Church to be in any degree curtailed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There seems here also to be another commencement, for the next lesson is
+called the First.
+
+_Lesson First._
+
+So large a grace of compunction was he wont to possess, between the
+secrets of prayer or the solemnities of masses, that with eyes trained
+to weeping he would be wholly dissolved in tears; and in the office
+{218} of the altar his appearance was as though he was witnessing the
+Lord's passion in the flesh. Knowing also that mercy softens justice,
+and that pity hath the promise of the life that now is, and of that
+which is to come, therefore towards the poor and the afflicted did he
+bear the bowels of mercy piteously, and was anxious to reach the poor by
+the blessings of his alms.
+
+_Lesson Second._
+
+The more humble of those whom a character for religion raised high, he
+made his acquaintance and intimates; and that he might learn from them
+to hunger and thirst after righteousness, he enjoyed more frequently
+their secret conversation. Towards such servants and soldiers of Christ
+this merciful man preferred to be liberal and abundant in food and
+raiment, he who determined in himself to be moderate and sparing. For
+what would he deny to Christ, who for Christ was about to shed his
+blood? He who owed his coat or cloak to one who asked it, desired to
+add, moreover, his own flesh. For he knew that the man would never
+freely give his own flesh, who showed himself greedy of any temporal
+thing.
+
+_Lesson Third._
+
+Hitherto the merciful Lord, who maketh poor and enricheth, bringeth low
+and lifteth up, wished to load his servant with riches, and exalt him
+with honours; and afterwards he was pleased to try him with adversity.
+By trying whether he loved Him, He proved it the more certainly; but He
+supplied grace more abundantly. For with the temptation He made a way to
+escape, that he might be able to bear it. Therefore, the envious enemy,
+considering that the new prelate {219} and the new man was flourishing
+with so manifold a grace of virtues, devised to send a burning blight of
+temptation, which might suffocate the germ of his merits already put
+forth. Nor was there any delay. He who severs a man from his God, and
+one friend from his neighbour, sowed irreconcileable quarrels between
+the king and the archbishop.
+
+Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.
+
+_In Lauds._
+
+ A grain falls and gives birth to an abundance of corn.
+ The alabaster-box is broken, and the odour of the
+ ointment is powerful.
+ The whole world vies in love to the martyr,
+ Whose wonderful signs strike all with astonishment.
+ The water for Thomas five times changing colour,
+ Once was turned into milk, four times into blood.
+ At the shrine[81] of Thomas four times the light
+ came down,
+ And to the glory of the saint kindled the wax-tapers.
+ DO THOU BY THE BLOOD OF THOMAS, WHICH HE[82]
+ SHED FOR THEE;
+ MAKE US, O CHRIST, ASCEND,
+ Whither Thomas has ascended.
+
+ Extend[83] succour to us, O Thomas,
+ Guide those who stand, {220}
+ Raise up those who fall,
+
+ Correct our morals, actions, and life;
+
+ And guide us into the way of peace.
+
+ [Footnote 81: Ad Thomæ memoriam.]
+
+ [Footnote 82: Tu per Thomæ sanguinem quem pro te impendit, Fac
+ nos, Christe, scandere, quo Thomas ascendit.]
+
+ [Footnote 83:
+
+ Opem nobis, O Thoma, porrige,
+ Rege stantes, jacentes erige,
+ Mores, actus, et vitam corrige,
+ Et in pacis nos viam dirige.
+ ]
+
+_Final Anthem._
+
+ Hail, O Thomas, the Rod of Justice;[84]
+ The Brightness of the World;
+ The Strength of the Church;
+ The Love of the People;
+ The Delight of the Clergy.
+ Hail, glorious Guardian of the Flock;
+ Save those who rejoice in thy glory.
+
+ [Footnote 84: Salve, Thomas, Virga Justitiæ, Mundi Jubar, Robur
+ Ecclesiæ, Plebis Amor, Cleri Delicia. Salve Gregis Tutor
+ egregie, Salva tuæ gaudentes gloriæ.]
+
+The end of the service of Thomas of Canterbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now for a few moments only let us meditate on this service. I have
+already referred to the lamentable practice of substituting biographical
+legends for the word of God. And what is the tendency of this service?
+What impression was it likely to make, and to leave on minds of ordinary
+powers and instruction? Must it not, of necessity, tend to withdraw them
+from contemplating Christ, and to fix their thoughts on the powers, the
+glory, the exaltation, the merits of a fellow-sinner? It will be said,
+that they will look beyond the martyr, and trace the blessings, here
+enumerated, to Christ, as their primary cause, and will think of the
+merits of Thomas as efficacious only through the merits of their
+Saviour; that in their invocation of Thomas they will implore him only
+to pray for them. But can this be so? Does not the ascription of
+miracles to him {221} and to his power; does not the very form of
+enumerating those miracles tend much to exalt the servant to an equality
+with the Master?
+
+Whilst Thomas by being thus, in words at least, presented to the people
+as working those miracles by his own power, (for there is throughout a
+lamentable absence of immediate ascription of glory to God,) is raised
+to an equality with Christ our Lord; many passages in this service have
+the tendency also of withdrawing the minds of the worshippers from an
+implicit and exclusive dependence on the merits of Christ alone, and of
+tempting them to admit the merits of Thomas to share at least with
+Christ in the work of grace and salvation. Let us place some texts of
+Scripture and some passages of this service side by side.
+
+[Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the other.]
+
+_Scripture._
+
+But after that the kindness and love of God towards man appeared, not by
+works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he
+saved us.--Titus iii. 4, 5.
+
+He who spared not his own Son, but gave him up for us all, how shall he
+not with him also freely give us all things?--Rom. viii. 32.
+
+The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin.--1 John i. 7.
+
+One Mediator.--1 Tim. ii. 5.
+
+Who also maketh intercession for us.--Rom. viii. 34.
+
+He ever liveth to make intercession for them.--Heb. vii. 25.
+
+_Service of Thomas Becket._
+
+O Christ Jesus, by the wounds of Thomas loosen the sins which bind us.
+
+O blessed Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS, forgive us our debts, raise us
+from the threefold death, and restore what has been lost with thy
+accustomed pity.
+
+Do thou, O Christ, by the blood of Thomas, which he shed for thee, make
+us ascend whither Thomas has ascended.
+
+Holy Thomas, pray for us.
+
+And if this service thus seems to mingle the merits of Christ, the
+merits of his blood and of his death, with {222} the merits of a mortal
+man, the immediate address to that mortal as the giver of good things
+temporal and spiritual, very awfully trespasses on that high, exclusive,
+and incommunicable prerogative of the one Lord God Omnipotent, which his
+Spirit hath proclaimed solemnly and repeatedly, and which he has fenced
+around against all invasion with so many warnings and denunciations.
+
+_Scripture._ _Service of Becket_
+
+1. O thou that hearest prayer, 1. For they sake, O Thomas,
+unto thee shall all flesh come.-- let the right hand of God embrace
+Ps. lxv. [vulg. lxiv.] 2. us.
+
+By prayer and supplication,
+with thanksgiving, let your requests
+be made known unto God.--Phil.
+iv. 6.
+
+2. Lord, be thou my helper.-- 2. Send help to us, O Thomas;
+Ps. xxx. [xxix.] 10.
+
+3. Thou shalt guide me by thy 3. Guide thou those who stand;
+counsel.--Ps. lxxiii. [lxxii.] 24.
+
+He, The Holy Spirit, shall guide
+you into all truth.--John xvi. 13.
+
+4. The Lord upholdeth all that 4. Raise up those who fall;
+fall, and raiseth up all those that
+be bowed down.--Psalm cxlv.
+[cxliv.] 14.
+
+5. Create in me a clean heart, 5. Correct our morals, actions
+O God.--Ps. li. [l.] 10. and life;
+
+6. The steps of a good man are 6. And guide us into the way
+ordered by the Lord. Though of peace.
+he fall, he shall not be utterly
+cast down, for the Lord upholdeth
+him.--Ps. xxxvii. [xxxvi.]
+23.
+
+The day-spring from on high
+hath visited us, to guide our feet
+into the way of peace.--Luke i.
+78, 79.
+
+And then again, in celebrating the praises of a mortal {223} man,
+recourse is had to language which can fitly be used only in our hymns
+and praises to the supreme Lord of our destinies, the eternal Creator,
+Redeemer, and Comforter, the only wise God our Saviour.
+
+_Address to Thomas._ _Language of Scripture._
+
+1. Hail, Thomas, Rod of Justice! 1. There shall come a rod out
+ of the stem of Jesse. Ye denied
+ the Holy One, and the Just--Isaiah
+ xi. 1. Acts iii. 14.
+
+2. The brightness of the world. 2. The brightness of his glory.
+ I am the light of the world--Heb.
+ i. 3. John viii. 12.
+
+3. The strength of the Church. 3. I can do all things through
+ Christ, that strengthened me.
+ Christ loved the Church, and
+ gave himself for it.--Phil. iv. 13.
+ Eph. v. 25.
+
+4. The love of the people: the 4. Grace be with all them that
+delight of the Clergy. love our Lord Jesus Christ in
+ sincerity. Delight thyself in the
+ Lord.--Eph. vi. 24. Ps. xxxvii. 4.
+
+5. Hail, glorious Guardian of 5. Our Lord Jesus, that great
+the Flock. Save those who rejoice Shepherd of the sheep. Give ear,
+in thy glory. O Shepherd of Israel; come and
+ save us. He that glorieth, let him
+ glory in the Lord.--Heb. xiii. 20.
+ Psalm lxxx. [lxxix.] 1. 1 Cor.
+ i. 31.
+
+Can that worship become the disciples of the Gospel and the Cross, which
+addresses such prayers and such praises to the spirit of a mortal man?
+Every prayer, and every form of praise here used in honour of Thomas
+Becket, it would well become Christians to offer to the Giver of all
+good, trusting solely and exclusively to the mediation of Christ Jesus
+our Lord for acceptance; and pleading-only the merits of his most
+precious blood. {224} And yet I am bound to confess, that in principle,
+in spirit, and in fact, I can find no substantial difference between
+this service of Thomas of Canterbury, and the service which all in
+communion with the Church of Rome are under an obligation to use even at
+the present hour.
+
+This point remains next for our inquiry, and we will draw from the
+well-head. I would, however, first suggest the application of a general
+test for ascertaining the real _bona-fide_ nature of these prayers and
+praises. The test I would apply is, to try with the change only of the
+name, substituting the holiest name ever named in heaven or in earth for
+the name of Thomas of Canterbury--whether these prayers and praises
+should not be offered to the Supreme Being alone through the atoning
+merits of his Blessed Son; whether they are not exclusively appropriate
+to HIM.
+
+To (Thomas/God Almighty) all things bow and are obedient.
+
+Plagues, diseases, death, and devils,
+Fire, air, land, and sea.
+(Thomas/The Almighty) fills the world with glory.
+
+The world offers obeisance to (Thomas/Almighty God).
+
+(The Martyr Thomas/Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ) began to shine
+forth with miracles [John ii. 11]; restoring sight to the blind [Luke
+vii. 21]; walking to the lame; hearing to the deaf; speech to the dumb;
+cleansing to the lepers [Matt. xi. 5]; making the paralytic sound [Matt.
+iv. 24]; healing the dropsy [Luke xiv. 4]; and all kinds of incurable
+diseases [Luke iv. 40]; restoring the dead to {225} life [Luke viii. 43.
+55]; in a wonderful manner commanding the devils [Matt. viii. 16], and
+all the elements [Luke viii. 25]. He put forth his hand to unwonted and
+unheard-of signs of his own power [Mark ii. 12. John ix. 30].
+
+Do thou, O Lord, by the blood of (Thomas/Christ) cause us to ascend
+whither (Thomas/Christ) has ascended. (O Thomas/O God), send help to us.
+Guide those who stand; raise up those who fall; correct our morals,
+actions, and life; and guide us into the way of peace.
+
+Hail, (Thomas!/Jesus!) Rod of Justice, the Brightness of the world, the
+Strength of the Church, the Love of the people, the Delight of the
+Clergy. Hail, Glorious Guardian of the flock! Save Thou those who
+delight in Thy glory.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We shall apply this same test to many of the collects and prayers used,
+and of necessity to be used, because they are authorized and appointed,
+even at the present day, in the ministrations of the Church of Rome. The
+impiety in many of those instances is not couched in such startling
+language; but it is not the less real. God forbid that we should charge
+our fellow-creatures with idolatry, who declare that they offer divine
+worship to the Supreme Being only; or that we should pronounce any
+professed Christian to have cast off his {226} dependence on the merits
+of Christ alone, who assures us that he looks for mercy only through
+those merits. But I know and feel, that according to the standard of
+Christian truth, and of the pure worship of Almighty God, which the
+Scriptures and primitive antiquity compel me to adopt, I should stain my
+own soul with the guilt of idolatry, and with the sin of relying on
+other merits than Christ's, were I myself to offer those prayers.
+
+That this service excited much disgust among the early reformers, we
+learn from various writers[85]. On the merits of the struggle between
+Becket and his king; on the question of Becket's moral and religious
+worth, (a question long and often discussed among the exercises of the
+masters of Paris in the full assembly of the Sorbonne[86],) or on the
+motives which influenced Henry the Eighth, I intend not to say one word:
+those points belong not to our present inquiry. It may not, however, be
+thought irrelevant here to quote a passage {227} from the ordinance of
+this latter monarch for erasing Becket's service out of the books, and
+his name from the calendar of the saints.
+
+ [Footnote 85: See Mornay "De la Messe," Saumur, 1604. p. 826.
+ Becon, in his "New Year's Gift," London, 1564, p. 183, thus
+ speaks: "What saint at any time thought himself so pure,
+ immaculate, and without all spot of sin, that he durst presume
+ to die for us, and to avouch his death to be an oblation and
+ sacrifice for our lives to God the Father, except peradventure
+ we will admit for good payment these and such like blasphemies,
+ which were wont full solemnly to be sung in the temples unto the
+ great ignominy of the glorious name of God, and the dishonour of
+ Christ's most precious blood." Then quoting the lines from the
+ service of Thomas Becket, on which we have above commented, he
+ adds, "I will let pass many more which are easy to be searched
+ and found out." Becon preached and wrote in the reign of Henry
+ VIII. and was then persecuted for his religion, as he was
+ afterwards in the reign of Mary.]
+
+ [Footnote 86: We are told that forty-eight years after his
+ death, the masters of Paris disputed whether Thomas was a
+ condemned sinner, or admitted into heaven.]
+
+In Henry the Eighth's proclamation, dated Westminster, 16th November, in
+the thirtieth year of his reign, printed by Bertholet, is the following
+very curious passage:--
+
+ "ITEM, for as moche as it appereth now clerely, that Thomas
+ Becket, sometyme Archbyshop of Canterburie, stubburnly to
+ withstand the holsome lawes establyshed agaynste the enormities
+ of the clergie, by the kynges highness mooste noble progenitour,
+ kynge HENRY the Seconde, for the common welthe, reste, and
+ tranquillitie of this realme, of his frowarde mynde fledde the
+ realme into Fraunce, and to the bishop of Rome, mayntenour of
+ those enormities, to procure the abrogation of the sayd lawes,
+ whereby arose moch trouble in this said realme, and that his
+ dethe, which they untruely called martyrdome, happened upon a
+ reskewe by him made, and that, as it is written, he gave
+ opprobrious wordes to the gentyllmen, whiche than counsayled hym
+ to leave his stubbernesse, and to avoyde the commocion of the
+ people, rysen up for that rescue. And he not only callyd the one
+ of them bawde, but also toke Tracy by the bosome, and violently
+ shoke and plucked hym in suche maner, that he had almoste
+ overthrowen hym to the pavement of the Churche; so that upon
+ this fray one of their company, perceivynge the same, strake
+ hym, and so in the thronge Becket was slayne. And further that
+ his canonization was made onely by the bysshop of Rome, bycause
+ he had ben a champion of maynteyne his usurped auctoritie, and a
+ bearer of the iniquitie of the clergie, for these and for other
+ great and urgent causes, longe to recyte, the Kynge's {228}
+ Maiestie, by the advyse of his counsayle, hath thought expedient
+ to declare to his lovynge subjectes, that notwithstandynge the
+ sayde canonization, there appereth nothynge in his lyfe and
+ exteriour conversation, wherby he shuld be callyd a sainct, but
+ rather estemed to have ben a rebell and traytour to his prynce.
+ Therefore his Grace strayghtly chargeth and commandeth that from
+ henseforth the sayde Thomas Becket shall not be estemed, named,
+ reputed, nor called a sayncte, but bysshop Becket; and that his
+ ymages and pictures, through the hole realme, shall be putte
+ downe, and avoyded out of all churches, chapelles, and other
+ places; and that from henseforthe, the dayes used to be
+ festivall in his name shall not be observed, nor the service,
+ office, antiphoners, colletes, and prayers, in his name redde,
+ but rased and put out of all the bokes[87]."
+
+ [Footnote 87: In the Roman Breviary, adapted to England, several
+ biographical lessons are appointed for the Anniversary of "St.
+ Thomas, bishop and martyr," interspersed with canticles. In one
+ of these we read, "This is truly a martyr, who, for the name of
+ Christ, shed blood; who feared not the threats of judges, nor
+ sought the glory of earthly dignity. But he reached the heavenly
+ kingdom."--Norwich, 1830. Hiem. p. 251.] {229}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+COUNCIL OF TRENT.
+
+
+In the process of ascertaining the real state of doctrine and practice
+in the worship of the Church of Rome at the present day, we must first
+gain as clear and accurate a knowledge of the decree of the Council of
+Trent, as its words will enable us to form. Into the character of that
+Council, and of those who constituted it, our present investigation does
+not lead us to inquire. It is now, I believe, generally understood, that
+its decrees are binding on all who profess allegiance to the Sovereign
+Roman Pontiff; and that the man would be considered to have renounced
+the Roman Catholic Communion, who should professedly withhold his assent
+from the doctrines there promulgated as vital, or against the oppugners
+of which the Council itself pronounced an anathema.
+
+Ecclesiastical writers[88] assure us, that the wording of the decrees of
+that Council was in many cases on purpose framed ambiguously and
+vaguely. The latitude, however, of the expressions employed, does not in
+itself {230} of necessity imply any of those sinister and unworthy
+motives to which it has been usual with many writers to attribute it. In
+charity, and without any improbable assumption, it may be referred to an
+honest and laudable desire of making the terms of communion as wide as
+might be, with a view of comprehending within what was regarded the pale
+of the Catholic Church, the greatest number of those who professed and
+called themselves Christians. Be this as it may, the vagueness and
+uncertainty of the terms employed, compel us in many instances to have
+recourse to the actual practice of the Church of Rome, as the best
+interpreter of doubtful expressions in the articles of that Council. The
+decree which bears on the subject of this volume is drawn up in the
+following words:--
+
+ [Footnote 88: See Mosheim, xvi. Cent. c. i. vol. iv. p. 196.
+ London, 1811.]
+
+ "SESSION XXV.[89]
+
+ "On the invocation, veneration, and reliques of saints, and of
+ sacred images.
+
+ "The Holy Council commands all bishops and others bearing the
+ office and care of instruction, that according to the usage of
+ the Catholic and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive
+ times of the Christian religion, and the consent of holy
+ fathers, and decrees of sacred councils, they in the first place
+ should instruct the faithful concerning the intercession and
+ invocation of saints, the honour of reliques, and the lawful use
+ of images, teaching them, that the SAINTS REIGNING TOGETHER WITH
+ CHRIST, offer their own {231} prayers for men to God: that it is
+ good and profitable SUPPLIANTLY TO INVOKE THEM: and to fly to
+ their PRAYERS, HELP, and ASSISTANCE, for obtaining benefits from
+ God, by his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer
+ and Saviour. But that those who deny that the saints, enjoying
+ everlasting happiness in heaven, are to be invoked; or who
+ assert either that they do not pray for us; or that the
+ invocation of them to pray for us even as individuals is
+ idolatry, or is repugnant to the word of God, and is opposed to
+ the honour of the one Mediator of God and man, Jesus Christ; or
+ that it is folly, by voice or mentally, to supplicate those who
+ reign in heaven, hold impious sentiments.
+
+ "That the bodies also of the holy martyrs and others living with
+ Christ, which were living members of Christ, and a temple of the
+ Holy Ghost to be raised by Him to eternal life, and to be
+ glorified, are to be worshipped by the faithful; by means of
+ which many benefits are conferred on men by God; so that those
+ who affirm that worship and honour are not due to the reliques
+ of the saints, or that they and other sacred monuments are
+ unprofitably honoured by the faithful; and that the shrines of
+ the saints are frequented in vain for the purpose of obtaining
+ their succour, are altogether to be condemned, as the Church has
+ long ago condemned them, and now also condemns them."
+
+ [Footnote 89: The Latin, which will be found in the Appendix, is
+ a transcript from a printed copy of the Acts of the Council of
+ Trent, preserved in the British Museum, to which are annexed the
+ autograph signatures of the secretaries (notarii), and their
+ seals.]
+
+An examination of this decree, in comparison with the form and language
+of other decrees of the same Council, forces the remark upon us, That
+the Council does not assert that the practice of invoking saints has any
+foundation in Holy Scripture. The absence of all such declaration is the
+more striking and important, because in the very decree immediately
+preceding this, {232} which establishes Purgatory as a doctrine of the
+Church of Rome, the Council declares that doctrine to be drawn from the
+Holy Scriptures. In the present instance the Council proceeds no further
+than to charge with impiety those who maintain the invocation of saints
+to be contrary to the word of God. Many a doctrine or practice, not
+found in Scripture, may nevertheless be not contrary to the word of God;
+but here the Council abstains from affirming any thing whatever as to
+the scriptural origin of the doctrine and practice which it
+authoritatively enforces. In this respect the framers of the decree
+acted with far more caution and wisdom than they had shown in wording
+the decree on Purgatory; and with far more caution and wisdom too than
+they exercised in this decree, when they affirmed that the doctrine of
+the invocation of saints was to be taught the people according to the
+usage of the Catholic and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive
+times of the Christian religion, and the consent of the holy fathers. I
+have good hope that these pages have already proved beyond gainsaying,
+that the invocation of saints is a manifest departure from the usage of
+the Primitive Church, and contrary to the testimony of "the holy
+fathers." However, the fact of the Council not having professed to trace
+the doctrine, or its promulgation, to any authority of Holy Scripture,
+is of very serious import, and deserves to be well weighed in all its
+bearings.
+
+With regard to the condemnatory clauses of this decree, I would for
+myself observe, that I should never have engaged in preparing this
+volume, had I not believed, "that it was neither good nor profitable to
+invoke the saints, or to fly to their prayers, their assistance, and
+succour." I am bound, with this decree {233} before me, to pronounce,
+that it is a vain thing to offer supplications, either by the voice or
+in the mind, to the saints, even if they be reigning in heaven; and that
+it is also in vain for Christians to frequent the shrines of the saints
+for the purpose of obtaining their succour.
+
+I am, moreover, under a deep conviction, that the invocation of them is
+both at variance with the word of God, and contrary to the honour of the
+one Mediator between God and man, Jesus Christ.
+
+On this last point, indeed, I am aware of an anxious desire prevailing
+on the part of many Roman Catholics, to establish a distinction between
+a mediation of Redemption, and a mediation of Intercession: and thus by
+limiting the mediation of the saints and angels to intercession, and
+reserving the mediation of redemption to Christ only, to avoid the
+setting up of another to share the office of Mediator with Him, who is
+so solemnly declared in Scripture to be the one Mediator between God and
+man. But this distinction has no foundation in the revealed will of God;
+on the contrary, it is directly at variance with the words and with the
+spirit of many portions of the sacred volume. There we find the two
+offices of redemption and mediation joined together in Christ. "If any
+man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
+Righteous, and He is the propitiation for our sins." [1 John ii. 1, 2.
+Heb. ix. 12. vii. 25.] In the Epistle to the Hebrews, the same Saviour
+who is declared "by his own blood to have obtained eternal redemption,"
+is announced also as the Mediator of Intercession. "Wherefore he is able
+to save them to the uttermost who come unto God through him, seeing he
+ever liveth to make intercession for them." The {234} redemption wrought
+by Christ, and the intercession still made in our behalf by Christ, are
+both equally declared to us by the most sure warrant of Holy Scripture;
+of any other intercession by saints in glory, by angels, or Virgin, to
+be sought by our suppliant invocations to them, the covenant of God
+speaks not.
+
+It may be observed, that the enactment of this decree by the Council of
+Trent, has been chiefly lamented by some persons on the ground of its
+presenting the most formidable barrier against any reconciliation
+between the Church of Rome, and those who hold the unlawfulness of the
+invocation of saints. Indeed persons of erudition, judgment, piety, and
+charity, in communion with Rome, have not been wanting to express openly
+their regret, that decrees so positive, peremptory, and exclusive,
+should have been adopted. They would have been better satisfied with the
+terms of communion in the Church to which they still adhered, had
+individuals been left to their own responsibility on questions of
+disputable origin and doubtful antiquity, involving rather the subtilty
+of metaphysical disquisitions, than agreeable to the simplicity of
+Gospel truth, and essential Christian doctrine. On this point I would
+content myself with quoting the sentiments of a Roman Catholic author.
+Many of the facts alleged in his interesting comments deserve the
+patient consideration of every Christian. Here (observes the commentator
+on Paoli Sarpi's History of the Council of Trent[90]) the Council makes
+it a duty to pray to saints, though the ancient Church never regarded it
+as necessary. The practice cannot be proved to be introduced into public
+worship {235} before the sixth century; and it is certain, that in the
+ancient liturgies and sacramentaries no direct invocation is found. Even
+in our modern missals, being those of our ecclesiastical books in which
+the ancient form has been longest retained, scarcely is there a collect
+[those he means in which mention is made of the saints] where the
+address is not offered directly to God, imploring Him to hear the
+prayers of the saints for us; and this is the ancient form of
+invocation. It is true, that in the Breviaries and other ecclesiastical
+books, direct prayers to the saints have been subsequently introduced,
+as in litanies, hymns, and even some collects. But the usage is more
+modern, and cannot be evidence for ancient tradition. For this [ancient
+tradition] only some invocations addressed to saints in public harangues
+are alleged, but which ought to be regarded as figures of rhetoric,
+_apostrophes_, rather than real invocations; though at the same time
+some fathers laid the foundation for such a practice by asserting that
+one could address himself to the saints, and hope for succour from them.
+
+ [Footnote 90: Histoire du Conc. de Trent, par Fra. Paoli Sarpi,
+ traduit par Pierre François de Courayer. Amsterdam, note 31.
+ 1751. vol. iii. p. 182.]
+
+We have already alluded to the very great latitude of interpretation
+which the words of this Council admit. The expressions indeed are most
+remarkably elastic; capable of being expanded widely enough to justify
+those of the Church of Rome who allow themselves in the practice of
+asking for aid and assistance, temporal and spiritual, to be expected
+from the saints themselves; and at the same time, the words of the
+decree admit of being so far contracted as not in appearance palpably to
+contradict those who allege, that the Church of Rome never addresses a
+saint with any other petition, than purely and simply that the saint
+would by prayer intercede for the worshippers. The words "suppliantly
+{236} to invoke them," and "to fly to their prayers, HELP, and SUCCOUR,"
+are sufficiently comprehensive to cover all kinds of prayer for all
+kinds of benefits, whilst "the invocation of them to pray for us even
+individually," will countenance those who would restrict the faithful to
+an entreaty for their prayers only.
+
+Whatever may be the advantage of this latitude of interpretation, in one
+point of view it must be a subject of regret. Complaints had long been
+made in Christendom, that other prayers were offered to the saints,
+besides those which petitioned only for their intercession; and if the
+Council of Trent had intended it to be a rule of universal application,
+that in whatever words the invocations of the saints might be couched,
+they should be taken to mean only requests for their prayers, it may be
+lamented, that no declaration to that effect was given.
+
+The manner in which writers of the Church of Rome have attempted to
+reconcile the prayers actually offered in her ritual, with the principle
+of invoking the saints only for their prayers, is indeed most
+unsatisfactory. Whilst to some minds the expedient to which those
+writers have had recourse carries with it the stamp of mental
+reservation, and spiritual subterfuge, and moral obliquity; others under
+the influence of the purest charity will regret in it the absence of
+that simplicity, and direct openness in word and deed, which we regard
+as characteristic of the religion of the Gospel; and will deprecate its
+adoption as tending, in many cases inevitably, to become a most
+dangerous snare to the conscience. I will here refer only to the
+profession of that principle as made by Bellarmin. Subsequent writers
+seem to have adopted his sentiments, and to have expressed themselves
+very much in his words. {237}
+
+Bellarmin unreservedly asserts that Christians are to invoke the saints
+solely and exclusively for their prayers, and not for any benefits as
+from the saints themselves. But then he seems to paralyse that
+declaration by this refinement: "It must nevertheless be observed that
+we have not to do with words, but with the meaning of words; for as far
+as concerns the words, it is lawful to say, 'Saint Peter, have mercy on
+me! Save me! Open to me the entrance of heaven!' So also, 'Give to me
+health of body, Give me patience, Give me fortitude!' Whilst only we
+understand 'Save me, and have mercy upon me BY PRAYING for me: Give me
+this and that, BY THY PRAYERS AND MERITS.' For thus Gregory of
+Nazianzen, in his Oratio in Cyprianum; and the Universal Church, when in
+the hymn to the Virgin she says,
+
+ Mary, Mother of Grace,
+ Mother of Mercy,
+ Do thou protect us from the enemy,
+ And take us in the hour of death.
+
+"And in that of the Apostles,
+
+ 'To whose command is subject'
+ The health and weakness of all:
+ Heal us who are morally diseased;
+ Restore us to virtue.
+
+"And as the Apostle says of himself 'that I might save some,' [Rom. xi.]
+and 'that he might save all,' [I Cor. ix.] not as God, but Thy prayer
+and counsel."
+
+I wish not to enter upon the question how far this distinction is
+consistent with that openness and straightforward undisguised dealing
+which is alone allowable when we are contending for the truth; nor how
+far the {238} charge of moral obliquity and double dealing, often
+brought against it, can be satisfactorily met. But suppose for a moment
+that we grant (what is not the case) that in the metaphysical
+disquisitions of the experienced casuist such a distinction might be
+maintained, how can we expect it to be recognized, and felt, and acted
+upon by the large body of Christians? Abstractedly considered, such an
+interpretation in a religious act of daily recurrence by the mass of
+unlearned believers would, I conceive, appear to reflecting minds most
+improbable, if not utterly impossible. And as to its actual _bona-fide_
+result in practice, a very brief sojourn in countries where the religion
+of Rome is dominant, will suffice to convince us, that such subtilties
+of the casuist are neither received nor understood by the great body of
+worshippers; and that the large majority of them, when they pray to an
+individual saint to deliver them from any evil, or to put them in
+possession of some good, do in very deed look to the saint himself for
+the fulfilment of their wishes. It is a snare to the conscience only too
+evidently successful.
+
+And I regret to add, that in the errors into which such language of
+their prayers may unhappily betray them, they cannot be otherwise than
+confirmed as well by the recorded sentiments of men in past years, whom
+they have been taught to reverence, as by the sentiments which are
+circulated through the world now, even by what they are accustomed to
+regard as the highest authority on earth[91].
+
+ [Footnote 91: See in subsequent parts of this work the
+ references to Bonaventura, Bernardin Sen., Bernardin de Bust.,
+ &c.; and also the encyclical letter of the present (A.D. 1840)
+ reigning pontiff.]
+
+To this point, however, we must repeatedly revert {239} hereafter; at
+present, I will only add one further consideration. If, as we are now
+repeatedly told, the utmost sought by the invocation of saints is that
+they would intercede for the supplicants; that no more is meant than we
+of the Anglican Church mean when we earnestly entreat our
+fellow-Christians on earth to pray for us,--why should not the prayers
+to the saints be confined exclusively to that form of words which would
+convey the meaning intended? why should other forms of supplicating them
+be adopted, whose obvious and direct meaning implies a different thing?
+If we request a Christian friend to pray for us, that we may be
+strengthened and supported under a trial and struggle in our spiritual
+warfare, we do not say, "Friend, strengthen me; Friend, support me."
+That entreaty would imply our desire to be, that he would visit us
+himself, and comfort and strengthen us by his own kind words and
+cheering offices of consolation and encouragement. To convey our
+meaning, our words would be, "Pray for me; remember me in your
+supplications to the throne of grace. Implore God, of his mercy, to give
+me the strength and comfort of his Holy Spirit." If nothing more is ever
+intended to be conveyed, than a similar request for their prayers, when
+the saints are "suppliantly invoked," in a case of such delicacy, and
+where there is so much danger of words misleading, why have other
+expressions of every variety been employed in the Roman Liturgies, as
+well as in the devotions of individuals, which in words appeal to the
+saints, not for their prayers, but for their own immediate exertion in
+our behalf, their assistance, succour, defence, and comfort,--"Protect
+us from our enemies--Heal the diseases of our minds--Release us from our
+sin--Receive us at the hour of death?" {240}
+
+In the present work, however, were it not for the example and warning
+set us by this still greater departure from Scripture and the primitive
+Church, we need not have dwelt on this immediate point; because we
+maintain that any invocation of saint or angel, even if it were confined
+to a petitioning for their prayers and intercessions, is contrary both
+to God's word and to the faith and practice of the primitive, Catholic,
+and Apostolic Church. We now proceed to the next portion of our proposed
+inquiry,--the present state of Roman Catholic worship, with respect to
+the invocation of saints and angels. {241}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SECTION I.--PRESENT SERVICE IN THE CHURCH OF ROME.
+
+
+In submitting to the reader's consideration the actual state of Roman
+Catholic worship at the present hour, I disclaim all desire to fasten
+upon the Church of Rome any of the follies and extravagancies of
+individual superstition. Probably many English Roman Catholics have been
+themselves shocked and scandalized by the scenes which their own eyes
+have witnessed in various parts of continental Europe. It would be no
+less unfair in us to represent the excesses of superstition there forced
+on our notice as the genuine legitimate fruits of the religion of Rome,
+than it would be in Roman Catholics to affiliate on the Catholics of the
+Anglican Church the wild theories and revolting tenets of all who assume
+the name of opponents to Rome. Well indeed does it become us of both
+Churches to watch jealously and adversely as against ourselves the
+errors into which our doctrines, if not preserved and guarded in their
+purity and simplicity, might have a tendency to seduce the unwary. And
+whilst I am fully alive to the necessity of us Anglican Catholics
+prescribing to ourselves a {242} practical application of the same rule
+in various points of faith and discipline, I would with all delicacy and
+respect invite Roman Catholics to do likewise. Especially would I
+entreat them to reflect with more than ordinary scrutiny and solicitude
+on the vast evils into which the practice of praying to saints and
+angels, and of pleading their merits at the throne of grace, has a
+tendency to betray those who are unenlightened and off their guard; and
+unless my eyes and my ears and my powers of discernment have altogether
+often deceived and failed me, I must add, actually betrays thousands.
+Often when I have witnessed abroad multitudes of pilgrims prostrate
+before an image of the Virgin, their arms extended, their eyes fixed on
+her countenance, their words in their native language pouring forth her
+praises and imploring her aid, I have asked myself, If this be not
+religious worship, what is? If I could transport myself into the midst
+of pagans in some distant part of the world at the present day; or could
+I have mingled with the crowd of worshippers surrounding the image of
+Minerva in Athens, or of Diana in Ephesus, when the servants of the only
+God called their fellow-creatures from such vanities, should I have seen
+or heard more unequivocal proofs that the worshippers were addressing
+their prayers to the idols as representations of their deities? Would
+any difference have appeared in their external worship? When the
+Ephesians worshipped their "great goddess Diana and the image which fell
+down from Jupiter," could their attitude, their eyes, or their words
+more clearly have indicated an assurance in the worshipper, that the
+Spirit of the Deity was especially present in that image, than the
+attitude, the eyes, the words of the pilgrims at Einsiedlin for example,
+are indications of the same {243} belief and assurance with regard to
+the statue of the Virgin Mary? These thoughts would force themselves
+again and again on my mind; and though since I first witnessed such
+things many years have intervened, chequered with various events of
+life, yet whilst I am writing, the scenes are brought again fresh to my
+remembrance; the same train of thought is awakened; and the lapse of
+time has not in the least diminished the estimate then formed of the
+danger, the awful peril, to which the practice of addressing saints and
+angels in prayer, even in its most modified and mitigated form, exposes
+those who are in communion with Rome. I am unwilling to dwell on this
+point longer, or to paint in deeper or more vivid colours the scenes
+which I have witnessed, than the necessity of the case requires. But it
+would have been the fruit of a morbid delicacy rather than of brotherly
+love, had I disguised, in this part of my address, the full extent of
+the awful dread with which I contemplate any approximation to prayers,
+of whatever kind, uttered by the lips or mentally conceived, to any
+spiritual existence in heaven above, save only to the one God
+exclusively. It is indeed a dread suggested by the highest and purest
+feelings of which I believe my frame of mind to be susceptible; it is
+sanctioned and enforced by my reason; and it is confirmed and
+strengthened more and more by every year's additional reflection and
+experience. Ardently as I long and pray for Christian unity, I could not
+join in communion with a Church, one of whose fundamental articles
+accuses of impiety those who deny the lawfulness of the invocations of
+saints.
+
+But I return from this digression on the peril of idolatry, to which as
+well the theory as the practice of {244} the Roman Catholic Church
+exposes her members; and willingly repeat my disclaimer of any wish or
+intention whatever to fasten and filiate upon the Church of Rome the
+doctrines or the practice of individuals, or even of different sections
+of her communion. Still, in the same manner as I have referred to the
+extravagancies which offend us in many parts of Christendom now, I would
+recall some of the excesses into which renowned and approved authors of
+her communion have been betrayed. I seek not to fix on those members of
+the Roman Church who disclaim any participation in such excesses, the
+folly or guilt of others; but when we find many of the most celebrated
+among her sons tempted into such lamentable departures from primitive
+Christian worship, we are naturally led to ascertain whether the
+doctrine be not itself the genuine cause and source of the
+mischief;--whether the malady be not the immediate and natural effect of
+the tenet and practice operating generally, and not to be referred to
+the idiosyncrasy of the patient. A voice seems to address us from every
+side, when such excesses are witnessed, Firmly resist the beginnings of
+the evil; oppose its very commencement; it is not a question of degree,
+exclude the principle itself from your worship; give utterance to no
+invocation; mentally conceive no prayer to any being, save God alone;
+plead no other merits with Him than the merits of his only Son. Then,
+and then only, are you safe. Then, and then only, is your prayer
+catholic, primitive, apostolic, and scriptural.
+
+The[92] most satisfactory method of conducting this {245} branch of our
+inquiry seems to be, that we should examine the Roman Ritual with
+reference to those several and progressive stages to which I have before
+generally referred; from the mere rhetorical apostrophe to the direct
+prayer for spiritual blessings petitioned for immediately from the
+person addressed. I am neither anxious to establish the progress
+historically, nor do I wish to tie myself down in all cases to the exact
+order of those successive stages, in my present citation of testimonies
+from the Roman Ritual. My anxiety is to give a fair view of what is now
+the real character of Roman Catholic worship, rather than to draw fine
+distinctions. I shall therefore survey within the same field of view the
+two fatal errors by which, as we believe, the worship of the Church of
+Rome is rendered unfit for the family of Christ to acknowledge it
+generally as their own: I mean the adoration of saints, and the pleading
+of their merits at the throne of grace, instead of trusting to the alone
+exclusive merits of the one only Mediator Jesus Christ our Lord, and
+addressing God Almighty alone.
+
+ [Footnote 92: I believe the method best calculated to supply us
+ with the very truth is, as I have before observed, to trace the
+ conduct of Christians at the shrines of the martyrs, and follow
+ them in their successive departures further and further from
+ primitive purity and simplicity, on the anniversaries of those
+ servants of God. What was hailed there first in the full warmth
+ of admiration and zeal for the honour and glory of a national or
+ favourite martyr, crept stealthily, and step by step, into the
+ regular and stated services of the Church.]
+
+I. In the original form of those prayers in which mention was made of
+the saints departed, Christians addressed the Supreme Being alone,
+either in praise for the mercies shown to the saints themselves, and to
+the Church through their means; or else in supplication, that the
+worshippers might have grace to follow their example, and profit by
+their instruction. Such, for instance, is the prayer in the Roman
+ritual[93] on St. {246} John's day[94] which is evidently the foundation
+of the beautiful Collect now used in the Anglican Church,--"Merciful
+Lord, we beseech thee to cast thy bright beams of light upon thy Church,
+that it being enlightened by the doctrine of thy Apostle and Evangelist
+St. John, may so walk in the light of thy truth, that it may at length
+attain to the light of everlasting life, through Jesus our Lord. Amen."
+Such too is the close of the Prayer for the whole state of Christ's
+Church militant here on earth, offered in our Anglican service,--"We
+bless thy holy name for all thy servants departed this life in thy faith
+and fear, beseeching thee to give us grace so to follow their good
+examples, that with them we may be partakers of thy heavenly kingdom.
+Grant this, O Father, for the sake of Jesus Christ our only Mediator and
+Advocate. Amen."
+
+ [Footnote 93: The references will generally be given to the
+ Roman Breviary as edited by F.C. Husenbeth, Norwich, 1830. That
+ work consists of four volumes, corresponding with the four
+ quarters of the ecclesiastical year--Winter, Hiem.; Spring,
+ Vern.; Summer, _Æstiv_.; Autumn, Aut.; and the volumes will be
+ designated by the corresponding initials, H. V. Æ. A.]
+
+ [Footnote 94: "Ecclesiam, tuam, Domine, benignus illustra, ut
+ beati Johannis Apostoli tui et evangelistæ illuminata doctrinis,
+ ad dona perveniat sempiterna. Per Dominum."--Husen. H. p. 243.]
+
+II. The second stage supplies examples of a kind of rhetorical
+apostrophe; the speaker addressing one who was departed as though he had
+ears to hear. Were not this the foundation stone on which the rest of
+the edifice seems to have been built, we might have passed it by
+unnoticed. Of this we have an instance in the address to the Shepherds
+on Christmas-day. "Whom have ye seen, ye shepherds? Say ye, tell ye, who
+hath appeared on the earth? Say ye, what saw ye? Announce to us the
+nativity of Christ[95]."
+
+ [Footnote 95: Quem vidistis, Pastores? Dicite, Annunciate nobis.
+ In terris quis apparuit? Dicite quidnam vidistis? Et annunciate
+ Christi nativitatem.--H. 219.] {247}
+
+Another instance is seen in that beautiful song ascribed to Prudentius
+and used on the day of Holy Innocents:
+
+ "Hail! ye flowers of Martyrs." [Salvete flores martyrum. H. 249.]
+
+It is of the same character with other songs, said to be from the same
+pen, in which the town of Bethlehem is addressed, and even the Cross.
+
+ "O Thou of mighty cities." [O sola magnarum urbium. H. 306.]
+ "Bend thy boughs, thou lofty tree...."
+ [Flecte ramos arbor alta, &c. Aut. 344.]
+ "Worthy wast thou alone
+ To bear the victim of the world."
+
+Thus, on the feast of the exaltation of the Cross, this anthem is
+sung,--"O blessed Cross, who wast alone worthy to bear the King of the
+heavens and the Lord." [O crux benedicta, quæ sola fuisti digna portare
+Regem coelorum et Dominum. Alleluia. A. 345.] Though unhappily, in an
+anthem on St. Andrew's day, this apostrophe becomes painful and
+distressing, in which not only is the cross thus apostrophised, but it
+is prayed to, as though it had ears to hear, and a mind to understand,
+and power to act,--"Hail, precious Cross! do thou receive the disciple
+of Him who hung upon thee, my master, Christ." [Salve, crux pretiosa
+suscipe discipulum ejus, qui pependit in te, magister meus Christus. A.
+547.] The Church of Rome, in this instance, gives us a vivid example of
+the ease with which exclamations and apostrophes are made the
+ground-work of invocations. In the legend of the day similar, though not
+the same, words form a part of the salutation, which St. Andrew is there
+said to have addressed {248} to the cross of wood prepared for his own
+martyrdom, and then bodily before his eyes. There are many such
+addresses to the Cross, in various parts of the Roman ritual. (See A.
+344.)
+
+In such apostrophes the whole of the Song of the Three Children abounds;
+and we meet with many such in the early writers.
+
+III. The third stage supplies instances of prayer to God, imploring him
+to allow the supplication of his saints to be offered for us. Of this we
+find examples in the Collects for St. Andrew's Eve and Anniversary, for
+the feast of St. Anthony, and various others.
+
+"We beseech thee, Almighty God, that he whose feast we are about to
+celebrate may implore thy aid for us," &c. [Quæsumus omnipotens Deus, ut
+beatus Andreas Apostolus cujus prævenimus festivitatem, tuum pro nobis
+imploret auxilium. A. 545.]
+
+"That he may be for us a perpetual intercessor." [Ut apud te sit pro
+nobis perpetuus intercessor. A. 551.]
+
+"We beseech thee, O Lord, let the intercession of the blessed Anthony
+the Abbot commend us, that what we cannot effect by our own merits, we
+may obtain by his patronage [Ejus patrocinio assequamur. H. 490.]:
+through the Lord."
+
+These prayers I could not offer in faith. I am taught in the written
+word to look for no other intercessor in heaven, than one who is eternal
+and divine, therefore I can need no other. Had God, by his revealed
+word, told me that the intercessions of his servants departed should
+prevail with Him, provided I sought that benefit by prayer, I should,
+without any misgiving, have implored Him to receive their {249} prayers
+in my behalf; but I can find no such an intimation in the covenant. In
+that covenant the word of the God of truth and mercy is pledged to
+receive those, and to grant the prayers of those who come to him through
+his blessed Son. In that covenant, I am strictly commanded and most
+lovingly invited to approach boldly the Supreme Giver of all good things
+myself, and to ask in faith nothing wavering, with an assurance that He
+who spared not his own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, will, with
+Him, also freely give us all things. In this assurance I place implicit
+trust; and as long as I have my being in this earthly tabernacle, I
+will, by his gracious permission and help, pray for whatever is needful
+for the soul and the body; I will pray not for myself only, but for all,
+individually and collectively, who are near and dear to me, and all who
+are far from me; for my friends, and for those who wish me ill; for my
+fellow Christians, and for those who are walking still in darkness and
+sin;--I will pray for mercy on all mankind. And I will, as occasion
+offers, desire others among the faithful on earth to pray for me; and
+will take comfort and encouragement and holy hope from the reflection
+that their prayers are presented to God in my behalf, and that they will
+continue to pray for me when my own strength shall fail and the hour of
+my departure shall draw nigh. But for the acceptance of my own prayers
+and of theirs I can depend on no other Mediator in the world of spirits,
+than on HIM, whom his own Word declares to be the one Mediator between
+God and men, who prayed for me when He was on earth, who is ever making
+intercession for me in heaven. I know of no other in the unseen world,
+by whom I can have access to the Father; I find no other offered to me,
+I seek no {250} other, I want no other. I trust my cause,--the cause of
+my present life, the cause of my soul's eternal happiness,--to HIM and
+to his intercession. I thank God for the blessing. I am satisfied; and
+in the assurance of the omnipotence of his intercession, and the perfect
+fulness of his mediation, I am happy.
+
+On this point it were well to compare two prayers both offered to God;
+the one pleading with Him the intercession of the passion of his only
+Son, the other pleading the prayers of a mortal man. The first prayer is
+a collect in Holy Week, the second is a collect on St. Gregory's Day.
+
+ We beseech thee, Almighty God, that we who among so many
+ adversities from our own infirmity fail, the passion of thy only
+ begotten Son interceding for us, may revive. V. 243.
+
+ O God, who hast granted the rewards of eternal blessedness[96]
+ to the soul of thy servant Gregory, mercifully grant that we who
+ are pressed down by the weight of our sins, may, by his prayers
+ with Thee, be raised up. V. 480.
+
+ [Footnote 96: I can never read this, and such passages as this,
+ without asking myself, can such an assertion be in accordance
+ with the inspired teaching?--"Judge nothing before the time,
+ until the Lord come, who both will bring to light the hidden
+ things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the
+ hearts: and then shall every man have praise of God." I Cor. iv.
+ 5.]
+
+IV. The next form of prayer to which I would invite your serious
+attention, is one from which my judgment and my feelings revolt far more
+decidedly even than from the last-mentioned; and I have the most clear
+denouncement of my conscience, that by offering it I should do a wrong
+to my Saviour, and ungratefully disparage his inestimable merits, and
+the full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice and satisfaction of his
+omnipotent {251} atonement: I mean those prayers, still addressed to
+God, which supplicate that our present and future good may be advanced
+by the merits of departed mortals, that by their merits our sins may be
+forgiven, and our salvation secured; that by their merits our souls may
+be made fit for celestial joys, and be finally admitted into heaven.
+
+Of these prayers the Roman Breviary contains a great variety of
+examples, some exceeding others very much in their apparent
+forgetfulness and disregard of the merits of the only Saviour, and
+consequently far more shocking to the reason and affections of us who
+hold it a point of conscience to make the merits of Christ alone, all in
+all, exclusive of any other to be joined with them, the only ground of
+our acceptance with God.
+
+We find an example of this prayer in the collect on the day of St.
+Saturnine. "O God, who grantest us to enjoy the birth-day of the blessed
+Saturnine, thy martyr, grant that we may be aided by his merits, through
+the Lord." [Ejus nos tribue meritis adjuvari per Dominum. A. 544.]
+
+Another example, in which the supplicants plead for deliverance from
+hell, to be obtained by the merits and prayers of the saint together, is
+the Collect for December 6th, the day of St. Nicolas.
+
+"O God, who didst adorn the blessed Pontiff Nicolas with unnumbered
+miracles, grant, we beseech Thee, that by his merits and prayers we may
+be set free from the fires of hell, through," &c. [Ut ejus meritis et
+precibus à gehennæ incendiis liberemur. H. 436.]
+
+Another example, in like manner specifying both the merits and
+intercession of the departed saint, contains {252} expressions very
+unacceptable to many of those who are accustomed to make the Bible their
+study. It is a prayer to Joseph, the espoused husband of the Virgin
+Mary. Of him mention is made by name in the Gospel just before and just
+after the birth of Christ, as an upright, merciful man, to whom God on
+three several occasions made a direct revelation of his will, by the
+medium of a dream, with reference to the incarnate Saviour. Again, on
+the holy family visiting Jerusalem, when our Lord was twelve years of
+age, Mary, his mother, in her remonstrance with her Son, speaks to Him
+of Joseph thus: "Why hast Thou thus dealt with us? Behold thy father and
+I have sought Thee sorrowing." Upon which not one word was uttered by
+our Saviour that would enable us to form an opinion as to his own will
+with regard to Joseph. Our Lord seems purposely to have drawn their
+thoughts from his earthly connexion with them, and to have raised their
+minds to a contemplation of his unearthly, his heavenly, and eternal
+origin. "How is it that ye sought me? Wist ye not that I must be about
+my Father's business?" After this time, though the writings of the Holy
+Book, either historical, doctrinal, or prophetic, at the lowest
+calculation embrace a period of fourscore years, no allusion is made to
+Joseph as a man still living, or to his memory as one already dead. And
+yet he is one of those for the benefit of whose intercession the Church
+of Rome teaches her members to pray to God, and from whose merits they
+are taught to hope for succour.
+
+On the 19th of March the following Collect is offered to the Saviour of
+the world:--
+
+"We beseech thee, O Lord, that we may be succoured by the merits of the
+husband of thy most holy mother, {253} so that what we cannot obtain by
+our own power, may be granted to us by his intercession. Who livest,"
+&c. [V. 486.]
+
+It is anticipating our instances of the different stages observable in
+the invocation of saints, to quote here direct addresses to Joseph
+himself; still it may be well to bring at once to a close our remarks
+with regard to the worship paid to him. We find that in the Litany of
+the Saints, "St. Joseph, pray for us," is one of the supplications; but
+on his day (March 19) there are three hymns addressed to Joseph, which
+appear to be full of lamentable superstition, assigning, as they do, to
+him a share at least in the work of our salvation, and solemnly stating,
+as a truth, what, whether true or not, depends upon a groundless
+tradition, namely, that our blessed Lord and Mary watched by him at his
+death; ascribing to Joseph also that honour and praise, which the Church
+was wont to offer to God alone. The following are extracts from those
+hymns:
+
+First hymn. "Thee, Joseph, let the companies of heaven celebrate; thee
+let all the choirs of Christian people resound; who, bright in merits,
+wast joined in chaste covenant with the renowned Virgin. Others their
+pious death consecrates after death; and glory awaits those who deserve
+the palm. Thou alive, equal to those above, enjoyest God, more blessed
+by wondrous lot. O Trinity, most High, spare us who pray; grant us to
+reach heaven [to scale the stars] BY THE MERITS OF JOSEPH, that at
+length we may perpetually offer to thee a grateful song." [Te Joseph
+celebrent agmina coelitum. V. 485.]
+
+Second hymn. "O, Joseph, the glory of those in heaven, and the sure hope
+of our life, and the safeguard {254} of the world, benignly ACCEPT THE
+PRAISES WHICH WE joyfully sing TO THEE.... Perpetual praise to the most
+High Trinity, who granting to thee honours on high, give to us, BY THY
+MERITS, the joys of a blessed life." [Coelitum, Joseph, Decus. V. 486.]
+
+Third hymn. "He whom we, the faithful, worship with joy, whose exalted
+triumphs we celebrate, Joseph, on this day obtained by merit the joys of
+eternal life. O too happy! O too blessed! at whose last hour Christ and
+the Virgin together, with serene countenance, stood watching. Hence,
+conqueror of hell, freed from the bands of the flesh, he removes in
+placid sleep to the everlasting seats, and binds his temples with bright
+chaplets. Him, therefore, reigning, let us all importune, that he would
+be present with us, and that he obtaining pardon for our transgressions,
+would assign to us the rewards of peace on high. Be praises to thee, be
+honours to thee, O Trine God, who reignest, and assignest golden crowns
+to thy faithful servant for ever. Amen." [Iste, quem læti colimus
+fideles. V. 490.]
+
+It is painful to remark, that in these last clauses the very same word
+is employed when the Church of Rome applies to Joseph to assign to the
+faithful the rewards of peace, and when she ascribes glory to God for
+assigning to his faithful servants crowns of gold. Indeed these hymns
+contain many expressions which ought to be addressed to the Saviour
+alone, whose "glory is in the heavens," who is "the hope of us on
+earth," and "the safeguard of the world."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Under this fourth head I will add only one more specimen. Would it were
+not to be found in the Roman {255} Liturgies since the Council of Trent:
+God grant it may ere long be wiped out of the book of Christian worship!
+It is a collect in which the Church of Rome offers this prayer to God
+the Son:--
+
+"O God, whose right hand raised the blessed Peter when walking on the
+waves, that he sank not; and rescued his fellow-apostle Paul, for the
+third time suffering shipwreck, from the depth of the sea; mercifully
+hear us, and grant that by the merits of both we may obtain the glory of
+eternity." [H. 149.]
+
+Now suppose for a moment it had been intended in any one prayer
+negatively to exclude the merits of Christ from the great work of our
+eternal salvation, and to limit our hopes of everlasting glory to the
+merits of St. Peter and St. Paul, could that object have been more
+effectually and fully secured than by this prayer? Not one word alluding
+to the redemption which is in Christ can be found in this prayer. The
+sentiment in the first member of the prayer refers us to the power
+exercised by the Son of God, and Son of man, when he was intabernacled
+in our flesh; and the second expression teaches us to contemplate the
+providence of our Almighty Saviour in his deeds of beneficence. But no
+reference, even by allusion, is here made to the merits of Christ's
+death--none to his merits as our great Redeemer; none to his merits as
+our never-ceasing and never-failing Intercessor. We are led to approach
+the throne of grace only with the merits of the two Apostles on our
+tongue. If those who offer it hope for acceptance through THE MEDIATION
+of Jesus Christ, and for the sake of his merits, that hope is neither
+suggested nor fostered by this prayer. The truth, as it is in Jesus,
+would compel us in addressing {256} Him, the Saviour of the world, to
+think of the merits of neither Peter nor Paul, of neither angel nor
+spirit. Instead of praying to him that we may obtain the glories of
+eternity for their merits, true faith in Christ would bid us throw
+ourselves implicitly on his omnipotent merits alone, and implore so
+great a blessing for his own mercy's sake. If we receive the whole
+truth, can it appear otherwise than a disparagement of his perfect and
+omnipotent merits, to plead with Him the merits of one, whom the Saviour
+himself rebuked with as severe a sentence as ever fell from his lips,
+"Get thee behind me, Satan, thou art an offence to me; for thou
+savourest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men;"
+[Matt. xvi. 23.] and of another who after his conversion, when speaking
+of the salvation wrought by Christ, in profound humility confesses
+himself to be a chief of those sinners for whom the Saviour died, "This
+is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus
+came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief?" [1 Tim. i.
+15.] We feel, indeed, a sure and certain hope that these two
+fellow-creatures, once sinners, but by God's grace afterwards saints,
+have found mercy with God, and will live with Christ for ever; but to
+pray for the same mercy at his gracious hands for the sake of their
+merits is repugnant to our first principles of Christian faith. When we
+think of merits, for which to plead for mercy, we can think of Christ's,
+and of Christ's alone.
+
+V. Our thoughts are next invited to that class of prayers which the
+Church of Rome authorizes and directs to be addressed immediately to the
+Saints themselves. {257} Of these there are different kinds, some far
+more objectionable than others, though all are directly at variance with
+that one single and simple principle, to which, as we believe, a
+disciple of the cross can alone safely adhere--prayer to God, and only
+to God. The words of the Council of Trent are, as we have already
+observed, very comprehensive on this subject. They not only declare it
+to be a good and useful thing supplicantly to invoke the saints reigning
+with Christ: but also for the obtaining of benefits from God, through
+Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer and Saviour, to fly to
+their prayers, HELP, and ASSISTANCE. Whether these last words can be
+interpreted as merely words of surplusage, or whether they must be
+understood to mean that the faithful must have recourse to some help and
+assistance of the saints beyond their intercession, is a question to
+which we need not again revert. If it had been intended to embrace other
+kinds of beneficial succour, and other help and assistance, perhaps it
+would be difficult to find words more expressive of such general aid and
+support as a human being might hope to derive, in answer to prayer from
+the Giver of all good. And certainly they are words employed by the
+Church, when addressing prayers directly to God. Be this as it may, the
+public service-books of the Church of Rome unquestionably, by no means
+adhere exclusively to such addresses to the saints, as supplicate them
+to pray for the faithful on earth. Many a prayer is couched in language
+which can be interpreted only as conveying a petition to them
+immediately for their assistance, temporal and spiritual.
+
+But let us calmly review some of the prayers, supplications,
+invocations, or by whatever name religious addresses now offered to the
+saints may be called; and {258} first, we will examine that class in
+which the petitioners ask merely for the intercession of the saints.
+
+We have an example of this class in an invocation addressed to St.
+Ambrose on his day, December 7; the very servant of Christ in whose
+hymns and prayers no address of prayer or invocation to any saint or
+martyr can be found.
+
+"O thou most excellent teacher, the light of the Holy Church, O blessed
+Ambrose, thou lover of the divine law, deprecate for us [or intercede
+for us with] the Son of God[97]."
+
+ [Footnote 97: H. 438. "Deprecare pro nobis Filium Dei." This
+ invocation to Ambrose is instantly followed by this prayer to
+ God: "O God, who didst assign to thy people the blessed Ambrose
+ as a minister of eternal salvation, grant, we beseech Thee, that
+ we may deserve to have him as our intercessor in heaven, whom we
+ had as a teacher of life on earth."]
+
+The Church of Rome has wisely availed herself of the pious labours of
+Ambrose, Bishop of Milan; and has introduced into her public worship
+many of the hymns usually ascribed to him. Would she had followed his
+example, and addressed her invocations to no one but our Creator, our
+Redeemer, and our Sanctifier! Could that holy man hear the supplications
+now offered to him, and could be make his voice heard in return among
+those who now invoke him, that voice, we believe, would only convey a
+prohibitory monition like that of the Angel to St. John when he fell
+down before him, See thou do it not; I am thy fellow-servant; worship
+God.
+
+It is needless to multiply instances of this fifth kind of invocation.
+In the "Litany of the Saints" more than fifty different saints are
+enumerated by name, and are invoked to pray and intercede for those who
+join in {259} it. Among the persons invoked are Raphael [Æ. cxcii.],
+Gervasius, Protasius, and Mary Magdalene; whilst in the Litany [Æ.
+cxcvi.] for the recommendation of the soul of the sick and dying, the
+names of Abel, and Abraham, are specified.
+
+Under this head I will call your attention only to one more example.
+Indeed I scarcely know whether this hymn would more properly be classed
+under this head, or reserved for the next; since it appears to partake
+of the nature of each. It supplicates the martyr to obtain by his
+prayers spiritual blessings, and yet addresses him as the person who is
+to grant those blessings. It implores him to liberate us by the love of
+Christ; but so should we implore the Father of mercies himself. Still,
+as the more safe course, I would regard it as a prayer to St. Stephen
+only to intercede for us. But it may be well to derive from it a lesson
+on this point; how easily the transition glides from one false step to a
+worse; how infinitely wiser and safer it is to avoid evil in its very
+lowest and least noxious appearance:
+
+"Martyr of God [or Unconquered Martyr], who, by following the only Son
+of the Father, triumphest over thy conquered enemies, and, as conqueror,
+enjoyest heavenly things; by the office of thy prayer wash out our
+guilt; driving away the contagion of evil; removing the weariness of
+life. The bands of thy hallowed body are already loosed; loose thou us
+from the bands of the world, by the love of the Son of God [or by the
+gift of God Most High]." [H. 237.]
+
+In the above hymn the words included within brackets are the readings
+adopted in the last English edition of the Roman Breviary; and in this
+place, when we are about to refer to many hymns now in use, it may be
+well to observe, that in the present day we find {260} various readings
+in the hymns as they are still printed for the use of Roman Catholics in
+different countries. In some instances the changes are curious and
+striking. Grancolas, in his historical commentary on the Roman Breviary
+(Venice, 1734, p. 84), furnishes us with interesting information as to
+the chief cause of this diversity. He tells us that Pope Urban VIII.,
+who filled the papal throne from 1623 to 1644, a man well versed in
+literature, especially in Latin poetry, and himself one of the
+distinguished poets of his time, took measures for the emendation of the
+hymns in the Roman Breviary. He was offended by the many defects in
+their metrical composition, and it is said that upwards of nine hundred
+and fifty faults in metre were corrected, which gave to Urban occasion
+to say that the Fathers had begun rather than completed the hymns.
+These, as corrected, he caused to be inserted in the Breviary. Grancolas
+proceeds to tell us that many complained of these changes, alleging that
+the primitive simplicity and piety which breathed in the hymns had been
+sacrificed to the niceties of poetry. "Accessit Latinitas, et recessit
+pietas." The verse was neater, but the thought was chilled.
+
+VI. But the Roman Church by no means limits herself to this kind of
+invocation; prayers are addressed to saints, imploring them to hear,
+and, as of themselves, to grant the prayers of the faithful on earth,
+and to release them from the bands of sin, without any allusion to
+prayers to be made by those saints. It grieves me to copy out the
+invocation made to St. Peter on the 18th of January, called the
+anniversary of the Chair of St. Peter at Rome; the words of our Blessed
+Lord himself, and of his beloved and inspired Apostle, seem to rise up
+in judgment against that prayer, and condemn it. It {261} will be well
+to place that hymn addressed to St. Peter, side by side with the very
+word of God, and then ask, Can this prayer be safe?
+
+1. Now, O good Shepherd, 1. Jesus saith, I am the good
+merciful Peter, Shepherd. John x. 11.
+
+2. Accept the prayers of us 2. Whatsoever ye shall ask in
+who supplicate, my name, that will I do. That
+ whatsoever ye shall ask the
+ Father in my name, he may give
+ it you. John xiv. 13; xv. 16.
+
+3. And loose the bands of our 3. The blood of Jesus Christ
+sins, by the power committed to his Son cleanseth us from all sin.
+thee, 1 John i. 7.
+
+4. By which thou shuttest 4. These things saith he that
+heaven against all by a word, is holy, he that is true, he that
+and openest it[98]. openeth and no man shutteth, and
+ shutteth and no man openeth.
+ Rev. iii. 7.
+
+ I am he that liveth and was
+ dead, and am alive for evermore,
+ and have the keys of hell and of
+ death. Rev. i. 18.
+
+ [Footnote 98: This hymn is variously read. In the edition of Mr.
+ Husenbeth (H. 497.) it is: "O Peter, blessed shepherd, of thy
+ mercy receive the prayers of us who supplicate, and loose by thy
+ word the bands of our sins, thou to whom is given the power of
+ opening heaven to the earth, and of shutting it when
+ open."--"Beate pastor, Petre, clemens accipe voces precantum,
+ criminumque vincula verbo resolve, cui potestas tradita aperire
+ terris coelum, apertum claudere." H. 497.]
+
+Let it not be answered that many a Christian minister is now called a
+good shepherd. Let it not be said that the very words of our ordination
+imply the conveyance of the power of loosing and binding, of opening and
+shutting the gates of heaven. When prayer is contemplated, we can think
+only of One, HIM, who has appropriated the title of Good Shepherd to
+{262} himself. And we must see that Peter cannot, by any latitude of
+interpretation, be reckoned now among those to whom the awful duty is
+assigned of binding and loosing upon earth.
+
+The same unsatisfactory associations must be excited in the mind of
+every one who takes a similar view of Christian worship with myself, by
+the following supplication to various saints on St. John's day:
+
+ "Let the heaven exult with praises[99],
+ Let the earth resound with joy; {263}
+ The sacred solemnities sing
+ The glory of the Apostles.
+ O ye Just Judges of the age,
+ And true lights of the world,
+ We pray you with the vows of our hearts,
+ Hear the prayers of your suppliants.
+ Ye who shut the heaven by a word,
+ And loose its bars,
+ Loose us by command, we beseech you,
+ From all our sins.
+ Ye to whose word is subject
+ The health and weakness of all,
+ Cure us who are diseased in morals,
+ Restore us to virtues.
+ So that when Christ shall come,
+ The Judge at the end of the world,
+ He may make us partakers
+ Of eternal joy.
+ To God the Father be Glory,
+ And to his only Son,
+ With the Spirit the Comforter,
+ Now and for ever. Amen[100]."
+
+ [Footnote 99: Having inserted in the text a translation of this
+ hymn from a copy with which I had been long familiar, I think it
+ right to insert here the two forms side by side. They supply an
+ example of the changes to which we have already alluded.
+
+ _Lille_, 1823. _Norwich_, 1830.
+
+ OLD VERSION. POPE URBAN'S VERSION.
+
+ Exultet coelum laudibus, Exultet orbis gaudiis,
+ Resultet terra gaudiis, Coelum resultet laudibus,
+ Apostolorum gloriam Apostolorum gloriam
+ Sacra canunt solemnia. Tellus et astra concinunt.
+ Vos sæcli justi judices Vos sæculorum judices
+ Et vera mundi lamina, Et vera mundi lumina,
+ Votis precamur cordium Votis precamur cordium
+ Audite preces supplicum. Audite voces supplicum.
+ Qui coelum verbo clauditis Qui templa coeli clauditis
+ Serasque ejus solvitis, Serasque verbo solvitis,
+ Nos a peccatis omnibus Nos a reatu noxios
+ Solvite jussu, quæsumus. Solvi jubete quæsumus.
+ Quorum præcepto subditur Præcepta quorum protinus
+ Salus et languor omnium, Languor salusque sentiunt,
+ Sanate ægros moribus, Sanate mentes languidas,
+ Nos reddentes virtutibus. Augete nos virtutibus.
+ Ut cum judex advenerit Ut cum redibit arbiter
+ Christus in fine sæculi, In fine Christus sæculi,
+ Nos sempiterni gaudii Nos sempiterni gaudii
+ Faciat esse compotes. Concedat esse compotes.
+ Deo Patri sit gloria, Jesu, tibi sit gloria
+ Ejusque soli Filio, Qui natus es de virgine,
+ Cum Spiritu paracleto, Cum Patre et Almo Spiritu,
+ Et nunc et in perpetuum. In sempiterna sæcula.
+
+ Amen. Amen.
+ (H. 243.)
+ ]
+
+ [Footnote 100: Or as in the present Roman Breviary:--
+
+ Let the world exult with joy,
+ Let the heaven resound with praise;
+ The earth and stars sing together
+ The glory of the Apostles.
+ Ye judges of the ages
+ And true lights of the world,
+ With the prayers of our hearts we implore,
+ Hear the voices of your suppliants.
+ Ye who shut the temples of heaven,
+ And loose its bars by a word,
+ Command ye us, who are guilty,
+ To be released from our sins; we pray.
+ Ye whose commands forthwith
+ Sickness and health feel,
+ Heal our languid minds,
+ Increase us in virtues,
+ That when Christ, the Judge, shall return,
+ In the end of the world,
+ He may grant us to be partakers
+ Of eternal joy.
+ Jesus, to thee be glory,
+ Who wast born of a virgin,
+ With the Father and the Benign Spirit,
+ Through eternal ages. Amen. {264}
+ ]
+
+Many a pious and humble Catholic of the Roman Communion, I have no
+doubt, would regard these prayers as little more than an application to
+Peter and the rest of the Apostles for absolution, and would interpret
+its several clauses as an acknowledgment only of that power, which
+Christ himself delegated to them of binding and loosing sins on earth.
+But the gulf fixed between these prayers, and the lawful use of the
+power given to Christ's ordained ministers on earth, is great indeed. To
+satisfy the mind of this, it is not necessary to enter upon even the
+confines of the wide field of controversy, as to what was really
+conveyed by Christ to his Apostles. I would ask only two questions.
+Could any of us address these same words to one of Christ's ministers on
+earth? And could we address our blessed Saviour himself in stronger or
+more appropriate language, as the Lord of our destinies--the God who
+heareth prayer--the Physician of our souls?
+
+Suppose for example we were celebrating the anniversary of Christ's
+Nativity, of his Resurrection, or his Ascension, what word in this hymn,
+expressive of {265} power, and honour, and justice, and mercy, would not
+be appropriate? What word would not apply to Him, in most perfect
+accordance with Scripture language? And can we without offence, without
+doing wrong to his great Name, address the same to our fellow-servants,
+even though we may believe them to be with Him in glory?
+
+ Let the heaven exult with praises--
+ Let the earth resound with joy;
+ The sacred solemnities sing
+ The glory of the Lord.
+ O Thou just Judge of the age,
+ And true light of the world,
+ We pray Thee with the supplications of our hearts
+ Hear the prayers of Thy suppliants,
+ Thou who shuttest the heavens by a word,
+ And loosest its bars.
+ Loose us by command, we beseech Thee,
+ From all our sins.
+ Thou to whose word is subject
+ The health and weakness of all,
+ Cure us who are diseased in morals,
+ Restoring us to virtue.
+ So that when Thou shalt come,
+ The Judge at the end of the world,
+ Thou mayest make us partakers
+ Of eternal joy.
+ Glory to Thee, O Lord,
+ Who wast born of a virgin,
+ With the Father and the Holy Spirit,
+ For ever and ever. Amen.
+
+Only for a moment let us see how peculiarly all these expressions are
+fitting in a hymn of prayer and praise {266} to our God and Saviour,
+recalling to our minds the words of inspiration; and then again let us
+put the question to our conscience, Is this language fit for us to use
+to a fellow-creature?
+
+Let the heaven exult with praises, Let the heavens rejoice, and
+Let the earth resound with joy: let the earth be glad ... (exultet
+ is the very word used in the Vulgate
+ translation of the Psalm)--before
+ the Lord, for He cometh
+ to judge the earth.--Ps. xcvi
+ (xcv). 11.
+
+The holy solemnities sing Ye shall have a song, as in the
+The glory of the Lord. night when a holy solemnity is
+ kept ... And the Lord shall cause
+ His glorious voice to be heard.
+ Isa. xxx. 29. Let the heaven
+ and earth praise Him. Ps. lxix
+ (lxviii). 34.
+
+Thou just Judge of mankind, All judgment is committed
+And true light of the world, unto the Son. John v. 22. That
+ was the true Light, which lighteth
+ every man that cometh into
+ the world. John i. 9.
+
+With the prayers of our hearts we With my whole heart have I
+ pray Thee, sought Thee. Ps. cxix (cxviii).
+Hear the prayers of Thy suppliants. 10. Hear my prayer, O God.
+ Ps. lxi (lx). 1. Whom have I in
+ heaven but Thee? Ps. lxxiii
+ (lxxii). 25. And this is the
+ confidence that we have in Him,
+ that if we ask any thing according to
+ His will, He heareth us. 1 John
+ v. 14.
+
+Thou who shuttest heaven by I have the keys of death and of
+ Thy word, hell. These things saith He that
+And loosest its bars, is holy, He that is true: He
+ that hath the key of David. He
+ that openeth and no man shutteth,
+ and shutteth and no man {267}
+ openeth. I have set before thee
+ an open door, and no man can
+ shut it. Rev. i. 18; iii. 7,8
+
+Release us by command, we pray Thy sins be forgiven thee.
+Thee, Matt. ix. 22. Bless the Lord, O
+From all our sins. my soul ... who forgiveth all
+ thine iniquities. Ps. ciii. 2. This
+ is your blood of the New Testament,
+ which is shed for many
+ for the remission of sins. Matt.
+ xxvi. 28. Have mercy upon me,
+ O God ... according to the
+ multitude of Thy tender mercies,
+ blot out my transgressions. Wash
+ me throughly from mine iniquity,
+ and cleanse me from my
+ sin. Ps. li (l).
+
+Thou to whose word is subject Bless the Lord, O my soul ...
+The health and weakness of all, who healeth all thy diseases. Ps.
+ ciii (cii). 2, 3.
+
+Do Thou heal us who are morally Create in me a clean heart, O
+diseased, God, and renew a right spirit
+Restoring us to virtue; within me. Ps. li. 10 (4.)
+That when Thou, the Judge, shalt
+appear in the end of the world,
+Thou mayest grant us to be
+partakers of eternal joy.
+
+This would be a Christian prayer, a primitive prayer, a scriptural
+prayer, a prayer well fitting mortal man to utter by his tongue and from
+his heart, to the God who heareth prayer; and him who shall in sincere
+faith offer such a prayer, Christ will never send empty away. But if
+this prayer, fitted as it seems only to be addressed to God, be offered
+to the soul of a departed saint--I will not talk of blasphemy, and
+deadly sin, and idolatry,--I will only ask members of the Church of Rome
+to weigh all these things well, one by one. These are not subjects for
+crimination and recrimination. {268}
+
+We have had far too much of those unholy weapons on both sides. Speaking
+the truth in love, I should be verily guilty of a sin in my own
+conscience were I, with my views of Christian worship, to offer this
+prayer to the soul of a man however holy, however blessed, however
+exalted.
+
+The next part of our work will be given exclusively to the worship of
+the Blessed Virgin Mary. {269}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SECTION I.--THE VIRGIN MARY.
+
+
+The worship of the blessed Virgin Mary is so highly exalted in the
+Church of Rome, as to require the formation of a new name to express its
+high character. Neither could the Latin language provide a word which
+would give an adequate idea of its excellence, nor could any word
+previously employed by the writers in Greek, meet the case
+satisfactorily. The newly invented term Hyperdulia, meaning "a service
+above others," seems to place the service of the Virgin on a footing
+peculiarly its own, as raised above the worship of the saints departed,
+and of the angels of God, cherubim and seraphim, with all the hosts of
+principalities and powers in heavenly places. The service of the Virgin
+Mary thus appears not only to justify, but even to require a separate
+and distinct examination in this volume. The general principles,
+however, which we have already endeavoured to establish and illustrate
+with regard as well to the study of the Holy Scriptures as to the
+evidence of primitive antiquity, are equally applicable here; and with
+those principles present to our minds, {270} we will endeavour now to
+ascertain the truth with regard to the worship of the Virgin as now
+witnessed in the Roman Catholic Church.
+
+Of the Virgin Mary, think not, brethren of the Church of Rome, that a
+true member of the Anglican branch of the Catholic Church will speak
+disparagingly or irreverently. Were such an one found among us, we
+should say of him, he knows not what spirit he is of. Our church, in her
+Liturgy, her homilies, her articles, in the works too of the best and
+most approved among her divines and teachers, ever speaks of Saint Mary,
+the blessed Virgin, in the language of reverence, affection, and
+gratitude.
+
+She was a holy virgin and a holy mother. She was highly favoured,
+blessed among women. The Lord was with her, and she was the mother of
+our only Saviour. She was herself blessed, and blessed was the fruit of
+her womb. We delight in the language of our ancestors, in which they
+were used to call her "Mary, the Blissful Maid." Should any one of those
+who profess and call themselves Christians and Catholics, entertain a
+wish to interrupt the testimony of every succeeding age, and to
+interpose a check to the fulfilment of her own recorded prophecy, "All
+generations shall call me blessed," certainly the Anglican Catholic
+Church will never acknowledge that wish to be the genuine desire of one
+of her own sons. The Lord hath blessed her; yea, and she shall be
+blessed.
+
+But when we are required either to address our supplications to her, or
+else to sever ourselves from the communion of a large portion of our
+fellow-Christians, we have no room for hesitation; the case offers us no
+alternative. Our love of unity must yield to our love {271} of truth; we
+cannot join in that worship which in our conscience we believe to be a
+sin against God. Whether we are right or wrong in this matter, God will
+himself judge: and, compared with his acquittal and approval, the
+severity of man's judgment cannot turn us aside from our purpose. But
+before any one pronounces a sentence of condemnation against us, or of
+approval on himself, it well becomes him patiently and dispassionately
+to weigh the evidence; lest his decision may not be consistent with
+justice and truth.
+
+In addition to what has been already said on the general subject of
+addressing our invocation to any created being--to any one among the
+principalities and thrones, dominions, powers, angels, archangels, and
+all the hosts of heaven, to any one among the saints, martyrs,
+confessors, and holy men departed hence in the Lord--I would submit to
+my brethren of the Roman Catholic Church some considerations
+specifically applicable to the case of the blessed Virgin, and to the
+practice of the Church of Rome in the religious worship paid to her.
+
+First, it will be well for us to possess ourselves afresh of whatever
+light is thrown on this subject by the Scriptures themselves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--EVIDENCE OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.
+
+
+The first intimation given to us that a woman was in the providence of
+God appointed to be the instrument, or channel by which the Saviour of
+mankind should be brought into the world, was made immediately after the
+Fall, and at the very first dawn of the day of salvation. {272} I am
+fully aware how the various criticisms on the words in which that first
+promise of a Saviour is couched, have been the well-spring of angry
+controversy. I will not enter upon that field. The authorized English
+version thus renders the passage: "I will put enmity between thee and
+the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head,
+and thou shalt bruise his heel." [Gen. iii. 15.] The Roman Vulgate,
+instead of the word "it," reads "she." Surely such a point as this
+should be made a subject of calm and enlightened criticism, without
+warmth or heart-burnings on either side. But for our present purpose, it
+matters little what turn that controversy may take. I believe our own to
+be the true rendering: but whether the word dictated here by the Holy
+Spirit to Moses should be so translated as to refer to the seed of the
+woman generally, as in our authorized version, or to the male child, the
+descendant of the woman, as the Septuagint renders it, or to the word
+"woman" itself; and if the latter, whether it refer to Eve, the mother
+of every child of a mortal parent, or to Mary, the immediate mother of
+our Saviour: whatever view of that Hebrew word be taken, no Christian
+can doubt, that before the foundations of the world were laid, it was
+foreordained in the counsels of the Eternal Godhead, that the future
+Messiah, the Redeemer of Mankind, should be of the seed of Eve, and in
+the fulness of time be born of a Virgin of the name of Mary, and that in
+the mystery of that incarnation should the serpent's head be bruised. I
+wish not to dwell on this, because it bears but remotely and
+incidentally on the question at issue. I will, therefore, pass on,
+quoting {273} only the words of one of the most laborious among Roman
+Catholic commentators, De Sacy. "The sense is the same in the one and in
+the other, though the expression varies. The sense of the Hebrew is, The
+Son of the Woman, Jesus Christ, Son of God, and Son of a Virgin, shall
+bruise thy head, and by establishing the kingdom of God on earth,
+destroy thine. The sense of the Vulgate is, The woman, by whom thou hast
+conquered man, shall bruise thy head, not by herself, but by Jesus
+Christ." [Vol. i. p. 132.]
+
+The only other passage in which reference appears to be made in the Old
+Testament to the Mother of our Lord, contains that celebrated prophecy
+in the seventh chapter of Isaiah, about which I am not aware that any
+difference exists between the Anglican and the Roman Churches. "A Virgin
+shall conceive and bear a Son, and shall call his name Immanuel."
+[Isaiah vii. 4.]
+
+I find no passage in the Old Testament which can by any inferential
+application be brought to bear on the question of Mary's being a proper
+object of invocation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the New Testament, mention by name is made of the Virgin Mary by St.
+Matthew, St. Mark, and St. Luke, and by St. John in his Gospel, as the
+Mother of our Lord, but not by name; and by no other writer. Neither St.
+Paul in any one of his many Epistles, though he mentions the names of
+many of our Lord's disciples, nor St. James, nor St. Peter, who must
+often have seen her during our Lord's ministry, nor St. Jude, nor St.
+John in any of his three Epistles, or in the {274} Revelation (though,
+as we learn from his own Gospel, she had of especial trust been
+committed to his care)--no one of these either mentions her as living,
+or alludes to her memory as dead.
+
+The first occasion on which any reference is made in the New Testament
+to the Virgin Mary is the salutation of the Angel, as recorded by St.
+Luke in the opening chapter of his Gospel. The last occasion is when she
+is mentioned by the same Evangelist, as "Mary the Mother of Jesus," in
+conjunction with his brethren and with the Apostles and the women all
+continuing in prayer and supplication, immediately after the ascension
+of our blessed Lord. Between these two occasions the name of Mary occurs
+under a variety of circumstances, on every one of which we shall do well
+to reflect.
+
+The first occasion, we have already said, is the salutation of Mary by
+the angel, announcing to her that she should be the Mother of the Son of
+God. Surely no daughter of Eve was ever so distinguished among women;
+and well does it become us to cherish her memory with affectionate
+reverence. The words addressed to her when on earth by the angel in that
+announcement, with a little variation of expression, are daily addressed
+to her by the Roman Catholic Church, now that she is no longer seen, but
+is removed to the invisible world. "Hail, thou that art highly
+favoured!" (or as the Vulgate reads it, "full of grace") "the Lord is
+with thee. Blessed art thou among women." [Luke i. 28.] On the
+substitution of the expression, "full of grace," for "highly favoured,"
+or, as our margin suggests, "graciously accepted, or much graced," I am
+not desirous {275} of troubling you with any lengthened remark. I could
+have wished that since the Greek is different in this passage, and in
+the first chapter of St. John, where the words "full of grace" are
+applied to our Saviour, a similar distinction had been observed in the
+Roman translation. But the variation is unessential. The other
+expression, "Blessed art thou among women," is precisely and identically
+the same with the ascription of blessedness made by an inspired tongue,
+under the elder covenant, to another daughter of Eve. "Blessed above
+women," or (as both the Septuagint and the Vulgate render the word)
+"Blessed among women shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be."
+[Judges v. 24.] We can see no ground in such ascription of blessedness
+for any posthumous adoration of the Virgin Mary.
+
+The same observation applies with at least equal strictness to that
+affecting interview between Mary and Elizabeth, when, enlightened
+doubtless by an especial revelation, Elizabeth returned the salutation
+of her cousin by addressing her as the Mother of her Lord, and hailing
+her visit as an instance of most welcome and condescending kindness,
+"Whence is this to me, that the mother of my Lord should come unto me?"
+[Luke i. 43.] Members of the Anglican Church are taught to refer to this
+event in Mary's life with feelings of delight and gratitude. On this
+occasion she uttered that beautiful hymn, "The Song of the blessed
+Virgin Mary," which our Church has selected for daily use at Evening
+Prayer. These incidents bring before our minds the image of a spotless
+Virgin, humble, pious, obedient, holy: a chosen servant of God--an
+exalted pattern for her fellow-creatures; but still a fellow-creature,
+and a fellow-servant: {276} a virgin pronounced by an angel blessed on
+earth. But further than this we cannot go. We read of no power, no
+authority, neither the power and influence of intercession, nor the
+authority or right of command being ever, even by implication, committed
+to her; and we dare not of our own minds venture to take for granted a
+statement of so vast magnitude, involving associations so awful. We
+reverence her memory as a blessed woman, the virgin mother of our Lord.
+We cannot supplicate any blessing at her hand; we cannot pray to her for
+her intercession.
+
+The angel's announcement to Joseph, whether before or after the birth of
+Christ, the visit of the Magi, the flight into Egypt, and the return
+thence, in the record of all of which events by St. Matthew the name of
+Mary occurs, however interesting and important in themselves, seem to
+require no especial attention with reference to the immediate subject of
+our inquiry. To Joseph the angel speaks of the blessed Virgin as "Mary
+thy wife." [Matt. i. 20.] In every other instance she is called "The
+young child's mother," or "His mother."
+
+In relating the circumstances of Christ's birth the Evangelist employs
+no words which seem to invite any particular examination. Joseph went up
+into the city of David to be taxed with Mary his espoused wife; and
+there she brought forth her first-born son, and wrapped him in swaddling
+clothes, and laid him in a manger. And the shepherds found Mary and
+Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger. And Mary kept all these things,
+and pondered them in her heart. [Luke ii. 19.]
+
+Between the birth of Christ, and the flight into Egypt, St. Luke records
+an event to have happened by no means unimportant--the presentation of
+Christ in {277} the temple. "And when the days of her purification
+according to the law of Moses were accomplished, they brought him to
+Jerusalem to present him to the Lord. And he (Simeon) came by the Spirit
+into the temple; and when the parents brought in the child Jesus to do
+for him after the custom of the law, then took he him up in his arms,
+and blessed God, and said, Lord, &c. And Joseph and his mother marvelled
+at those things which were spoken of him. And Simeon blessed them, and
+said unto Mary his mother, Behold, this child is set for the fall and
+rising again of many in Israel; and for a sign that shall be spoken
+against, (yea, a sword shall pierce through thine own soul also) that
+the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed." [Luke ii. 28.] In this
+incident it is worthy of remark, that Joseph and Mary are both mentioned
+by name, that they are both called the parents of the young child; that
+both are equally blessed by Simeon; and that the good old Israelite,
+illumined by the spirit of prophecy, when he addresses himself
+immediately to Mary, speaks only of her future sorrow, and does not even
+most remotely or faintly allude to any exaltation of her above the other
+daughters of Abraham. "A sword shall pass through thine own soul also,"
+a prophecy, as St. Augustine interprets it, accomplished when she
+witnessed the sufferings and death of her Son. (See De Sacy, vol. xxxii.
+p. 138.)
+
+The next occasion on which the name of the Virgin Mary is found in
+Scripture, is the memorable visit of herself, her husband, and her Son,
+to Jerusalem, when he was twelve years old. And the manner in which this
+incident is related by the inspired Evangelist, so far from intimating
+that Mary was destined to be an object of worship to the believers in
+her Son, affords {278} evidence which exhibits strongly a bearing the
+direct contrary. Here again Joseph and Mary are both called his parents:
+Joseph is once mentioned by name, and so is Mary. If the language had
+been so framed as on purpose to take away all distinction of preference
+or superiority, it could not more successfully have effected its
+purpose. But not only so, of the three addresses recorded as having been
+made by our blessed Lord to his beloved mother (and only three are
+recorded in the New Testament), the first occurs during this visit to
+Jerusalem. It was in answer to the remonstrance made by Mary, "Son, why
+hast thou thus dealt with us? Behold, thy father and I have sought thee
+sorrowing." [Luke ii. 48.] "How is it that ye sought me? Knew ye not
+that I must be about my Father's business?"--[or in my Father's house,
+as some render it.] He lifts up their minds from earth to heaven, from
+his human to his eternal origin. He makes no distinction here,--"Wist YE
+not." Again, I would appeal to any dispassionate person to pronounce,
+whether this reproof, couched in these words, countenances the idea that
+our blessed Lord intended his human mother to receive such divine honour
+from his followers to the end of time as the Church of Rome now pays?
+and whether St. Luke, whose pen wrote this account, could have been made
+cognizant of any such right invested in the Virgin?
+
+The next passage calling for our consideration is that which records the
+first miracle: "And the third day there was a marriage in Cana of
+Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there, and both Jesus was called
+and his disciples to the marriage. And when they wanted wine (when the
+wine failed), the mother of {279} Jesus saith unto him, They have no
+wine. Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine
+hour is not yet come." [John ii. 1.]
+
+I have carefully read the comments on this passage, which different
+writers of the Roman Catholic communion have recommended for the
+adoption of the faithful, and I desire not to make any remarks upon
+them. Let the passage be interpreted in any way which enlightened
+criticism and the analogy of Scripture will sanction, and I would ask,
+after a careful weighing of this incident, the facts, and the words in
+all their bearings, would any unprejudiced mind expect that the holy and
+beloved person, towards whom the meek and tender and loving Jesus
+employed this address, was destined by that omniscient and omnipotent
+Saviour to be an object of those religious acts with which, as we shall
+soon be reminded, the Church of Rome now daily approaches her?
+
+It is pain and grief to me thus to extract and to comment upon these
+passages of Holy Writ. The feelings of affection and of reverence
+approaching awe, with which I hold the memory of that blessed Virgin
+Mother of my Lord, raise in me a sincere repugnance against dwelling on
+this branch of our subject, beyond what the cause of the truth as it is
+in Jesus absolutely requires; and very little more of the same irksome
+task awaits us. You will of course expect me to refer to an incident
+recorded with little variety of expression, and with no essential
+difference, by the first three Evangelists. St. Matthew's is the most
+full account, and is this,--"While he yet talked to the people, behold
+his mother and his brethren stood without desiring to speak with him.
+Then one said unto him, {280} Behold, thy mother and thy brethren stand
+without, desiring to speak with thee. But he answered and said unto him
+that told him, Who is my mother, and who are my brethren? And he
+stretched forth his hand toward his disciples and said, Behold my mother
+and my brethren. For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is
+in heaven, the same is my brother and sister and mother." [Matt. xii.
+46.] Or, as St. Luke expresses it,--"And he answered and said unto them,
+My mother and my brethren are these, who hear the word of God and do
+it." [Luke viii. 21.]
+
+Humanly speaking, could a more favourable opportunity have presented
+itself to our blessed Lord of referring to his beloved mother, in such a
+manner as to exalt her above her fellow daughters of Eve,--in such a
+manner too, as that Christians in after days, when the Saviour's bodily
+presence should have been taken away from them, and the extraordinary
+communications of the Spirit of truth should have been withdrawn, might
+have remembered that He had spoken these things, and have been
+countenanced by his words in doing her homage? But so far is this from
+the plain and natural tendency of the words of her blessed Son, that,
+had He of acknowledged purpose (and He has condescended to announce to
+us, in another place (John xiii. 19, &c.), the purpose of his words)
+wished to guard his disciples, whilst the world should last, against
+being seduced by any reverence and love which they might feel towards
+Himself into a belief that they ought to exalt his mother above all
+other created beings, and pay her holy worship, we know not what words
+He could have adopted more fitted for that purpose. There was nothing in
+the communication which seemed to call for {281} such a remark. A plain
+message announces to Him as a matter of fact one of the most common
+occurrences of daily life. And yet He fixes upon the circumstance as the
+groundwork not only of declaring the close union which it was his good
+pleasure should exist between obedient and true believers and Himself,
+but of cautioning all against any superstitious feelings towards those
+who were nearly allied to Him by the ties of his human nature. With
+reverence I would say, it is as though He desired to record his
+foreknowledge of the errors into which his disciples were likely to be
+seduced, and warned them beforehand to shun and resist the temptation.
+The evidence borne by this passage against our offering any religious
+worship to the Virgin, on the ground of her having been the mother of
+our Lord, seems clear, strong, direct, and inevitable. She was the
+mother of the Redeemer of the world, and blessed is she among women; but
+that very Redeemer Himself, with his own lips, assures us that every
+faithful servant of his heavenly Father shall be equally honoured with
+her, and possess all the privileges which so near and dear a
+relationship with Himself might be supposed to convey.--Who is my
+mother? Or, who are my brethren? Behold my mother and my brethren!
+Whosoever shall do the will of my Father in heaven, the same is my
+brother, and my sister, and my mother.
+
+No less should we be expected in this place to take notice of that most
+remarkable passage of Holy Scripture, [Luke xi. 27.] in which our
+blessed Lord is recorded under different circumstances to have expressed
+the same sentiments, but in words which will appear to many even more
+strongly indicative of his desire to prevent any {282} undue exaltation
+of his mother. "As he spake these things, a certain woman of the company
+lifted up her voice and said unto him, Blessed is the womb that bare
+thee, and the paps which thou hast sucked." On the truth or wisdom of
+that exclamation our Lord makes no remark; He refers not to his mother
+at all, not even to assure them (as St. Augustine in after-ages taught,
+see De Sacy, vol. xxxii. p. 35.), that however blessed Mary was in her
+corporeal conception of the Saviour, yet far more blessed was she
+because she had fully borne Him spiritually in her heart. He alludes not
+to his mother except for the purpose of instantly drawing the minds of
+his hearers from contemplating any supposed blessedness in her, and of
+fixing them on the sure and greater blessedness of his true, humble,
+faithful, and obedient disciples, to the end of time. "But he said, Yea,
+rather [or, as some prefer, yea, verily, and] blessed are they that hear
+the word of God, and keep it." Again, it must be asked, could such an
+exclamation have been met by such a reply, had our Lord's will been to
+exalt his mother, as she is now exalted by the Church of Rome? Rather,
+we would reverently ask, would He have given this turn to such an
+address, had He not desired to check any such feeling towards her?
+
+That most truly affecting and edifying incident recorded by St. John as
+having taken place whilst Jesus was hanging in his agony on the cross,
+an incident which speaks to every one who has a mind to understand and a
+heart to feel, presents to us the last occasion on which the name of the
+Virgin Mother of our Lord occurs in the Gospels. No paraphrase could add
+force, or clearness, or beauty to the simple narrative of the
+Evangelist; no exposition could bring out its parts more prominently or
+{283} affectingly. The calmness and authority of our blessed Lord, his
+tenderness and affection, his filial love in the very midst of his
+agony, it is impossible to describe with more heart-stirring and
+heart-soothing pathos than is conveyed in the simple language of him
+whom the Saviour at that awful hour addressed, as He committed his
+mother to him of especial trust. But not one syllable falls from the
+lips of Christ, or from the pen of the beloved disciple, who records
+this act of his blessed Master's filial piety, which can by possibility
+be construed to imply, that our blessed Lord intended Mary to be held in
+such honour by his disciples, as would be shown in the offering of
+prayer and praise to her after her dissolution. He who could by a word,
+rather by the mere motion of his will, have bidden the whole course of
+nature and of providence, so to proceed as that all its operations
+should provide for the health and safety, the support and comfort of his
+mother--He, when He was on the cross, and when He was on the point of
+committing his soul into the hands of his Father, leaves her to the care
+of one whom He loved, and whose sincerity and devotedness to Him He had,
+humanly speaking, long experienced. He bids him treat Mary as his own
+mother, He bids Mary look to John as to her own son for support and
+solace: "Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother, and his
+mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene. When
+Jesus, therefore, saw his mother and the disciple standing by whom he
+loved, he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son; then saith he to
+the disciple, Behold thy mother." [John xix. 25.] And He added no more.
+If Christ willed that his beloved mother should end her days in peace,
+removed equally {284} from want and the desolation of widowhood on the
+one hand, and from splendour and notoriety on the other, nothing could
+be more natural than such conduct in such a Being at such a time. But if
+his purpose was to exalt her into an object of religious adoration, that
+nations should kneel before her, and all people do her homage, then the
+words and the conduct of our Lord at this hour seem altogether
+unaccountable: and so would the words of the Evangelist also be, "And
+from that hour that disciple took her unto his own home."
+
+After this not another word falls from the pen of St. John which can be
+made to bear on the station, the character, the person, or circumstances
+of Mary. After his resurrection our Saviour remained on earth forty days
+before He finally ascended into heaven. Many of his interviews and
+conversations with his disciples during that interval are recorded in
+the Gospel. Every one of the four Evangelists relates some act or some
+saying of our Lord on one or more of those occasions. Mention is made by
+name of Mary Magdalene, of Mary [the mother] of Joses, of Mary [the
+mother] of James, of Salome, of Joanna, of Peter, of Cleophas, of the
+disciple whom Jesus loved, at whose house the mother of our Lord then
+was; of Thomas, of Nathanael. The eleven also are mentioned generally.
+But by no one of the Evangelists is reference made at all to Mary the
+mother of our Lord, as having been present at any one of those
+interviews; her name is not alluded to throughout.
+
+On one solitary occasion subsequently to the ascension of Christ,
+mention is made of Mary his mother, in company with many others, and
+without any further distinction to separate her from the rest: "And when
+{285} they were come in (from having witnessed the ascension of our
+Saviour), they went up into an upper room, where abode both Peter, and
+James, and John, and Andrew, Philip, and Thomas, Bartholomew and
+Matthew, James the son of Alphaeus, and Simon Zelotes, and Judas the
+brother of James. These all continued with one accord in prayer and
+supplication with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his
+brethren." [Acts i. 13.] Not one word is said of Mary having been
+present to witness even the ascension of her blessed Son; we read no
+command of our Lord, no wish expressed, no distant intimation to his
+disciples that they should even show to her marks of respect and honour;
+not an allusion is there made to any superiority or distinction and
+preeminence. Sixty years at the least are generally considered to be
+comprehended within the subsequent history of the New Testament before
+the Apocalypse was written; but neither in the narrative, nor in the
+Epistles, nor yet in the prophetic part of the Holy Book, is there the
+most distant allusion to Mary. Of him to whose loving care our dying
+Lord committed his beloved mother of especial trust, we hear much. John,
+we find, putting forth the miraculous power of Christ at the Beautiful
+Gate of the Temple; we find him imprisoned and arraigned before the
+Jewish authorities; but not one word is mentioned as to what meanwhile
+became of Mary. We find John confirming the Church in Samaria; we find
+him an exile in the island of Patmos; but no mention is made of Mary.
+Nay, though we have three of his epistles, and the second of them
+addressed to one "whom he loved in the truth," we find neither from the
+tongue nor from the pen of St. John, one single allusion to the mother
+of our Lord alive or dead. And then, whatever may have been the matter
+{286} of fact as to St. Paul, neither the many letters of that Apostle,
+nor the numerous biographical incidents recorded of him, intimate in the
+most remote degree that he knew any thing whatever concerning her
+individually. St. Paul does indeed refer to the human nature of Christ
+derived from his human mother, and had he been taught by his Lord to
+entertain towards her such sentiments as the Roman Church now professes
+to entertain, he could not have had a more inviting occasion to give
+utterance to them. But instead of thus speaking of the Virgin Mary, he
+does not even mention her name or state at all, but refers only in the
+most general way to her nature and her sex as a daughter of Adam: "But
+when the fulness of time was come, God sent forth his Son, MADE OF A
+WOMAN, made under the law; to redeem them that were under the Law, that
+we might receive the adoption of sons." [Gal. iv. 4.] From a time
+certainly within a few days of our Saviour's ascension the Scriptures
+are totally silent throughout as to Mary, whether in life or in death.
+
+Here we might well proceed to contrast this view which the Scriptures of
+eternal truth give of the blessed Virgin Mary with the authorized and
+appointed worship of that branch of the Christian Church which is in
+communion with Rome. We must first, however, here also examine the
+treasures of Christian antiquity, and ascertain what witness the
+earliest uninspired records bear on this immediate point. {287}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.--EVIDENCE OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.
+
+
+Closing the inspired volume, and seeking at the fountain-head for the
+evidence of Christian antiquity, what do we find? For upwards of three
+centuries and a half (the limit put to our present inquiry) we discover
+in no author, Christian or heathen, any trace whatever of the invocation
+of the Virgin Mary by Catholic Christians. I have examined every passage
+which I have found adduced by writers of the Church of Rome, and have
+searched for any other passages which might appear to deserve
+consideration as bearing favourably on their view of the subject; and
+the worship of the Virgin, such as is now insisted upon by the Council
+of Trent, prescribed by the Roman ritual, and practised in the Church of
+Rome, is proved by such an examination to have had neither name, nor
+place, nor existence among the early Christians. Forgive my importunity
+if I again and again urge you to join us in weighing these facts well;
+and to take your view of them from no advocate on the one side or the
+other. Search the Scriptures for yourselves, search the earliest writers
+for yourselves, and for yourselves search with all diligence into the
+authentic and authorized liturgies of your own Church, your missals, and
+breviaries, and formularies. Hearsay evidence, testimony {288} taken at
+second or third hand, vague rumours and surmises will probably expose
+us, on either side, to error. Let well-sifted genuine evidence be
+brought by an upright and an enlightened mind to bear on the point at
+issue, and let the issue joined be this, Is the practice of praying to
+the Virgin, and praising her, in the language of the prayers and praises
+now used in the prescribed formularies of the Roman Church, primitive.
+Catholic, Apostolical?
+
+I am aware that among those who adhere to the Tridentine Confession of
+faith, there are many on whom this investigation will not be allowed to
+exercise any influence.
+
+The sentiments of Huet, wherever they are adopted, would operate to the
+total rejection of such inquiries as we are instituting in this work.
+His words on the immaculate conception of the Virgin are of far wider
+application than the immediate occasion on which he used them, "That the
+blessed Mary never conceived any sin in herself is in the present day an
+established principle of the Church, and confirmed by the Council of
+Trent. In which it is our duty to acquiesce, rather than in the dicta of
+the ancients, if any seem to think otherwise, among whom must be
+numbered Origen." [Origen's Works, vol. iv. part 2, p. 156.]
+
+In this address, however, we take for granted that the reader is open to
+conviction, desirous of arriving at the truth, and, with that view,
+ready to examine and sift the evidence of primitive antiquity.
+
+In that investigation our attention is very soon called to the
+remarkable fact, that, whereas in the case of the invocation of saints
+and angels, the defenders of that doctrine and practice bring forward a
+great variety of passages, in which mention is supposed to be made of
+{289} those beings as objects of honour and reverential and grateful
+remembrance, the passages quoted with a similar view, as regards the
+Virgin Mary, are very few indeed: whilst the passages which intimate
+that the early Christians paid her no extraordinary honour (certainly
+not more than we of the Anglican Church do now) are innumerable.
+
+I have thought that it might be satisfactory here to refer to each
+separately of those earliest writers, whose testimony we have already
+examined on the general question of the invocation of saints and angels,
+and, as nearly as may be, in the same order.
+
+In the former department of our investigation we first endeavoured to
+ascertain the evidence of those five primitive writers, who are called
+the Apostolical Fathers; and, with regard to the subject now before us,
+the result of our inquiry into the same works is this:
+
+1. In the Epistle ascribed to BARNABAS we find no allusion to Mary.
+
+2. The same must be affirmed of the book called The Shepherd of HERMAS.
+
+3. In CLEMENT of Rome, who speaks of the Lord Jesus having descended
+from Abraham according to the flesh, no mention is made of that daughter
+of Abraham of whom he was born.
+
+4. IGNATIUS in a passage already quoted (Ad Eph. vii. p. 13 and 16)
+speaks of Christ both in his divine and human nature as Son of God and
+man, and he mentions the name of Mary, but it is without any adjunct or
+observation whatever, "both of Mary and of God." In another place he
+speaks of her virgin state, and the fruit of her womb; and of her having
+borne our God Jesus the Christ; but he adds no {290} more; not even
+calling her "The blessed," or "The Virgin." In the interpolated Epistle
+to the Ephesians, the former passage adds "the Virgin" after "Mary," but
+nothing more.
+
+5. In the Epistle of POLYCARP we find an admonition to virgins (Page
+186), how they ought to walk with a spotless and chaste conscience, but
+there is no allusion to the Virgin Mary.
+
+JUSTIN MARTYR. In this writer I do not find any passage so much in point
+as the following, in which we discover no epithet expressive of honour,
+or dignity, or exaltation, though it refers to Mary in her capacity of
+the Virgin mother of our Lord:--"He therefore calls Himself the Son of
+Man, either from his birth of a virgin, who was of the race of David,
+and Jacob, and Isaac, and Abraham, or because Abraham himself was the
+father of those persons enumerated, from whom Mary drew her origin."
+[Trypho, § 100. p. 195.] And a little below he adds, "For Eve being a
+virgin and incorrupt, having received the word from the serpent, brought
+forth transgression and death; but Mary the Virgin having received faith
+and joy (on the angel Gabriel announcing to her the glad tidings, that
+the Spirit of the Lord should come upon her, and the power of the
+Highest overshadow her) answered, Be it unto me according to thy word.
+And of her was born He of whom we have shown that so many Scriptures
+have been spoken; He by whom God destroys the serpent, and angels and
+men resembling [the serpent]; but works a rescue from death for such as
+repent of evil and believe in Him." One more passage will suffice, "And
+according to the command of God, Joseph, taking Him with Mary, went into
+Egypt." [Trypho, § 102. p. 196.] {291}
+
+Among those "Questions" to which we have referred under the head of
+Justin Martyr's works, but which are confessedly of a much less remote
+date, probably of the fifth century, an inquiry is made, How could
+Christ be free from blame, who so often set at nought his parent? The
+answer is, that He did not set her at nought; that He honoured her in
+deed, and would not have hurt her by his words;--but then the respondent
+adds, that Christ chiefly honoured Mary in that view of her maternal
+character, under which all who heard the word of God and kept it, were
+his brothers and sisters and mother; and that she surpassed all women in
+virtue. [Qu. 136. p. 500.]
+
+IRENÆUS. To the confused passage relied upon by Bellarmin, in which
+Irenæus is supposed to represent Mary as the advocate of Eve, we have
+already fully referred (page 120 of this work). In that passage there is
+no allusion to any honour paid, or to be paid to her, nor to any
+invocation of her. In every passage to which my attention has been
+drawn, Irenæus speaks of the mother of our Lord as Mary, or the Virgin,
+without any adjunct, or term of reverence.
+
+CLEMENT of Alexandria speaks of the Virgin, and refers to an opinion
+relative to her virgin-state, but without one word of honour. [Stromat.
+vii. 16. p. 889.]
+
+TERTULLIAN[101]. The passages in which this ancient writer refers to the
+mother of our Lord are very far from countenancing the religious worship
+now paid to her by Roman Catholics: "The brothers of the Lord had not
+believed on him, as it is contained in the Gospel published {292} before
+Marcion. His mother likewise is not shown to have adhered to him;
+whereas others, Marys and Marthas, were frequently in his company." (See
+Tert. De carne Christi, c. 7. (p. 364. De Sacy, 29. 439.)) And he tells
+us that Christ was brought forth by a virgin, who was also about to be
+married once after the birth, that the two titles of sanctity might be
+united in Christ by a mother who was both a virgin and also once
+married[102].
+
+ [Footnote 101: Paris, 1675. De carne Christi, vii. p. 315. De
+ Monogamia, vii. p. 529. N.B. Both these treatises were probably
+ written after he became a Montanist.]
+
+ [Footnote 102: On the works once ascribed to Methodius, but now
+ pronounced to be spurious, see above, p. 131.]
+
+ORIGEN thus speaks: "Announcing to Zacharias the birth of John, and to
+Mary the advent of our Saviour among men." [Comment on John, § 24. vol.
+iv. p. 82.] In his eighth homily on Leviticus, he refers to Mary as a
+pure Virgin. [Vol. ii. p. 228.] In the forged work of later times, the
+writer, speaking of our Saviour, says, "He had on earth an immaculate
+and chaste mother, this much blessed Virgin Mary." [Hom. iii. in
+Diversos.]
+
+In CYPRIAN we do not find one word expressive of honour or reverence
+towards the Virgin Mary. Nor is her name mentioned in the letter of his
+correspondent Firmilian, Bishop of Cappadocia.
+
+LACTANTIUS speaks of "a holy virgin" [Vol. i. p. 299.] chosen for the
+work of Christ but not one other word of honour, or tending to
+adoration; though whilst dwelling on the incarnation of the Son of God,
+had he or his fellow-believers paid religious honour to her, he could
+scarcely have avoided all allusion to it.
+
+EUSEBIUS speaks of the Virgin Mary, but is altogether silent as to any
+religious honour of any kind being due to her. In the Oration of the
+Emperor Constantine (as it is recorded by Eusebius), direct mention is
+made of the "chaste virginity," and of the maid who was mother {293} of
+God, and yet remained a virgin. But the object present to the author's
+mind was so exclusively God manifest in the flesh, that he does not
+throughout even mention the name of Mary, or allude to any honour paid
+or due to her. [Cantab. 1720. § 11. p. 689. and § 19. p. 703.]
+
+ATHANASIUS, bent ever on establishing the perfect divinity and humanity
+of Christ, thus speaks: "The general scope of Holy Scripture is to make
+a twofold announcement concerning the Saviour, that He was always God,
+and is a Son; being the Word and the brightness and wisdom of the
+Father, and that He afterwards became man for us, taking flesh of the
+Virgin Mary, who bare God ([Greek: taes theotokou])." [Athan. Orat. iii.
+Cont. Arian. p. 579.]
+
+The work which we have already examined, called The Apostolical
+Constitutions, compiled probably about the commencement of the fourth
+century, cannot be read without leaving an impression clear and powerful
+on the mind, that no religious honour was paid to the Virgin Mary at the
+time when they were written; certainly not more than is now cheerfully
+paid to her memory by us of the Anglican Church. Take, for example, the
+prayer prescribed to be used on the appointment of a Deaconess; the
+inference from it must be, that others with whom the Lord's Spirit had
+dwelt, were at least held in equal honour with Mary: "O Eternal God,
+Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, Maker of male and female, who didst
+fill with thy Spirit Miriam, and Hannah, and Holda, and didst not
+disdain that thy Son should be born of a woman," &c. [Book viii. c. 20.]
+Thus, {294} too, in another passage, Mary is spoken of just as other
+women who had the gift of prophecy; and of her equally and in
+conjunction with the others it is said, that they were not elated by the
+gift, nor lifted themselves up against the men. "But even have women
+prophesied; in ancient times Miriam, the sister of Aaron and Moses;
+after her Deborah; and afterwards Huldah and Judith; one under Josiah,
+the other under Darius; and the mother of the Lord also prophesied, and
+Elizabeth her kinswoman; and Anna; and in our day the daughters of
+Philip; yet they were not lifted up against the men, but observed their
+own measure. Therefore among you also should any man or woman have such
+a grace, let them be humble, that God may take pleasure in them." [Book
+viii. c. 2.]
+
+In the Apostolical Canons I find no reference to Mary; nor indeed any
+passage bearing on our present inquiry, except the last clause of all,
+containing the benediction. In this passage not only is the prayer for
+spiritual blessings addressed to God alone, but it is offered
+exclusively through the mediation of Christ alone, without alluding to
+intercessions of angels saints, or the Virgin: "Now may God, the only
+unproduced Being, the Creator of all things, unite you all by peace in
+the Holy Ghost; make you perfect unto every good work, not to be turned
+aside, unblameable, not deserving reproof; and may He deem you worthy of
+eternal life with us, by the mediation of his beloved Son Jesus Christ
+our God and Saviour: with whom be glory to Him the Sovereign God and
+Father, in the Holy Ghost the Comforter, now and ever, world without
+end. Amen." [Vol. i. p. 450.]
+
+I have not intentionally omitted any ancient author {295} falling within
+the limits of our present inquiry, nor have I neglected any one passage
+which I could find bearing testimony to any honour paid to the Virgin.
+The result of my research is, that I have not discovered one solitary
+expression which implies that religious invocation and honour, such as
+is now offered to Mary by the Church of Rome, was addressed to her by
+the members of the primitive Catholic Church. {296}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.--THE ASSUMPTION OF THE VIRGIN MARY.
+
+
+By the Church of England, two festivals are observed in grateful
+commemoration of two events relating to Mary as the mother of our
+Lord:--the announcement of the Saviour's birth by the message of an
+angel, called, "The Annunciation of the blessed Virgin Mary," and "The
+Presentation of Christ in the Temple," called also, "The Purification of
+Saint Mary the Virgin." In the service for the first of these
+solemnities, we are taught to pray that, as we have known the
+incarnation of the Son of God by the message of an angel, so by his
+Cross and Passion we may be brought to the glory of his resurrection. In
+the second, we humbly beseech the Divine Majesty that, as his
+only-begotten Son was presented in the Temple in the substance of our
+flesh, so we may be presented unto Him with pure and clean hearts by the
+same, his Son Jesus Christ our Lord. These days are observed to
+commemorate events declared to us on the most sure warrant of Holy
+Scripture; and these prayers are primitive and evangelical. They pray
+only to God for spiritual blessings through his Son. The second prayer
+was used in the Church {297} from very early times, and is still
+retained in the Roman Breviary (Hus. Brev. Rom. H. 536.); whereas,
+instead of the first[103], we find there unhappily a prayer now
+supplicating that those who offer it, "believing Mary to be truly the
+Mother of God, might be aided by her intercessions with Him." [V. 496.]
+
+ [Footnote 103: This collect also is found in the Roman Missal,
+ as a Prayer at the Post Communion; though it does not appear in
+ the Breviarium Romanum.]
+
+In the Roman Catholic Church, on the other hand, feasts are observed to
+the honour of the Virgin Mary, in which the Anglican Church cannot join;
+such as the Nativity of the Virgin Mary, and the immaculate conception
+of her by her mother. On the origin and nature of these feasts it is not
+my intention to dwell. I can only express my regret, that by appointing
+a service and a collect commemorative of the Conception of the
+Virgin[104] in her mother's womb, and praying that the observance of
+that solemnity may procure the votaries an increase of peace, the Church
+of Rome has given countenance to a superstition, against which at its
+commencement, so late as the 12th century, St. Bernard strongly
+remonstrated, in an epistle to the monks of Lyons; a superstition which
+has been supported and explained by discussions in no way profitable to
+the head or the heart. [Epist. 174. Paris, 1632, p. 1538.]
+
+ [Footnote 104: Ut quibus beatæ Virginis partus exstitit salutis
+ exordium, conceptionis ejus votiva solemnitas pacis tribuat
+ incrementum. H. 445.]
+
+Of all these institutions however in honour of the Virgin, the Feast of
+the ASSUMPTION appears to be as it were the crown and the
+consummation[105]. This festival {298} is kept to celebrate the
+miraculous taking up (assumptio) of the Virgin Mary into heaven. And its
+celebration, in Roman Catholic countries, is observed in a manner worthy
+a cause to which our judgment would give deliberately its sanction; in
+which our feelings would safely and with satisfaction rest on the
+firmness of our faith; from joining in which a truly pious mind would
+have no ground for inward misgiving, nor for the aspiration, Would it
+were founded in truth!
+
+ [Footnote 105: "The Assumption of the Virgin Mary is the
+ greatest of all the festivals which the Church celebrates in her
+ honour. It is the consummation of all the other great mysteries
+ by which her life was rendered most wonderful. It is the
+ birthday of her true greatness and glory, and the crown of all
+ the virtues of her whole life, which we admire single in her
+ other festivals." Alban Butler, vol. viii. p. 175.]
+
+Before such a solemn office of praise and worship were ever admitted
+among the institutions of the religion of truth, its originators and
+compilers should have built upon sure grounds; careful too should they
+also be who now join in the service, and so lend it the countenance of
+their example; more especially should those sift the evidence well, who,
+by their doctrine and writings, uphold, and defend, and advance it; lest
+they prove at the last to love Rome rather than the truth as it is in
+Jesus. So solemn, so marked, a religious service in the temples and at
+the altar of HIM who is the truth, a service so exalted above his
+fellows, ought beyond question to be founded on the most sure warrant of
+Holy Scripture, or at the least on undisputed historical evidence, as to
+the alleged matter of fact on which it is built,--the certain,
+acknowledged, uninterrupted, and universal testimony of the Church
+Catholic from the very time. They incur a momentous responsibility who
+aid in propagating for religious truths the inventions of men[106].
+
+ [Footnote 106: Very different opinions are held by Roman
+ Catholic writers as to the antiquity of this feast. All, indeed,
+ maintain that it is of very ancient introduction; but whilst
+ some, with Lambecius (lib. viii. p. 286), maintain the antiquity
+ of the festival to be so remote, that its origin cannot be
+ traced; and thence infer that it was instituted by a silent and
+ unrecorded act of the Apostles themselves; others (among whom
+ Kollarius, the learned annotator on the opinion of Lambecius)
+ acknowledged, that it was introduced by an ordinance of the
+ Church, though not at the same time in all countries of
+ Christendom. That annotator assigns its introduction at Rome to
+ the fourth century; at Constantinople to the sixth; in Germany
+ and France to the ninth.] {299}
+
+But what is the real state of the case with regard to the fact of the
+Assumption of the Virgin Mary? It rests (as we shall soon see) on no
+authentic history; it is supported by no primitive tradition. I profess
+my surprise to have been great, when I found the most celebrated
+defenders of the Roman Catholic cause, instead of citing such evidence
+as would bear with it even the appearance of probability, appealing to
+histories written more than a thousand years after the alleged event, to
+forged documents and vague rumours. I was willing to doubt the
+sufficiency of my research; till I found its defenders, instead of
+alleging and establishing by evidence what God was by them said to have
+done, contenting themselves with asserting his omnipotence, in proof
+that the doctrine implied no impossibility; dwelling on the fitness and
+reasonableness of his working such a miracle in the honour of her who
+was chosen to be the mother of his eternal Son; and whilst they took the
+fact as granted, substituting for argument glowing and fervent
+descriptions of what might have been the joy in heaven, and what ought
+to be the feelings of mortals on earth.
+
+At every step of the inquiry into the merits of this case, the principle
+recurs to the mind, that, as men really and in earnest looking onward to
+a life after this, our duty is to ascertain to the utmost of our {300}
+power, not what God could do, not what we or others might pronounce it
+fit that God should do, but what He has done; not what would be
+agreeable to our feelings, were it true, but what, whether agreeably or
+adversely to our feelings or wishes, is proved to be true. The very
+moment a Christian writer refers me from evidence to possibilities, I
+feel that he knows not the nature of Christianity; he throws me back
+from the sure and certain hope of the Gospel to the "beautiful fable" of
+Socrates,--"It were better to be there than here, IF THESE THINGS ARE
+TRUE."
+
+But let us inquire into the facts of the case.
+
+First, I would observe that it is by no means agreed among all who have
+written upon the subject, what was the place, or what was the time of
+the Virgin's death. Whilst some have maintained that she breathed her
+last at Ephesus, the large majority assert that her departure from this
+world took place at Jerusalem. And as to the time of her death, some
+have assigned it to the year 48 of the Christian era, about the time at
+which Paul and Barnabas (as we read in Holy Scripture) returned to
+Antioch; whilst others refer it to a later date. I am not, however,
+aware of any supposition which fixes it at a period subsequent to that
+at which the canon of Scripture closes. Epiphanius indeed, towards the
+close of the fourth century, reminding us that Scripture is totally and
+purely silent on the subject as well of Mary's death and burial, as of
+her having accompanied St. John in his travels or not, without alluding
+to any tradition as to her assumption, thus sums up his sentiments: "I
+dare to say nothing; but considering it, I observe silence." [Epiph.
+vol. i. p. 1043.] {301}
+
+Should any of my readers have deliberately adopted as the rule of their
+faith the present practice of the Church of Rome, I cannot hope that
+they will take any interest in the following inquiry; but I have been
+assured, by most sensible and well-informed members of that Church, that
+there is a very general desire entertained to have this and other
+questions connected with our subject examined without prejudice, and
+calmly placed before them. To such persons I trust this chapter may not
+appear altogether unworthy of their consideration. Those who would turn
+from it on the principle to which we have here alluded, will find
+themselves very closely responding to the sentiments professed by St.
+Bernard, "Exalt her who is exalted above the choirs of angels to the
+heavenly kingdom. These things the Church sings to me of her, and has
+taught me to sing the same to others. For my part, what I have received
+from it, I am secure in holding and delivering; which also, I confess, I
+am not OVER-SCRUPULOUS in admitting. (Quod non scrupulosius fateor
+admiserim.) I have received in truth from the Church that that day is to
+be observed with the highest veneration on which she was TAKEN up
+(assumpta) from this wicked world, and carrying with her into heaven
+feasts of the most celebrated joys[107]."
+
+ [Footnote 107: See Lambecius, book viii. p. 286. The letter of
+ St. Bernard is addressed to the Canons of Lyons on the
+ Conception of the holy Mary. Paris, 1632, p. 1538. His
+ observations in that letter, with a view of discountenancing the
+ rising superstition, in juxtaposition with these sentiments, are
+ well deserving the serious consideration of every one.]
+
+Let us then, with the authorized and enjoined service of the Church of
+Rome for the 15th of August before us, examine the evidence on which
+that religious {302} service, the most solemn consummation of all the
+rest, is founded.
+
+In the service of the Assumption, more than twice seven times is it
+reiterated in a very brief space, and with slight variations of
+expression, that Mary was taken up into heaven; and that, not on any
+general and indefinite idea of her beatific and glorified state, but
+with reference to one specific single act of divine favour, performed at
+a fixed time, effecting her assumption, as it is called, "to-day." [Æs.
+595.] "To-day Mary the Virgin ascended the heavens. Rejoice, because she
+is reigning with Christ for ever." "Mary the Virgin is taken up into
+heaven, to the ethereal chamber in which the King of kings sits on his
+starry throne." "The holy mother of God hath been exalted above the
+choirs of angels to the heavenly realms." "Come, let us worship the King
+of kings, to whose ethereal heaven the Virgin Mother was taken up
+to-day." And that it is her bodily ascension, her corporeal assumption
+into heaven, and not merely the transit of her soul[108] from mortal
+life to eternal bliss, which the Roman Church maintains and propagates
+by this service, is put beyond doubt by the service itself. In the
+fourth and sixth reading[109], or lesson, for example, we find these
+{303} sentences:--"She returned not into the earth but is seated in the
+heavenly tabernacles." "How could death devour, how could those below
+receive, how could corruption invade, THAT BODY, in which life was
+received? For it a direct, plain, and easy path to heaven was prepared."
+
+ [Footnote 108: Lambecius, indeed (book viii. p. 306), distinctly
+ affirms, that one object which the Church had in view was to
+ condemn the HERESY of those who maintain that the reception of
+ the Virgin into heaven, was the reception of her soul only, and
+ not also of her body. "Ut damnet eorum hæresin qui sanctissimæ
+ Dei genetricis rcceptionem in coelum ad animam ipsius tantum,
+ non vero simul etiam ad corpus pertinere existimant."]
+
+ [Footnote 109: Non reversa est in terram, sed ... in coelestibus
+ tabernaculis collocatum. Quomodo mois devoraret, quomodo inferi
+ susciperent, quomodo corruptio invaderit CORPUS ILLUD in quo
+ vita suscepta est? Huic recta plana et facilis ad coelum parata
+ est via. Æs. 603, 604.]
+
+Now, on what authority does this doctrine rest? On what foundation stone
+is this religious worship built? The holy Scriptures are totally and
+profoundly silent, as to the time, the place, the manner of Mary's
+death. Once after the ascension of our Lord, and that within eight days,
+we find mentioned the name of Mary promiscuously with others; after
+that, no allusion is made to her in life or in death; and no account, as
+far as I can find, places her death too late for mention to have been
+made of it in the Acts of the Apostles. The historian, Nicephorus
+Callistus, refers it to the 5th year of Claudius, that is about A.D. 47:
+after which period, events through more than fifteen years are recorded
+in that book of sacred Scripture.
+
+But closing the holy volume, what light does primitive antiquity enable
+us to throw on this subject?
+
+The earliest testimony quoted by the defenders of the doctrine, that
+Mary was at her death taken up bodily into heaven, is a supposed entry
+in the Chronicon of Eusebius, opposite the year of our Lord 48. This is
+cited by Coccius without any remark; and even Baronius rests the date of
+Mary's assumption upon this testimony. [Vol. i. 403.] The words referred
+to are these,--"Mary the Virgin, the mother of Jesus, was taken up into
+heaven; as some write that it had been revealed to them." {304}
+
+Now, suppose for one moment that this came from the pen of Eusebius
+himself, to what does it amount? A chronologist in the fourth century
+records that some persons, whom he does not name, not even stating when
+they lived, had written down, not what they had heard as matter of fact,
+or received by tradition, but that a revelation had been made to them of
+a fact alleged to have taken place nearly three centuries before the
+time of that writer. But instead of this passage deserving the name of
+Eusebius as its author, it is now on all sides acknowledged to be
+altogether a palpable interpolation. Suspicions, one would suppose, must
+have been at a very remote date suggested as to the genuineness of this
+sentence. Many manuscripts, especially the seven in the Vatican, were
+known to contain nothing of the kind; and the Roman Catholic editor of
+the Chronicon at Bordeaux, A.D. 1604, tells us that he was restrained
+from expunging it, only because nothing certain as to the assumption of
+the Virgin could be substituted in its stead. [P. 566.] Its spuriousness
+however can no longer be a question of dispute or doubt; it is excluded
+from the Milan edition of 1818, by Angelo Maio and John Zohrab; and no
+trace of it is to be found in the Armenian[110] version, published by
+the monks of the Armenian convent at Venice, in 1818.
+
+ [Footnote 110: The author visited that convent whilst this
+ edition of the Chronicon of Eusebius was going through the
+ press, and can testify to the apparent anxiety of the monks to
+ make it worthy of the patronage of Christians.]
+
+The next authority, to which we are referred, is a letter[111] said to
+have been written by Sophronius the {305} presbyter, about the
+commencement of the fifth century. The letter used to be ascribed to
+Jerome; Erasmus referred it to Sophronius; but Baronius says it was
+written "by an egregious forger of lies," ("egregius mendaciorum
+concinnator,") who lived after the heresies of Nestorius and Eutyches
+had been condemned. I am not at all anxious to enter upon that point of
+criticism; that the letter is of very ancient origin cannot be doubted.
+This document would lead us to conclude, that so far from the tradition
+regarding the Virgin's assumption being general in the Church, it was a
+point of grave doubt and discussion among the faithful, many of whom
+thought it an act of pious forbearance to abstain altogether from
+pronouncing any opinion on the subject. Whoever penned the letter, and
+whether we look to the sensible and pious sentiments contained in it, or
+to its undisputed antiquity, the following extract cannot fail to be
+interesting[112].
+
+ [Footnote 111: The letter is entitled "Ad Paulam et Eustochium
+ de Assumptione B.M. Virginis." It is found in the fifth volume
+ of Jerome's works, p. 82. Edit. Jo. Martian.]
+
+ [Footnote 112: Baronius shows great anxiety (Cologne, 1609, vol.
+ i. p. 408) to detract from the value of this author's testimony,
+ whoever he was; sharply criticising him because he asserts, that
+ the faithful in his time still expressed doubts as to the matter
+ of fact of Mary's assumption. By assigning, however, to the
+ letter a still later date than the works of Sophronius, Baronius
+ adds strength to the arguments for the comparatively recent
+ origin of the tradition of her assumption. See Fabricius
+ (Hamburgh, 1804), vol. ix. p. 160.]
+
+"Many of our people doubt whether Mary was taken up together with her
+body, or went away, leaving the body. But how, or at what time, or by
+what persons her most holy body was taken hence, or whither removed, or
+whether it rose again, is not known; although some will maintain that
+she is already revived, and is clothed with a blessed immortality with
+Christ in heavenly places, which very many affirm also of the blessed
+{306} John, the Evangelist, his servant, to whom being a virgin, the
+virgin was intrusted by Christ, because in his sepulchre, as it is
+reported, nothing is found but manna, which also is seen to flow forth.
+Nevertheless which of these opinions should be thought the more true we
+doubt. Yet it is better to commit all to God, to whom nothing is
+impossible, than to wish to define rashly[113] by our own authority any
+thing, which we do not approve of.... Because nothing is impossible with
+God, we do not deny that something of the kind was done with regard to
+the blessed Virgin Mary; although for caution's sake (salva fide)
+preserving our faith, we ought rather with pious desire to think, than
+inconsiderately to define, what without danger may remain unknown." This
+letter, at the earliest, was not written until the beginning of the
+fifth century.
+
+ [Footnote 113: These last words, stamping the author's own
+ opinion, "Which we do not approve of," are left out in the
+ quotation of Coccius.]
+
+Subsequent writers were not wanting to fill up what this letter declares
+to have been at its own date unknown, as to the manner and time of
+Mary's assumption, and the persons employed in effecting it. The first
+authority appealed to in defence of the tradition relating to the
+assumption of the Virgin[114], is usually cited as a well-known work
+written by Euthymius, who was contemporary with Juvenal, Archbishop of
+Jerusalem. And the testimony simply quoted as his, offers to us the
+following account of the miraculous transaction[115]:--
+
+ [Footnote 114: Coccius heads the extract merely with these
+ words: "Euthumius Eremita Historiæ Ecclesiasticæ, lib. iii. c.
+ 40;" assigning the date A.D. 549.]
+
+ [Footnote 115: This version by Coccius differs in some points
+ from the original. Jo. Dam. vol. ii. p. 879.]
+
+"It has been above said, that the holy Pulcheria {307} built many
+churches to Christ at Constantinople. Of these, however, there is one
+which was built in Blachernæ, in the beginning of Marcian I's _reign_ of
+divine memory. These, therefore, namely, Marcian and Pulcheria, when
+they had built a venerable temple to the greatly to be celebrated and
+most holy mother of God and ever Virgin Mary, and had decked it with all
+ornaments, sought her most holy body, which had conceived God. And
+having sent for Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, and the bishops of
+Palestine, who were living in the royal city on account of the synod
+then held at Chalcedon, they say to them, 'We hear that there is in
+Jerusalem the first and famous Church of Mary, mother of God and ever
+Virgin, in the garden called Gethsemane, where her body which bore the
+Life was deposited in a coffin. We wish, therefore, her relics to be
+brought here for the protection of this royal city. But Juvenal
+answered, 'In the holy and divinely inspired Scripture, indeed, nothing
+is recorded of the departure of holy Mary, mother of God. But from an
+ancient and most true tradition we have received, that at the time of
+her glorious falling asleep, all the holy Apostles who were going
+through the world for the salvation of the nations, in a moment of time
+borne aloft, came together at Jerusalem. And when they were near her,
+they had a vision of angels, and divine melody of the highest powers was
+heard: and thus with divine and more than heavenly glory, she delivered
+her holy soul into the hands of God in an unspeakable manner. But that
+which had conceived God being borne with angelic and apostolic psalmody,
+with funeral rites, was deposited in a coffin in Gethsemane. In this
+place the chorus and singing of the angels continued for three whole
+days. But {308} after three days, on the angelic music ceasing, since
+one of the Apostles had been absent, and came after the third day, and
+wished to adore the body which had conceived God, the Apostles, who were
+present, opened the coffin; but the body, pure and every way to be
+praised, they could not at all find. And when they found only those
+things in which it had been laid out and placed there, and were filled
+with an ineffable fragrancy proceeding from those things, they shut the
+coffin. Being astounded at the miraculous mystery, they could form no
+other thought, but that He, who in his own person had vouchsafed to be
+clothed with flesh, and to be made man of the most holy Virgin, and to
+be born in the flesh, God the Word, and Lord of Glory, and who after
+birth had preserved her virginity immaculate, had seen it good after she
+had departed from among the living, to honour her uncontaminated and
+unpolluted body by a translation before the common and universal
+resurrection."
+
+Such is the passage offered to us in its insulated form, as an extract
+from Euthymius. To be enabled, however, to estimate its worth, the
+inquirer must submit to the labour of considerable research. He will not
+have pursued his investigation far, before he will find, that a thick
+cloud of uncertainty and doubt hangs over this page of ecclesiastical
+history. Not that the evidence alleged in support of the reputed miracle
+can leave us in doubt as to the credibility of the tradition; for that
+tradition can scarcely be now countenanced by the most zealous and
+uncompromising maintainers of the assumption of the Virgin. What I would
+say is, that the question as to the genuineness and authenticity of the
+works by which the tradition is said to have been preserved, is far more
+difficult and complicated, than {309} those writers must have believed,
+who appeal to such testimony without any doubt or qualification. The
+result of my own inquiries I submit to your candid acceptance.
+
+The earliest author in whose reputed writings I have found the
+tradition, is John Damascenus, a monk of Jerusalem, who flourished
+somewhat before the middle of the eighth century. The passage is found
+in the second of three homilies on the "Sleep of the Virgin," a term
+generally used by the Greeks as an equivalent for the Latin word
+"Assumptio." The original publication of these homilies in Greek and
+Latin is comparatively of a late date. Lambecius, whose work is dated
+1665, says he was not aware that any one had so published them before
+his time[116]. But not to raise the question of their genuineness, the
+preacher's introduction of this passage into his homily is preceded by a
+very remarkable section, affording a striking example of the manner in
+which Christian orators used to indulge in addresses and appeals not
+only to the spirits of departed men, but even to things which never had
+life. The speaker here in his sermon addresses the tomb of Mary, as
+though it had ears to hear, and an understanding to comprehend; and then
+represents the tomb as having a tongue to answer, and as calling forth
+from the preacher and his congregation an address of admiration and
+reverence. Such apostrophes as these cannot be too steadily borne in
+mind, or too carefully weighed, when any argument is sought to be drawn
+from similar salutations offered by ancient Christian orators to saint,
+or angel, or the Virgin.
+
+ [Footnote 116: Vol. viii. p. 281. Le Quien, who published them
+ in 1712, refers to earlier homilies on the Dormitio Virginis.
+ Jo. Damas. Paris, 1712. vol. ii. p. 857.] {310}
+
+The following are among the expressions in which the preacher, in the
+passage under consideration, addresses the Virgin's tomb: "Thou, O Tomb,
+of holy things most holy (for I will address thee as a living being),
+where is the much desired and much beloved body of the mother of God?"
+[Vol. ii. p. 875.] The answer of the tomb begins thus, "Why seek ye her
+in a tomb, who has been taken up on high to the heavenly tabernacles?"
+In reply to this, the preacher first deliberating with his hearers what
+answer he should make, thus addresses the tomb: "Thy grace indeed is
+never-failing and eternal," &c. [P. 881.] By the maintainers of the
+invocation of saints, many a passage far less unequivocal and less
+cogent than this has been adduced to show, that saints and martyrs were
+invoked by primitive worshippers.
+
+We find John Damascenus thus introducing the passage of Euthymius, "Ye
+see, beloved fathers and brethren, what answer the all-glorious tomb
+makes to us; and that these things are so, in the EUTHYMIAC HISTORY, the
+third book and fortieth chapter, is thus written word for word." [P.
+877.]
+
+Lambecius maintains, that the history here quoted by John Damascenus was
+not an ecclesiastical history, written by Euthymius, who died in A.D.
+472, but a biographical history concerning Euthymius himself, written by
+an ecclesiastic, whom he supposes to be Cyril, the monk, who died in
+A.D. 531. This opinion of Lambecius is combated by Cotelerius; the
+discussion only adding to the denseness of the cloud which involves the
+whole tradition. But whether the work quoted had Euthymius for its
+author or its subject, the work itself is lost; and an epitome only of
+such a work has come down to {311} our time. In that abridgment the
+passage quoted by Damascenus is not found.
+
+The editor of John Damascenus, Le Quien, in his annotations on this
+portion of his work, offers to us some very interesting remarks, which
+bear immediately on the agitated question as to the first observance of
+the feast of the Assumption, as well as on the tradition itself. Le
+Quien infers, from the words of Modestus, patriarch of Jerusalem, that
+scarcely any preachers before him had addressed their congregations on
+the departure of the Virgin out of this life; he thinks, moreover, that
+the Feast of the Assumption was at the commencement of the seventh
+century only recently instituted. Though all later writers affirm that
+the Virgin was buried in the valley of Jehoshaphat, in the garden of
+Gethsemane, the same editor says, that this could not have been known to
+Jerome, who passed a great part of his life in Bethlehem, and yet
+observes a total silence on the subject; though in his "Epitaph on
+Paula," [Jerome, Paris, 1706. Vol. iv. p. 670-688, ep. 86.] he
+enumerates all the places in Palestine consecrated by any remarkable
+event. Neither, he adds, could it have been known to Epiphanius, who,
+though he lived long in Palestine, yet declares that nothing was known
+as to the death or burial of the Virgin. [Vol. ii, p. 858.]
+
+Again, in his remarks upon the writings falsely attributed to Melito,
+the same editor says, that since this Pseudo-Melito speaks many jejune
+things of the Virgin Mary, (such for example as at the approach of death
+her exceeding fear of being exposed to the wiles of Satan,) he
+concludes, from that circumstance, that the work was written before the
+Council of Ephesus; alleging this very remarkable reason, that "after
+that {312} time there BEGAN TO BE ENTERTAINED, as was right, not only in
+the East, but also in the West, a far better estimate of the parent of
+God." [P. 880.]
+
+Many of the remarks of this editor would appear to savour of prejudice
+had they come from the pen of one who denied the reality of the
+assumption, or oppugned the honour and worship now paid by members of
+the Church of Rome to the Virgin. Nor could the suspicion of such
+prejudice be otherwise than increased by the insinuation which the same
+editor throws out against the honesty of Archbishop Juvenal, and on the
+possibility of his having invented the whole story, and so for sinister
+purposes deceived Marcian and Pulcheria; just as he fabricated the
+writings which he forged for the purpose of securing the primacy of
+Palestine; a crime laid to the charge of Juvenal by Leo the Great, in
+his letter to Maximus, Bishop of Antioch. [P. 879. See Leo. vol. i. p.
+1215. Epist. cxix.]
+
+It is moreover much to be regretted that in making the extract from John
+Damascenus those who employ it as evidence of primitive belief, have not
+presented it to their readers whole and entire. In the present case the
+system of quoting garbled extracts is particularly to be lamented,
+because the paragraphs omitted in the quotation carry in themselves
+clear proof that Juvenal's answer, as it now appears in John Damascenus,
+could not have been made by Juvenal to Marcian and Pulcheria. For in it
+is quoted from Dionysius the Areopagite by name, a passage still found
+in the works ascribed to him; whereas by the judgment of the most
+learned Roman Catholic writers, those spurious works did not make their
+appearance in Christendom till the beginning of the sixth century, fifty
+years after the Council of Chalcedon, to assist at which {313} Juvenal
+is said to have been present in Constantinople when the emperor and
+empress held the alleged conversation with him.
+
+The remainder of the passage from the history of Euthymius, rehearsed in
+this oration of John Damascenus, is as follows: "There were present with
+the Apostles at that time both the most honoured Timothy the Apostle,
+and first bishop of the Ephesians, and Dionysius the Areopagite,
+himself, as the great Dionysius testifies in the laboured words
+concerning the blessed Hierotheus, himself also then being present, to
+the above-named apostle Timothy, saying thus, Since with the inspired
+hierarchs themselves, when we also as thou knowest, and yourself, and
+many of our holy brethren had come together to the sight of the body
+which gave the principle of life; and there was present too James the
+brother of the Lord ([Greek: adelphotheos]), and Peter the chief and the
+most revered head of the apostles ([Greek: theologon]); then it seemed
+right, after the spectacle, that all the hierarchs (as each was able)
+should sing of the boundless goodness of the divine power. After the
+apostles, as you know, he surpassed all the other sacred persons, wholly
+carried away, and altogether in an ecstasy, and feeling an entire
+sympathy with what was sung; and by all by whom he was heard, and seen,
+and known (and he[117] knew it not), he was considered to be an inspired
+and divine hymnologist. And why should I speak to you about the things
+there divinely said, for unless I have even forgotten myself, I know
+that I have often heard from you some portions also of those inspired
+canticles? And the royal personages having heard this, requested of
+Juvenal the archbishop, that the holy coffin, with the {314} clothes of
+the glorious and all-holy Mary, mother of God, sealed up, might be sent
+to them. And this, when sent, they deposited in the venerable temple of
+the Mother of God, built in Blachernae; and these things were so."
+
+ [Footnote 117: This seems confused in the original ([Greek: kai
+ eginosketo, kai ouk eginoske]). The whole passage is involved in
+ great obscurity.]
+
+It is a fact no less lamentable than remarkable, that out of the lessons
+appointed by the Church of Rome for the feast of the Assumption, to be
+read to believers assembled in God's house of prayer, three of those
+lessons are selected and taken entirely from this very oration of John
+Damascenus[118].
+
+ [Footnote 118:
+
+ The Fourth Lesson begins "Hodie sacra et animata arca."
+ The Fifth " " "Hodie virgo immaculata."
+ The Sixth " " "Eva quæ serpentis," &c.--Æ. 603.
+
+ These contain the passages to which we have before referred as
+ fixing the belief of the Church of Rome to be in the CORPOREAL
+ assumption of Mary. "Quomodo corruptio invaderet CORPUS ILLUD in
+ quo vita suscepta est? [Greek: pos diaphthora tou zoodochon
+ katatolmaeseie somatos.]"]
+
+This, then, is the account nearest to the time of the supposed event;
+and yet can any thing be more vague, and by way of testimony, more
+worthless? A writer near the middle of the sixth century refers to a
+conversation, said to have taken place in the middle of the fifth
+century; in this reported conversation at Constantinople, the Bishop of
+Jerusalem is represented to have informed the Emperor and Empress of an
+ancient tradition, which was believed, concerning a miraculous event,
+said to have taken place nearly four hundred years before, that the body
+was taken out of a coffin without the knowledge of those who had
+deposited it there: Whilst the primitive and inspired account, recording
+most minutely the journeys and proceedings of some of those very
+persons, and the letters of others, makes no mention at all of any
+transaction of the kind; and of {315} all the intermediate historians
+and ecclesiastical writers not one gives the slightest intimation that
+any rumour of it had reached them[119].
+
+ [Footnote 119: Baronius appears not to have referred to this
+ history of Euthymius, but he refers to Nicephorus, and also to a
+ work ascribed to Melito, c. 4, 5. Nicephorus, Paris, 1630. vol.
+ i. p. 168. lib. ii. c. 21. Baronius also refers to lib. 15. c.
+ 14. This Nicephorus was Patriarch of Constantinople. He lived
+ during the reign of our Edward the First, or Edward the Second,
+ and cannot, therefore, be cited in any sense of the word as an
+ ancient author writing on the events of the primitive ages;
+ though the manner in which his testimony is appealed to would
+ imply, that he was a man to whose authority on early
+ ecclesiastical affairs we were now expected to defer.]
+
+Another authority to which the writers on the assumption of the Virgin
+appeal, is that of Nicephorus Callistus, who, at the end of the
+thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century, dedicated his
+work to Andronicus Palæologus. The account given by Nicephorus is this:
+
+In the fifth year of Claudius, the Virgin at the age of fifty-nine, was
+made acquainted with her approaching death. Christ himself then
+descended from heaven with a countless multitude of angels, to take up
+the soul of his mother; He summoned his disciples by thunder and storm
+from all parts of the world. The Virgin then bade Peter first, and
+afterwards the rest of the Apostles, to come with burning torches[120].
+The Apostles surrounded her bed, and "an outpouring of miracles flowed
+forth." The blind beheld the sun, the deaf heard, the lame walked, and
+every disease fled away. The Apostles and others sang, as the coffin was
+borne from Sion to Gethsemane, angels preceding, surrounding, and
+following it. {316} A wonderful thing then took place. The Jews were
+indignant and enraged, and one more desperately bold than the rest
+rushed forward, intending to throw down the holy corpse to the ground.
+Vengeance was not tardy; for his hands were cut off from his arms[121].
+The procession stopped; and at the command of Peter, on the man shedding
+tears of penitence, his hands were joined on again and restored whole.
+At Gethsemane she was put into a tomb, but her Son transferred her to
+the divine habitation.
+
+ [Footnote 120: This author here quotes the forged work ascribed
+ to Dionysius the Areopagite, to which we have before referred.]
+
+ [Footnote 121: This tradition seems to have been much referred
+ to at a time just preceding our Reformation. In a volume called
+ "The Hours of the most blessed Mary, according to the legitimate
+ rite of the Church of Salisbury," printed in Paris in 1526, from
+ which we have made many extracts in the second part of this
+ work, the frontispiece gives an exact representation of the
+ story at the moment of the Jew's hands being cut off. They are
+ severed at the wrist, and are lying on the coffin, on which his
+ arms also are resting. In the sky the Virgin appears between the
+ Father and the Son, the Holy Dove being seen above her. The same
+ print occurs also in another part of the volume.]
+
+Nicephorus then refers to Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, as the
+authority on which the tradition was received, that the Apostles opened
+the coffin to enable St. Thomas (the one stated to have been absent) to
+embrace the body; and then he proceeds to describe the personal
+appearance of the Virgin. [Vol. i. p. 171.]
+
+I am unwilling to trespass upon the patience of my readers by any
+comment upon such evidence as this. Is it within the verge of
+credibility that had such an event as Mary's assumption taken place
+under the extraordinary circumstances which now invest the tradition, or
+under any circumstances whatever, there would have been a total silence
+respecting it in the Holy Scriptures? {317} That the writers of the
+first four centuries should never have referred to such a fact? That the
+first writer who alludes to it, should have lived in the middle of the
+fifth century, or later; and that he should have declared in a letter to
+his contemporaries that the subject was one on which many doubted; and
+that he himself would not deny it, not because it rested upon probable
+evidence, but because nothing was impossible with God; and that nothing
+was known as to the time, the manner, or the persons concerned, even had
+the assumption taken place? Can we place any confidence in the relation
+of a writer in the middle of the sixth century, as to a tradition of
+what an archbishop of Jerusalem attending the council of Chalcedon, had
+told the sovereigns at Constantinople of a tradition, as to what was
+said to have happened nearly four hundred years before, whilst in the
+"Acts" of that Council, not the faintest trace is found of any allusion
+to the supposed fact or the alleged tradition, though the transactions
+of that Council in many of its most minute circumstances are recorded,
+and though the discussions of that Council brought the name and
+circumstances of the Virgin Mary continually before the minds of all who
+attended it?
+
+This, however, is a point of too great importance to be dismissed
+summarily; and seems to require us to examine, however briefly, into the
+circumstances of that Council. {318}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.--COUNCILS OF CONSTANTINOPLE, EPHESUS, AND THE GENERAL
+COUNCIL OF CHALCEDON
+
+
+The legend on which the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary is
+founded professes to trace the tradition to Juvenal, Archbishop of
+Jerusalem, when he was sojourning in Constantinople for the purpose of
+attending the General Council of Chalcedon. To the Emperor and Empress,
+who presided at that council, Juvenal is said to have communicated the
+tradition, as received in Palestine, of the miraculous taking up of
+Mary's body into heaven. This circumstance seems, as we have already
+intimated, of itself, to require us to examine the records of that
+Council, with the view of ascertaining whether any traces may be found
+confirmatory of the tradition, or otherwise; and since that Council
+cannot be regarded as an insulated assembly, but as a continuation
+rather or resumption of the preceding minor Councils of Constantinople
+and Ephesus, we must briefly refer to the occasion and nature generally
+of that succession of Christian synods. I am not aware that in the
+previous Councils any thing had transpired {319} which could be brought
+as evidence on the subject of our inquiry. The questions which had
+disturbed the peace of Christendom, and which were agitated in these
+Councils, inseparable from a repeated mention of the Virgin Mary's name,
+afforded an opportunity at every turn for an expression of the
+sentiments of those who composed the Councils, and of all connected with
+them, including the Bishop of Rome himself, towards her. It would be
+altogether foreign from the purpose of this address to enter in any way
+at large upon the character and history of those or the preceding
+Councils, yet a few words seem necessary, to enable us to judge of the
+nature and weight of the evidence borne by them on the question
+immediately before us.
+
+The source of all the disputes which then rent the Church of HIM who had
+bequeathed peace as his last and best gift to his followers, was the
+anxiety to define and explain the nature of the great Christian mystery,
+the Incarnation of the Son of God; a point on which it were well for all
+Christians to follow only so far as the Holy Scriptures lead them by the
+hand. All parties appealed to the Nicene Council; though there seems to
+have been, to say the least, much misunderstanding and unnecessary
+violence and party spirit on all sides. The celebrated Eutyches of
+Constantinople was charged with having espoused heterodox doctrine, by
+maintaining that in Christ was only one nature, the incarnate Word. On
+this charge he was accused before a Council held at Constantinople in
+A.D. 448. His doctrine was considered to involve a denial of the human
+nature of the Son of God. The Council condemned him of heresy, deposed,
+and excommunicated him. From this proceeding Eutyches appealed to a
+General Council. A council (the authority of which, however, {320} has
+been solemnly, but with what adequate reason we need not stop to
+examine, repudiated), was convened at Ephesus in the following year, by
+the Emperor Theodosius. The proceedings of this assembly were
+accompanied by lamentable unfairness and violence. Eutyches was
+acquitted, and restored by this council[122]; and his accusers were
+condemned and persecuted; Flavianus, Archbishop of Constantinople, who
+had summoned the preceding council, being even scourged and exiled. In
+his distress that patriarch sought the good offices of Leo, Bishop of
+Rome, who espoused his cause, but who failed nevertheless of inducing
+Theodosius to convene a General Council. His successor Marcian, however,
+consented; and in the year 451 the Council of Chalcedon was convened,
+first meeting at Nice, and by adjournment being removed to Chalcedon. In
+this council all the proceedings as well of the Council of
+Constantinople as of Ephesus, were rehearsed at length; and from a close
+examination of the proceedings of those three councils, only one
+inference seems deducible, namely, that the invocation and worship of
+saints and of the Virgin Mary had not then obtained that place in the
+Christian {321} Church, which the Church of Rome now assigns to it; a
+place, however, which the Church of England, among other branches of the
+Catholic Church, maintains that it has usurped, and cannot, without a
+sacrifice of the only sound principle of religious worship, be suffered
+to retain.
+
+ [Footnote 122: The sentiments of Eutyches, even as they are
+ recorded by the party who charged him with heresy, seem to imply
+ so much of soundness in his principles, and of moderation in his
+ maintenance of those principles, that one must feel sorrow on
+ finding such a man maintaining error at any time. The following
+ is among the records of transactions rehearsed at Chalcedon:
+ "He, Eutyches, professed that he followed the expositions of the
+ holy and blessed Fathers who formed the Councils of Nicæa and
+ Ephesus, and was ready to subscribe to them. But if any where it
+ might chance, as he said, that our fathers were deceived and led
+ astray, that as for himself he neither accepted nor accused
+ those things, but he only on such points investigated the divine
+ Scriptures as more to be depended upon [Greek: os
+ bebaioteras]."]
+
+The grand question then agitated with too much asperity, and too little
+charity, was, whether by the incarnation our blessed Saviour became
+possessed of two natures, the divine and human. Subordinate to this, and
+necessary for its decision, was involved the question, What part of his
+nature, if any, Christ derived from the Virgin Mary? Again and again
+does this question bring the name, the office, the circumstances, and
+the nature of that holy and blessed mother of our Lord before these
+Councils. The name of Mary is continually in the mouth of the accusers,
+the accused, the judges, and the witnesses; and had Christian pastors
+then entertained the same feelings of devotion towards her; had they
+professed the same belief as to her assumption into heaven, and her
+influence and authority in directing the destinies of man, and in
+protecting the Church on earth; had they habitually appealed to her with
+the same prayers for her intercession and good offices, and placed the
+same confidence in her as we find now exhibited in the authorized
+services of the Roman Ritual, it is impossible to conceive that no
+signs, no intimation of such views and feelings, would, either directly
+or incidentally, have shown themselves, somewhere or other, among the
+manifold and protracted proceedings of these Councils. I have searched
+diligently, but I can find no expression as to her nature and office, or
+as to our feelings and conduct towards Mary, in which, as a {322}
+Catholic of the Anglican Church, I should not heartily acquiesce. I can
+find no sentiment implying invocation, or religious worship of any kind,
+or in any degree; I find no allusion to her Assumption.
+
+Pope Leo, who is frequently in these documents [Vol. v. p. 1418.] called
+Archbishop of Rome, in a letter to Julianus, Bishop of Cos, speaks of
+Christ as born of "A Virgin," "The blessed Virgin," "The pure, undefiled
+Virgin;" and in a letter to the empress Pulcheria, he calls Mary simply
+"The Virgin Mary." In his celebrated letter to Flavianus, not one iota
+of which (according to the decree of the Roman council under Pope
+Gelasius) was to be questioned by any man on pain of incurring an
+anathema, Pope Leo says that Christ was conceived by the Holy Ghost in
+the womb of the Virgin Mary his mother, who brought him forth with the
+same virgin purity as she had conceived him. Flavianus, Archbishop of
+Constantinople, in his Declaration of faith to the Emperor Theodosius,
+affirms, that Christ was born "of Mary, the Virgin--of the same
+substance with the Father according to his Godhead--of the same
+substance with his mother according to his manhood." [Vol. vi. p. 539.]
+He speaks of her afterwards as "The holy Virgin."
+
+There is, indeed, one word used in a quotation from Cyril of Alexandria,
+and adopted in these transactions, which requires a few words of
+especial observation. The word is _theotocos_[123], which the Latins
+were accustomed {323} to transfer into their works, substituting only
+Roman instead of Greek characters, but which afterwards the authors of
+the Church of Rome translated by Deipara, and in more recent ages by Dei
+Mater, Dei Genetrix, Creatoris Genetrix, &c. employing those terms not
+in explanation of the twofold nature of Christ's person, as was the case
+in these Councils, but in exaltation of Mary, his Virgin mother. This
+word was adopted by Christians in much earlier times than the Council of
+Chalcedon; but it was employed only to express more strongly the
+Catholic belief in the union of the divine and human nature in Him who
+was Son both of God and man; and by no means for the purpose of raising
+Mary into an object of religious adoration. The sense in which it was
+used was explained in the seventh Act of the Council of Constantinople,
+(repeated at Chalcedon) as given by Cyril of Alexandria. "According to
+this sense of an unconfused union, we confess the holy Virgin to be
+theotocos, because that God the Word was made flesh, and became man, and
+from that very conception united with himself the temple received from
+her."
+
+ [Footnote 123: [Greek: Theotokos]. To those who would depend
+ upon this word _theotocos_ as a proof of the exalted honour in
+ which the early Christians held the Virgin, and not as
+ indicative of an anxiety to preserve whole and entire the
+ doctrine of the union of perfect God and perfect man in Christ,
+ deriving his manhood through her, I would suggest the necessity
+ of weighing well that argument with this fact before them; that
+ to the Apostle James, called in Scripture the Lord's brother,
+ was assigned the name of Adelphotheos, or God's brother. This
+ name was given to James, not to exalt him above his
+ fellow-apostles, but to declare the faith of those who gave it
+ him in the union of the divine and human nature of Christ.--See
+ Joan. Damascenus, Hom. ii. c. 18. In Dormit. Virg. vol. ii. p.
+ 881. Le Quien, Paris, 1712. The Latin translation renders it
+ Domini frater.]
+
+Nothing in our present inquiry turns upon the real {324} meaning of that
+word _theotocos_. Some who have been among the brightest ornaments of
+the Anglican Church have adopted the translation "mother of God," whilst
+many others among us believe that the original sense would be more
+correctly conveyed by the expression "mother of Him who was God."
+
+I am induced here to lay side by side, with the second Article of our
+Anglican Church, the Confession of Faith from Cyril, first recited at
+Constantinople, then repeated at Ephesus, and afterwards again rehearsed
+at Chalcedon; in its last clause the expression occurs which gave rise
+to these remarks.
+
+ _Ancient Confession._
+
+ We confess that our Lord Jesus, the Christ, the only begotten
+ Son of God, perfect God and perfect man, from a reasonable soul
+ and body, begotten from everlasting of the Father according to
+ his Godhead, and in these last days, He the same for us and for
+ our salvation [was born] of Mary, the Virgin, according to his
+ manhood--of the same substance with the Father according to his
+ Godhead, of the same substance with us according to his manhood.
+ For of two natures there became an union. Wherefore we confess
+ one Christ, one Lord. According to this sense of the unconfused
+ union, we confess the holy Virgin to be theotocos, because that
+ God the Word was made flesh, and became man, and from that very
+ conception united with himself the temple received from her.
+
+ [Vol. vi. p. 736.]
+
+ _Second Article of Anglican Church._
+
+ The Son, which is the Word of the Father, begotten from
+ everlasting of the Father, the very and eternal God, and of one
+ substance with the Father, took man's nature in the womb of the
+ blessed Virgin, of her substance: so that two whole and perfect
+ natures, that is to say, the Godhead and Manhood, were joined
+ together in one Person, never to be divided, whereof is one
+ Christ, very God, and very man; who truly suffered, was
+ crucified, dead and buried, to reconcile his Father to us, and
+ to be a sacrifice, not only for original guilt, but also for
+ actual sins of men. {325}
+
+But there are other points in the course of these important proceedings
+to which I would solicit your especial attention, with the view of
+comparing the sentiments of the Bishop of Rome at that day, and also the
+expressions employed by other Chief Pastors of Christ's flock, with the
+language of the appointed authorized services of the Roman Church now,
+and the sentiments of her reigning Pontiff, and of his accredited
+ministers.
+
+The circumstances of the Church Catholic, as represented in Leo's letter
+in the fifth century, and the circumstances of the Church of Rome, as
+lamented by the present Pope in 1832[124], are in many respects very
+similar. The end desired by Leo and Flavianus, his brother pastor and
+contemporary, Bishop of Constantinople, and by Gregory, now Bishop of
+Rome, is one and the same, namely, the suppression of heresy, the
+prevalence of the truth, and the unity of the Christian Church. But how
+widely and how strikingly different are the foundations on which they
+respectively build their hopes for the attainment of that end!
+
+ [Footnote 124: "The encyclical letter of our most holy Father,
+ Pope Gregory, by divine providence, the sixteenth of that name,
+ to all patriarchs, primates, archbishops, and bishops."]
+
+The present Roman Pontiff's hopes, and desires, and exhortations are
+thus expressed[125]:--
+
+ [Footnote 125: This is the translation circulated in the Roman
+ Catholic Annual, p. 15, called, The Laity's Directory for the
+ year 1833; on the title page of which is this notice: "The
+ Directory for the Church Service, printed by Messrs. Keating and
+ Brown, is the only one which is published with the authority of
+ the Vicars Apostolic in England.--London, Nov. 12, 1829." Signed
+ "James, Bishop of Usula, Vic. Ap. Lond."]
+
+"That all may have a successful and happy issue, let us raise our eyes
+to the most blessed Virgin Mary, {326} WHO ALONE DESTROYS HERESIES, who
+is our GREATEST HOPE, yea, the ENTIRE GROUND OF OUR HOPE[126]. May she
+exert her patronage to draw down an efficacious blessing on our desires,
+our plans, and proceedings in the present straitened condition of the
+Lord's flock. We will also implore, in humble prayer, from Peter, the
+prince of the Apostles, and from his fellow-Apostle Paul, that you may
+all stand as a wall to prevent any other foundation than what hath been
+laid; and supported by this cheering hope, we have confidence that the
+author and finisher of faith, Jesus Christ, will at last console us all
+in the tribulations which have found us exceedingly."
+
+ [Footnote 126: On this word there is a note of reference to S.
+ Bern. Serm. de Nat. B.M.V. 7.]
+
+"To you, venerable brethren, and the flocks committed to your care, we
+most lovingly impart, as auspicious of celestial help, the Apostolic
+Benediction. Given at Rome from St. Mary Major's, August 15th, the
+Festival of the Assumption of the same blessed Virgin Mary, the year of
+our Lord 1832, of our Pontificate the Second."
+
+How deplorable a change, how melancholy a degeneracy is here evinced
+from the faith, and hopes, and sentiments of Christian bishops in days
+of old! In the expressed hopes of Leo and Flavianus, you will seek in
+vain for any reference or allusion "to the blessed Virgin Mary, as the
+destroyer of heresies, the greatest hope, the entire ground of a
+Christian's hope;" you will in vain seek for any exhortation for the
+faithful "to raise their eyes to her in order to obtain a merciful and
+happy issue." Equally vain would be your search for any "imploring in
+humble prayer," of Peter and Paul, or any even distant allusion to help
+from them. {327} To God and God alone are the faithful exhorted to pray;
+on God and God alone do those Christians express that their hopes rely;
+God alone they regard as the destroyer of heresy, the restorer of peace,
+and the protector of the Church's unity. "Their greatest hope, yea, the
+entire ground of their hope," the Being to be "implored in humble
+prayer," is not Mary, nor Peter, nor Paul, but God alone, the Creator,
+the Redeemer, the Sanctifier of Mary, and of Peter, and of Paul.
+
+Thus Flavian writing to Leo says, "Wherefore (in consequence of those
+errors, and heresies, and distractions, which he had deplored) we must
+be sober and watch unto prayer, and draw nigh to God." [Vol. v. 1330.]
+And again, "Thus will the heresy which has arisen, and the consequent
+commotion, be easily destroyed by your holy letters with the assistance
+of God." [Vol. v. 1355.] Thus Leo in his turn writing to Julian, Bishop
+of Cos, utters this truly Christian sentiment. "May the mercy of God, as
+we trust, grant that without the loss of any soul, against the darts of
+the devil the sound parts may be entirely preserved, and the wounded
+parts may be healed. May God preserve you safe and sound, most honoured
+brother!" [Vol. v. 1423.] Thus the same Bishop of Rome writing to
+Flavian, expresses his hopes in these words: "Confidently trusting that
+the help of God will be present, so that one who has been misled,
+condemning the vanity of his own thoughts, may be saved. May God
+preserve you in health and strength, most beloved brother!" [Vol. v.
+1390.]
+
+I will detain you by only one more reference to these most interesting
+documents. The whole Council of Chalcedon, at the conclusion of all, and
+when the {328} triumph was considered to have been secured over
+Eutyches, and their gratitude was expressed that the heresies had been
+destroyed--instead of referring to Mary as the "sole destroyer of
+heresies," shout, as if with the voice of one man, from every side, "It
+is God alone who hath done this!" [Vol. vii. p. 174.] Neither
+antecedently did their chief pastors exhort them to raise their eyes to
+Mary, and promise to "implore" the blessing they needed, "in humble
+prayer from Peter and Paul." Neither "in the straitened condition of the
+Lord's flock" did they invoke any other than God. And when truth
+prevailed, and the victory was won, whilst they were lavish of their
+grateful thanks to the emperor and his queen, who were present and had
+succoured them; of help from the invisible world they make no mention,
+save only of the Lord's; they had implored neither angel, nor saints,
+nor Virgin to be their protector and patron; no angel, nor saint, nor
+virgin, shared their praises;--God alone was exalted in that day.
+
+And, let not the answer, ever at hand when reference is thus made to the
+prayers or professions of individuals, whether popes or canonized
+saints, seduce any now from a pursuit of the very truth. These, it is
+said, "are the prayers and professions of individuals, it is unfair then
+to make the Church responsible for them; we appeal from them to the
+Church." But in this case the words of the Sovereign Pontiff are in good
+faith the words of the Church of Rome; not because I at all would
+identify the words of a Pope with the Church, but because the prayers of
+the Church of Rome in her authorized solemn services and acts of worship
+justify {329} Pope Gregory in every sentiment he utters, and every
+expression he employs. Does Gregory bid the faithful lift up their eyes
+to Mary the sole destroyer of heresies? The Roman ritual in the Lesser
+Office of the holy Virgin thus addresses her, "Rejoice, O Mary Virgin;
+thou alone hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world:" And again:
+"Under thy protection we take refuge, holy parent of God; despise not
+thou our prayers in our necessities, but from all dangers ever deliver
+us, O glorious and blessed Virgin." Does Gregory assure the faithful
+that he will implore in humble prayer of Peter and Paul? in doing so he
+is only treading in the very footsteps of the Roman Church itself. In an
+address, which we have already quoted (see p. 262), Peter is thus
+invoked. "Now O good shepherd, merciful Peter, accept the prayers of us
+who supplicate, and loose the bands of our sins, by the power committed
+to thee, by which thou shuttest heaven against all by a word, and
+openest it."
+
+These things are now; but from the beginning it was not so. {330}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+SECTION I.--PRESENT WORSHIP OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN IN THE AUTHORIZED AND
+ENJOINED SERVICES OF THE CHURCH OF ROME.
+
+
+When from examining the evidence of antiquity we turn to the present
+enjoined services of the Church of Rome, it is impossible not to be
+struck by the fact repeatedly forced upon our notice, that whereas the
+invocation of the Virgin seems to have been introduced at a period much
+later than those addresses to the martyrs which have already invited our
+attention, her worship now assumes so much higher a place, and claims so
+large a share in the public worship of the Roman Catholic portions of
+Christendom above martyrs, saints, and angels. The offices of the Virgin
+present instances of all those various and progressive stages of divine
+worship, which we have already exemplified in the case of the martyrs,
+from the first primitive and Christian practice of making the
+anniversary of the Saint a day either of especial praise and prayer to
+God for the mercies of redemption generally, or of returning thanks to
+God for the graces manifested in his holy servants now in peace, with
+prayers for light and strength to enable the worshippers to follow them,
+as they followed Christ--down to the last and worst stage, the
+consummation {331} of all, namely, prayer directly to saints and angels
+for protection, succour, and spiritual benefits at their hands.
+
+I. Of the first class is the following collect, retained almost word for
+word in our Anglican service.
+
+_On the day of the Purification._
+
+"Almighty and everlasting God, we humbly beseech thy majesty, that as
+thy only begotten Son was this day presented in the temple in substance
+of our flesh, so Thou wouldest cause us to be presented unto Thee with
+purified minds. Through the same."
+
+(Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, majestatem tuam supplices exoramus, ut
+sicut unigenitus Filius tuus hodierna die cum nostræ carnis substantia
+est præsentatus, ita nos facias purificatis tibi mentibus præsentari.
+Per eundem Dominum.--H. 536.)
+
+Such a prayer is founded on the facts of revelation, and is primitive,
+catholic, apostolic, and evangelical.
+
+II. Of the second progressive stage towards the adoration of the saints,
+the offices of the Virgin supply us with various instances; the case,
+namely, of the Christian orator being led by the flow of his eloquence
+to apostrophize the spirit of the Saint, and address him as though he
+were present, witnessing the celebration of his day, hearing the
+panegyrics uttered for his honour, and partaking with the congregation
+in their religious acts of worship.
+
+"O holy and spotless virginhood; with what praises to extol thee I know
+not: because Him, whom the heavens could not contain, thou didst bear in
+thy bosom. {332} Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit
+of thy womb. Thou art blessed, O Virgin Mary, who didst carry the Lord,
+the Creator of the world. Thou didst give birth to Him who made thee,
+and remainest a virgin for ever. [Beata es Virgo Maria, quæ Dominum
+portasti Creatorem mundi: genuisti qui te fecit, et in æternum permanes
+virgo.--Vern. clxii.] Hail, holy parent, who didst in child-birth bring
+forth the King who ruleth heaven and earth for ever and ever. Amen."
+[Salve sacra parens enixa puerpera regem, qui coelum terramque regit in
+sæcula sæculorum. Amen.--Introit. at the mass on the Nativity of the
+Virgin.]
+
+In apostrophes like these, the members of the Anglican Church see
+nothing in itself harmful, so long as they are kept within due bounds.
+Many of the passages cited from the ancient writers in proof of their
+having espoused the doctrine, and exemplified in themselves the practice
+of invoking saints, are nothing more than these glowing addresses. They
+have been responded to by one of the brightest ornaments, and sweetest
+minstrels of the Anglican Church, whose apostrophe at the same time by
+its own words would guard us against the abuses and excesses in which in
+the Roman Catholic Church this practice, followed without restraint and
+indulged in with less and less of caution and soberness, unhappily
+ended; abuses against which also we cannot ourselves now be too
+constantly and carefully on our guard.
+
+ "Ave Maria! Blessed maid,
+ Lily of Eden's fragrant shade,
+ Who can express the love,
+ That nurtured thee so pure and sweet;
+ Making thy heart a shelter meet
+ For Jesus' holy Dove? {333}
+ Ave Maria! mother blest,
+ To whom, caressing and caress'd,
+ Clings the Eternal Child!
+ Favour'd beyond archangel's dream,
+ When first on thee with tenderest gleam
+ The newborn Saviour smiled.
+ Ave Maria! thou whose name,
+ ALL BUT ADORING love may claim,
+ Yet may we reach thy shrine;
+ For HE, thy Son and Saviour, vows,
+ To crown all lowly lofty brows
+ With love and joy like thine.
+ Bless'd is the womb that bare Him,--bless'd
+ The bosom where his lips were press'd;
+ But rather bless'd are they
+ Who hear his word and keep it well,
+ The living homes where Christ shall dwell,
+ And never pass away."
+
+ J. Keble's Christian Year. "The Annunciation."
+
+Would that no branch of the Church Catholic had ever passed the boundary
+line drawn here so exquisitely by this Anglican Catholic, from whose
+lips or pen no syllable could ever fall in disparagement of the holy
+Virgin, as blessed among women, and the holy mother of our Lord. To
+bring about the re-union of Christians would in that case have been a
+far more hopeful task than it is now.
+
+III. In the third stage, a prayer was offered to God, that He would
+permit the intercessions of the saints to help us; or the prayer
+contained the expression of a wish,--a desire not addressed either to
+God or to the saint, merely words expressive of the hope of the
+individual. The following are some of the many instances now contained
+in the Roman Breviary: {334}
+
+"May the Virgin of virgins herself intercede for us to the Lord. Amen."
+[Ipsa Virgo virginum intercedat pro nobis ad Dominum. Amen.--Vern.
+cxlviii.]
+
+In the Post-communion, on the day of the Assumption, this prayer is
+offered:--"Partakers of the heavenly table, we implore thy clemency, O
+Lord our God, that we who celebrate the Assumption of the mother of God,
+may, by her intercession, be freed from all impending evils. Through,"
+&c. [Mensæ coelestis participes effecti imploramus clementiam tuam,
+Domine Deus noster, ut qui Assumptionem Dei Genetricis colimus, a
+cunctis malis imminentibus ejus intercessione liberemur. Per.--Miss.
+Rom.]
+
+"We beseech Thee, O Lord, let the glorious intercession of the blessed
+and glorious ever Virgin Mary protect us and bring us to life eternal."
+[Beatæ et gloriosæ semper Virginia Mariæ, quæsumus, Domine, intercessio
+gloriosa nos protegat, et ad vitam producat æternam.--Vern. clv.]
+
+"Pardon, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the offences of thy servants, that we,
+who cannot please Thee of our own act, may be saved by the intercession
+of the mother of thy Son, our Lord, who liveth with Thee." [Famulorum
+tuorum quæsumus, Domine, delictis ignosce, ut qui tibi placere de
+nostris actibus non valemus, Genetricis Filii tui, Domini nostri,
+intercessione salvemur, qui tecum vivit.--Vern. clxix.]
+
+On the vigil of the Epiphany, this prayer is offered in the
+Post-communion at the mass,--"Let this communion, O Lord, purge us from
+guilt, and by the intercession of the blessed Virgin, mother of God, let
+it make us partakers of the heavenly cure. Through the same." [Hæc nos
+communio, Domine, purget a crimine, et intercedente beata Virgine Dei
+genetrice coelestis remedii faciat esse consortes. Per eundem.--Miss.
+Rom.]
+
+"Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord God, that we thy {335} servants may
+enjoy perpetual health of body and mind, and be freed from present
+sorrow, and enjoy eternal gladness, by the glorious intercession of the
+blessed Mary, ever Virgin. Through." [Concede nos famulos tuos,
+quæsumus, Domine Deus, perpetua mentis et corporis sanitate gaudere, et
+gloriosa beatæ Mariæ semper Virginis intercessione a præsenti liberari
+tristitia, et æterna perfrui lætitia. Per Dominum.--Vern. cxlvi.]
+
+On the second Sunday after Easter, we find a further and more sad
+departure from the simplicity of Christian worship, in which the Church
+of Rome declares that the offerings made to God at the Lord's Supper
+were made for the honour of the Virgin.--"Having received, O Lord, the
+helps of our salvation, grant, we beseech Thee, that by the patronage of
+Mary, ever Virgin, we may be every where protected; in veneration of
+whom we make these offerings to thy Majesty." [Sumptis, Domine, salutis
+nostræ subsidiis, da, quæsumus, beatæ Mariæ semper Virginis patrociniis
+ubique protegi, _in cujus veneratione_ hæc tuæ obtulimus
+Majestati.--Post Commun. Mis. Rom.]
+
+On the octave of Easter, at the celebration of mass, in the Secret, the
+intercession of the Virgin is made to appear as essential a cause of our
+peace and blessedness as the propitiation of Christ; or rather, the two
+are represented as joint concurrent causes; as though the office of the
+Saviour was confined to propitiation, exclusive altogether of
+intercession, whilst the office of intercession was assigned to the
+Virgin.--"By thy propitiation, O Lord, and by the intercession of the
+blessed Mary, ever Virgin, may this offering be profitable to us for
+perpetual and present prosperity and peace." [Tua, Domine, propitiatione
+et beatæ Marisæ semper Virginis intercessione ad perpetuam atque
+prsesentem hæc oblatio nobis profecerit prosperitatem et pacem.] {336}
+
+IV. A fourth station in this lamentable progress was evidenced when
+Christians at the tombs of martyrs implored, yet still in prayer to God,
+that He would, for the sake of the martyrs, and by their merits and good
+offices, grant to the petitioner some benefit temporal or spiritual. Of
+that practice, we have an example in this prayer: "O God, who didst
+deign to choose the blessed Virgin's womb in which to dwell, vouchsafe,
+we beseech thee, to make us, defended by her protection, to take
+pleasure in her commemoration." [Deus qui virginalem aulam beatæ Mariæ
+in qua habitares eligerere dignatus es, da, quæsumus, ut sua nos
+defensione munitos jucundos facias suæ interesse commemorationi.--Æst.
+clvi.]
+
+"By the Virgin mother, may the Lord grant us health and peace. Amen."
+[Per Virginem Matrem concedat nobis Dominus salutem et pacem.
+Amen.--Vern. cxliii.]
+
+"By the prayers and merits of the blessed Mary, ever Virgin, and of all
+saints, may the Lord bring us to the kingdom of heaven." [Precibus et
+meritis beatæ Mariæ Virginis et omnium sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad
+regna coelorum.--Vern. cxlvii.]
+
+"May the Virgin Mary bless us, together with a pious offspring." [Nos
+cum prole pia benedicat Virgo Maria.--Vern. cxlvii.]
+
+V. The fifth grade involves a still more melancholy departure from
+Christian truth and primitive simplicity, when the prayer is no longer
+addressed to God, but is offered to the Virgin, imploring her to
+intercede with God for the supplicants, yet still asking nothing but her
+prayers.
+
+"Blessed mother, Virgin undefiled, glorious Queen of the world,
+intercede for us with the Lord." [Beata Mater, et intacta Virgo,
+gloriosa regina mundi, intercede pro nobis ad Dominum.--Aut. cxliv.]
+{337}
+
+"Blessed mother of God, Mary, perpetual Virgin, the temple of the Lord,
+the holy place of the holy Spirit, thou alone without example hast
+pleased our Lord Jesus Christ: Pray for the people, mediate for the
+clergy, intercede for the female sex who are under a vow." [Beata Dei
+Genitrix, Maria Virgo perpetua, templum Domini, sacrarium Spiritus
+Sancti, sola sine exemplo placuisti Domino nostro Jesu Christo; ora pro
+populo, interveni pro clero, intercede pro devoto femineo sexu.--Vern.
+clxiii.]
+
+ "Holy Mary, pray for us!
+ Holy mother of God, pray for us!
+ Holy Virgin of virgins, pray for us!"
+
+In the form of prayer called Litaniæ Lauretanæ, between the most solemn
+addresses to the ever blessed Trinity, and to the Lamb of God that
+taketh away the sins of the world, are inserted more than forty
+addresses to the Virgin, invoking her under as many varieties of title.
+She is appealed to as--The Mirror of Justice, The Cause of our Joy, The
+mystical Rose, The Tower of David, The Tower of Ivory, The House of
+Gold, The Arc of the Covenant, The Gate of Heaven, The Refuge of
+Sinners, The Queen of Angels, the Queen of all Saints. [Vern. ccxxxix.]
+
+In examining the case of the invocation of saints, we placed under this
+head, as the safer course, a kind of invocation which seemed to
+vacillate between this appeal to them merely for intercession, and the
+last consummation of all, direct prayer to them for blessings. We
+exemplified it by the hymn to St. Stephen. The following seems very much
+of the same character, addressed to the Virgin:--
+
+ "Hail, O Queen, Mother of mercy, our life, sweetness, and hope,
+ Hail! To thee we cry, banished sons {338} of Eve. To thee we
+ sigh, groaning and weeping in this valley of tears. Come then,
+ our Advocate, turn those compassionate eyes of thine on us, and
+ after this exile show to us Jesus, the blessed fruit of thy
+ womb. O merciful! O pious! O sweet Virgin Mary! [Salve, Regina,
+ Mater Misericordiæ, vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra, salve. Ad te
+ clamamus exules filii Evæ. Ad te suspiramus gementes et flentes
+ in hac lachrymarum valle. Eja ergo Advocata nostra, illos tuos
+ misericordes oculos ad nos converte, et Jesum benedictum fructum
+ ventris tui nobis post hoc exilium ostende. O clemens! O pia! O
+ dulcis Virgo Maria!]
+
+ "Pray for us, O holy Mother of God, that we may be made worthy
+ of the promises of Christ." [Ora pro nobis, Sancta Dei Genetrix,
+ ut digni efficiamur promissionibus Christi.--Æst. 151.]
+
+VI. Unhappily, in the appointed religious services of the Roman ritual,
+we have too many examples of prayer for benefits spiritual and temporal,
+addressed directly to the Virgin. It is in vain to say that all that is
+meant is to ask her intercession; the people will not, cannot, do not,
+regard it in that light. It is affirmed that when the Church of Rome
+guides and directs her sons and daughters to pray for specific benefits
+at the hands of the Virgin mother, without any mention of her prayers,
+without specifying that her petitions are all that they ask; yet they
+are taught only to ask for her intercession, and are not encouraged to
+look for the blessings as her gift and at her hands. But, can this be
+right and safe? In an act of all human acts the most solemn and holy,
+can recourse be had to such refinements without great danger?
+
+Among many others of a similar kind this invocation frequently recurs,
+"Deem me worthy to praise thee, {339} O sacred Virgin; give to me
+strength against thy enemies." [Dignare me laudare te, Virgo sacrata. Da
+mihi virtutem contra hostes tuos.--Æst. clvi.]
+
+The following seems to be among the most favourite addresses to the
+Virgin:--"Hail, Star of the Sea, kind Mother of God, and ever Virgin!
+Happy Gate of Heaven, taking that 'Hail!' from the mouth of Gabriel,
+establish us in peace,--changing the name of Eve. For the guilty, loose
+their bonds; bring forth light for the blind; drive away our evils;
+demand for us all good things. SHOW THAT THOU ART A MOTHER. Let Him who
+endured for us to be thy Son, through thee receive our prayers. O
+excellent Virgin, meek among all, us, FREED FROM FAULT, MAKE MEEK AND
+CHASTE; make our life pure; prepare a safe journey; that, beholding
+Jesus, we may always rejoice. Praise be to God the Father, glory to
+Christ most high, and to the Holy Spirit; one honour to the three.
+Amen."
+
+ [Ave Man's Stella,
+ Dei Mater alma,
+ Atque semper Virgo!
+ Felix coeli porta,
+ Sumens illud Ave
+ Gabrielis ore,
+ Funda nos in pace,
+ Mutans Evæ nomen.
+ Solve vincla reis,
+ Profer lumen cæcis,
+ Mala nostra pelle,
+ Bona cuncta posce.
+ MONSTRA TE ESSE MATREM;
+ Sumat per te preces,
+ Qui pro nobis natus
+ Tulit esse tuus.
+ Virgo singularis,
+ Inter omnes mitis,
+ Nos culpa solutos,
+ Mites fac et castos,
+ Vitam præsta puram,
+ Iter para tutum,
+ Ut videntes Jesum
+ Semper collætemur.
+
+ Sit laus Deo Patri, summo Christo decus,
+ Spiritui Sancto, tribus honor unus. Amen.--Æst. 597.
+ ]
+
+In the body of this hymn, there is undoubtedly reference to an
+application to be made to the Son, &c.; but can it be fitting that such
+language as is here suggested to the Virgin, for her to use, should be
+addressed by a {340} mortal to God? can such a call upon her to show her
+power and influence over the eternal Son of the eternal Father be
+fitting--"Show that thou art a mother?" I confess that against what is
+here implied, my understanding and my heart entirely revolt.[127]
+
+ [Footnote 127: At the present day some versions, contrary to the
+ whole drift and plain sense and meaning of the passage, have
+ translated it, as though the prayer was, that Mary would, by her
+ maternal good offices in our behalf, prove to us that she was
+ our mother. An instance of what I mean occurs in a work called
+ "Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques," p. 353.
+
+ "Monstra te esse Matrem: Faites voir que vous êtes véritablement
+ notre mère." In an English manual, first printed in 1688, and
+ then called "The Prince of Wales's Manual," the lines are thus
+ rendered--
+
+ Shew us a Mother's care,
+ To Him convey our prayer,
+ Who for our sake put on
+ The title of thy Son.
+
+ I rejoice to see an indication of a feeling of impropriety in
+ the sentiment in its plain, obvious meaning; still the change is
+ inadmissible. She is addressed above, in the second line, as the
+ mother of God; Jesus is immediately mentioned, in the very next
+ line, and through the entire stanza, as her Son; and the prayer
+ is, that through her that Being who endured to be her Son would
+ hear the prayers of the worshippers.
+
+ Since I first prepared this note for the press, I have found a
+ proof, that the obvious grammatical and logical meaning, "show
+ thyself to be His mother," is the sense in which it was received
+ and interpreted before the Reformation. In a work dedicated to
+ the "Youth of England studious of good morals," and entitled
+ "Expositio Sequentiarum," the only interpretation given to this
+ passage is thus expressed: "Show thyself to be a MOTHER, namely
+ BY APPEASING THY SON, and let thy Son take our prayers through
+ thee, who (namely, the Son born of the Virgin Mary,) for us
+ miserable sinners endured to be thy Son." "Monstra te esse
+ MATREM (sc.) placando TILIUM TUUM, et filius tuus sumat precem,
+ id est, deprecationes nostras per te qui (sc.) filius natus ex
+ Virgine Maria pro nobis (sc.) miseris peccatoribus tulit, id
+ est, sustinuit esse tuus filius." It must be observed, that this
+ work was expressly written for the purpose of explaining these
+ parts of the ritual according to the use of Sarum. It was
+ printed by the famous W. de Worde, at the sign of the Sun in
+ Fleet-street, 1508. The passage occurs in p. 33. b. This is by
+ no means the only book of the kind. I have before me one printed
+ at Basil, in 1504, and another at Cologne the same year. They
+ are evidently all drawn from some common source, but are not
+ reprints all of the same work, for there are in each some
+ variations. The Cologne edition tells us, that it was the
+ reprint of a familiar commentary long ago (jamdudum) published
+ on the hymns. All these join in construing the passage so as to
+ represent the prayer to the Virgin to be, that she would show
+ and prove that she was mother by appeasing her Son, and causing
+ him to hear our prayers. Nor can any other meaning be attached
+ to the translation of the words as given by Cardinal Du Perron
+ (Replique à la Rep. du Roy de la G. Bretagne. Paris, 1620, p.
+ 970). "Et pourtant quand l'Eglise dit à la saincte Vierge,
+ 'Defends nous de l'ennemy, et nous reçoy à l'heure delamort,'
+ elle n'entend pas prier la Vierge qu'elle nous reçoive par sa
+ propre virtu, mais par impetration de la grace de son Fils,
+ comme l'Eglise le temoigne en ces mots: 'Monstre que tu es mère,
+ reçoive par toy nos prieres celuy, qui né pour nous a eu
+ agreeable d'être tien!'" This novel interpretation I have not
+ found in any one book of former days.] {341}
+
+Another prayer runs thus: "Under thy protection we take refuge, Holy
+Mother of God. Despise not our supplications in our necessities; but
+from all dangers ever deliver us, O glorious and Blessed Virgin." [Sub
+tuum præsidium confugimus, sancta Dei Genetrix; nostras deprecationes ne
+despicias in necessitatibus, sed a periculis cunctis libera nos semper,
+Virgo gloriosa et benedicta.--Æst. cxlvi.]
+
+Let us suppose the object of these addresses to be changed; and instead
+of the Virgin let us substitute the name of the ever-blessed God and
+Father of us all. The very words here addressed to the Virgin are
+offered to Him, and spoken of Him in some of the most affecting prayers
+and praises recorded in the Bible[128].
+
+ [Footnote 128: The identity of the prayers offered to the Virgin
+ with those offered in the Book of inspiration, or in the Roman
+ Ritual to the Almighty, becomes very striking, if we lay side by
+ side the authorized language of the Roman Liturgy, and the only
+ translation of the Scriptures authorized by the Roman Church.
+
+ _Roman Ritual in addressing the _Roman Ritual, or Translation
+ Virgin_ of the Bible, in addressing
+ the Almighty_.
+
+ Sub tuum præsidium confugimus. Dominus, firmamentum meum et
+ refugium meum. Ad te
+ confugi.--Ps. xvii. 1; cxlii.
+ 11.
+
+ Nostras deprecationes ne despicias Ne despexeris deprecationem
+ in necessitatibus. meam.--Ps. liv. 1.
+
+ Sed a periculis cunctis libera nos. Libera, Domine, animam servi
+ tui ab omnibus periculis
+ inferni. Hiem. ccvi.
+
+ Libera nos a malo. Orat. Dom.
+
+ A periculo mortis libera nos,
+ Domine.--Hiem. cciv.
+
+ Tu nos ab hoste protege. Eripe me de inimicis meis,
+ Domine.--Ps. cxlii. 11.
+
+ Et hora mortis SUSPICE. _Suscipe_, Domine, servum
+ tuum.--Hiem. ccvi. {342}
+ ]
+
+But another hymn in the office of the Virgin, addressed in part to the
+blessed Saviour himself, and partly to the Virgin Mary, is still more
+revolting to all my feelings with regard to religious worship. The
+Redeemer is only asked to remember his mortal birth; no blessing is here
+supplicated for at his hands; his protection is not sought; no
+deliverance of our souls at the hour of death is implored from Him;
+these blessings, and these heavenly benefits, and these divine mercies,
+are sought for exclusively at the hands of the Virgin alone. Can such a
+mingled prayer, can such a contrast in prayer, be the genuine fruit of
+that Gospel which bids us ask for all we need in prayer to God in the
+name and for the sake of his blessed Son?
+
+ "Author of our salvation, remember that once, by {343} being
+ born of a spotless virgin, thou didst take the form of our body!
+ Mary, mother of grace, mother of mercy, do thou protect us from
+ the enemy, and receive us at the hour of death. Glory to thee, O
+ Lord, who wast born of a Virgin, with the Father and the Holy
+ Spirit, through eternal ages. Amen[129]."
+
+ [Footnote 129:
+
+ Memento, Salutis Auctor, Tu nos ab hoste protege,
+ Quod nostri quondam corporis, Et hora mortis suscipe.
+ Ex illibata Virgine, Gloria tibi, Domine,
+ Nascendo formam sumpseris. Qui natus es de Virgine,
+ Maria mater gratiæ, Cum Patre et Sancto Spiritu,
+ Mater misericordiæ, In sempiterna sæcula. Amen.
+
+ In the new version, (referred to in page 260 of the present
+ work,) this hymn stands thus:--
+
+ Memento, rerum Conctitor, Maria mater gratiæ,
+ Nostri quod olim corporis, Dulcis parens clementiæ,
+ Sacrata ab alvo Virginis, Tu nos ab hoste protege,
+ Nascendo forrnam sumpseris. In mortis hora suscipe, &c.
+
+ Æst. clv.]
+
+Could the beloved John, to whose kind and tender care our blessed Lord
+gave his mother of especial trust, have offered to her such a prayer as
+this? To God alone surely would he have prayed for deliverance from all
+evil and mischief. To God alone would he have prayed:--"In the hour of
+death, good Lord, deliver us, and all for Jesus Christ's sake, our only
+Saviour and Mediator."
+
+To one other example of the practice of the Church of Rome I must refer.
+The rubric in our Book of Common Prayer directs that "at the end of
+every Psalm throughout the year, shall be repeated, Glory be to the
+Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost: As it was in the
+beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen." In the
+Roman Breviary also we find this rubric: "This verse, _Gloria_, is
+always said in the end of all psalms, EXCEPT IT BE OTHERWISE {344}
+NOTED." [Æst. 3.] Such notifications occur at the end of various psalms.
+On the Feast of the Assumption [Æst. 595.], fourteen psalms are
+appointed to be used. At the close of every one of these psalms, without
+however any note that the Gloria is not to be said, there is appended an
+anthem to the Virgin. In some cases, so intimately is the anthem
+interwoven with the closing words of the psalm, as that under other
+circumstances it would induce us to infer that the Gloria was intended
+to be left out, especially as in the Parvum Officium of the Virgin [Æst.
+clv.], though to the various psalms anthems in the same manner have been
+annexed, yet the words "Gloria Patri et Filio" are inserted in each case
+between the psalm and the anthem. Be this as it may, the annexation of
+the anthem has a lamentable tendency to withdraw the thoughts of the
+worshippers from the truths contained in the inspired psalm, and to fix
+them upon Mary and her Assumption; changing the Church's address from
+the Eternal Being, alone invoked by the Psalmist, to one, who though a
+virgin blessed among women, is a creature of God's hand. Thus, at the
+conclusion of the 8th psalm; "O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is thy
+name in all the world," we find immediately annexed these two anthems,
+"The holy mother of God is exalted above the choirs of angels to the
+heavenly realms. The gates of paradise are opened to us by thee, [by
+thee, O Virgin [Quæ gloriosa]] who glorious triumphest with the angels."
+Thus again, an anthem is attached to the last verse of the 95th (in the
+Hebrew and English versions the 96th). "He shall judge the earth in
+equity, and the people with his truth. Rejoice, {345} O Virgin Mary;
+thou alone hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world. Deem me
+worthy to praise thee, hallowed Virgin: Give me strength against thy
+enemies." To the 96th (97th), the latter clause of that address is
+repeated, with the addition of the following: "After the birth thou
+didst remain a virgin inviolate. Mother of God, intercede for us."
+
+An instance of the anthem being so intimately interwoven with the psalm,
+as to render the insertion of the "Gloria," between the two, to say the
+least, forced and unnatural, occurs at the close of the 86th (87th)
+psalm. The vulgate translation of the last verse, differing entirely
+from the English, is this: "As the habitation of all who rejoice is in
+thee." This sentence of the Psalmist is thus taken up in the Roman
+Ritual: "As the habitation of all us who rejoice is in THEE, Holy Mother
+of God."
+
+The object proposed by the Church from of old in concluding each psalm
+by an ascription of glory to the eternal Trinity, was to lead the
+worshipper to apply the sentiments of the psalm to the work of our
+salvation accomplished by the three Persons of the Godhead. The
+analogous end of these anthems in the present service of the Church of
+Rome is to fix the thoughts of the worshipper upon Mary. This practice
+unhappily sanctions the excesses into which Bonaventura and others have
+run in their departures from the purity and integrity of primitive
+worship.
+
+Cardinal du Perron informs us, that at the altar in the office of the
+mass, prayer is not made directly to any saint, but only obliquely, the
+address being always made to God. But if prayers are offered in other
+parts of the service directly to them, it is difficult to see what is
+gained by that announcement. Surely it is trifling {346} to make such
+immaterial distinctions. If as a priest I could address the following
+prayer to the Virgin in preparing for offering mass, why should I not
+offer a prayer to the same being during its celebration?
+
+"O mother of pity and mercy, blessed Virgin Mary, I a miserable and
+unworthy sinner, flee to thee with my whole heart and affection, and I
+pray thy most sweet pity, that as thou didst stand by thy most sweet Son
+hanging upon the cross, so thou wouldest vouchsafe mercifully to stand
+by me a miserable priest, and by all priests who here and in all the
+holy Church offer Him this day, that, aided by thy grace, we may be
+enabled to offer a worthy and acceptable victim in the sight of the most
+high and undivided Trinity. Amen." [O Mater pietatis et misericordiæ,
+beatissima Virgo Maria, ego miser et indignus peccator ad te confugio
+toto corde et affectu. Et precor dulcissimam pietatem tuam, ut sicut
+dulcissimo Filio tuo in cruce pendenti astitisti, ita et mihi misero
+sacerdoti et sacerdotibus omnibus hic et in tota sancta ecclesia ipsum
+hodie offerentibus, clementer assistere digneris, ut tua gratia adjuti
+dignam et acceptabilem hostiam in conspectu summæ et individuæ
+Trinitatis offerre valeamus. Amen.--Rom. Brev. Hus. Hiem. p. ccxxxiii.]
+
+This is called, in the Roman Breviary, "A PRAYER to the blessed Virgin
+before the celebration of the mass," and is immediately followed by
+another prayer directed to be offered to any saint, male or female,
+whose feast is on that day celebrated. "O Holy N. behold I, a miserable
+sinner, DERIVING CONFIDENCE FROM THY MERITS, now offer the most holy
+sacrament of the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, FOR THY HONOUR
+AND GLORY. I humbly and devotedly pray thee that thou wouldest deign to
+intercede for me to-day, that I may be enabled to offer so great a
+sacrifice {347} worthily and acceptably, and to praise Him eternally
+with thee and with all his elect, and that I may live with Him for
+ever." [O sancte N. ecce ego miser peccator de tuis mentis confisus,
+offero nunc sacratissimura sacramentum corporis et sanguinis Domini
+nostri Jesu Christ! PRO TUO HONORE ET GLORIA; precor te humiliter et
+devote ut pro me hodie intercedere digneris, ut tantum sacrificium digne
+et acceptabiliter offerre valeam, ut Eum tecum et cum omnibus electis
+ejus æternaliter laudare et cum eo semper regnare valeam.--Hiem.
+ccxxxiii.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such, Christian brethren, is the result of our inquiries into the real
+practice of the Church of Rome with regard to the worship of the Virgin
+Mary at the present day, in every part of the world where allegiance to
+that Church is acknowledged. Can we wonder that individuals, high in
+honour with that Church, have carried out the same worship to far
+greater lengths? I have ever present to my mind the principle of fixing
+upon the Church of Rome herself that only which is to be found in her
+canons, acknowledged decrees, and formularies. And unhappily of that
+which directly contravenes the Gospel-rule and primitive practice, far
+more than enough is found in her authorized rituals to compel all who
+hold to the Gospel and the integrity of primitive times, to withdraw
+their assent and consent from her worship. But with this principle
+before us, surely common justice and common prudence require that we
+should see for ourselves the practical workings of the system. "By their
+fruits ye shall know them," is a principle no less sanctioned by the
+Gospel than suggested by common sense and experience And, indeed, the
+shocking lengths to which priests, bishops, cardinals, and canonized
+persons have gone in this particular of the worship of the Virgin, might
+well {348} cause every upright and enlightened Roman Catholic to look
+anxiously to the foundation; to determine honestly, though with tender
+caution and pious care, for himself, whether the corruption be not in
+the well-head, whether the stream do not flow impregnated with the
+poison from the very fountain itself; whether the prayers authorized and
+directed by the Church of Rome to be offered to the Virgin be not in
+themselves at variance with the first principles of the Gospel--Faith in
+one God, the giver of every good, and in one Mediator and Intercessor
+between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, whose blood cleanseth from
+all sin: in a word, to see whether all the aberrations of her children
+in this department of religious duty have not their prototype in the
+laws and ordinances, the rules and injunctions, the example and practice
+of their mother herself.
+
+Indeed I am compelled here to say, that, however revolting to us as
+believers in Jesus, and as worshippers of the one true God, are those
+extravagant excesses into which the votaries of the Virgin Mary have
+run, I have found few of their most unequivocal ascriptions of divine
+worship to her, for a justification of which they cannot with reason
+appeal to the authorized ritual of the Church of Rome.
+
+In leaving this point of our inquiry, I would suggest two
+considerations: 1st, If it was intended that the invocation of the
+Virgin should be exclusively confined to requests, praying her to pray
+and intercede by prayer for the petitioners, why should language be
+addressed to her which in its plain, obvious, grammatical, and common
+sense interpretation conveys the form of direct prayers to her for
+benefits believed to be at her disposal? And, 2ndly, If the Church had
+{349} intended that her members, when they suppliantly invoked the
+Virgin Mary, and had recourse to her aid, should have offered to her
+direct and immediate prayers that she would grant temporal and spiritual
+benefits, to be dispensed at her own will, and by her own authority and
+power, in that case, what words could the Church have put into the mouth
+of the petitioners which would more explicitly and unequivocally have
+conveyed that idea?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN, CONTINUED.
+
+
+I have no intention of dwelling at any length on the extraordinary
+excesses to which the adoration of the Virgin Mary has been carried in
+the Church of Rome, I do not mean by obscure and illiterate or fanatical
+individuals, but by her celebrated prelates, doctors, and saints. My
+researches have brought to my knowledge such a mass of error and
+corruption in the worship of Christians as I never before had any
+conception of; and rather than bring it all forward, and exhibit it to
+others, I would turn my own eyes from it altogether. Still many reasons
+render it absolutely necessary that we should not pass over the subject
+entirely in silence. Few in England, I believe, are aware of the real
+facts of the case; and it well becomes us to guard ourselves and others
+against such melancholy results as would appear to be inseparable from
+the invocation and worship of the Virgin. If indeed we could be
+justified in regarding such palpable instances of her worship in its
+most objectionable form as the {350} marks of former and less
+enlightened times, most gladly would I draw a veil over them, and hide
+them from our sight for ever. But when I find the solemn addresses of
+the present chief authorities in the Church, nay, the epistles of the
+present sovereign Pontiff himself, cherishing, countenancing, and
+encouraging the selfsame evil departures from primitive truth and
+worship, it becomes a matter not of choice, but of necessity, to give
+examples at least of the deplorable excesses into which the highest and
+most honoured in that communion have been betrayed. On the present
+Pope's encyclical letter [A.D. 1840] we have already observed; and in
+this place I propose to examine only one more of those many excesses
+meeting us on every side, which characterize the public worship of the
+Virgin. The instance to which I refer seems to take a sort of middle
+station between the authorized enjoined services of the Church of Rome,
+and the devotions of individuals and family worship. It partakes on the
+one hand far too much of a public character to be considered in the
+light of private religious exercises; and on the other it wants that
+authority which would rank it among the appointed services of the
+Church. The devotional parts of the services are found neither in the
+Missals nor the Breviaries, and the adoption and celebration of the
+service seems to be left to the option and care of individuals. But the
+service is performed in the Churches,--a Priest presides,--the Host is
+presented to the adorations of the people,--and a sermon is preached by
+an appointed minister. The service to which I am referring is performed
+every evening through the entire month of May, and is celebrated
+expressly in honour of the Virgin Mary. {351}
+
+The month of May is dedicated to her, and is called Mary's month.
+Temporary altars are raised to her honour, surrounded by flowers and
+adorned with garlands and drapery; her image usually standing before the
+altar. Societies are formed chiefly for the celebration of the Virgin's
+praises, and in some Churches the effect, both to the eye and to the
+ear, corresponds with the preparation. One thing only is wanting--the
+proper object of worship. I have now before me a book of hymns published
+professedly for the religious fraternities in Paris, and used in the
+Churches there. [Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques à l'usage des confréries
+des Paroisses de Paris. Paris, 1839.] Many of these hymns are addressed
+to the Virgin alone; some without any reference to the Son of God and
+Man, the only Saviour, and without any allusion to the God of
+Christians; indeed, an address to a heathen Goddess more entirely
+destitute of Christianity can scarcely be conceived. I copy one hymn
+entire.
+
+ "Around the altars of Mary
+ Let us, her children, press;
+ To that mother so endeared
+ Let us address the sweetest prayers.
+ Let a lively and holy mirth
+ Animate us in this holy day:
+ There exists no sadness
+ For a heart full of her love.
+ Let us adorn this sanctuary with flowers;
+ Let us deck her revered altar;
+ Let us redouble our efforts to please her.
+ Be this month consecrated to her;
+ Let the perfume of these crowns
+ Form a delicious incense, {352}
+ Which ascending even to her throne
+ May carry to her both our hearts and our prayers.
+ Let the holy name of Mary
+ Be for us a name of salvation!
+ Let our softened soul
+ Ever pay to her a sweet tribute of love.
+ Let us join the choirs of angels
+ The more to celebrate her beauty;
+ And may our songs of praise
+ Resound in eternity.
+ O holy Virgin! O our mother!
+ Watch over us from fhe height of heaven;
+ And when from this sojourning of misery,
+ We present our prayers to you;
+ O sweet, O divine Mary!
+ Lend an ear to our sighs,
+ And after this life
+ Make us to taste of immortal pleasures."
+
+ [Autour des autels de Marie
+ Nous ses enfants, empressons-nous;
+ A cette Mère si chérie,
+ Adressons les voeux les plus doux.
+ Qu'une vive et sainte allégresse
+ Nous anime dans ce saint jour;
+ Il n'existe point de tristesse
+ Pour un coeur plein de son amour.
+ Ornons des fleurs ce sanctuaire,
+ Parons son autel révéré,
+ Redoublons d'efforts pour lui plaire.
+ Que ce mois lui soi, consacré;
+ Que le parfume de ces couronnes
+ Forme un encens délicieux,
+ Qui s'élevant jusqu'à son trône,
+ Lui porte et nos coeurs et nos voeux.
+ Que le nom sacré de Marie
+ Soit pour nous un nom de salut;
+ Que toujours notre âme attendrie,
+ D'amour lui paie un doux tribut.
+ Unissons-nous aux choeurs des anges,
+ Pour mieux célébrer sa beauté.
+ Et puissent nos chants de louanges
+ Retentir dans l'éternité.
+ O Vierge sainte! ô notre Mère!
+ Veillez sur nous du haut des cieux;
+ Et de ce séjour de misère,
+ Quand nous vous présentons nos voeux,
+ O douce, ô divine Marie!
+ Prêtez l'oreille à nos soupirs;--
+ Et faites qu'après cette vie,
+ Nous goûtions d'immortels plaisirs.
+
+ --"Cantiques à l'usage des Confréries." Paris, 1839, p. 175.]
+
+In the course of the present work I have already suggested the propriety
+of trying the real import, {353} the true intent, and meaning and force
+of an address to a Saint, by substituting the holiest name ever uttered
+on earth, for the name of the Saint to whom such address is offered; and
+if the same words, without any change, form a prayer fit to be offered
+by us sinners to the Saviour of the world, then to ask ourselves, Can
+this be right? I would earnestly recommend the application of the same
+test here; and in many other of the prayers now offered (for many such
+there are now offered) by Roman Catholics to the Virgin. Suppose,
+instead of offering these songs of praise and prayer, and self-devotion
+to Mary in the month of May, we were to offer them, on the day of his
+nativity, to our blessed Lord, would they not form an act of faith in
+Him as our Saviour and our God?
+
+ "Around the altar of Jesus,
+ Let us, his children, press;
+ To that Saviour so endeared
+ Let us address the sweetest prayers. {354}
+ Let a lively and holy mirth
+ Animate us in this holy day:
+ There exists no sadness
+ For a heart full of his love.
+ Let the holy name of Jesus
+ Be for us a name of salvation!
+ Let our softened soul
+ Ever pay to HIM a sweet tribute of love.
+ O holy Jesus! O our Saviour!
+ Watch over us from the height of heaven;
+ And when from this sojourning of misery,
+ We present our prayers to Thee;
+ O sweet, O divine Redeemer,
+ Lend an ear to our sighs; and after this life,
+ Make Thou us to taste of immortal pleasures."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--BONAVENTURA.
+
+
+I will now briefly call your attention to the devotional works of the
+celebrated Bonaventura. He is no ordinary man; and the circumstances
+under which his works were commended to the world are indeed remarkable.
+I know not how a Church can give the impress of its own name and
+approval in a more full or unequivocal manner to the works of any human
+being, than the Church of Rome has stamped her authority on the works of
+this her saint.
+
+In the "Acta Sanctorum", [Antwerp, 1723, July 14, p. 811-823.] it is
+stated, that this celebrated man was born in 1221, and died in 1274. He
+passed through all degrees of ecclesiastical dignities, {355} short only
+of the pontifical throne itself. He was of the order of St. Francis, and
+refused the archbishopric of York, when it was offered to him by Pope
+Clement the Fourth, in 1265; whose successor, Gregory the Tenth,
+elevated him to the dignity of cardinal bishop. His biographer expresses
+his astonishment, that such a man's memory should have been so long
+buried with his body; but adds, that the tardiness of his honours was
+compensated by their splendour.
+
+More than two centuries after his death, his claims to canonization were
+urged upon Sixtus the Fourth; and that Pope raised him to the dignity of
+saint; the diploma of his canonization bearing date 18 kalends of May,
+1482, the eleventh year of that pope's reign.
+
+Before a saint is canonized by the Pope, it is usually required, that
+miracles wrought by him, or upon him, or at his tomb, be proved to the
+satisfaction of the Roman court[130]. We need not dwell on the nature of
+an inquiry into a matter-of-fact, alleged to have been done by an
+individual two hundred years before; and whose memory is said to have
+lain buried with his corpse. Among the miracles specified, it is
+recorded, that on one occasion, when he was filled with solemn awe and
+fear at the celebration of the Lord's Supper, God, by an angel, took a
+particle of the consecrated host from the hands of the priest, and
+gently placed it in the holy man's mouth. But, with these transactions,
+I am not anxious to interfere, except so far as to ascertain the degree
+of authority with which any pious Roman Catholic must be induced to
+invest Bonaventura as a teacher and instructor in the doctrines of
+Christianity, authorized and appointed by his Church. The case stands
+thus:--Pope Sixtus IV. states in his {356} diploma, that the proctor of
+the order of Minors, proved by a dissertation on the passage of St.
+John, "There are three that bear record in heaven," that the blessed
+Trinity had borne testimony to the fact of Bonaventura being a saint in
+heaven: the Father proving it by the attested miracles; the Son, in the
+WISDOM OF HIS DOCTRINE; the Holy Spirit, by the goodness of his life.
+The pontiff then adds, in his own words, "He so wrote on divine
+subjects, THAT THE HOLY SPIRIT SEEMS TO HAVE SPOKEN IN HIM." [Page 831.
+"Ea de divinis rebus scripsit, ut in eo Spiritus Sanctus locutus
+videatur."] A testimony referred to by Pope Sixtus the Fifth.
+
+ [Footnote 130: See the canonization of St. Bonaventura in the
+ Acta Sanctorum.]
+
+This latter pontiff was crowned May 1, 1585, more than a century after
+the canonization of Bonaventura, and more than three centuries after his
+death. By his order, the works of Bonaventura were "most carefully
+emendated." The decretal letters, A.D. 1588, pronounced him to be an
+acknowledged doctor of Holy Church, directing his authority to be cited
+and employed in all places of education, and in all ecclesiastical
+discussions and studies. The same act offers plenary indulgence to all
+who assist at the mass on his feast, in certain specified places, with
+other minor immunities on the conditions annexed. [Page 837.]
+
+In these documents Bonaventura[131] is called the Seraphic Doctor; and I
+repeat my doubt, whether it is possible for any human authority to give
+a more full, entire, and unreserved sanction to the works of any human
+being than the Church of Rome has given to {357} the writings of
+Bonaventura. And what do those works present to us, on the subject of
+the Invocation and worship of the Virgin Mary?
+
+ [Footnote 131: The edition of his works which I have used was
+ published at Mentz in 1609; and the passages referred to are in
+ vol. vi. between pp. 400 and 500.]
+
+Taking every one of the one hundred and fifty psalms[132], Bonaventura
+so changes the commencement of each, as to address them not as the
+inspired Psalmist did, to the Lord Jehovah, the One only Lord God
+Almighty, but to the Virgin Mary; inserting much of his own composition,
+and then adding the Gloria Patri to each. It is very painful to refer to
+these prostitutions of any part of the Holy Book of revealed truth; but
+we must not be deterred from looking this evil in the face. A few
+examples, however, will suffice.
+
+ [Footnote 132: It is curious to find the Cardinal Du Perron, in
+ his answer to our King James, declaring that he had never seen
+ nor met with this Psalter in his life, and he was sure it was
+ never written by Bonaventura; alleging that it was not mentioned
+ by Trithemius or Gesner. The Vatican editors, however, have set
+ that question at rest. They assure us that they have thrown into
+ the appendix all the works about the genuineness of which there
+ was any doubt, and that Bonaventura wrote many works not
+ mentioned by Trithemius, which they have published from the
+ Vatican press. Of this Psalter there is no doubt. See Cardinal
+ Du Perron, Replique à la Rep. du Roi de Grand Bretagne. Paris,
+ 1620, p. 974.]
+
+In the 30th psalm. "In thee, O Lord, have I trusted; let me not be
+confounded for ever," &c., the Psalter of the Virgin substitutes these
+words: [In te, Domina, speravi; non confundar in æternum, &c. &c. In
+manus tuas, Domina, commendo spiritum meum, totam vitam meam, et diem
+ultimum meum.--P. 480.]
+
+"In thee, O Lady, have I trusted; let me not be confounded for ever: in
+thy grace take me.
+
+"Thou art my fortitude and my refuge; my consolation and my protection.
+{358}
+
+"To thee, O Lady, have I cried, while my heart was in heaviness; and
+thou didst hear me from the top of the eternal hills.
+
+"Bring thou me out of the snare which they have hid for me; for thou art
+my succour.
+
+"Into thy hands, O Lady, I commend my spirit, my whole life, and my last
+day.--Gloria Patri," &c.
+
+In the 31st psalm we read, "Blessed are they whose hearts love thee, O
+Virgin Mary; their sins shall be mercifully blotted out BY THEE...."
+[Beati quorum corda te diligunt, Virgo Maria; peccata ipsorum A TE
+misericorditer diluentur.--P. 481.]
+
+In the 35th, v. 2. "Incline thou the countenance of God upon us; COMPEL
+HIM to have mercy upon sinners. O Lady, thy mercy is in the heaven, and
+thy grace is spread over the whole earth." [Inclina vultum Dei super
+nos. COGE illum peccatoribus misereri; Domina, in coelo misericordia
+tua, et gratia diffusa est super terram.]
+
+In the 67th, instead of, "Let God arise, and let his enemies be
+scattered," the Psalter of the Virgin has,
+
+"Let Mary arise, and let her enemies be scattered." [Exurgat Maria, et
+dissipentur inimici ejus.--P. 483.]
+
+In the opening of the 93rd psalm there is a most extraordinary, rather,
+as it sounds to me, a most impious and blasphemous comparison of the
+Supreme God with the Virgin Mary, in reference to the very Attribute,
+which shines first, last, and brightest in HIM,--His eternal mercy. Nay,
+it draws the contrast in favour of the Virgin, and against God. Most
+glad should I be, to find that I had misunderstood this passage; and
+that it admits of another acceptation[133]. But I fear its real meaning
+is beyond controversy.
+
+ [Footnote 133: A similar idea indeed pervades some addresses to
+ the Virgin of the present day, representing the great and only
+ potentate as her heavenly husband, in himself full of rage, but
+ softened into tenderness towards her votaries by her influence.
+ See a hymn, in the Paris collection already referred to, p. 353,
+ &c. of this work (Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques, p. 183).
+
+ Daignez, Marie, en ce jour Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day
+ Ecouter nos soupirs, To hear our sighs,
+ Et seconder nos désirs. And to second our desires.
+ Daignez, Marie, en ce jour Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day
+ Recevoir notre encens, notre amour. To receive our incense, our
+ love.
+ Du céleste époux Calm the rage
+ Calmez le courroux, Of thy heavenly husband,
+ Qu'il se montre doux Let HIM show himself kind
+ A tous qui sont à vous. To all those who are thine.
+ Du céleste époux Of thy heavenly husband
+ Calmez le courroux, Calm the rage,
+ Que son coeur s'attendrisse sur nous. Let his heart be softened
+ towards us. {359}
+ ]
+
+"The Lord is a God of vengeance; but thou, O Mother of Mercy, bendest to
+be merciful." [Deus ultionum Dominus; sed tu, Mater Misericordiæ, ad
+miserandum inflectis.--P. 485.]
+
+The well known and dearly valued penitentiary psalm (129th) "De
+profundis," is thus addressed to Mary:--
+
+"Out of the depths have I called to thee, O Lady:
+
+"O Lady, hear my voice. Let thine ears be attent to the voice of thy
+praise and glorifying: deliver me from the hand of my enemies: confound
+their imaginations and attempts against me. Rescue me in the evil day;
+and, in the day of death, forget not my soul. Carry me into the haven of
+safety: let my name be enrolled among the just." [De profundis clamavi
+ad te, Domina: Domina, exaudi vocem meam. Fiant aures tuæ intendentes in
+vocem laudis et glorificationis tuæ. Libera me de manu adversariorum
+meorum: confunde ingenia et conatus eorum contra me. Erue me in die
+mala: et in die mortis ne obliviscaris animæ meæ. Deduc me ad portum
+salutis: inter justos scribatur nomen meum.--P. 489.] {360}
+
+But, as the penitential psalms are thus turned, from Him to whom the
+Psalmist addressed them, so his hymns of praise to Jehovah, are made to
+flow through the same channel to the Virgin. And all nature in the sea,
+on the earth, in the heavens, and heaven of heavens, is called upon to
+praise and glorify Mary. Thus, in the 148th psalm, we read,--
+
+"Praise our Lady of heaven, glorify her in the highest. Praise her, all
+ye men and cattle, ye birds of the heaven, and fishes of the sea. Praise
+her, sun and moon; ye stars and circles of the planets. Praise her,
+cherubim and seraphim, thrones and dominions, and powers. Praise her,
+all ye legions of angels. Praise her, all ye orders of spirits above."
+[Laudate Dominam nostram de coelis: glorificate eam in excelsis. Laudate
+eam omnes homines et jumenta: volucres coeli et pisces maris. Laudate
+eam sol et luna: stellæ, et circuli planetarum. Laudate eam cherubim et
+seraphim: throni et dominationes, et potestates. Laudate eam omnes
+legiones angelorum. Laudate eam omnes ordines spirituum supernorum.--P.
+491.]
+
+The last sentence of the psalms is thus rendered,--"Let every spirit
+[_or_ every thing that hath breath] praise our Lady."
+
+To this Psalter are added many hymns changed in the same manner. One,
+entitled, "A Canticle, like that of Habakkuk iii." presents to us an
+address to the Virgin Mary, of the very words which our blessed Saviour
+most solemnly addressed to his heavenly Father.
+
+O Lord, I have heard thy O Lady, I have heard thy report,
+speech, and was afraid, &c. &c. and was astonished; I considered
+ thy works, O Lady, and
+ I was afraid at thy work. In the
+ midst of the years thou hast revived
+ it. {361}
+
+ I will confess to thee, O Lady,
+ because thou hast hid these things
+ from the wise, and hast revealed
+ them to babes.
+
+ Thy glory hath covered the
+ heavens, and the earth is full of
+ thy mercy.
+
+ Thou, O Virgin, wentest forth
+ for the salvation of thy people,
+ for salvation with thy Christ [thy
+ anointed].
+
+ O thou Blessed, our salvation
+ rests in thy hands. Remember
+ our poverty, O thou pious One.
+
+ WHOM THOU WILLEST, HE
+ SHALL BE SAVED; AND HE FROM
+ WHOM THOU TURNEST AWAY THY
+ COUNTENANCE, GOETH INTO DESTRUCTION.
+
+[Domina, audivi auditionem tuam, et obstupui: consideravi opera tua, et
+expavi, Domina, opus tuum: circa medium annorum vivificasti illud.
+
+Confitebor tibi, Domina: quia abscondisti hæc a sapientibus: et
+revelasti ea parvulis. Operuit coelos gloria tua, et misericordia tua
+plena est terra.
+
+Egressa es, Virgo, in salutem populi tui: in salutem cum Christo tuo. O
+Benedicta, in manibus tuis est reposita nostra salus; recordare, pia,
+paupertatis nostræ.
+
+Quem vis, ipse salvus erit, et a quo avertis vultum tuum, vadit in
+interitum.--G.P., &c.]
+
+The song of the Three Children is altered in the same manner. In it as
+well as in the Canticle of Zacharias, these prayers are introduced;
+
+"O Mother of Mercy, have mercy upon us miserable sinners; who neglect to
+repent of our past sins, and commit every day many to be repented of."
+[Miserere, misericordiæ Mater, nobis miseris peccatoribus, qui retroacta
+peccata poenitere negligimus, ac multa quotidie poenitenda committimus.]
+{362}
+
+The Te Deum is thus lamentably perverted:
+
+"We praise thee, Mother of God; we acknowledge thee, Mary the Virgin.
+[Te Matrem Dei laudamus; Te Mariam Virginem profitemur.]
+
+"All the earth doth worship thee, spouse of the eternal Father.
+
+"To thee all Angels and Archangels, Thrones and Principalities,
+faithfully do service....
+
+"To thee the whole angelic creation with incessant voice proclaim,
+
+"Holy! Holy! Holy! Mary, parent, mother of God, and virgin!...
+
+"... Thou with thy Son sittest at the right hand of the Father....
+
+"O Lady, SAVE THY PEOPLE, that we may partake of the inheritance of thy
+Son.
+
+"And rule us and guard us for ever....
+
+"Day by day we salute thee, O pious One; and we desire to praise thee in
+mind and voice even for ever.
+
+"Vouchsafe, O sweet Mary, now and for ever, to keep us without sin.
+
+"Have mercy upon us, O pious One; have mercy upon us.
+
+"Let thy great mercy be with us, because we put our trust in thee, O
+Virgin Mary.
+
+"In thee, sweet Mary, do we hope, defend thou us eternally. {363}
+
+"Praise becomes thee, empire becomes thee; to thee be virtue and glory
+for ever and ever. Amen."
+
+[SALVUM FAC POPULUM tuum, Domina, ut simus participes hæreditatis Filii
+tui,
+
+Et rege nos et custodi nos in æternum.
+
+Dignare, Dulcis Maria, mine et semper nos sine delicto conservare.
+Miserere, Pia, nobis! miserere nobis! Fiat misericordia tua magna
+nobiscum, quia in te, Virgo Maria, confidimus. In te, Dulcis Maria,
+speramus, nos defendas in æternum. Te decet laus, te decet imperium,
+tibi virtus et gloria in sæcula sæculorum, Amen.]
+
+Can this by any the most subtle refinement be understood to be a mere
+request to her to pray for us?
+
+The Athanasian Creed is employed in the same manner; and it is very
+remarkable that the Assumption itself of the Virgin into heaven is there
+specified as one of the points to be believed on pain of losing all
+hopes of salvation.
+
+"Whosoever will be saved, before all things it is necessary that he hold
+firm the faith concerning the Virgin Mary: which except a man keep whole
+and undefiled, without doubt he shall perish everlastingly....
+[Quicunque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est ut teneat de Maria
+firmam fidem.]
+
+"Whom at length He took up (assumpsit) unto heaven, and she sitteth at
+the right hand of her Son, not ceasing to pray to her Son for us. [Quam
+demum ipse in coelum assumpsit, et sedit ad dexteram Filii, non cessans
+pro nobis Filium exorare.]
+
+"This is the faith concerning Mary the Virgin, which except every one
+believe faithfully and firmly he cannot be saved." [Hæc est fides de
+Maria Virgine: quam nisi quisque fideliter firmiterque crediderit,
+salvus esse non poterit.]
+
+In the Litany addressed to her, these sentences are found.
+
+"Holy Mary, whom all things praise and venerate, pray for us,--be
+propitious,--spare us, O Lady.
+
+"From all evil deliver us, O Lady.
+
+"In the devastating hour of death, deliver us, O Lady.
+
+"From the horrible torments of hell, deliver us, O Lady.
+
+"We sinners do beseech thee to hear us.
+
+"That thou wouldest vouchsafe to give eternal rest {364} to all the
+faithful departed, we beseech thee to hear us. &c. &c."
+
+ [Sancta Maria, quam omnia laudant
+ Et venerantur, ora pro nobis.
+ Propitia esto. Parce nobis, Domina.
+ Ab omni malo libera nos, Domina.
+ In hora mortis devastante libera nos, Domina.
+ Ab inferni horribili cruciamine libera nos, Domina.
+ Peccatores te rogamus, audi nos.
+ Ut cunctis fidelibus defunctis requiem
+ Æternam donare digneris, te rogamus, audi nos.]
+
+I will add to this catalogue of prayers and praises to the Virgin, only
+the translation of one prayer more from the same canonized Saint; it
+contains a passage often referred to, but the existence of which has
+been denied. It stands, however, in his works, vol. vi. page 466.
+
+"Therefore, O Empress, and our most benign Lady, by THY RIGHT OF MOTHER
+COMMAND thy most beloved Son [JURE MATRIS IMPERA tuo dilectissimo
+Filio], our Lord, Jesus Christ, that He vouchsafe to raise our minds
+from the love of earthly things to heavenly desires, who liveth and
+reigneth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now let any man of common understanding and straightforward principles
+say, whether any, the most ingenious refinement can interpret all this
+to mean merely that Bonaventura invoked the Virgin Mary to pray for him,
+or for his fellow-creatures. It looks as though he were resolved on set
+purpose to exalt her to an equality with the Almighty, when we find him
+not once, not casually, not in the fervent rapture of momentary
+excitement, but deliberately, through one hundred and fifty Psalms,
+applying to Mary the very words dictated by the Holy Spirit to the
+Psalmist, and consecrated {365} to the worship of the one supreme God;
+and then selecting the most solemn expressions by which the Christian
+Church approaches the Lord of heaven and earth, our Father, our Saviour,
+our Sanctifier: employing too the very words of her most solemn form of
+belief in the ever-blessed Trinity, and substituting Mary's name for the
+God of Christians. On the words, "By thy right of mother command thy
+Son," beyond the assertion of the fact that there they are to this day,
+I wish to add nothing, because the very denial of their existence often
+repeated shows, that many Roman Catholics themselves regard them as
+objectionable.
+
+But, if such a man as Bonaventura, one of the most learned and
+celebrated men of his age, could be tempted by the views cherished by
+the Church of Rome, to indulge in such language, what can be fairly
+expected of the large mass of persons who find that language published
+to the world with the highest sanction which their religion can give, as
+the work of a man whom the Almighty declared when on earth, by miracles,
+to be a chosen vessel, and to be under the guidance of the Holy Spirit;
+and of whom they are taught by the infallible testimony[134] of his
+canonization, that he is now reigning with Christ in heaven, and is
+himself the lawful and appointed object of religious invocation. I
+profess to you that I see no way by which Christians can hold and
+encourage this doctrine of the Invocation of Saints, without at the same
+time countenancing and cherishing what, were I to join in such
+invocation, would stain my soul with the guilt of idolatry. If the
+doctrine were confessedly Scriptural, come what would come, our duty
+would be to maintain it at all hazards, {366} and to brave every danger
+rather than from fear of consequences to renounce what we believe to
+have come from God; securing the doctrine at all events, and then
+putting forth our very best to guard against its perversion and abuse.
+But surely, it well becomes our brethren of the Church of Rome, to
+examine with most rigid and unsparing scrutiny into the very foundation
+of such a doctrine as this; a doctrine which in its mildest and most
+guarded form is considered by a very large number of their fellow
+Christians, as a dishonouring of God and of his Son, our Saviour; and
+which in its excess, an excess witnessed in the books of learned and
+sainted authors, and in the every day practice of worshippers, seems to
+be in no wise distinguishable from the practices of acknowledged
+polytheism, and pagan worship. If that foundation, after honest and
+persevering examination, approves itself as based sure and deep on the
+word of God, and the faith and practice of the apostles and the Church
+founded by them from the first, I have not another word to say, beyond a
+fervent prayer that the God in whom we trust would pour the bright beams
+of his Gospel abundantly into the hearts of all who receive that Gospel
+as the word of life. But were they my dying words to my dearest friend
+who had espoused that doctrine, I would say to him, Look well yourself
+to the foundation, because I am, after long examination, convinced,
+beyond a shadow of doubt that the doctrine and practice of the
+Invocation of Saints and Angels is as contrary to the doctrine and
+practice of the primitive Church, as it is in direct opposition to the
+express words of Scripture, and totally abhorrent from the spirit which
+pervades the whole of the Old, and the whole of the New Testament of
+God's eternal truth.
+
+ [Footnote 134: Bellarmin, in his Church Triumphant, maintains
+ that in the act of Canonization, the Church is infallible. Vol.
+ ii. p. 871.] {367}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.--BIEL, DAMIANUS, BERNARDINUS DE BUSTIS, BERNARDINUS
+SENENSIS, &c.
+
+
+Unhappily these excesses in the worship of the Virgin Mary are not
+confined to Bonaventura, or to his age. We have too many examples of the
+same extravagant exaltation of her as an object of adoration and praise
+in men, whose station and abilities seemed to hold them forth to the
+world as burning and shining lights. Again, let me repeat, that in thus
+soliciting your attention to the doctrines and expressed feelings of a
+few from among the host of the Virgin's worshippers, I am far from
+believing that the enlightened Roman Catholics in England now are ready
+to respond to such sentiments. My desire is that all persons should be
+made aware of the excesses into which even celebrated teachers have been
+tempted to run, when they once admitted the least inroad to be made upon
+the integrity of God's worship; and I am anxious also, without offence,
+but with all openness, to caution my countrymen against encouraging that
+revival of the worship of the Virgin in England, to promote which the
+highest authorities in the Church of Rome have lately expressed their
+solicitude, intimating, at the same time, their regret that the worship
+of the Virgin at the present time has, in England, degenerated from its
+exaltation in former ages, and that England is now far behind her
+continental neighbours in her worship. Though these excessive departures
+from Gospel truth and the primitive worship of one God by one Mediator
+may not be the doctrines of all who belong to the Church of Rome, yet
+they are the tenets of some of her most {368} celebrated doctors, of men
+who were raised to her highest dignities in their lifetime, and solemnly
+enrolled by her among the saints of glory after their death. Their words
+and their actions are appealed to now in support of similar tenets and
+doctrines, though few, in this country at least, are found to put them
+forth in all their magnitude and fulness. But even in their mildest and
+least startling form these doctrines are awfully dangerous.
+
+The fact is, that the direct tendency of the worship of the Virgin, as
+practically illustrated in the Church of Rome, is to make GOD himself an
+object of FEAR, and the VIRGIN an object of LOVE; to invest Him, who is
+the Father of mercy and God of all comfort, with awfulness, and majesty,
+and with the terrors of eternal justice, and in direct and striking
+contrast to array the Virgin mother with mercy and benignity, and
+compassionate tenderness. Christians cannot be too constantly and too
+carefully on their guard against doing this wrong to our heavenly
+Father. His own inspired word invites us to regard Him not only as the
+God of love, but as Love itself. "God is love;" [1 John iv. 8.] and so
+far from terrifying us by representations of his tremendous majesty, and
+by declarations that we cannot ourselves draw nigh to God; so far from
+bidding us to approach Him with our suits and supplications through
+mediators whom we should regard as having, more than our blessed
+Redeemer, a fellow-feeling with us, and at the same time resistless
+influence with Him; his own invitation and assurance is, "Come unto me,
+and I will give you rest:" [Matt. xi. 28.] "No one cometh unto the
+Father but by me:" [John xiv. 6.] "Him that cometh to me I will {369} in
+no wise cast out:" [John vi. 37.] "Let us come boldly unto the throne of
+grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of
+need." [Heb. iv. 16.]
+
+How entirely opposed to such passages as these, breathing the spirit
+that pervades the whole Bible, are those doctrines which represent the
+Virgin Mary as the Mediatrix by whom we must sue for the divine
+clemency; as the dispenser of all God's mercies and graces; as the
+sharer of God's kingdom, as the fountain of pity, as the moderator of
+God's justice, and the appeaser of his wrath. "Show thyself a mother."
+"Compel thy Son to have pity." "By thy right of mother command thy Son."
+"God is a God of vengeance; but thou, Mary, dost incline to mercy;" such
+expressions convey sentiments and associations shocking to our feelings,
+and from which our reason turns away, when we think of God's
+perfections, and the full atonement and omnipotent intercession of his
+Son Christ our Redeemer. But it must not be disguised, that these are
+the very sentiments in which the most celebrated defenders of the
+worship of the Virgin, in the Church of Rome, teach their disciples to
+acquiesce, and in which they must have themselves fully acquiesced, if
+they practised what they taught. It is very painful to make such
+extracts as leave us no alternative in forming our opinions on this
+point; but it is necessary to do so, otherwise we may injure the cause
+of truth by suppressing the reality; a reality over which there seems to
+be a strong disposition, in the present day, in part at least, to draw a
+veil; an expedient which can only increase the danger.
+
+The first author, whose sentiments I would request you to weigh, is
+Gabriel Biel, a schoolman of great celebrity[135]. {370} In his
+thirty-second lecture, on the Canon of the Mass, he thus expresses
+himself, referring to a sermon of St. Bernard, "The will of God was,
+that we should have all through Mary.... You were afraid to approach the
+Father, frightened by only hearing of Him.... He gave you Jesus for a
+Mediator. What could not such a Son obtain with such a Father? He will
+surely be heard for his own reverence-sake; for the Father loveth the
+Son. But, are you afraid to approach even Him? He is your brother and
+your flesh; tempted through all, that He might become merciful. THIS
+BROTHER MARY GAVE TO YOU. But, perhaps, even in Him you fear the divine
+Majesty, because, although He was made man, yet He remained God. You
+wish to have an advocate even to Him. Betake yourself to Mary. For, in
+Mary is pure humanity, not only pure from all contamination, but pure
+also by the singleness of her nature[136]. Nor should I, with any doubt
+say, she too will be heard for her own reverence-sake. The Son, surely,
+will hear the Mother, and the Father will hear the Son."
+
+ [Footnote 135: Tubingen, 1499. Gabriel Biel, born at Spires
+ about A.D. 1425, was in A.D. 1484 appointed the first Professor
+ of Theology in the then newly founded University of Tubingen. He
+ afterwards retired to a monastery, and died A.D. 1495.]
+
+ [Footnote 136: This is a very favourite argument in the present
+ day, often heard in the pulpits on the Continent.]
+
+In his 80th lecture, the same author comments on this prayer, which is
+still offered in the service of the Mass:
+
+"Deliver us, we beseech thee, O Lord, from all evils past, present, and
+future; and by the intercession of the blessed and glorious ever-virgin
+mother of God, Mary, with thy blessed apostles, Peter and Paul, and
+Andrew, and all saints, mercifully grant peace in our days, that, aided
+by the help of thy mercy, we may be both ever {371} free from sin, and
+free from all disquietude. Through the same our Lord, &c."
+
+On this prayer Biel observes, "Again we ask, in this prayer, the defence
+of peace; and since we cannot, nor do we presume to obtain this by our
+own merit, ... therefore, in order to obtain this, we have recourse, in
+the second part of this prayer, to the suffrages of all his saints, whom
+He hath constituted, in the court of his kingdom, as our mediators, most
+acceptable to himself, whose prayers his love does not reject. But, of
+them, we fly, in the first place, to the most blessed Virgin, the Queen
+of Heaven, to whom the King of kings, the heavenly Father, has given the
+half of his kingdom; which was signified in Hester, the queen, to whom,
+when she approached to appease king Asuerus, the king said to her, Even
+if thou shalt ask the half of my kingdom, it shall be given thee. So the
+heavenly Father, inasmuch as He has justice and mercy as the more valued
+possessions of his kingdom, RETAINING JUSTICE TO HIMSELF, GRANTED MERCY
+to the Virgin Mother. We, therefore, ask for peace, by the intercession
+of the blessed and glorious Virgin." [Cum habeat justitiam et
+misericordiam tanquam potiora regni sui bona, justitia sibi retenta,
+misericordiam Matri Virgini concessit.]
+
+The very same partition of the kingdom of heaven, is declared to have
+been made between God himself and the Virgin by one who was dignified by
+the name of the "venerable and most Christian Doctor," John Gerson[137],
+who died in 1429; excepting that, instead of justice and mercy, Gerson
+mentions power and mercy as the two parts of which God's kingdom
+consists, and that, whilst power remained with the Lord, the part of
+mercy ceded "to the mother of Christ, and the reigning {372} spouse;
+hence, by the whole Church, she is saluted as Queen of Mercy."
+
+ [Footnote 137: Paris, 1606. Tract iv. Super "Magnificat," part
+ iii. p. 754. See Fabricius, vol. iii. p. 49. Patav. 1754.]
+
+I would next refer to a writer who lived four centuries before Biel, but
+whose works received the papal sanction so late as the commencement of
+the seventeenth century, Petrus Damianus, Cardinal and Bishop. His works
+were published at the command of Pope Clement VIII., who died A.D. 1604,
+and were dedicated to his successor, Paul V., who gave the copyright for
+fifteen years to the Editor, Constantine Cajetan, A.D. 1606. I will
+quote only one passage from this author. It is found in his sermon on
+the nativity of the Virgin, whom he thus addresses: "Nothing is
+impossible with thee, with whom it is possible to restore those in
+despair to the hope of blessedness. For how could that authority, which
+derived its flesh from thy flesh, oppose thy power? For thou approachest
+before that golden altar of human reconciliation not only asking, but
+commanding; a mistress, not a handmaid." [Accedis enim ante illud aureum
+humanæ reconciliationis altare, non solum rogans, sed imperans; Domina,
+non ancilla. Paris, 1743. vol. ii. p. 107. Serm. 44.]
+
+I must now solicit your attention to the sentiments of two writers,
+whose partial identity of name has naturally led, in some instances, to
+the one being mistaken for the other, Bernardinus de Bustis, and
+Bernardinus Senensis. Bernardinus de Bustis, [Fabricius, vol. i. 215.]
+in the country of Milan, was the celebrated author of the "Office of the
+Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin," which was confirmed by the
+bull of Sixtus the Fourth, and has since been celebrated on the 8th of
+December.
+
+He composed different works in honour of the Virgin, {373} to one of
+which he gave the title "Mariale." In this work, with a great variety of
+sentiments of a similar tendency, he thus expresses himself:--
+
+"Of so great authority in the heavenly palace is that empress, that,
+omitting all other intermediate saints, we may appeal to her from every
+grievance.... With confidence, then, let every one appeal to her,
+whether he be aggrieved by the devil, or by any tyrant, or by his own
+body, or by divine justice;" [Cologne, 1607. Part iii. Serm. ii. p.
+176.] and then, having specified and illustrated the three other sources
+of grievance, he thus proceeds: "In the fourth place, he may APPEAL TO
+HER, if any one feels himself AGGRIEVED BY THE JUSTICE OF GOD [Licet ad
+ipsam appellare, si quis a Dei justitia se gravari sentit.] ... That
+empress, therefore, Hester, was a figure of this empress of the heavens,
+with whom God divided his kingdom. For, whereas God has justice and
+mercy, He retained justice to himself to be exercised in this world, and
+granted mercy to his mother; and thus, if any one feels himself to be
+aggrieved in the court of God's justice, let him appeal to the court of
+mercy of his mother." [Ideo si quis sentit se gravari in foro justitiæ
+Dei, appellet ad forum misericordiæ matris ejus.]
+
+For one moment, let us calmly weigh the import of these words:--Is it
+any thing short of robbing the Eternal Father of the brightest jewel in
+his crown, and sharing his glory with another? Is it not encouraging us
+to turn our eyes from the God of mercy as a stern and ruthless judge,
+and habitually to fix them upon Mary as the dispenser of all we want for
+the comfort and happiness of our souls?
+
+In another place, this same author thus exalts Mary:
+
+"Since the Virgin Mary is mother of God, and God is her Son; and every
+son is naturally inferior to his {374} mother, and subject to her; and
+the mother is preferred above, and is superior to her son, it follows
+that the blessed Virgin is herself superior to God, and God himself is
+her subject, by reason of the humanity derived from her;" [Part ix.
+Serm. ii. p. 605.] and again. "O the unspeakable dignity of Mary, who
+was worthy to command the Commander of all." [Part xii. Serm, ii. p.
+816.]
+
+I will detain you by only one more quotation from this famed Doctor. It
+appears to rob God of his justice and power, as well as of his mercy;
+and to turn our eyes to Mary for the enjoyment of all we can desire, and
+for safety from all we can dread. Would that Bernardine stood alone in
+the propagation of such doctrines. "We may say, that the blessed Virgin
+is chancellor in the court of heaven. For we see, that in the chancery
+of our lord the pope, three kinds of letters are granted: some are of
+simple justice, others are of pure grace, and the third mixed,
+containing justice and grace.... The third chancellor is he to whom it
+appertains to give letters of pure grace and mercy. And this office hath
+the blessed Virgin; and therefore she is called the mother of grace and
+mercy: but those letters of mercy she gives only in the present life.
+For, to some souls, as they are departing, she gives letters of pure
+grace; to others, of simple justice; and to others, mixed, namely, of
+justice and grace. For some were very much devoted to her, and to them
+she gives letters of pure grace, by which she COMMANDS, that glory be
+given to them without any pain of purgatory: others were miserable
+sinners, and not devoted to her, and to them she gives letters of simple
+justice, by which she COMMANDS that condign vengeance be done upon them;
+others were lukewarm and remiss in devotion, and to them she gives
+letters of justice and grace, by which {375} she COMMANDS that grace be
+given to them, and yet, on account of their negligence and sloth, some
+pain of purgatory be also inflicted on them." [Part xii. Serm. ii. On
+the twenty-second excellence, p. 825.]
+
+The only remaining author, to whom I will at present refer you, is a
+canonized saint, Bernardinus Senensis. A full account of his life, his
+miracles, and his enrolment among the saints in heaven, is found in the
+Acta Sanctorum, vol. v. under the 20th of May, the day especially
+dedicated to his honour. Eugenius IV. died before the canonization of
+Bernardine could be completed: the next pope, Nicholas V. on Whitsunday
+1450, in full conclave, enrolled him among the saints, to the joy, we
+are told, of all Italy. In 1461, Pius the Second said that Bernardine
+was taken for a saint even in his lifetime; and, in 1472, Sixtus IV.
+issued a bull, in which he extols the saint, and authorizes the
+translation of his body into a new church, dedicated, as others had
+been, to his honour.
+
+This Bernardine is equally explicit with others, in maintaining, that
+all the blessings which Christians can receive on earth are dispensed by
+Mary; that her princedom equals the princedom of the Eternal Father;
+that all are her servants and subjects, who are the subjects and
+servants of the Most High; that all who adore the Son of God should
+adore his virgin-mother, and that the Virgin has repaid the Almighty for
+all that He has done for the human race. Some of these doctrines were to
+me quite startling; I was not prepared for them; but I have been assured
+they find an echo in the pulpits in many parts of the continent. Very
+few quotations will suffice. [Opera, per John de la Haye. Paris, 1636.
+Five volumes bound in two.] {376}
+
+"As many creatures do service to the glorious Mary, as do service to the
+Trinity.... For he who is the Son of God, and of the blessed Virgin,
+wishing (so to speak) to make, in a manner, the princedom of his mother
+equal to the princedom of his father, he who was God, served his mother
+on earth. Moreover, this is true, all things, even the Virgin, are
+servants of the divine empire; and again, this is true, all things, even
+God, are servants of the empire of the Virgin." [Vol. iv. Serm. v. c.
+vi. p. 118.]
+
+"Therefore, all the angelic spirits are the ministers and servants of
+this glorious Virgin." [Serm. iii. c. iii. p. 104.]
+
+"To comprise all in a brief sentence, I do not doubt that God made all
+the liberations and pardons in the Old Testament on account of the
+reverence and love of this blessed maid, by which God preordained from
+eternity, that she should be, by predestination, honoured above all his
+works. On account of the immense love of the Virgin, as well Christ
+himself, as the whole most blessed Trinity, frequently grants pardon to
+the most wicked sinners." [Serm. v. c. ii. p. 116.]
+
+"By the law of succession, and the right of inheritance, the primacy and
+kingdom of the whole universe is due to the blessed Virgin. Nay, when
+her only Son died on the cross, since He had no one on earth to succeed
+Him of right, his mother, by the laws of all, succeeded, and by this
+acquired the principality of all. [Serm. v. c. vii. p. 118.] ... But, of
+the monarchy of the universe, Christ never made any testamentary
+bequest, because that could never be done without prejudice to his
+mother. Moreover, HE KNEW THAT A MOTHER CAN ANNUL THE {377} WILL OF HER
+SON, IF IT BE MADE TO THE PREJUDICE OF HERSELF." [Insuper noverat quod
+potest mater irritare Filii testamentum si in sui præjudicium sit
+confectum.--P. 118.]
+
+"The Virgin Mother[138], from the time she conceived God, obtained a
+certain jurisdiction and authority in every temporal procession of the
+Holy Spirit, so that no creature could obtain any grace of virtue from
+God except according to the dispensation of his Virgin mother[139]. As
+through the neck the vital breathings descend from the head into the
+body, so the vital graces are transfused from the head Christ into his
+mystical body, through the Virgin. I fear not to say, that this Virgin
+has a certain jurisdiction over the flowing of all graces. And, because
+she is the mother of such a Son of God, who produces the Holy Spirit;
+THEREFORE, ALL THE GIFTS, VIRTUES, AND GRACES OF THE HOLY SPIRIT ARE
+ADMINISTERED BY THE HANDS OF HERSELF, TO WHOM SHE WILL, WHEN SHE WILL,
+HOW SHE WILL, AND IN WHAT QUANTITY SHE WILL." [Serm. v. p. 119.]
+
+ [Footnote 138: Serm. v. c. viii. and Serm. vi. c. ii. p. 120 and
+ 122. There is an omission (probably by an error of the press) in
+ the first passage, which the second enables us to supply.]
+
+ [Footnote 139: This writer is constantly referring to St.
+ Bernard's doctrine, "No grace comes from heaven upon the earth,
+ but what passes through the hands of Mary."]
+
+"She is the queen of mercy, the temple of God, the habitation of the
+Holy Spirit, always sitting at the right hand of Christ in eternal
+glory. Therefore she is to be venerated, to be saluted, and to be adored
+with the adoration of hyperdulia. And therefore she sits at the right
+hand of the King, that as often as you adore Christ the king you may
+adore also the mother of Christ." [Serm. vi. p. 121.]
+
+"The blessed Virgin Mary alone has done more for {378} God; or as much
+(so to speak) as God hath done for the whole human race. For I verily
+believe that God will grant me indulgence if I now speak for the Virgin.
+Let us gather together into one what things God hath done for man, and
+let us consider what satisfaction the Virgin Mary hath rendered to the
+Lord." Bernardine here enumerates many particulars, placing one against
+the other, which for many reasons I cannot induce myself to transfer
+into these pages, and then he sums up the whole thus: "Therefore,
+setting each individual thing one against another, namely, what things
+God had done for man, and what things the blessed Virgin has done for
+God, you will see that Mary has done more for God, than God has for man;
+so that thus, on account of the blessed Virgin, (whom, nevertheless, He
+himself made,) God is in a certain manner under greater obligations to
+us than we are to Him." [Serm. vi. p. 120.]
+
+The whole treatise he finishes with this address to the Virgin:--
+
+"Truly by mere babbling are we uttering these thy praises and
+excellences; but we suppliantly pray thy immense sweetness. Do thou, by
+thy benignity, supply our insufficiencies, that we may worthily praise
+thee through the endless ages of ages. Amen."
+
+In closing these brief extracts I would observe, that by almost every
+writer in support of the worship of the Virgin, an appeal is made to St.
+Bernard[140] as their chief authority. Especially is the following
+passage quoted by many, either whole or in part, at almost every turn of
+their argument:--
+
+ [Footnote 140: The present Pope, in the same manner, refers to
+ him in his Encyclical Letter.--A.D. 1840.]
+
+"If thou art disturbed by the heinousness of thy crimes, and confounded
+by the foulness of thy conscience, {379} if terrified by the horror of
+judgment thou begin to be swallowed up in the gulf of despair, think of
+Mary, invoke Mary; let her not depart from thy heart, let her not depart
+from thy mouth. For whilst thinking of her, thou dost not err; imploring
+her, thou dost not despair; following her, thou dost not lose thy way;
+whilst she holds thee, thou dost not fall; whilst she protects thee,
+thou dost not fear; whilst she is thy leader, thou art not wearied;
+whilst she is favourable, thou reachest thy end[141]."
+
+ [Footnote 141: See Bern. Sen. vol. iv. p. 124. The passage is
+ found in Bernard, Paris, 1640. p. 25.]
+
+If the Virgin Mary is thus regarded as the source and well-head of all
+safety and blessing, we cannot wonder, that glory and praise are
+ascribed in the selfsame terms to her as to the Almighty. Cardinal
+Bellarmin closes the several portions of his writings with "Praise to
+God and the blessed Virgin Mary[142]." It is painful to reflect, that
+either the highest glory, due to that God who will not share his glory
+with another, is here ascribed to one of the creatures of his hand
+(however highly favoured and full of grace), or else that to the most
+high God is ascribed an inferior glory and praise, such as it is lawful
+for us to address to an exalted fellow-creature. Surely the only
+ascription fitting the lips and the heart of those who have been
+enlightened by the bright beams of Gospel truth, is Glory to God alone
+through Christ his Son.
+
+ [Footnote 142: Such ascriptions are very common. Joannes de
+ Carthagena, a most voluminous writer of homilies, adopts this as
+ the close of his sections: "Praise and glory to the Triune God,
+ to the Humanity of Christ, to the Blessed Virgin Mary his
+ mother, and to St. Joseph her dearest spouse."--Catholic
+ Homilies on the Sacred Secrets of the Mother of God, and Joseph,
+ p. 921. Paris, 1615.] {380}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION V.--MODERN WORKS OF DEVOTION AMONG ROMAN CATHOLICS.
+
+
+It may perhaps be surmised, that the authors referred to in the last
+section lived many years ago, and that the sentiments of the faithful
+members of the Church of Rome have undergone material changes on these
+points. Assurances are given on every side, that the invocation of the
+saints and of the Virgin is nothing more than a request, that they would
+intercede with God, and implore his mercy for the suppliants. But
+whatever implicit reliance we may place on the good faith with which
+these declarations are made, we can discover no new key by which to
+interpret the forms of prayer and praise satisfactorily. Confessedly
+there are no changes in the authorized services. We discover no traces
+of change in the worship of private devotion. The Breviary and Missal
+contain the same offices of the Virgin Mary as in former days. The same
+sentiments are expressed towards her in public; the same forms of
+devotion[143], both in prayer and praise, are prepared for the use of
+individuals in their daily exercises. Whatever meaning is to be attached
+to the expressions employed, the prevailing expressions themselves
+remain the same as we found them to have been in past ages.
+
+ [Footnote 143: Works of this character abound in every place,
+ where Catholic books may be purchased.]
+
+Since I made these extracts from the learned and celebrated doctors and
+canonized saints of former ages, my attention has been invited to the
+language now {381} used in forms of devotion, the spirit of which
+implies similar views of the power and love of the Virgin Mary, as the
+fountain of mercies to mankind, and the dispenser of every heavenly
+blessing.
+
+At the head of these modern works, I was led to read over again the
+encyclical letter of the present sovereign pontiff, from the closing
+sentences of which I have already made extracts. And referring his words
+to a test which we have more than once applied in a similar case--that
+of changing the name of the person, and substituting the name of God, or
+his blessed Son, I cannot see how the spirit of his sentiments falls in
+the least below the highest degree of religious worship. His words, in
+the third paragraph of his letter, as they appear in the Laity's
+Directory for 1833, are these:--
+
+"But having at length taken possession of our see in the Lateran Basilic
+according to the custom and institution of our predecessors, we turn to
+you without delay, venerable brethren, and in testimony of our feelings
+towards you, we select for the date of our letter this most joyful day
+on which we celebrate the solemn festival of the most blessed Virgin's
+triumphant assumption into heaven, that she who has been through every
+great calamity our patroness and protectress, may WATCH OVER US WRITING
+TO YOU, AND LEAD OUR MIND BY HER HEAVENLY INFLUENCE to those counsels
+which may prove most salutary to Christ's flock."
+
+Let us substitute for the name of Mary, the holiest of all, The Eternal
+Spirit of Jehovah Himself; and will not these words be a proper vehicle
+of the sentiments of a Christian pastor? Let us fix upon Christmas-day,
+or Easter, or Holy Thursday, and what word expressive {382} of gratitude
+for past mercies to the supreme Giver of all good things, or of hope and
+trust in the guidance of the Spirit of counsel, and wisdom, and
+strength--of the most High God, who alone can order the wills and ways
+of men--might not a bishop of Christ's flock take from this declaration
+of the Sovereign Pontiff, and use in its first and natural sense, when
+speaking of the Lord Jehovah Himself? "We select for the date of our
+letter this most joyful day on which we celebrate the solemn festival of
+the most blessed Redeemer's nativity, (or glorious resurrection, or
+ascension,) that He who has been through every great calamity our patron
+and protector, may watch over us writing to you, and lead our mind by
+his heavenly influence to those counsels which may prove most salutary
+to Christ's flock."
+
+In these sentiments of the present Pope there is no allusion (as there
+is in the other clause) to Mary's prayers and intercessions. Looking to
+and weighing the words employed, and as far as words can be relied upon
+as interpreters of the thoughts, looking to the spirit of his
+profession, only one inference can be fairly drawn. However direct and
+immediate the prayers of the suppliants may be to the Virgin for her
+protection and defence from all dangers, spiritual and bodily, and for
+the guidance of the inmost thoughts in the right way, (blessings which
+we of the Anglican Catholic Church, following the footsteps of the
+primitive flock of Christ, have always looked for at the hand of God
+Almighty only, to be granted by Him for the sake of his blessed Son,)
+such petitioners to Mary would be sanctioned to the utmost by the
+principles and example of the present Roman Pontiff.
+
+We have already, when examining the records of {383} the Council of
+Chalcedon, compared the closing words of this encyclical letter with the
+more holy and primitive aspirations of the Bishops of Rome and
+Constantinople in those earlier days; and the comparison is striking
+between the sentiments now expressed in the opening parts of the same
+letter, and the spirit of the collects which were adopted for the use of
+the faithful, before the invocation of saints and of the Virgin had
+gained its present strong hold in the Church of Rome. For example, a
+collect at Vespers teaches us to pray to God as the source from whom all
+holy desires and all good counsels proceed [Hiem. 149.]; and on the
+fifth Sunday after Easter this prayer is offered: "O God, from whom all
+good things do come, grant, we pray Thee, that by thy inspiration we may
+think those things that be good; and by thy guidance may perform the
+same;" whilst on the fifth Sunday after the Epiphany, in a collect, the
+spirit of which is strongly contrasted with the sentiments in both parts
+of this encyclical letter, God is thus addressed: "We beseech thee, O
+Lord, with thy continual pity, guard thy family, that, leaning on the
+sole hope of heavenly grace, it may ever be defended by thy protection."
+[Ut quæ in _sola_ spe gratiæ coelestis innititur, tua semper protectione
+muniatur.--Hiem, 364. "Let us raise our eyes to the Blessed Virgin, who
+is our greatest hope, yea, the entire ground of our hope."]
+
+Similar materials are abundant. A whole volume, indeed, might readily be
+composed consisting solely of rules and instructions, confessions and
+forms of prayer, appertaining to the Virgin and the Saints, published by
+authority at the present day, both in our country and on the Continent,
+for the use of our Roman Catholic {384} brethren; but to which the word
+of God, and the doctrine and practice of the primitive Church, are in
+our estimation as much opposed as to the prayers of Bonaventura, or to
+the doctrine of either of the Bernardins. It would, however, be
+unprofitable to dwell on this subject at any great length. I will,
+therefore, only briefly refer to two publications of this sort, to which
+my own attention has been accidentally drawn: "The Imitation of the
+Blessed Virgin,"[144] and "The Little Testament of the Holy
+Virgin."[145]
+
+ [Footnote 144: "The Imitation of the Blessed Virgin, composed on
+ the plan of the Imitation of Christ. London, 1816. Approved by
+ T.R. Asselini, Doctor of Sorbonne, last Bishop of Boulogne. From
+ the French."]
+
+ [Footnote 145: "The Little Testament of the Holy Virgin,
+ translated from the French, and revised by a Catholic Priest.
+ Third Edition. Dublin, 1836."]
+
+The first professes to be "composed on the plan of the 'Imitation of
+Christ.'" This is, in itself, highly objectionable; its tendency is to
+exalt Mary, by association, to the same place in our hearts and minds,
+which Thomas à Kempis had laboured, in his "Imitation of Christ," to
+secure for the Saviour; and it reminds us of the proceedings of
+Bonaventura, who wrote psalms to the honour of the Virgin after the
+manner which David used in his hymns to the Lord of Glory. In this work
+we read the following prayer to the Virgin, which seems to be stained
+with the error, the existence of which elsewhere we have already
+noticed, of contrasting the justice and the stern dealings even of the
+Saviour, with the mercy, and loving-kindness, and fellow-feeling of
+Mary; making God an object of fear, Mary an object of love.
+
+"Mother of my Redeemer, O Mary, in the last moments {385} of my life, I
+implore thy assistance with more earnestness than ever. I find myself,
+as it were, placed between heaven and hell. Alas! what will become of
+me, if thou do not exert, in my behalf, thy powerful influence with
+Jesus?... I die with SUBMISSION since JESUS has ORDAINED it; but
+notwithstanding the natural horror which I have of death, I die with
+PLEASURE, because I die under THY protection." [Chap. xiii. p. 344.]
+
+In the fourteenth chapter the following passage occurs: "It is giving to
+the blessed Virgin a testimony of love particularly dear and precious to
+her, to make her holy spouse Joseph the first object of our devotion,
+next to that which consecrates us to her service.... The name of Joseph
+is invoked with singular devotion by all the true faithful. They
+frequently join it with the sacred names of Jesus and Mary. Whilst Jesus
+and Mary lived at Nazareth, if we had wished to obtain some favour from
+them, could we have employed a more powerful protector than St. Joseph?
+Will he now have less power and credit? GO THEREFORE TO JOSEPH, (Gen.
+xli. 55.) that he may intercede for you. Whatever favour you ask, God
+will grant it you at his request.... Go to Joseph in all your
+necessities; but especially to obtain the grace of a happy death. The
+general opinion that he died in the arms of Jesus and Mary has inspired
+the faithful with great confidence, that, through his intercession, they
+will have an end as happy and consoling as his. In effect, it has been
+remarked, that it is particularly at the hour of death that those who
+have been during their life careful to honour this great saint, reap the
+fruit of their devotion." [P. 347.]
+
+In this passage the unworthy idea, itself formed on a groundless
+tradition, is introduced of paying reverence {386} to one saint, in
+order to gratify and conciliate another. Joseph must be especially
+honoured in order to do what is most acceptable to Mary. Surely this
+tends to withdraw the mind from that habitual reference of all our
+actions immediately to God, which the primitive teachers were so anxious
+to cultivate in all Christians.
+
+In the "Little Testament of the Holy Virgin," the following (p. 46) is
+called, "A Prayer to the blessed Virgin." Can any words place more on an
+entire level with each other, the eternal Son of God and the Virgin?
+"Jesus and Mary?!"
+
+"O Mary! what would be our poverty and misery if the Father of Mercies
+had not drawn you from his treasury to give you to earth! Oh! my Life
+and Consolation, I trust and confide in your holy name. My heart wishes
+to love you; my mouth to praise you; my mind to contemplate you; my soul
+sighs to be yours. Receive me, defend me, preserve me; I cannot perish
+in your hands. Let the demons tremble when I pronounce your holy name,
+since you have ruined their empire; but we shall say with Saint Anselm,
+that he does not know God, who has not an idea sufficiently high of your
+greatness and glory. We shall esteem it the greatest honour to be of the
+number of your servants. Let your glory, blessed Mother, be equal to the
+extent of your name; reign, after God, over all that is beneath God;
+but, above all, reign in my heart; you will be my consolation in
+suffering, my strength in weakness, my counsel in doubt. At the name of
+Mary my hope shall be enlightened, my love inflamed. Oh! that I could
+deeply engrave the dear name on every heart, suggest it to every tongue,
+and make all celebrate it with me. Mary! sacred name, under which no one
+{387} should despair. Mary! sacred name, often assaulted, but always
+victorious. Mary! it shall be my life, my strength, my comfort! Every
+day shall I envoke IT AND THE DIVINE NAME OF JESUS. The Son will awake
+the recollection of the mother, and the mother that of the Son. JESUS
+AND MARY! this is what my heart shall say at the last hour, if my tongue
+cannot; I shall hear them on my death bed,--they shall be wafted on my
+expiring breath, and I with them, to see THEM, know THEM, bless and love
+THEM for eternity. Amen."
+
+There may, perhaps, be a reasonable ground for our hoping that these are
+not the sentiments entertained by the enlightened Roman Catholics of our
+country and age. Any one has a full right to say, "These are productions
+of individuals for which we and the Church to which we belong are not
+responsible, any more than the Church of England is responsible for all
+doctrines and sentiments expressed by writers in her communion! Even the
+sentiments above referred to of the present reigning pope, you have no
+right to allege as the doctrines of the Church!" But I would again
+venture to suggest to every one, who would thus speak, the duty of
+ascertaining for himself, whether the sentiments of those who at present
+fill the highest places, and which fully justify these devotional
+exercises and prayers to the Virgin and the Saints, be not themselves
+fully justified by the authorized ritual of the Roman Church. On this
+point are supplied, even in this volume, materials sufficiently
+diversified and abundant in quantity to enable any one to form a correct
+judgment.
+
+By two brief extracts I will now bring this branch of our inquiry to a
+close. The first is from the concluding paragraphs of a discourse lately
+delivered and {388} published. In principle, the sentiments here
+professed apparently admit not only of being identified with those of
+the authorized services of the Church of Rome, but also, though not so
+naked and revolting in appearance as the doctrines of Bonaventura, Biel,
+and the two Bernardins, yet in reality they equally depart from the
+simplicity of the Gospel, and are equally at direct variance with that,
+its first and its last principle, ONE GOD AND ONE MEDIATOR BETWEEN GOD
+AND MEN, THE MAN CHRIST JESUS.
+
+"Remember that this day you have put yourselves and your families under
+the protection of the ever-blessed Mother of God, and Her chaste Spouse,
+St. Joseph; of those who were chosen of God to protect the infancy of
+Jesus from the danger by a persecuting world. ENTREAT THEM TO PROTECT
+YOU AND YOURS FROM THE PERILS of a seducing and ensnaring world; to
+plead your interests in heaven, and secure by their intercession your
+everlasting crown. Loudly proclaim the praises of your heavenly Queen,
+but at the same time turn Her power to your everlasting advantage by
+your earnest supplications to HER." (See Appendix.)
+
+The other extract, which sanctions to the full whatever offerings of
+praise and ascriptions of glory we have found individuals making to the
+Virgin and to Saints, is from an announcement in, I believe, the last
+English edition of the Roman Breviary published, in its present form,
+under the sanction of the Pope himself.
+
+"To those who devoutly recite the following prayer after the office,
+Pope Leo the Tenth hath granted pardon (indulsit) for the defects and
+faults in celebrating it, contracted by human frailty.
+
+"To the most holy and undivided Trinity; to the manhood {389} of our
+crucified Lord Jesus Christ; to the fruitful spotlessness of the most
+blessed and most glorious and ever-Virgin Mary; and to the entire body
+of all the Saints, be eternal praise, honour, virtue, and glory, from
+every creature, and to us remission of all sins, through endless ages of
+ages. Amen." [Norwich, 1830. Æst.]
+
+On the indulgence for pardon given by Pope Leo the Tenth, more than 300
+years ago, for such defects and faults in celebrating a religious
+service as may be contracted by human frailty; and on the fact of the
+notification of that indulgence being retained, and set forth so
+prominently in the service books at the present day, I will say nothing.
+Whatever associations may be raised in our minds by these circumstances,
+the subject does not fall within our present field of inquiry. But to
+join the Holy Trinity with the Virgin Mother, and all the Saints in one
+and the same ascription of ETERNAL PRAISE, HONOUR, and GLORY, is as
+utterly subversive of the integrity of primitive Christian Worship, as
+it is repugnant to the plainest sense of holy Scripture, and derogatory
+to the dignity of that Supreme Being, who declares Himself to be a
+jealous God.
+
+It has, indeed, been maintained that such ascriptions of glory and
+praise jointly to God and his Saints, is sanctioned by the language of
+our blessed Saviour Himself when He speaks of his having given his glory
+to his disciples [John xvii. 22.], and of his second advent, when He
+shall come in his own glory, and in his Father's, and of the holy
+angels. [Luke ix. 26.] But between the two cases there is no analogy
+whatever; the inference is utterly fallacious. We know that the Lord of
+Hosts is the King of glory, and that his eternal Son shared the glory of
+his Father before the foundations {390} of the world were laid. We know,
+too, that the Almighty has been pleased to create beings of various
+degrees and orders, differing from each other in kind or in excellence
+according to his supreme will. Among those creatures of his hand are the
+angels whom we reverence and love, as his faithful servants and his
+ministers to us for good. But when we speak and think of religious
+adoration; of giving thanks; and ascribing eternal glory and honour, we
+have only one object in our minds,--the supreme Sovereign Lord of all.
+
+With regard to the gracious words of our Saviour in his prayer to the
+Father, on the eve of his death, St. Peter's acts and words supply us
+with a plain and conclusive comment. He was himself one of those to whom
+Christ had declared that He had given the glory which his Father had
+given to Him; and yet when Cornelius fell down at his feet to worship
+him, he took him up, saying, "Stand up; I myself also am a man." [Acts
+x. 26.] The Saviour was pleased to impart his glory to his Apostles,
+dividing to them his heavenly gifts severally as He willed. We praise
+Him for those graces which shone so brightly in them, and we pray to Him
+to enable us by his grace to follow them, as they followed his blessed
+steps. We reverence their memory, but we give God alone the praise.
+
+As to the other instance, the words of our Lord (assuring us that the
+angels should accompany Him at his second advent in their glory, the
+glory which He assigned to them in the order of creation,) no more
+authorize us to ascribe praise and glory by a religious act to them,
+when we praise the God of angels and men, than would {391} the assurance
+of an inspired apostle, that "there is one glory of the sun, another
+glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars," sanction us in
+joining those luminaries in the same ascription of glory with their
+Almighty Creator and ours. Just as reasonably would a pagan justify his
+worship of the sun, the moon, and the stars, by this passage of
+Scripture, as our Roman Catholic brethren would justify themselves by
+the former passage in their ascription of praise and glory to the holy
+angels, and saints, and the blessed Virgin. We honour the holy angels,
+we praise God for the glory which He has imparted to them, and for the
+share which He has been pleased to assign to them in executing his
+decrees of mercy in the heavenly work of our salvation; and we pray to
+HIM to grant that they may by his appointment succour and defend us on
+earth, through Jesus Christ our Lord. But we address no invocation to
+them; we ascribe no glory to them as an act of religious worship. By
+offering thanks and praise to God He declares that we honour HIM; by
+offering thanks and praise, and by ascribing glory and honour to angel,
+saint, or virgin, we make them gods. {392}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+We have now, my fellow Christians, arrived at the conclusion of the task
+which I proposed to undertake. I have laid before you, to the utmost of
+my abilities and means, the result of my inquiry into the evidence of
+holy Scripture and primitive antiquity, on the invocation of saints and
+angels, and the blessed Virgin Mary. In this inquiry, excepting so far
+as was necessary to elucidate the origin and history of the Roman
+Catholic tenet of the Assumption of the Virgin, we have limited our
+researches to the writers who lived before the Nicene Council. That
+Council has always been considered a cardinal point,--a sort of
+climacteric in the history of the early Church. It was the first Council
+to which all the bishops of Christendom were summoned; and the influence
+of its decrees is felt beneficially in the Catholic Church to this very
+day. In fixing upon this Council as our present boundary line, I was
+influenced by a conviction, that the large body of Christians, whether
+of the Roman, the Anglican, or any other branch of the Church Catholic,
+would consent to this as an indisputable axiom,--that what the Church
+Catholic did not believe or practise up to {393} that date of her
+existence upon earth, cannot be regarded as either Catholic or
+primitive, or apostolical. Ending with St. Athanasius, (who, though he
+was present at that Council, yet brings his testimony down through
+almost another half century, his death not having taken place till A.D.
+873, on the verge of his eightieth year,) we have examined the remains
+of Christian antiquity, reckoning forward to that Council from the times
+of the Apostles. We have searched diligently into the writings, the
+sentiments, and the conduct of those first disciples of our Lord. We
+have contemplated the words of our blessed Saviour himself, and the
+inspired narrative of his life and teaching. With the same object in
+view we have studied the prophets of the Old Testament, and the works of
+Moses; and we have endeavoured, at the fountainhead, to ascertain what
+is the mind and will of God, as revealed to the world from the day when
+He made man, on the question of our invoking the angels and saints to
+intercede with Him in our behalf, or to assist and succour us on the
+earth. And the result is this:--From first to last, the voice of God
+Himself, and the voices of the inspired messengers of heaven, whether
+under the patriarchal, the Mosaic, or the Christian dispensations, the
+voices too of those maintainers of our common faith in Christ, who
+prayed, and taught, in the Church, before the corruptions of a
+degenerate world had mingled themselves with the purity of Christian
+worship, combine all, in publishing, throughout the earth, one and the
+self-same principle, "Pray only to God; draw nigh to Him alone; invoke
+no other; seek no other in the world of spirits, neither angel, nor
+beatified saint; seek Him, and He will favourably, with mercy, hear your
+prayers." To this one {394} principle, when the Gospel announced the
+whole counsel of God in the salvation of man, our Lord himself, his
+Apostles, and his Church, unite in adding another principle of eternal
+obligation,--There is one Mediator between God and men, the man Christ
+Jesus; whatsoever the faithful shall ask the Father in the name of that
+Mediator, He will grant it to them: He is ever living to make
+intercession for those who believe in Him: Invoke we no other
+intercessor, apply we neither to saint nor angel, plead we the merits of
+no other. Let us lift up our hearts to God Almighty himself, and make
+our requests known to Him in the name, and through the mediation of
+Christ, and He will fulfil our desires and petitions as may be most
+expedient for us; He will grant to us, in this world, a knowledge of his
+truth, and in the world to come life everlasting!
+
+Watching the tide of evidence through its whole progress, we find it to
+flow all in this one direction. Here and there indeed attempts have been
+made to raise some mounds and barriers of human structure, in order to
+arrest its progress, and turn it from its straight course, but in vain;
+unchecked by any such endeavours, it rolls on in one full, steady,
+strong, and resistless current. Until we have long passed the Nicene
+Council, we find no one writer of the Christian Church, whose remains
+tell us, that he either himself invoked saints and angels, and the
+Virgin Mary, or was at all aware of any such practice prevailing in
+Christendom. Suppose, for one moment, that our doctrine is right; and
+then we find the whole tenour of the Old and New Testaments, and the
+ancient writers, in their plain meaning, agreeably to the interpretation
+of the most learned and unbiassed critics, fully coinciding in every
+respect with our view of God being the sole object of invocation, {395}
+and of the exclusive character of Christ's intercession, mediation, and
+advocacy. Suppose, for another moment, the Roman Catholic theory to be
+correct, then the whole general tenour and drift of Scripture must be
+evaded; the clearest statements and announcements must be explained away
+by subtle distinctions, gratuitous definitions, and casuistical
+refinements, altogether foreign from the broad and simple truths of
+Revelation; then, too, in ascertaining the sentiments of an author, not
+his general and pervading principles, evidenced throughout his writings,
+must be appealed to; but casual and insulated expressions must be
+contracted or expanded as may best seem to counteract the impression
+made by the testimony of those principles. We may safely ask, Is there
+such evidence, that the primitive Church offered invocations to saints
+and angels, and the Virgin, as would satisfy us in the case of any
+secular dispute with regard to ancient usage? On the contrary, is not
+the evidence clear to a moral demonstration, that the offering of such
+addresses is an innovation of later days, unknown to the primitive
+Christians till after the middle of the fourth century, and never
+pronounced to be an article of faith, until the Council of Trent, more
+than a thousand years after its first appearance in Christendom, so
+decreed it.
+
+The tendency, indeed, of some Roman Catholic writings, especially of
+late years, is to draw off our minds on these points from the written
+word of God, and the testimony of the earliest Church, and to dwell upon
+the possibility, the reasonableness of the doctrines of the Church of
+Rome in this respect, their accordance with our natural feelings, and
+their charitableness. But in points of such vast moment, in things
+concerning the soul's salvation, we can depend with satisfaction and
+{396} without misgiving, only on the sure word of promise; nothing short
+of God's own pledge of his own eternal truth can assure us, that all is
+safe. Such substitution of what may appear to us reasonable, and
+agreeable to our natural sentiments, and desirable if true, in place of
+the assurances of God's revealed Will, may correspond with the arguments
+of a heathen philosopher unacquainted with the truth as it is in Jesus,
+but cannot satisfy disciples of Him who brought life and immortality to
+light by his Gospel. Such questions as these, "Is there any thing
+unreasonable in this? Would not this be a welcome tenet, if true?" well
+became the lips of Socrates in his defence before his judges, but are in
+the strict sense of the word preposterous in a Christian. With the
+Christian the first question is, What is the truth? What is revealed?
+What has God promised? What has He taught man to hope for? What has He
+commanded man to do? By his own words, by the words and by the example
+of his inspired messengers, by the doctrine and practice of his Church,
+the witness and interpreter of the truth, how has He directed us to sue
+for his mercy and all its blessings? On what foundation, sure and
+certain, can we build our hopes that "He will favourably with mercy hear
+our prayers?" For in this matter, a matter of spiritual life and death,
+we can anchor our hope on no other rock than his sure word of promise.
+
+That sure word of promise, if I am a faithful believer, I have; but it
+is exclusive of any invocation by me of saint, or angel, or virgin. The
+pledge of heaven is most solemnly and repeatedly given; God, who cannot
+lie, has, in language so plain, that he may run who readeth it, assured
+me that if I come to HIMSELF by HIS SON, my prayer shall not be cast
+out, my suit shall {397} not be denied, I shall not be sent empty away.
+In every variety of form which language can assume, this assurance is
+ratified and confirmed. His own revealed will directs me to pray for my
+fellow-creatures, and to expect a beneficial effect from the prayers of
+the faithful upon earth in my behalf. To pray for them, therefore, and
+to seek their prayers, and to wait patiently for an answer to both, are
+acts of faith and of duty. And were it also appointed by God's will to
+be an act of faith and duty in a Christian to seek the prayers, and aid,
+and assistance, of saints and angels by supplicatingly invoking them,
+surely the same word of truth would have revealed that also. Whereas the
+reverse shows itself under every diversified state of things, from the
+opening of the sacred book to its very last page. The subtle distinction
+of religious worship into latria, dulia, and hyperdulia, the refined
+classification of prayer under the two heads of direct, absolute, final,
+sovereign, on the one hand, and of oblique, relative, transitory,
+subaltern, on the other, swell indeed many elaborate works of casuistry,
+but are not discoverable in the remains of primitive Christians, nor in
+the writings of God's word have they any place. I cannot find in the
+inspired Apostles any reference to the necessity, the duty, the
+lawfulness, the expediency of our seeking by prayer the good offices of
+the holy dead, or of the angels of light. In their successors the
+earliest inspired teachers and pastors of Christ's fold, I seek in vain
+for any precept, or example, or suggestion, or incidental allusion
+looking that way. Why then should a Christian wish to add to that which
+God has been pleased to appoint and to reveal? Why should I attempt to
+enter heaven through any other gate than {398} that gate which the Lord
+of heaven has opened for me? or why should I seek to reach that gate by
+any other way than the way which He has made for me; which He has
+Himself plainly prescribed to me; in which He has promised that his word
+shall be a lantern unto my feet; and along which those saints and
+servants of his, who received the truth from his own lips, and sealed it
+by their blood, have gone before?
+
+Whenever a maintainer of the doctrine and practice of invoking the
+Saints asks me, as we have lately been asked in these words, "May I not
+reasonably hope that their prayers will be more efficacious than my own
+and those of my friends? And, under this persuasion, I say to them, as I
+just now said to you, holy Mary, holy Peter, holy Paul, pray for me.
+What is there in reason or revelation to forbid me to do so?" To this
+and similar questions and suggestions, I answer at once, God has
+solemnly covenanted to grant the petitions of those who ask HIM for his
+mercy, in the name and for the sake of his Son; and in his holy word
+has, both by precept and example, taught us in this life to pray for
+each other, and to ask each other's prayers [James v. 16; I Tim. ii.
+1.]; but that He will favourably answer the prayers which we supplicate
+angels to offer, or which we offer to Himself through the merits and by
+the intercession of departed mortals, is no where in the covenant.
+Moreover, when God invites me and commands me to approach Him myself, in
+the name of his Son, and trusting to his merits, it is not Christian
+humility, rather it savours of presumption, and intruding into those
+things which we have not seen [Coloss. ii. 18.], to seek to prevail with
+Him by {399} pleading other merits, and petitioning creatures, however
+glorious, to interest themselves with Him in our behalf, angels and
+saints, of whose power even to hear us we have no evidence. When Jesus
+Himself, who knows both the deep counsels of the Eternal Spirit, and
+man's wants and weaknesses and unworthiness, and who loveth his own to
+the end, pledges his never-failing word, that whatsoever we ask the
+Father in his name, He will give it us, can it be less than an unworthy
+distrust of his truth and faithfulness to ask the Father for the merits
+and by the intercession of another? and as though in fear lest God
+should fail of his promise, or be unmindful of us Himself, to invoke
+angels and the good departed to make our wants known unto HIM, and
+prevail with HIM to relieve us?
+
+Surely it were wiser and safer to adhere religiously to that one way
+which cannot fail, than to adopt for ourselves methods and systems, for
+the success of which we have no guarantee; which may be unacceptable in
+his sight; and the tendency of which may be to bring down a curse and
+not a blessing.
+
+May the great Shepherd and Bishop of souls pour down upon his Church the
+abundance of his mercy, preserving those in the truth who now possess
+it, restoring it to those by whom it has been lost, and imparting it to
+all who are yet in darkness. And, whilst we speak the truth in love, and
+endeavour to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, may HE,
+for his own glory, and for the safety and comfort of his people, shed
+this truth abroad in our hearts, and enlighten us to receive it in all
+its fulness and integrity, and in the very sense in which the Holy
+Spirit, when He guided {400} the pen of St. Paul, willed the Church to
+interpret it, "There is one God and one Mediator between God and men,
+the man Christ Jesus."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services of
+Angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant, that as thy holy
+Angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by thy appointment they may
+succour and defend us on earth, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
+
+O Almighty God, who hast built thy Church upon the foundation of the
+Apostles and Prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the head corner-stone;
+Grant us so to be joined together in unity of spirit by their doctrine,
+that we may be made an holy temple, acceptable unto Thee, through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. Amen.
+
+O Almighty God, who hast knit together thine elect in one communion and
+fellowship, in the mystical body of thy Son Christ our Lord; Grant us
+grace, so to follow thy blessed Saints in all virtuous and godly living,
+that we may come to those unspeakable joys, which Thou hast prepared for
+them that unfeignedly love Thee; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
+{401}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Note.--Pages 107 and 110.
+
+The following is the original of the passages discussed in the text.
+Justin Martyr, Apol. I. p. 47. § vi. Benedictine Edition by P. Maran.
+Paris, A.D. 1742.
+
+[Greek: Enthende kai atheoi keklaemetha; kai homologoumen ton toiouton
+nomizomenon theon atheoi einai, all' ouchi tou alaethestatou, kai patros
+dikaiosunaes kai sophrosunaes, kai ton allon areton, anepimiktou te
+kakias Theou; all' ekeinon te, kai ton par' autou huion elthonta kai
+didaxanta haemas tauta, kai ton ton allon hepomenon kai exomoioumenon
+agathon angelon straton, pneuma te to prophaetikon sebometha, kai
+proskunoumen, logoi kai alaetheiai timontes, kai panti boulomenoi
+mathein, hos edidachthaemen, aphthonos paradidontes.]
+
+Ibid. page 50, 51. sect. xiii.--[Greek: 'Atheoi men oun hos ouk esmen,
+ton daemiourgon toude tou pantos sebomenoi, ... ton didaskalon te touton
+genomenon haemin, kai eis touto genaethenta Iaesoun Christon ton
+staurothenta epi Pontiou Pilatou, tou genomenou en Ioudaiai epi chronois
+Tiberiou Kaisaros epitropou, huion autou tou ontos Theou mathontes, kai
+en deuterai chorai echontes, pneuma te prophaetikon en tritaei taxei,
+hoti meta logou timomen, apodeixomen....]
+
+Note.--Page 134.
+
+In the text it has been observed, that "Coccius in his elaborate work
+quotes the two following passages as Origen's, without expressing {402}
+any hesitation or doubt respecting their genuineness; in which he is
+followed by writers of the present day."
+
+The modern works, to which reference is here made, are chiefly the
+Lectures delivered by Dr. Wiseman, in the Roman Catholic Chapel in
+Moorfields in the year 1836, and the compilation of Messrs. Berington
+and Kirk [Berington and Kirk. London, 1830, p. 403.], from which Dr.
+Wiseman in his preface to his Lectures (p. ix.) informs us, that in
+general he had drawn his quotations of the Fathers. In citing the
+testimony of Origen in support of the invocation of saints, it is
+evident that Dr. Wiseman has drawn from that source; for whereas the two
+confessedly spurious passages, from the Lament, and from the Book on
+Job, are in that compilation quoted in the same page, Dr. Wiseman cites
+only the passage from the Lament, as from a work on the Lamentations,
+but gives his reference to the Book on Job. His words are these:--"Again
+he (Origen) thus writes on the Lamentations: 'I will fall down on my
+knees, and not presuming, on account of my crimes, to present my prayer
+to God, I will invoke all the saints to my assistance. O ye saints of
+heaven, I beseech you with a sorrow full of sighs and tears; fall at the
+feet of the Lord of mercies for me, a miserable sinner,'--Lib. ii. De
+Job." [Lectures on the Principal Doctrines and Practices of the Catholic
+Church, by Nicholas Wiseman, D.D. London, 1836. Vol. i. preface, p. ix.
+and vol. ii. p. 107.]
+
+When we find such passages as these, which have been so long ago and so
+repeatedly pronounced to be utterly spurious, yet cited in evidence at
+the present time, and represented as conveying the genuine testimony of
+Origen, we shall be pardoned for repeating the sentiments expressed so
+many years ago by the learned Bishop of Avranches with regard to the
+very work here cited, "It is wonderful that, WITHOUT ANY MARK OF THEIR
+BEING FORGERIES, they should be sometimes cited in evidence by some
+theologians."
+
+Note.--Page 151.
+
+The whole passage cited as Origen's comment on the words of Ezekiel,
+"The heavens are opened," is in the Latin version as follows. The Greek
+original, if it ever existed, is lost. The portion between brackets is
+the part suspected of being an interpolation.
+
+6. _Et aperti sunt coeli_. Clausi erant coeli, et ad adventum Christi
+aperti sunt, ut reseratis illis veniret super eum Spiritus Sanctus in
+specie columbæ. Neque enirn poterat ad nos commeare nisi primum {403} ad
+suæ naturæ consortem descendisset. _Ascendit Jesus in altum, captivam
+duxit captivitatem, accepit dona in hominibus. Qui descendit, ipse est
+qui ascendit super omnes coelos ut impleret omnia. Et ipse dedit alios
+apostolos, alios prophetas, alios evangelistas, alios pastores et
+magistros in perfectionem sanctorum_.
+
+[7. _Aperti sunt coeli_. Non sufficit unum coelum aperiri: aperiuntur
+plurimi, ut descendant non ab uno, sed ab omnibus coelis angeli ad eos
+qui salvandi sunt. Angeli qui ascendebant et descendebant super Filium
+hominis, et accesserunt as eum, et ministrabant ei. Descenderunt autem
+angeli, quia prior descenderat Christus, metuentes descendere priusquam
+Dominus virtutum omnium rerumque præciperet. Quando autem viderunt
+principem militiæ coelestis in terrestribus locis commorari, tunc per
+apertam viam ingressi sunt sequentes Dominum suum, et parentes voluntati
+ejus qui distribuit eos custodes credentium nomini suo. Tu heri sub
+dæmonio eras, hodie sub angelo. _Nolite_, inquit Dominus, _contemnere
+unum de minimis istis_ qui sunt in ecclesia. _Amen enim dico vobis, quia
+angeli eorum per omnia vident faciem Patris qui est in coelis_.
+Obsequuntur saluti tuæ angeli, concessi sunt ad ministerium Filii Dei,
+et dicuntinter se: si ille descendit, et descendit in corpus; si mortali
+indutus est carne, et sustinuit crucem, et pro hominibus mortuus est,
+quit nos quiescimus? quid parcimus nobis? Eja omnes angeli descendamus e
+coelo. Ideo et multitudo militiæ coelestis erat laudantium et
+glorificantium Deum, quando natus est Christus. Omnia angelis plena
+sunt: veni, angeli, suscipe sermone conversum ab errore pristino, a
+doctrina dæmoniorum, ab iniquitate in altum loquente: et suscipiens eum
+quasi medicus bonus confove atque institue, parvulus est, hodie nascitur
+senex repuerascens: et suscipe tribuens ei baptismum secundæ
+regenerationis, et advoca tibi alios socios ministerii tui, ut concti
+pariter eos qui aliquando decepti sunt, erudiatis ad fidem. _Gaudium
+enim est majus in coelis super unum peccatorem poenitentiam agentem,
+quam supra nonaginta novem justos quibus non opus est poenitentia_.
+Exultat omnis creatura, collætatur et applaudit his qui salvandi sunt.
+Nam _expectatio creaturæ revelationem filiorum Dei expectat_. Et licet
+nolint ii qui scripturas apostolicas interpolaverunt istiusmodi sermones
+inesse libris eorum quibus possit Creator Christus approbari, expectat
+tamen omnis creatura filios Dei, quando liberentur a delicto, quando
+auferentur de Zabuli manu, quando regenerentur a Christo. Verum jam
+tempus est, ut de præsenti loco aliqua tangamus. Vidit Propheta non
+visionem, sed visiones Dei. {404} Quare non vidat unam, sed plurimas
+visiones? Audi Dominum pollicentem atque dicentem: _Ego visiones
+multiplicavi_. 8. _Quinta mensis_. Hic annus quinta captivitatis regis
+Joachim. Trigesimo anno ætatis Ezekielis, et quinto captivitatis
+Joachim, Propheta mittiur ad Judæos. Non despexit clementissimus pater,
+nec longo tempore incommonitum populum dereliquit. Quintus est annus.
+Quantum temporis intercessit? Quinque anni interfluxerunt ex quo captivi
+serviunt.]
+
+Statim descendit Spiritus Sanctus,--aperuit coelos, ut hi qui
+captivitatis jugo premebantur, viderent ea quæ videbantur a Propheta.
+Dicente quippe eo, _Et aperti sunt coeli_, quodam modo et ipsi
+intuebantur oculis cordis quæ ille etiam oculis carnis aspexerat.--Vol.
+iii. p. 358.
+
+Note.--Page 165.
+
+In a note on the Epistle of St. Cyprian to his brother, reference was
+made to the Appendix for a closer comparison of Cyprian's original
+letter with the modern translation of the passage under consideration.
+By placing the two versions in parallel columns side by side, we shall
+immediately see, that the mode of citing the testimony of St. Cyprian
+adopted in Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, from the compilation of Messrs.
+Berington and Kirk, is rather to substitute his own comment and
+inference, than to allow the witness to speak for himself in his own
+words. The whole paragraph, as it appears in Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, is
+this:--
+
+"St. Cyprian in the same century: 'Let us be mindful of one another in
+our prayers; with one mind and with one heart, in this world and in the
+next, let us always pray with mutual charity relieving our sufferings
+and afflictions. And may the charity of him, who, by the divine favour,
+shall first depart hence, still persevere before the Lord; may his
+prayer, for our brethren and sisters, not cease.' Therefore, after
+having departed this life, the same offices of charity are to continue,
+by praying for those who remain on earth." [Lect. xiii. vol. ii. p. 107,
+and Berington and Kirk, p. 430.]
+
+_St. Cyprian's words_. _Epist._ lvii. _p._ 96.
+
+_Translation adopted by Dr. Wiseman from Berington and Kirk._
+
+
+1. Memories nostri invicem simus,
+
+1. Let us be mindful of one
+another IN OUR PRAYERS; {405}
+
+2. Concordes atque unanimes, 2. With one mind and with
+ one heart.
+
+3. Utrobique. 3. In this world and in the next,
+
+4. PRO NOBIS semper oremus, 4. Let us always pray,
+
+5. Pressuras et angustias mutua 5. With mutual charity RELIEVING out
+caritate relevemus, sufferings and afflictions.
+
+6. Et si quis istinc nostrum 6. And may the CHARITY OF HIM,
+prior divinæ dignationis celeritate who, by the divine facour, shall
+præcesserit, perseveret apud Dominum first depart hence, still persevere
+NOSTRA DILECTIO, before the Lord;
+
+7. Pro fratribus et sororibus 7. May HIS prayer, for our brethren
+nostris apud misericordiam patris and sisters, not cease.
+non cesset oratio.
+
+In this translation, by inserting the words, _in our prayers_, which are
+not in the original in the first clause; by rendering the adverb
+_utrobique_, IN THIS WORLD AND IN THE NEXT, in the third clause; by
+omitting the words _pro nobis, for each other_, which are in the
+original, in the fourth clause; by changing in the fifth the verb
+_relevemus, let us relieve_, implying another branch of their mutual
+kindness, into the participle _relieving_, which may imply, that the
+relief alluded to was also to be conveyed by the medium of their
+prayers; by substituting _the charity of him_, in place of _nostra
+dilectio, our charity_, in the sixth; and by inserting the word _his_,
+which is not in the original, before _prayer_, where the grammar of the
+sentence requires _our_, in the seventh clause;--by these means the
+translator makes Cyprian express a sentiment far removed from what the
+words of Cyprian, in their plain and natural sense, convey. It must,
+however, be borne in mind, as we have shown in our examination of the
+passage, that the sentiment of Cyprian, even as it is thus unduly
+extracted from his words, would not in the remotest degree countenance
+the invocation of saints. It would do no more than imply his belief,
+that the faithful departed may take an interest in the welfare of their
+surviving friends on earth, and promote that welfare by their prayers; a
+point which, in the preface, is mentioned as one of those topics, the
+discussion of which would be avoided in this inquiry, as quite distinct
+from the invocation of saints. {406}
+
+Note.--Page 176.
+
+An extract from Eusebius, unnoticed in the text of this work, has
+recently been cited as conveying his testimony in favour of the
+invocation of saints. I have judged it better to defer the consideration
+of it to the appendix. It has been cited in these terms: "In the fourth
+century Eusebius of Cæsarea thus writes: 'May we be found worthy by the
+prayers and intercessions of all the saints.'" [Dr. Wiseman's Lectures,
+vol. ii. p. 107. Lect. xiii. Berington and Kirk, p. 431.] To form a just
+estimate of this alleged testimony, it is requisite that we have before
+us not only that incomplete clause, but the whole passage purporting to
+contain, in these words, the closing sentences of a commentary on
+Isaiah: [Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1707. Dr. Wiseman's reference is
+"Com. in Isai. Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1706."]
+
+"'And they shall be for a spectacle to all flesh.' To what flesh?
+Altogether to that which shall be somewhere punished? Nay, to that which
+shall of the heavenly vision be deemed worthy, concerning which it was
+said before, All flesh shall come to worship before me, of which may we
+also be deemed worthy by the prayers and intercessions of all the
+saints. Amen."
+
+In examining this passage I am willing for the present that all its
+clauses should be accepted as the genuine words of Eusebius, and
+accepted too in the meaning attached to them by those who have cited
+them. And to what do they amount? If these are indeed his expressions,
+Eusebius believed that the saints departed can forward our spiritual
+welfare by their prayers and ministering offices; and he uttered his
+desire that we might thus be benefited. Now whether we agree with him or
+not in that belief; whether we consider the faithful departed as able to
+take an interest in our welfare and to promote it, or regard such an
+opinion as without foundation in the word of God and in primitive
+doctrine; the belief implied and the wish expressed here by Eusebius,
+are widely indeed removed from the act of suppliantly invoking the
+saints departed, and resorting to them with entreaties for their prayers
+and intercessions in our behalf. These two things, although often
+confounded, are far from being equivalent; and by all who would
+investigate with fairness the subject of our inquiry, they must be
+carefully kept distinct. The invocation of saints being the single point
+in question, our business is to ascertain, not what opinions Eusebius
+may have {407} entertained as to the condition, and power, and offices
+of the saints departed, but whether he invoked them; whether he had
+recourse to them with supplications for their prayers, or aid and
+succour. And keeping this closely in view, even if we admit this passage
+to be genuine, and interpret it as those who have cited it wish it to be
+interpreted, we find in it no authority for the invocation of saints. A
+Christian would be no more countenanced by this language of Eusebius in
+suppliantly invoking departed saints, than he would in praying to the
+angels for their help and mediation be countenanced by the terms of the
+prayer in regard to them, addressed by the Anglican Church to God, "O
+everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services of
+angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant, that as thy holy
+angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by THY appointment they may
+succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."
+Whoever petitions them, makes them Gods--Deos qui rogat ille facit.
+
+But whilst, for the sake of the argument, I have admitted this passage
+to be genuine, and correctly translated, and have shown that whether
+genuine or not, and even if it be thus correctly translated, it affects
+not in the least the issue of our inquiry, I do not feel at liberty to
+withhold the acknowledgment of my persuasion that in this concession I
+grant too much. For, in the first place, I am assured, that if the
+passage came from the pen of Eusebius, no one is justified in confining
+the desire and wish contained in it to the intercessions and prayers of
+the saints in heaven; and, secondly, I see reasons for inferring that
+the last clause was framed and attached to this work, not by Eusebius
+himself, but by some editor or scribe.
+
+In support of my first persuasion, I would observe that the very
+language of the writer of these comments on Isaiah and the Psalms
+precludes us from regarding the Saints departed as exclusively
+constituting those "holy ones" by whose intercessions and prayers he
+expresses his desire that our spiritual welfare may be promoted. In this
+very comment on Isaiah (ch. vi. 2. p. 376), when he is speaking of the
+heavenly inhabitants, and illustrates his views by God's dealings
+towards the children of men in this world, he employs this expression:
+"For as among men the Saints of God partake of more excellent graces."
+On the 67th (68th) Ps. v. 34, having interpreted the words, "his
+strength is in the clouds," as referring to the {408} prophets and
+teachers of divine wisdom, under the guidance of the Spirit, pouring
+heavenly truths upon the souls of men as the clouds drop rain on fertile
+lands, he proceeds thus to comment on the expression, "God is wonderful
+among his Saints." [Vol. i. p. 364. The English translation refers the
+word "holy" to places, not persons.] "These Saints are different from
+those before called Apostles and prophets. And who can they be, except
+those who out of all nations are deemed worthy of purity and holiness,
+among whom God is wonderful, giving to them power and strength?" Thus in
+perfect accordance with the language of this writer, the Saints, from
+whose prayers and intercessions he desires to derive spiritual benefits,
+may be the Saints of God on earth--in the same state with those saints
+still living in the flesh, whose prayers St. Paul desired to be offered
+up for himself, that by them a door of utterance to speak the mystery of
+Christ might be opened unto him [Coloss. i. 2; iv. 2, 3.]--and with
+those saints to whom the same Apostle wrote at Philippi: "To all the
+saints in Christ Jesus:" and to whom he sent the greetings of the saints
+who then surrounded him: "ALL the SAINTS salute you." [Phil i. 1; iv.
+22.]
+
+But before the closing words of this paragraph, whatever be its meaning,
+be acknowledged as the genuine and undoubted production of Eusebius, I
+would suggest the careful weighing of some considerations, which appear
+to me to involve serious difficulties.
+
+1. First, through all the voluminous works of Eusebius, I have found in
+no single passage any allusion to the prayers of saints departed, or to
+their ministering offices in our behalf, though numberless openings show
+themselves for the natural introduction of such a subject.
+
+2. Secondly, among all the various works and treatises of Eusebius, I
+have not found one which is closed by any termination of the kind; on
+the contrary, they all end with remarkable suddenness and abruptness,
+precisely as this comment would end, were the sentence under
+consideration removed. Each, indeed, of the books of his Ecclesiastical
+History, is followed by a notice of the close of the book, in some cases
+too that notice involving a religious sentiment: for example, at the
+close of the 10th book we read: "With the help of God, the end of the
+tenth book." But that these are appendages made by an editor or scribe
+is evident in itself, and moreover {409} in many instances is shown by
+such sentences as these, "And this we have found in a certain copy in
+the 8th volume:" "This is in some copies, as if omitted from the 8th
+book." I find no one instance of Eusebius bringing a chapter or a
+treatise to its close by any religious sentiment, or any termination of
+the nature here contemplated.
+
+It is also difficult to conceive that any author, having the flow and
+connexion of the whole passage present to his mind, would himself have
+appended this ejaculation as we now find it. We know that editors and
+scribes often attached a sentiment of their own to the closing words of
+an author. And it seems far more probable, that a scribe not having the
+full drift of the argument mainly before him, but catching the
+expression, "heavenly vision," appended such an ejaculation. That the
+writer himself should introduce such a sentence by the connecting link
+of a relative pronoun feminine, which must of necessity be referred, not
+as the grammatical construction would suggest to the feminine noun
+preceding it,--not to any word expressed or understood in the
+intervening clause preceding it,--not to the last word in the sentence
+even before that intervening clause, nor yet to the principal and
+leading subject immediately under discussion and thrice repeated,--but
+to a noun incidentally introduced, seems, to say the least, strange and
+unnatural. "And they shall be for a spectacle to all flesh. To what
+flesh? Altogether to that which shall be somewhere punished? Nay, to
+that which shall of the heavenly vision be deemed worthy, concerning
+WHICH it was said before, All FLESH shall come to worship before me, of
+which may we also be deemed worthy by the prayers and intercessions of
+all the saints. Amen." But the classical reader will appreciate these
+remarks more satisfactorily by examining them with reference to the
+passage in the original language.
+
+[Greek: Kai esontai eis orasin pasaei sarki. poiai de sarki; ae pantos
+pou taei kolasthaesomenaei; taes de epouraniou theas kataxiothaesomenaei
+peri HAES anotero elegeto aexei pasa sarx tou proskunaesai enopion mou,
+HAES kai haemeis axiotheiaemen euchais kai presbeiais panton ton hagion,
+amaen.]
+
+Note.--Page 181.
+
+ATHANASIUS.
+
+In the text I observed that some Roman Catholic writers of the present
+day had cited the homily there shown to be utterly spurious, {410} as
+the genuine work of St. Athanasius, and as recording his testimony in
+defence of the invocation of Saints. The passage there referred to Dr.
+Wiseman thus introduces, and comments upon.
+
+"St. Athanasius, the most zealous and strenuous supporter that the
+Church ever possessed of the divinity of Jesus Christ, and consequently
+of his infinite superiority over all the saints, thus enthusiastically
+addresses his ever-blessed Mother: 'Hear now, O daughter of David;
+incline thine ear to our prayers. We raise our cry to thee. Remember us,
+O most holy Virgin, and for the feeble eulogiums we give thee, grant us
+great gifts from the treasures of thy graces, thou who art full of
+grace. Hail, Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Queen and
+mother of God, intercede for us.' Mark well," continues Dr. Wiseman,
+"these words; 'grant us great gifts, from the treasures of thy graces;'
+as if he hoped directly to receive them from her. Do Catholics use
+stronger words than these? Or did St. Athanasius think or speak with us,
+or with Protestants?"
+
+In answer to these questions I reply with sure and certain confidence,
+first, that the genuine words of St. Athanasius himself prove him to
+have spoken and thought with the Anglican Church, and not with the Roman
+Church on the invocation of saints and angels, and the blessed Virgin
+Mary; and secondly, that whatever words Roman Catholics use, whether
+stronger or not than these, these words on which the above questions are
+put, never came forth from the pen of St. Athanasius. Their spuriousness
+is not a question of doubt or difficulty. It has been shown in the text
+that the whole homily has been for ages utterly repudiated, as a work
+falsely attributed to St. Athanasius. It is indeed very disheartening to
+those, whose object is the discovery and the establishment of the truth,
+to find works cited in evidence as the genuine productions of primitive
+Christian teachers, which have been so long ago, and so repeatedly, and
+that not by members of another communion, but by the most learned men of
+the Church of Rome, adjudged to be spurious. I do not mean that I think
+it not fully competent for a writer of the present day to call in
+question, and overrule and set aside the decisions of former editors, as
+to the genuine or the spurious character of any work. On the contrary I
+am persuaded that a field is open in that department of theology, which
+would richly repay all the time and labour and expense, which persons
+well qualified for the task could bestow upon its culture. What I lament
+is this, that after a work has been deliberately condemned as
+unquestionably {411} spurious, by competent and accredited judges for
+two centuries and a half at the least, that very work should be now
+cited as genuine and conclusive evidence, without any the most distant
+allusion to the judgment which had condemned it, or even to any
+suspicion of its being a forgery. In this instance, also, Dr. Wiseman
+has implicitly followed the compilation of Messrs. Berington and Kirk.
+This is evident, because the extract, as it stands word for word the
+same in his Lectures and their compilation, is not found as one passage
+in the spurious homily, but is made up of sentences selected from
+different clauses, and put together so as to make one paragraph. It is
+worthy of notice, that in quoting their authority, both Dr. Wiseman, and
+those whom he follows, refer us to the very volume in which the
+Benedictine editors declare that there was no learned man, who did not
+pronounce the work to be spurious; and in which also they quote at
+length the letter of Baronius which had proved it to be a forgery. [Dr.
+Wiseman's Lectures, vol. ii. p. 108, from Berington and Kirk, p. 430,
+431.]
+
+Note.--Page 231. (Decree of the Council of Trent.) [Canones et Decreta
+Sacros. OEcumen. et Genera. Concilii Tridentini, &c. Rom. fol. A.D.
+1564.]
+
+Mandat sancta Synodus omnibus Episcopis, et ceteris docendi munus
+curamque sustinentibus, ut juxta Catholicæ, et Apostolicæ Ecclesiæ usum,
+a primævis Christianæ religionis temporibus receptum, sanctorumque
+Patrum consensionem, et sacrorum Conciliorum decreta, inprimis de
+Sanctorum intercessione, invocatione, Reliquiarum honore, et legitimo
+imaginum usu, fideles diligenter instruant, docentes eos, Sanctos, una
+cum Christo regnantes, orationes suas pro hominibus Deo offerre; bonum
+atque utile esse suppliciter eos invocare; et ob beneficia impetranda a
+Deo per Filium ejus Jesum Christum, Dominum nostrum, qui solus noster
+Redemptor et Salvator est, ad eorum orationes, opem, auxiliumque
+confugere: illos vero, qui negant sanctos æternâ felicitate in coelo
+fruentes, invocandos esse; aut qui asserunt, vel illos pro hominibus non
+orare, vel eorum, ut pro nobis etiam singulis orent, invocationem esse
+idololatriam, vel pugnare cum verbo Dei, adversarique honori unius
+Mediatoris Dei et hominum, Jesu Christi, vel stultum esse, in coelo
+regnantibus voce, vel mente supplicare, impie sentire. Sanctorum quoque
+Martyrum, et aliorum cum Christo viventium Sancta corpora, {412} quæ
+viva membra fuerunt Christi, et templum Spiritus Sancti, ab ipso ad
+æternam vitam suscitanda et glorificanda, a fidelibus veneranda esse;
+per quæ multa beneficia a Deo hominibus præstantur: ita ut affirmantes,
+Sanctorum Reliquiis venerationem, atque honorem non deberi; vel eas,
+aliaque sacra monumenta a fidelibus inutiliter honorari; atque eorum
+opis impetrandæ causa sanctorum memorias frustra frequentari; omnino
+damnandos esse, prout jampridem eos damnavit, et nunc etiam damnat
+Ecclesia. [De Invocatione, Veneratione, et Reliquiis Sanctorum, et
+Sacris Imaginibus, p. 202.]
+
+Note.--Pages 369 and 390.
+
+In a prefatory epistle, addressed to the "Chaplains, Wardens, and
+Brethren of the Holy Catholic Gild," in Huddersfield, Dr. Wiseman (p. 4)
+expresses himself thus: "Yesterday I laid the badge of your association
+at the feet of the sovereign pontiff, and it was most condescendingly
+and graciously received. But this is not all. As I had foretold, I found
+His Holiness fully informed of your establishment and public
+manifestation; and I had the satisfaction of hearing him express his
+WISH THAT SIMILAR INSTITUTIONS SHOULD REVIVE ALL OVER THE COUNTRY."
+
+Towards the close of the sermon, to which this preface is prefixed, and
+which was preached at St. Patrick's Chapel, Huddersfield, Sept. 26th,
+1839, and was printed at York in the present year [A.D. 1840], the
+preacher draws the comparison, referred to in page 370 of this work,
+between England and the continent, and between England as it is, and
+England as it once was, and as, in his view, it ought to be again. After
+describing the scenes which you may witness in Roman Catholic countries,
+"where you might see the poor and the afflicted crowding round some
+altar, where their pious confidence or experience of past favours leads
+them to hope that their prayers will best be heard through the
+intercession of our dear Lady," he thus proceeds: "Oh that the time had
+come, when a similar expression of our devout feelings towards her
+should publicly be made, and all should unite to show her that honour,
+that reverence, and love which she deserves from all Christians, and
+which has so long been denied her amongst us. There was a time when
+England was second to {413} no other country upon earth in the discharge
+of this holy duty; and it will be only PART OF THE RESTORATION OF OUR
+GOOD AND GLORIOUS DAYS OF OLD to revive to the utmost this part of
+ancient piety. Therefore do I feel sincere joy at witnessing the
+establishment of this excellent brotherhood, and its public
+manifestation in this town this day, both as a means of encouraging
+devotion and virtue, and as a return to one of the venerable
+institutions of our forefathers. Enter then fully into its spirit."
+
+["A Sermon delivered at St. Patrick's, Huddersfield, Sept. 26th, 1839,
+on occasion of the Holy Catholic Gild there established, by the Rev. N.
+Wiseman, D.D., Professor in the University of Rome. York, 1840," p. 22,
+23. The first quotation made in p. 390, is from this Sermon.]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Primitive Christian Worship, by James Endell Tyler
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14072 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14072 ***</div>
+
+<h1>PRIMITIVE CHRISTIAN WORSHIP</h1>
+<h2>OR, THE EVIDENCE OF HOLY SCRIPTURE AND THE CHURCH, AGAINST THE
+INVOCATION OF SAINTS AND ANGELS, AND THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY.</h2>
+<h2>BY J. ENDELL TYLER, B.D.</h2>
+<h3>RECTOR OF ST. GILES-IN-THE-FIELDS, AND CANON RESIDENTIARY OF
+ST. PAUL'S.</h3>
+<hr />
+<center>Speaking the truth in love.&mdash;EPH. iv. 15</center>
+<center>Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.&mdash;1
+THESS. v. 21.</center>
+<h3>SECOND EDITION</h3>
+<h3>LONDON</h3>
+<h3>1847.</h3>
+<hr />
+<center>TO</center>
+<center>THE ONE</center>
+<center>HOLY, CATHOLIC, AND APOSTOLIC CHURCH,</center>
+<center>AS A TRIBUTE OF VENERATION AND LOVE,</center>
+<center>THIS WORK IS DEDICATED,</center>
+<center>BY HER DEVOTED SERVANT AND SON.</center>
+<h3>Nov. 25, 1840.</h3>
+<hr />
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+<p>Members of the Church of Rome, and members of the Church of
+England, have too long entertained towards each other feelings of
+hostility. Instead of being drawn together as brethren by the cords
+of that one faith which all Catholics hold dear, their sentiments
+of sympathy and affection have been absorbed by the abhorrence with
+which each body has regarded the characteristic tenets of its
+adversary; whilst the terms "heretic" on the one side, and
+"idolater" on the opposite, have rendered any attempt to bring
+about a free and friendly discussion of each other's views almost
+hopeless.</p>
+<p>Every Christian must wish that such animosities, always
+ill-becoming the servants and children of the God of love, should
+cease for ever. Truth indeed must never be sacrificed to secure
+peace; nor must we be tempted by the seductiveness of a liberality,
+falsely so called, to soften down and make light of those
+differences which keep the Churches of England and Rome asunder.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagepreface5" id=
+"pagepreface5"></a>{Pref 5}</span> But surely the points at issue
+may be examined without exasperation and rancour; and the results
+of inquiries carried on with a singleness of mind, in search only
+for the truth, may be offered on the one side without insult or
+offence, and should be received and examined without contempt and
+scorn on the other.</p>
+<p>The writer of this address is not one in whom early associations
+would foster sentiments of evil will against members of the Church
+of Rome; or encourage any feeling, incompatible with regard and
+kindness, towards the conscientious defenders of her creed. From
+his boyhood he has lived on terms of friendly intercourse and
+intimacy with individuals among her laity and of her priesthood. In
+his theological pursuits, he has often studied her ritual,
+consulted her commentators, and perused the homilies of her
+divines; and, withal, he has mourned over her errors and misdoings,
+as he would have sighed over the faults of a friend, who, with many
+good qualities still to endear him, had unhappily swerved from the
+straight path of rectitude and integrity.</p>
+<p>In preparing these pages, the author is not conscious of having
+been influenced by any motive in the least degree inconsistent with
+sentiments of charity and respect; at all events, he would hope
+that no single expression may have escaped from his pen tending to
+hurt unnecessarily the feelings of any sincere Christian. He has
+been prompted by a hope that he may perhaps <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pagepreface6" id="pagepreface6"></a>{Pref
+6}</span> induce some individuals to investigate with candour, and
+freedom, and with a genuine desire of arriving at the truth, the
+subjects here discussed; and that whilst some, even of those who
+may have hitherto acquiesced in erroneous doctrines and practices,
+may be convinced of their departure from Christian verity; others,
+if tempted to desert the straight path of primitive worship, may be
+somewhat strengthened and armed by the views presented to them
+here, against the captivating allurements of religious error.</p>
+<p>Whether the present work may, by the Divine favour, be made in
+some degree instrumental in forwarding these results, or in
+effecting any good, the author presumes not to anticipate; but he
+will hope for the best. He believes that the honest pursuit of the
+truth, undertaken with an humble zeal for God's glory, and in
+dependence on his guidance and light, is often made successful
+beyond our own sanguine expectations.</p>
+<p>With these views the following pages are offered, as the result
+of an inquiry into the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of
+Saints and Angels, and of the Blessed Virgin Mary.</p>
+<p>To prevent misconception as to the nature of this work, the
+author would observe, that since the single subject here proposed
+to be investigated is, "The Invocation of Saints and Angels and the
+Blessed Virgin Mary," he has scrupulously avoided the discussion of
+many important and interesting questions usually considered
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagepreface7" id=
+"pagepreface7"></a>{Pref 7}</span> to be connected with it. He has
+not, for example, discussed the practice of praying for the dead;
+he has investigated no theory relating to the soul's intermediate
+state between our dissolution and the final judgment; he has
+canvassed no opinion as to any power in the saints and the faithful
+departed to succour either by their prayers or by any other
+offices, those who are still on earth, and on their way to God.
+From these and such like topics he has abstained, not because he
+thinks lightly of their importance, nor because his own mind is
+perplexed by doubts concerning them; but because the introduction
+of such points would tend to distract the thoughts from the
+exclusive contemplation of the one distinct question to be
+investigated.</p>
+<p>He is also induced to apprise the reader, that in his work, as
+he originally prepared it, a far wider field, even on the single
+subject of the present inquiry, was contemplated than this volume
+now embraces. His intention was to present an historical survey of
+the doctrine and practice of the invocation of Saints and Angels,
+and the Virgin, tracing it from the first intimation of any thing
+of the kind through its various progressive stages, till it had
+reached its widest prevalence in Christendom. When, however, he had
+arranged and filled up the results of the inquiries which he made
+into the sentiments and habits of those later writers of the
+Church, whose works he considered it necessary to examine with this
+specific object in view, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pagepreface8" id="pagepreface8"></a>{Pref 8}</span> he found that
+the bulk of the work would be swollen far beyond the limits which
+he had prescribed to himself; he felt also that the protracted
+investigation would materially interfere with the solution of that
+one independent question which he trusts now is kept unmixed with
+any other. He has, consequently, in the present address limited the
+range of his researches on the nature of Primitive Christian
+Worship, to the writers of the Church Catholic who lived before the
+Nicene Council, or were members of it.</p>
+<p>In one department, however, he has been under the necessity of
+making, to a certain extent, an exception to this rule. Having
+found no allusion to the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin,
+on which much of the religious worship now paid to her seems to be
+founded, in any work written before the middle of the fifth
+century, he has been induced, in his examination of the grounds on
+which that doctrine professes to be built, to cite authors who
+flourished subsequently to the Nicene Council.</p>
+<p>The author would also mention, that although in substance he has
+prepared this work for the examination of all Christians equally,
+and trusts that it will be found not less interesting or profitable
+to the members of his own Church than to any other, yet he has
+throughout adopted the form of an address to his Roman Catholic
+countrymen. Such a mode of conveying his sentiments he considered
+to be less controversial, while the facts and the arguments would
+remain the same. His object <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pagepreface9" id="pagepreface9"></a>{Pref 9}</span> is not to
+condemn, but to convince: not to hold up to obloquy those who are
+in error, but, as far as he may be allowed, to diminish an evil
+where it already exists, and to check its further prevalence.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagepreface10" id=
+"pagepreface10"></a>{Pref 10}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<p><a href="#chap1.1">PART I.&mdash;CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+<p>Introduction&mdash;The duty of examining the grounds of our
+Faith&mdash;Principles of conducting that examination&mdash;Errors
+to be avoided&mdash;Proposed plan of the present work</p>
+<p><a href="#chap1-2">CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect1-2-1">1. Evidence of Holy Scripture, how
+to be ascertained</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-2-2">2. Direct Evidence of the Old
+Testament</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-2-3">3. Evidence of the Old Testament,
+continued</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-2-4">4. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; New Testament</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap1-3">CHAPTER III.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect1-3-1">1. Evidence of Primitive
+Writers</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-3-2">2. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Apostolic
+Fathers</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap1-4">CHAPTER IV.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect1-4-1">1. Evidence of Justin
+Martyr</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-2">2. Evidence of Iren&aelig;us</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-3">3. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Clement of
+Alexandria</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-4">4. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Tertullian</a><br />
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Methodius<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-5">5. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Origen</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-6">6. Supplementary Section on Origen</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-7">7. Evidence of St. Cyprian</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-8">8. Evidence of Lactantius</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-9">9. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Eusebius</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-10">10. Apostolical Canons and
+Constitutions</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-11">11. Evidence of St. Athanasius</a><br />
+See also Appendix</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagepreface11" id=
+"pagepreface11"></a>{Pref 11}</span>
+<p><a href="#chap2-1">PART II.&mdash;CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+<p>State of Worship at the time of the Reformation</p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect2-1-1">1. "Hours of the Virgin"</a><br />
+<a href="#sect2-1-2">2. Service of Thomas Becket</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap2-2">CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+<p>Council of Trent See also Appendix</p>
+<p><a href="#chap2-3">CHAPTER III.</a></p>
+<p>Present Service in the Church of Rome</p>
+<p>PART III.</p>
+<p>WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN MARY.</p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-1">CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect3-1-1">1. Introductory Remarks</a><br />
+<a href="#sect3-1-2">2. Evidence of Holy Scripture</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-2">CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+<p>Evidence of Primitive Writers</p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-3">CHAPTER III.</a></p>
+<p>Assumption of the Virgin Mary</p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-4">CHAPTER IV.</a></p>
+<p>Councils of Constantinople, Ephesus, and Chalcedon</p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-5">CHAPTER V.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect3-5-1">1. Present authorized Worship of the
+Virgin</a><br />
+<a href="#sect3-5-2">2. Worship of the Virgin, continued</a><br />
+<a href="#sect3-5-3">3. Bonaventura</a><br />
+<a href="#sect3-5-4">4. Biel, Damianus, Bernardinus de Bustis,
+Bernardinus Senensis,&amp;c.</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect3-5-5">5. Modern Works of Devotion</a><br />
+See also Appendix</p>
+<p><a href="#conclusion">CONCLUSION</a></p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page1" id="page1"></a>{1}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>PART I.</h2>
+<h3><a name="chap1.1" id="chap1.1">CHAPTER I.</a></h3>
+<h4>THE DUTY OF PRIVATE JUDGMENT.</h4>
+<p>Fellow Christians,</p>
+<p>Whilst I invite you to accompany me in a free and full
+investigation of one of those tenets and practices which keep
+asunder the Roman and the Anglican Church, I am conscious in how
+thankless an undertaking I have engaged, and how unwelcome to some
+is the task in which I call upon you to join. Many among the
+celebrated doctors of the Roman Church have taught their disciples
+to acquiesce in a view of their religious obligation widely
+different from the laborious and delicate office of ascertaining
+for themselves the soundness of the principles in which they have
+been brought up. It has been with many accredited teachers a
+favourite maxim, that individuals will most acceptably fulfil their
+duty by abstaining <span class="pagenum"><a name="page2" id=
+"page2"></a>{2}</span> from active and personal inquiries into the
+foundations of their faith; and by giving an implicit credence to
+whatever the Roman Church pronounces to be the truth<a id=
+"footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href=
+"#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>. Should this book fall into the hands
+of any who have adopted that maxim for the rule of their own
+conduct as believers, its pages will of course afford them no help;
+nor can they take any interest in our pursuit, or its results.
+Whilst, however, I am aware, that until the previous question
+(involving the grounds on which the Church of Rome builds her claim
+to be the sole, exclusive, and infallible teacher of Christians in
+all the doctrines of religion,) shall have been solved, many
+members of her body would throw aside, as preposterous, any
+treatise which professed to review the soundness of her
+instructions; I have been at the same time assured, that with many
+of her communion the case is far otherwise; and that instead of
+their being averse to all investigation, a calm, candid, and
+friendly, but still a free and unreserved inquiry into the disputed
+articles of their creed, is an object of their sincere desire. On
+this ground I trust some preliminary reflections upon the duty of
+proving all things, with a view of holding the more fast
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id="page3"></a>{3}</span> and
+sure what is good, may be considered as neither superfluous nor out
+of place.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote1" name=
+"footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+<p>It is sometimes curious to observe the language in which the
+teachers and doctors themselves profess their entire, unlimited,
+and implicit submission of all their doctrines, even in the most
+minute particulars, to the judgment and will of the authorities of
+Rome. Instances are of very frequent occurrence. Thus Joannes de
+Carthagena, a very voluminous writer of homilies, closes different
+parts of his work in these words, "These and all mine I willingly
+subject to the judgment of the Catholic Roman Church, ready, if
+there be written any thing in any way in the very least point
+contrary to her doctrine, to correct, amend, erase, and utterly
+abolish it." Hom. Cath. De Sacris Arcanis Deipar&aelig; et Josephi.
+Paris, 1615. page 921.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>But just as it would belong to another and a separate province
+to examine, at such length as its importance demands, the claims of
+the Church of Rome to be acknowledged as that universal interpreter
+of the word and will of God, from whose decisions there is no
+appeal; so would it evidently be incompatible with the nature of
+the present address, to dwell in any way corresponding with the
+magnitude and delicacy of the subject, on the duty, the
+responsibility, and the privilege of private judgment; on the
+dangers to which an unchastened exercise of it may expose both an
+individual, and the cause of Christian truth; or on the rules which
+sound wisdom and the analogy of faith may prescribe to us in the
+government of ourselves with respect to it. My remarks, therefore,
+on this subject will be as few and brief as I believe to be
+consistent with an acknowledgment of the principles upon which this
+work has been conducted.</p>
+<p>The foundation, then, on which, to be safe and beneficial, the
+duty of private judgment, as we maintain, must be built, is very
+far indeed removed from that common and mischievous notion of it
+which would encourage us to draw immediate and crude deductions
+from Holy Scripture, subject only to the control and the colouring
+of our own minds, responsible for nothing further than our own
+consciousness of an honest intention. Whilst we claim a release
+from that degrading yoke which neither are we nor were our fathers
+able to bear, we deprecate for ourselves and for our
+fellow-believers that licentiousness which in doctrine and practice
+tempts a man to follow merely what is right in his own eyes,
+uninfluenced by the example, the precepts, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page4" id="page4"></a>{4}</span> and the
+authority of others, and owning no submissive allegiance to those
+laws which the wise and good have established for the benefit of
+the whole body. The freedom which we ask for ourselves, and desire
+to see imparted to all, is a rational liberty, tending to the good,
+not operating to the bane of its possessors; ministering to the
+general welfare, not to disorder and confusion. In the enjoyment of
+this liberty, or rather in the discharge of the duties and trusts
+which this liberty brings with it, we feel ourselves under an
+obligation to examine the foundations of our faith, to the very
+best of our abilities, according to our opportunities, and with the
+most faithful use of all the means afforded to us by its divine
+Author and finisher. Among those means, whilst we regard the Holy
+Scriptures as paramount and supreme, we appeal to the witness and
+mind of the Church as secondary and subsidiary; a witness not at
+all competing with Scripture, never to be balanced against it; but
+competing with our own less able and less pure apprehension of
+Scripture. In ascertaining the testimony of this witness, we
+examine the sentiments and practice of the ancient teachers of the
+Church; not as infallible guides, not as uniformly holding all of
+them the same opinions, but as most valuable helps in our
+examination of the evidence of the Church, who is, after all, our
+appointed instructor in the truths of the Gospel,&mdash;fallible in
+her individual members and branches, yet the sure witness and
+keeper of Holy Writ, and our safest guide on earth to the mind and
+will of God. When we have once satisfied ourselves that a doctrine
+is founded on Scripture, we receive it with implicit faith, and
+maintain it as a sacred deposit, entrusted to our keeping, to be
+delivered down whole and entire without our adding <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5"></a>{5}</span> thereto what to
+us may seem needful, or taking away what we may think
+superfluous.</p>
+<p>The state of the Christian thus employed, in acting for himself
+in a work peculiarly his own, is very far removed from the
+condition of one who labours in bondage, without any sense of
+liberty and responsibility, unconscious of the dignity of a free
+and accountable agent, and surrendering himself wholly to the
+control of a task-master. Equally is it distant from the conduct of
+one who indignantly casting off all regard for authority, and all
+deference to the opinions of others, boldly and proudly sets up his
+own will and pleasure as the only standard to which he will submit.
+For the model which we would adopt, as members of the Church, in
+our pursuit of Christian truth, we find a parallel and analogous
+case in a well-principled and well-disciplined son, with his way of
+life before him, exercising a large and liberal discretion in the
+choice of his pursuits; not fettered by peremptory paternal
+mandates, but ever voluntarily referring to those principles of
+moral obligation and of practical wisdom with which his mind has
+been imbued; shaping his course with modest diffidence in himself,
+and habitual deference to others older and wiser than himself, yet
+acting with the firmness and intrepidity of conscious rectitude of
+principle, and integrity of purpose; and under a constant sense of
+his responsibility, as well for his principles as for his
+conduct.</p>
+<p>Against the cogency of these maxims various objections have been
+urged from time to time. We have been told, that the exercise of
+private judgment in matters of religion, tends to foster errors of
+every diversity of character, and leads to heresy, scepticism, and
+infidelity: it is represented as rending the Church of Christ, and
+totally <span class="pagenum"><a name="page6" id=
+"page6"></a>{6}</span> subverting Christian unity, and snapping
+asunder at once the bond of peace. So also it has been often
+maintained, that the same cause robs individual Christians of that
+freedom from all disquietude and perplexity and anxious
+responsibility, that peace of mind, satisfaction, and content,
+which those personally enjoy, who surrender themselves implicitly
+to a guide, whom they believe to be unerring and infallible.</p>
+<p>For a moment let us pause to ascertain the soundness of such
+objections. And here anticipating, for argument's sake, the worst
+result, let us suppose that the exercise of individual inquiry and
+judgment (such as the best teachers in the Anglican Church are wont
+to inculcate) may lead in some cases even to professed infidelity;
+is it right and wise and justifiable to be driven by an abuse of
+God's gifts to denounce the legitimate and faithful employment of
+them? What human faculty&mdash;which among the most precious of the
+Almighty's blessings is not liable to perversion? What
+unquestionable moral duty can be found, which has not been
+transformed by man's waywardness into an instrument of evil? Nay,
+what doctrine of our holy faith has not the wickedness or the folly
+of unworthy men employed as a cloke for unrighteousness, and a
+vehicle for blasphemy? But by a consciousness of this liability in
+all things human, must we be tempted to suppress the truth? to
+disparage those moral duties? or to discountenance the cultivation
+of those gifts and faculties? Rather would not sound philosophy and
+Christian wisdom jointly enforce the necessity of improving the
+gifts zealously, of discharging the moral obligation to the full,
+and of maintaining the doctrine in all its integrity; but guarding
+withal, to the utmost of our power and watchfulness, against the
+abuses to which <span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id=
+"page7"></a>{7}</span> any of these things may be exposed? And we
+may trust in humble but assured confidence, that as it is the duty
+of a rational being, alive to his own responsibility, to inquire
+and judge for himself in things concerning the soul, with the most
+faithful exercise of his abilities and means; so the wise and
+merciful Ruler of our destinies will provide us with a sure way of
+escaping from all evils incident to the discharge of that duty, if,
+in reliance on his blessing, we honestly seek the truth, and
+perseveringly adhere to that way in which He will be our guide.</p>
+<p>It is a question very generally and very reasonably entertained
+among us, whether the implicit submission and unreserved surrender
+of ourselves to any human authority in matters of faith, (though
+whilst it lasts, it of course affords an effectual check to open
+scepticism,) does not ultimately and in very deed prove a far more
+prolific source of disguised infidelity. Doubts repressed as they
+arise, but not solved, silenced but not satisfied, gradually
+accumulate in spite of all external precaution; and at length (like
+streams pent back by some temporary barrier) break forth at once to
+an utter discarding of all authority, and an irrecoverable
+rejection of the Christian faith. From unlimited acquiescence in a
+guide whom our associations have invested with infallibility, the
+step is very short, and frequently taken, to entire apostasy and
+the renunciation of all belief.</p>
+<p>The state of undisturbed tranquillity and repose in one, who has
+divested himself of all responsibility in matters of religious
+belief and practice, enjoying an entire immunity from the anxious
+and painful labour of trying for himself the purity and soundness
+of his faith, is often painted in strong contrast with the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8"></a>{8}</span>
+lamentable condition of those who are driven about by every wind of
+novelty. The condition of such a man may doubtless be far more
+enviable than theirs, who have no settled fixed principles, and who
+wander from creed to creed, and from sect to sect, just as their
+fickle and roving minds suggest some transitory preference. But the
+believer must not be driven by the evils of one extreme to take
+refuge in the opposite. The whirlpool may be the more perilous, but
+the Christian mariner must avoid the rock also, or he will equally
+make shipwreck of his faith. He must with all his skill, and all
+his might, keep to the middle course, shunning that presumptuous
+confidence which scorns all authority, and boldly constitutes
+itself sole judge and legislator; but equally rescuing his mind
+from the thraldom which prostrates his reason, and paralyzes all
+the faculties of his judgment in a matter of indefeasible and awful
+responsibility.</p>
+<p>Here, too, it is questioned, and not without cause, whether the
+satisfaction and comfort so often represented in warm and
+fascinating colours, be really a spiritual blessing; or whether it
+be not a deception and fallacy, frequently ending in lamentable
+perplexity and confusion; like guarantees in secular concerns,
+which as long as they maintain unsuspected credit afford a most
+pleasing and happy security to any one who depends upon them; but
+which, when adverse fortune puts their responsibility to the test,
+may prove utterly worthless, and be traced only by losses and
+disappointments. Such a blind reliance on authority may doubtless
+be more easy and more free from care, than it is to gird up the
+loins of our mind, and engage in toilsome spiritual labour. But
+with a view to our own ultimate safety, wisdom bids us look to our
+foundations in time, and assure ourselves <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9"></a>{9}</span> of them;
+admonishing us that if they are unsound, the spiritual edifice
+reared upon them, however pleasing to the eye, or abounding in
+present enjoyments, will at length fall, and bury our hopes in its
+ruin.</p>
+<p>On these and similar principles, we maintain that it well
+becomes Christians, when the soundness of their faith, and the
+rectitude of their acts of worship, are called in question, "to
+prove all things, and hold fast that which is good." Thus, when the
+unbeliever charges us with credulity in receiving as a divine
+revelation what he scornfully rejects, it behoves us all (every one
+to the extent of his means and opportunities) to possess ourselves
+of the accumulated evidences of our holy faith, so that we may be
+able to give to our own minds, and to those who ask it of us, a
+reason for our hope. The result can assuredly be only the comfort
+of a still more unshaken conviction. Thus, too, when the
+misbeliever charges us with an undue and an unauthorized ascription
+of the Divine attributes to our Redeemer and to our Sanctifier,
+which he would confine to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
+exclusively of the Eternal Son and the Blessed Spirit, it well
+becomes every Catholic Christian to assure himself of the evidence
+borne by the Scriptures to the divinity of the Son and of the Holy
+Ghost, together with the inseparable doctrines of redemption by the
+blood of Christ, and sanctification by the Spirit of grace;
+appealing also in this investigation to the tradition of the
+Church, and the testimony of her individual members from the
+earliest times, as under God his surest and best guides. In both
+these cases, I can say for myself that I have acted upon my own
+principles, and to the very utmost of my faculties have scrutinized
+the foundations <span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id=
+"page10"></a>{10}</span> of my faith, and from each of those
+inquiries and researches I have risen with a satisfaction increased
+far beyond my first anticipations. What I had taken up in my youth
+on authority, I have been long assured of by a moral demonstration,
+which nothing can shake; and I cling to it with an affection,
+which, guarded by God's good providence, nothing in this world can
+dissolve or weaken.</p>
+<p>It is to engage in a similar investigation that I now most
+earnestly but affectionately invite the members of the Church of
+Rome, in order to ascertain for themselves the ground of their
+faith and practice in a matter of vast moment, and which, with
+other points, involves the principle of separation between the
+Roman and Anglican branches of the universal Church. Were the
+subjects of minor importance, or what the ancient writers were wont
+to call "things indifferent," reason and charity would prescribe
+that we should bear with each other, allowing a free and large
+discretion in any body of Christians, and not severing ourselves
+from them because we deemed our views preferable to theirs. In such
+a case we might well walk in the house of God as friends, without
+any interruption of the harmony which should exist between those
+who worship the true God with one heart and one mind, ever striving
+to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. But when the
+points at issue are of so vast moment; when two persons agreeing in
+the general principles of belief in the Gospel and its chief
+characteristic doctrines, yet find it impossible to join
+conscientiously in the same prayer, or the same acts of faith and
+worship, then the necessity is imperative on all who would not be
+parties to the utter breaking up of Christian unity, nor assist in
+propagating error, to make sure of their <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>{11}</span> foundations;
+and satisfy themselves by an honest inquiry and upright judgment,
+that the fault does not rest with them.</p>
+<p>Such appear to me both the doctrine and the practice of the
+INVOCATION OF SAINTS. I have endeavoured to conjecture in what
+light this doctrine and this practice would have presented itself
+to my mind, after a full and free inquiry into the nature and
+history and circumstances of the case, had I been brought up in
+communion with the Church of Rome; the question to be solved being,
+"Could I continue in her communion?" And the result of my inquiry
+is, that I must have either discarded that doctrine at once and for
+ever, or have joined with my lips and my knees in a worship which
+my reason condemned, and from which my heart shrunk. I must have
+either left the communion of Rome, or have continued to offer
+prayers to angels, and the spirits of departed mortals. Unless I
+had resolved at once to shut my eyes upon my own personal
+responsibility, and to surrender myself, mind and reason, soul and
+body, to the sovereign and undisputed control of others, never
+presuming to inquire into the foundation of what the Church of Rome
+taught; I must have sought some purer portion of the Catholic
+Church, in which her members addressed the One Supreme Being
+exclusively, without contemplating any other in the act of
+religious invocation. The distinction invented in comparatively
+late years, of the three kinds of worship; one for God, the second
+for the Virgin Mary, the third for Angels and Saints;&mdash;the
+distinction, too, between praying to a saint to give us good
+things, and praying to that saint to procure them for us at God's
+hand, (or, as the distinction <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page12" id="page12"></a>{12}</span> is sometimes made, into prayer
+direct, absolute, final, sovereign, confined to the Supreme Being
+on the one hand; and prayer oblique, relative, transitory,
+subordinate, offered to saints on the other,) would have appeared
+to me the ingenious and finely-drawn inventions of an advocate, not
+such a sound process of Christian simplicity as the mind could rest
+upon, with an undoubting persuasion that all was right.</p>
+<p>This, however, involves the very point at issue; and I now
+invite you, my Christian Brethren, to join with me, step by step,
+in a review of those several positions which have left on my mind
+the indelible conviction that I could never have passed my life in
+communion with that Church whose articles of fellowship maintained
+the duty of invoking saints and angels; and whose public offices
+were inseparably interwoven with addresses in prayer to other
+beings, than the Holy and undivided Trinity, the one only God.</p>
+<p>In pursuing this inquiry I have thought the most convenient and
+satisfactory division of our work would be&mdash;</p>
+<p>First, to ascertain what inference an unprejudiced study of the
+revealed will of God would lead us to make; both in the times of
+the elder covenant, when "holy men of old spake as they were moved
+by the Holy Ghost," and in that "fulness of time" when God spoke to
+us by his Son.</p>
+<p>Secondly, to examine into the belief and practice of the
+Primitive Church, beginning with the inspired Apostles of our
+Lord.</p>
+<p>Thirdly, to compare the results of those inquiries with the
+tenets and practice of the Church of Rome, with reference to three
+periods; the first immediately <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page13" id="page13"></a>{13}</span> preceding the Reformation; the
+second comprising the Reformation, and the proceedings of the
+Council of Trent; the third embracing the belief and practice of
+the present day.</p>
+<p>In this investigation, I purpose to reserve the worship of the
+Virgin Mary, called by Roman Catholic writers "Hyperdulia," and for
+various reasons the most important and interesting portion of the
+whole inquiry, for separate and distinct examination; except only
+so far as our review of any of the primitive writers may occasion
+some incidental departure from that rule.</p>
+<p>May God guide us to his truth!</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>{14}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap1-2" id="chap1-2">CHAPTER II.</a></h3>
+<h4><a name="sect1-2-1" id="sect1-2-1">SECTION I.</a>&mdash;THE
+EVIDENCE OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.</h4>
+<p>Here, Christian Brethren, bear with me if I briefly, but freely,
+recall to our thoughts on this first entrance upon a review of the
+inspired volume, the principles, and tone of mind, the temper and
+feelings, in a word, the frame both of the understanding and of the
+heart, with which we should study the sacred pages, on whatever
+subject we would try all things, and hold fast what should prove
+itself to be most in accordance with the will of God. Whether we
+would regard the two great parts into which the Holy Scriptures are
+divided, as the Old and the New Covenants; or whether we would
+prefer to call them the Old and the New Testaments, it matters not.
+Although different ideas and associations are suggested by those
+different names, yet, under either view, the same honest and good
+heart, the same patience of investigation, the same upright and
+unprejudiced judgment, the same exercise of our mental faculties,
+and the same enlightened conscience, must be brought to the
+investigation. In the one case we must endeavour to ascertain for
+ourselves the true intent and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page15" id="page15"></a>{15}</span> meaning of the inspired word
+of God, on the very same principles with those on which we would
+interpret a covenant between ourselves, and a person who had made
+it in full and unreserved reliance on our integrity, and on our
+high sense of equity, justice, and honour. In the other case we
+must bring the selfsame principles and feelings to bear on our
+inquiry, as we should apply in the interpretation of the last will
+and testament of a kind father, who with implicit confidence in our
+uprightness and straightforward dealing and affectionate anxiety to
+fulfil his intentions to the very utmost, had assigned to us the
+sacred duty of executor or trustee.</p>
+<p>Under the former supposition, our sincere solicitude would be to
+ascertain the true intent and meaning of the contracting parties,
+not to seek out plausible excuses for departing from it; not to
+cull out and exaggerate beyond their simple and natural bearing,
+such expressions in the deed of agreement, as might seem to justify
+us in adopting the view of the contract most agreeable to our
+present wishes and most favourable to our own interests. Rather it
+would be our fixed and hearty resolution, at whatever cost of time,
+or labour, or pecuniary sacrifice, or personal discomfort, to apply
+to the instrument our unbiassed powers of upright and honest
+interpretation.</p>
+<p>Or adopting the latter analogy, we should sincerely strive to
+ascertain the chief and leading objects of our parent's will; what
+were his intentions generally; what ruling principles seemed to
+pervade his views in framing the testament; and in all cases of
+obscurity and doubt, in every thing approaching an appearance of
+inconsistency, we should refer to that paramount principle as our
+test and guide. We should not for a moment <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>{16}</span> suffer
+ourselves to be tempted to seek for ambiguous expressions, which
+ingenuity might interpret so as to countenance our departure from
+the general drift of our parent's will, in cases where it was at
+variance with our own inclination, and where we could have wished
+that he had made another disposition of his property, or given to
+us a different direction, or trusted us with larger discretion.
+Moreover, in any points of difficulty, we should apply for
+assistance, in solving our doubts, to such persons as were most
+likely to have the power of judging correctly, and whose judgment
+would be least biassed by partiality and prejudice;&mdash;not to
+those whose credit was staked on the maintenance of those
+principles which best accorded with our own inclination. Especially
+if in either case some strong feeling should have been raised and
+spread abroad on any point, we should seek the judgment and counsel
+of those who had been familiar with the testator's intentions, or
+with the views of the covenanting party, before such points had
+become matter of discussion.</p>
+<p>Now only let us act upon these principles in the interpretation
+of THAT COVENANT in which the Almighty has vouchsafed to make
+Himself one of the contracting parties, and man, the creature of
+his hand, is the other: only let us act on these principles in the
+interpretation of THAT TESTAMENT of which the Saviour of the world
+is the Testator; and with God's blessing on our labours (a blessing
+never denied to sincere prayer and faithful exertions) we need not
+fear the result. Any other principle of interpretation will only
+confirm us in our prejudices, and involve us more inextricably in
+error.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>{17}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-2-2" id="sect1-2-2">SECTION II.</a>&mdash;DIRECT
+EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.</h4>
+<p>The first step in our proposed inquiry is to ascertain what
+evidence on the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of Saints
+and Angels can be fairly drawn from the revealed word of God in the
+Old Testament.</p>
+<p>Now, let us suppose that a person of a cultivated and
+enlightened mind, and of a sound and clear judgment, but hitherto a
+stranger to revelation, were required to study the ancient
+Scriptures with the single view of ascertaining what one object
+more than any other, subordinate to the great end of preparing the
+world for the advent of Messiah, seemed to be proposed by the
+wisdom of the Almighty in imparting to mankind that revelation;
+could he fix upon any other point as the one paramount and
+pervading principle with so much reason, as upon this, the
+preservation in the world of a practical belief in the perfect
+unity of God, and the fencing of his worship against the admixture
+of any other, of whatever character or form; The announcement that
+the Creator and Governor of the universe is the sole Giver of every
+temporal and spiritual blessing; the one only Being to whom, his
+rational creatures on earth should pay any religious service
+whatever; the one only Being to whom mortals must seek by prayer
+and invocation for the supply of any of their wants? Through the
+entire volume the inquirer would find that the unity of God is
+announced in every variety of expression; and that the exclusive
+worship <span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id=
+"page18"></a>{18}</span> of HIM alone is insisted upon and guarded
+with the utmost jealousy by assurances, by threats, and by
+promises, as the God who heareth prayer, alone to be called upon,
+alone to be invoked, alone to be adored. So to speak, he would find
+that recourse was had to every expedient for the express purpose of
+protecting God's people from the fatal error of embracing in their
+worship any other being or name whatever; not reserving supreme
+adoration for the Supreme Being, and admitting a sort of secondary
+honour and inferior mode of invocation to his exalted saints and
+servants; but banishing at once and for ever the most distant
+approximation towards religious honour&mdash;the veriest shadow of
+spiritual invocation to any other Being than Jehovah HIMSELF
+ALONE.</p>
+<p>In process of time, the heathen began to deify those mortals who
+had conferred signal benefits on the human race, or had
+distinguished themselves by their power and skill above their
+fellow-countrymen. Male and female divinities were multiplying on
+every side. Together with Jupiter, the fabled father of gods and
+men, worshipped under different names among the various tribes,
+were associated those "gods many and lords many," which ignorance
+and superstition, or policy and craft, had invented; and which
+shared some a greater, some a less portion of popular veneration
+and religious worship. To the people of God, the worshippers of
+Jehovah, it was again and again most solemnly and awfully
+denounced, that no such thing should be. "Thou shalt worship the
+Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve," is a mandate repeated
+in every variety of language, and under every diversity of
+circumstance. In some passages, indeed, together with the most
+clear assurances, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id=
+"page19"></a>{19}</span> that mankind need apply to no other
+dispenser of good, and can want no other as Saviour, advocate, or
+intercessor, that same truth is announced with such superabundance
+of repetition, that in the productions of any human writer the
+style would be chargeable with tautology. In the Bible, this
+repetition only the more forces upon the mind, and fixes there,
+that same principle as an eternal verity never to be questioned;
+never to be dispensed with; never to be diluted or qualified; never
+to be invaded by any service, worship, prayer, invocation, or
+adoration of any other being whatever. Let us take, for example,
+the forty-fifth chapter of Isaiah, in which the principle is most
+strongly and clearly illustrated. "I am the LORD, and there is none
+else: there is no God beside me; I girded thee, though thou hast
+not known me; that they may know from the rising of the sun and
+from the west, that there is none beside me: I am the Lord, and
+there is none else. They shall be ashamed, and also confounded, all
+of them; they shall go to confusion together, that are makers of
+idols. But Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting
+salvation: ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without
+end: I am the Lord, and there is none else. I said not unto the
+seed of Jacob, Seek ye me in vain. They have no knowledge that set
+up the wood of their graven image, and pray unto a god that cannot
+save. There is no god beside me; a just God and a Saviour; there is
+none beside me. Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the
+earth; for I am God, and there is none else."</p>
+<p>But it is needless to multiply these passages; and members of
+the Church of Rome will say, that they themselves acknowledge, as
+fully as members of the Anglican Church can do, that there is but
+one supreme <span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id=
+"page20"></a>{20}</span> God and Lord, to whom alone they intend to
+offer the worship due to God; and that the appeals which they offer
+by way of invocation to saints and angels for their services and
+intercession, do not militate against this principle. But here let
+us ask ourselves these few questions:&mdash;</p>
+<p>First, if it had been intended by the Almighty to forbid any
+religious application, such as is now professedly the invocation of
+saints and angels, to any other being than Himself alone, what
+words could have been employed more stringently prohibitory?</p>
+<p>Secondly, had such an address to saints and angels, as the
+Church of Rome now confessedly makes, been contemplated by our
+heavenly Lawgiver as an exception to the general rule, would not
+some saving clause, some expressions indicative of such an intended
+exception, have been discovered in some page or other of his
+revealed will?</p>
+<p>Thirdly, if such an appeal to the angels of heaven, or to the
+spirits of the just in heaven, had been sanctioned under the elder
+covenant, would not some example, some solitary instance, have been
+recorded of a faithful servant of Jehovah offering such a prayer
+with the Divine approbation?</p>
+<p>Lastly, when such strong and repeated declarations and
+injunctions interspersed through the entire volume of the Old
+Testament, unequivocally show the will of God to be, that no other
+object of religious worship should have place in the heart or on
+the tongue of his own true sons and daughters, can it become a
+faithful child of our Heavenly Father to be seeking for excuses and
+palliations, and to invent distinctions between one kind of worship
+and another?</p>
+<p>God Himself includes all in one universal prohibitory
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>{21}</span>
+mandate, "Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt
+thou serve." So far from according with those general rules for the
+interpretation of the revealed will of God, which we have already
+stated, and from which, in the abstract, probably few would
+dissent, an anxiety to force the word of God into at least an
+acquiescence in the invocation of saints and angels, indicates a
+disposition to comply with his injunctions, wherever they seem to
+clash with our own view, only so far as we cannot avoid compliance;
+and to seek how we may with any show of propriety evade the spirit
+of those commands. Instead of that full, free, and unstinted
+submission of our own inclinations and propensities to the
+Almighty's will wherever we can discover it, which those entertain
+whom the Lord seeketh to worship Him; to look for exceptions and to
+act upon them, bears upon it the stamp of a reserved and grudging
+service. After so many positive warnings, enactments, and
+denunciations, against seeking by prayer the aid of any other being
+whatever, surely a positive command would have been absolutely
+necessary to justify a mortal man in preferring any prayer to any
+being, saint, angel, or archangel, save only the Supreme Deity
+alone. Instead of any such command or even permission appearing,
+not one single word occurs, from the first syllable in the Book of
+Genesis to the last of the prophet Malachi, which could even by
+implication be brought to countenance the practice of approaching
+any created being in prayer.</p>
+<p>But let us now look to the examples on this subject afforded in
+the Old Testament. Many, very many a prayer is recorded of holy
+men, of inspired men, of men, to whose holiness and integrity and
+acceptance <span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id=
+"page22"></a>{22}</span> the Holy Spirit bears witness; yet among
+these prayers there is not found one invocation addressed to saint
+or angel. I will not here anticipate the observations which it will
+be necessary to make in consequence of the extraordinary argument
+which has been devised, to account for the absence of invocations
+to saints before the resurrection of Christ, namely, that before
+that event the saints were not admitted into heaven. Although
+pressed forward with such unhesitating confidence in its validity,
+that argument is so singular in its nature, and so important in its
+consequences, and withal so utterly groundless, as to call for a
+separate examination, on which we will shortly enter: meanwhile, we
+are now inquiring into the matter of fact.</p>
+<p>The whole Book of Psalms is a manual of devotion, consisting
+alternately, or rather intermixedly, of prayers and praises,
+composed some by Moses, some by other inspired Israelites of less
+note, but the greater part by David himself; and what is the force
+and tendency of their example? Words are spoken in collaudation of
+"Moses and Aaron among the saints of the Lord," and of "Samuel
+among such as called upon his name;" and mention is made with
+becoming reverence of the holy angels; but not one word ever falls
+from the pen of the Psalmist, addressed, by way of invocation, to
+saint or angel. In the Roman Ritual supplication is made to Abel
+and Abraham as well as to Michael and all angels. If it is now
+lawful, if it is now the duty of the worshippers of the true God to
+seek his aid through the mediation of those holy men, can we avoid
+asking, Why the inspired patriarchs did not appeal to Abel for his
+mediation? Why did not the inspired David invoke the father of the
+faithful to intercede for him with God? If the departed spirits
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>{23}</span>
+of faithful men may be safely addressed in prayer; if those who in
+their lifetime have, to their fellow-mortals, (who can judge only
+from outward actions, and cannot penetrate the heart,) appeared
+accepted servants and honoured saints of our Creator, may now be
+invoked by an act of religious supplication either to grant us aid,
+or to intercede with God for aid in our behalf, why did not men
+whom God declared to be partakers of his Spirit of truth, offer the
+same supplication to those departed spirits, who, before and after
+their decease, had this testimony from Omniscience itself, that
+they pleased God? Why is no intimation given in the later books of
+the Old Testament that such supplications were offered to Moses, or
+Aaron, or Abraham, or Noah? When wrath was gone out from the
+presence of the Lord, and the plague was begun among the people,
+Aaron took a censer in his hand, and stood between the living and
+the dead, and the plague was stayed. If the soul of Aaron was
+therefore to be regarded as a spirit influential with God, one
+whose intercession could avail, one who ought to be approached in
+prayer, were it only for his intercession, could a stronger motive
+be conceived for suggesting that invocation, than David must have
+felt, when the pestilence was destroying its thousands around him,
+and all his glory and strength, and his very life too, were
+threatened by its resistless ravages? But no! neither Abel, nor
+Abraham, nor Moses, nor Aaron, must be petitioned to intercede with
+God, and to pray that God would stay his hand. To God and God
+alone, for his own mercy's sake, must his afflicted servant turn in
+supplication. We find among his prayers no "Holy Abraham, pray for
+us,"&mdash;"Holy Abel, pray for us." His own Psalm of thanksgiving
+describes full well the object and the nature of his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>{24}</span> prayer:
+"When the waves of death compassed me, the floods of ungodly men
+made me afraid, the sorrows of hell compassed me about, the snares
+of death prevented me; in my distress I called upon the Lord, and
+cried to my God; and He did hear my voice out of his temple, and my
+cry did enter into his ears." [2 Sam. (2 Kings Vulg.) xxii. 5. or
+Ps. xviii.] Abraham, when on earth, prayed God to spare the
+offending-people; but he invoked neither Noah, nor Abel, nor any of
+the faithful departed, to join their intercessions with his own.
+Isaac prayed to God for his son Jacob, but he did not ask the
+mediation of his father Abraham in his behalf; and when Jacob in
+his turn supplicated an especial blessing upon his grandsons
+Ephraim and Manasseh, though he called with gratitude to his mind,
+and expressed with his tongue, the devotedness both of Abraham and
+of Isaac to the Almighty, yet we do not find him appealing to them,
+or invoking their intercession with Jehovah.</p>
+<p>When the conscience-struck Israelites felt that they had exposed
+themselves to the wrath of Almighty God, whose sovereign power, put
+forth at the prayer of Samuel, they then witnessed, distrusting the
+efficacy of their own supplication, and confiding in the
+intercession of that man of God, they implored him to intercede for
+them; and Samuel emphatically responded to their appeal, with an
+assurance of his earnestly undertaking to plead their cause with
+heaven: "And all the people said unto Samuel, Pray for thy servants
+unto the Lord thy God, that we die not. And Samuel said unto the
+people, Fear not.... The Lord will not forsake his people, for his
+great name's <span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id=
+"page25"></a>{25}</span> sake.... Moreover, God forbid that I
+should sin against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you." [1 Sam. (1
+Kings Vulg.) xii. 19.] Samuel is one whom the Holy Spirit numbers
+among those "who called upon God's name;" and when Samuel died, all
+Israel gathered together to lament and to bury him,&mdash;but we
+read of no petition being offered to him to carry on the same
+intercessory office, when he was once removed from them. As long as
+he was entabernacled in the flesh and sojourned on earth with his
+brethren, they besought him to pray for them, to intercede with
+their God and his God for blessings at his hand, (just as among
+ourselves one Christian asks another to pray for him,) but when
+Samuel's body had been buried in peace, and his soul had returned
+to God who gave it, the Bible never records any further application
+to him; we no where read, "Holy Samuel, pray for us."</p>
+<p>Again, what announcement could God Himself make more expressive
+of his acceptance of the persons of any, than He actually and
+repeatedly made to Moses with regard to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob?
+How could He more clearly intimate that if the spirits of the
+faithful departed could exercise intercessory or mediatorial
+influence with Him, those three holy patriarchs would possess such
+power above all others who had ever lived on the earth? "I am the
+God of your fathers; the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God
+of Jacob: and Moses hid his face, for he was afraid to look upon
+God." "Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, The God of
+thy fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of
+Jacob, hath sent me unto you. This is my name for ever, and this is
+my memorial throughout all generations." [Exod. iii. 6. 15.] Did
+Moses in his alarm and dread, when he was afraid <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>{26}</span> to look upon
+God, call upon those holy and accepted servants to aid him in his
+perplexity, and intercede for him and his people with the awful
+Eternal Being on whose majesty he dared not to look? Did he teach
+his people to invoke Abraham? That was far from him. When Moses,
+that saint of the Lord, was himself called hence and was buried,
+(though no mortal man was allowed to know the place of his
+sepulture,) did the surviving faithful pray to him for his help and
+intercession with God? He had wrought so many and great miracles as
+never had been before witnessed on earth; whilst in the tabernacle
+of the flesh he had talked with God as a man talketh with his
+friend; and yet the sacred page records no invocation ever breathed
+to his departed spirit. The same is the result of our inquiry
+throughout.</p>
+<p>I will specify only one more example&mdash;Hezekiah, who
+"trusted in the Lord God of Israel, and clave to the Lord, and
+departed not from following him, but kept his commandments," when
+he and his people were in great peril, addressed his prayer only to
+God. He offered no invocation to holy David to intercede with the
+Almighty for his own Jerusalem; he made his supplication directly
+and exclusively to Jehovah; and, yet, the very answer made to that
+prayer would surely have seemed to justify Hezekiah in seeking holy
+David's mediation, if prayer for the intercession of any departed
+mortal could ever have been sanctioned by Heaven: "Thus saith the
+Lord, the God of David thy father; I have heard thy prayer, I have
+seen thy tears; <i>I</i> will heal thee. I will save this city for
+mine own sake, and for my servant David's sake." [2 Kings (Vulg. 4
+Kings) xix. 15. and xx. 6.] Of what saint in the calendar was ever
+such a thing as this spoken?</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27"></a>{27}</span>
+<p>I have already intimated my intention of referring, with
+somewhat more than a cursory remark, to the position assumed, and
+the argument built upon it by writers in communion with Rome, for
+the purpose of nullifying or escaping from the evidence borne by
+the examples of the Old Testament against the invocation of saints.
+The writers to whom I refer, with Bellarmin at their head, openly
+confess that the pages of the Old Testament afford no instance of
+invocation being offered to the spirits of departed mortals; and
+the reason which they allege is this, No one can be invoked who is
+not admitted to the presence of God in heaven; but before Christ
+went down to hell<a id="footnotetag2" name=
+"footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a> and
+released the spirits from prison, no mortal was admitted into
+heaven; consequently, before the resurrection of Christ the spirit
+of no mortal was invoked. The following are the words of Bellarmin
+at the close of the preface to his "Church Triumphant:"&mdash;"The
+spirits of the patriarchs and prophets before the coming of Christ
+were for this reason not worshipped and invoked, as we now worship
+and invoke the Apostles and martyrs, because they were yet shut up
+and detained in prisons below<a id="footnotetag3" name=
+"footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a>." Again,
+he says, "Because before <span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id=
+"page28"></a>{28}</span> the coming of Christ the saints who died
+did not enter heaven and saw not God, nor could ordinarily know the
+prayers of suppliants, therefore, it was not customary in the Old
+Testament to say, 'Holy Abraham, pray for me,' &amp;c.; but the men
+of that time prayed to God only, and alleged the merits of the
+saints who had already departed, that their own prayers might be
+aided by them."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote2" name=
+"footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+<p>The word Hell, signifying, in Saxon, a hidden-place, altogether
+corresponding in its etymology with "hades," is now used for the
+place of torment called by the Hebrews "Gehennah;" and we must
+perhaps regret that the same Saxon word is employed to signify also
+the unseen region of departed spirits. This circumstance has been
+the source of much difficulty and confusion.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote3" name=
+"footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+<p>"Nam idcirco ante Christi adventum non ita colebantur neque
+invocabantur spiritus patriarcharum atque prophetarum, quemadmodum
+nunc Apostolos et martyres colimus et invocamus, quod illi adhuc
+infernis carceribus clausi detinebantur."&mdash;Ingolstadii, 1601.
+vol. ii. p. 833. "The last edition, enlarged and corrected by the
+Author."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Now let us inquire into this statement thus broadly made, and
+ascertain for ourselves whether the point assumed and the argument
+built upon it can stand the test of examination. Is this argument
+such as ought to satisfy the mind of one, who would humbly but
+honestly follow the apostolic rule, "Prove all things: hold fast
+that which is good?" Is this such an exposition as that the reason
+of a cultivated mind, and the faith of an enlightened Christian,
+can acquiesce in it? Let it be examined neither with prejudice in
+its favour, nor with any undue suspicion of its soundness, but with
+candour and impartiality throughout.</p>
+<p>It is not necessary to dwell at any length on the
+inconsistencies and perplexities involved in this assumed abstract
+theory with regard to the souls of the faithful who died before the
+resurrection of Christ, and which require to be cleared away before
+its advocates can reasonably expect to obtain for it any general
+acceptance among thinking men. I do not wish to contravene the
+theory, far less to substitute another in its stead. On the
+contrary, I am fully content, in company with some of the most
+valuable among Roman Catholic writers, following the example of
+Augustin [Aug. De Pecc. Orig. c. 23. tom. vii. p. 338.&mdash;Quoted
+by De Sacy. 2 Kings (Vulg. 4 Kings) ii.], to leave the subject
+where Scripture has left it. To the arguments <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>{29}</span> alleged, I
+would wish to reply independently of any opinion, as a matter of
+Christian belief, with regard to the place, the condition, and the
+circumstances of the souls of the patriarchs and prophets before
+our blessed Lord's resurrection. It may, nevertheless, materially
+facilitate an inquiry into the soundness of the reasons alleged for
+the total absence of invocation to those souls, if we briefly
+contemplate some of the difficulties which surround this novel
+theory. At all events, such a process will incline us to abstain
+from bold assumptions on a point upon which the Almighty has been
+pleased to throw so little light in his Holy Word, or at least
+avoid all severity of condemnation towards those who may differ
+from our views.</p>
+<p>It is very easy to assert, that all the souls of the faithful
+departed were kept in the prison-house of Hades, and to allege in
+its behalf an obscure passage of St. Peter, to which many of the
+most learned and unprejudiced Christian teachers assign a meaning
+totally unconnected with the subject of departed spirits. But
+surely the case of Enoch's translation from this life to heaven,
+making, as it has been beautifully expressed, but one step from
+earth to glory, which St. Paul, in his Epistle to the Hebrews,
+cites with a most important comment of his own, requires to be well
+and patiently weighed. He was taken from the earth by an immediate
+act of Providence, that he should not see death; and before his
+translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God. Surely the
+case of Elijah too, when we would ascertain the soundness of this
+theory, must not be dismissed summarily from our thoughts, of whom
+the book of eternal truth declares, that Jehovah took him
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>{30}</span>
+in a whirlwind into heaven; his ascent being made visible to mortal
+eyes, as was afterwards the ascension of the blessed Saviour
+Himself. Indeed the accounts of Elijah's translation, and of our
+Lord's ascension, whether in the Septuagint and Greek Testament,
+the Vulgate, or our own authorized version, present a similarity of
+expression very striking and remarkable.</p>
+<p>On this subject we are strongly reminded, first, with what care
+and candour and patience the language of Holy Scripture should be
+weighed, which so positively declares, that Moses and Elijah, both
+in glory, appeared visibly to the Apostles at the transfiguration
+of our blessed Saviour, and conversed with Him on the holy mount:
+"And behold there talked with Him two men, who were Moses and
+Elias, who appeared in glory (in majesty, as the Vulgate renders
+the word), and spake of his decease which He should accomplish at
+Jerusalem;" [Luke ix. 30.]&mdash;and, secondly, how unwise it is to
+dogmatize on such subjects beyond the plain declaration of the
+sacred narrative. Moreover, how very unsatisfactory is the theory
+which we are examining as to the state of the souls of the faithful
+who died before Christ, even the words of Jerome himself prove,
+who, commenting on the transfiguration of the blessed Jesus, is
+unhappily led to represent the Almighty as having summoned Elijah
+to descend from heaven, and Moses to ascend from Hades, to meet our
+Lord in the Mount<a id="footnotetag4" name=
+"footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote4" name=
+"footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+<p>"Elia inde descendente quo conscenderat, et Moyse ab inferis
+resurgente."&mdash;Hieron. in Matt. xvii. 1. Paris, 1706. vol. iv.
+p. 77.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Strange and startling as is this sentiment of Jerome, it is, you
+will observe, utterly irreconcileable with the theory, that the
+reason why the ancient Church did not <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31"></a>{31}</span> pray to the
+saints departed, was because they were not yet in heaven.</p>
+<p>On this point, among Roman Catholic writers themselves, there
+prevails a very great diversity of opinion, arising probably from
+the difficulty which they have experienced in their endeavours to
+make all facts and doctrines square with the present tenets and
+practices of their Church<a id="footnotetag5" name=
+"footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a>. Thus,
+whilst some maintain that Elijah was translated to the terrestrial
+paradise in which Adam had been placed, not enjoying the immediate
+divine presence; others cite the passage as justifying the belief
+that the saints departed pray for us<a id="footnotetag6" name=
+"footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a>. But not
+only are different authors at variance with each other on very many
+points here; the same writer in his zeal is betrayed into great and
+palpable inconsistency. Bellarmin, anxious to enlist the account
+given by our Lord of the rich man and Lazarus, to countenance the
+invocation of saints by the example of the rich man appealing to
+Abraham, maintains that section of Holy Writ to be not a parable,
+but a true history of a matter of fact which took place between two
+real individuals; and of his assertion he adduces this proof, that
+"the Church worships that Lazarus as verily a holy man<a id=
+"footnotetag7" name="footnotetag7"></a><a href=
+"#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a>;" and yet he denies that any of the
+holy men were in heaven before the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page32" id="page32"></a>{32}</span> death of Christ. Either
+Abraham was in heaven in the presence of God, or not; if he was in
+heaven, why did not his descendants invoke his aid? if he was not
+in heaven, the whole argument drawn from the rich man's
+supplication falls to the ground.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote5" name=
+"footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+<p>See De Sacy on 4 Kings i. 1. See also Estius, 1629. p. 168. Pope
+Gregory's Exposition; Rome, 1553. p. 99. Stephen's Bible in loc.
+1557, &amp;c. The Vulgate ed. Antwerp, 1624, cites a note, "Thy
+prayers are stronger than chariots and horsemen."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote6" name=
+"footnote6"></a><b>Footnote 6:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
+<p>Gaspar Sanctius, Antwerp, 1624. p. 1360, considers the fable not
+improbable, that Elijah, living in the terrestrial paradise, wrote
+there the letters to Joram (mentioned 2 Chron. xxi. 12), and sent
+them by angels.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote7" name=
+"footnote7"></a><b>Footnote 7:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag7">(return)</a>
+<p>Colit Lazarum ilium ut vere sanctum hominem.&mdash;Bellarm. De
+Ecd. Triumph, p. 864.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Another very extraordinary inconsistency, arising from the same
+solicitude, forces itself upon our notice, when the same author
+urges a passage in Leviticus [Levit. xix. 13.] to prove, that the
+saints are now admitted at once into the enjoyment of the presence
+of God in heaven, without waiting for the day of final judgment.
+[Bell vol. ii. p. 865.] "God (such are his words) commanded it to
+be written, 'The work of the hireling shall not remain with thee
+till the morning;' therefore, unless God would appear inconsistent
+with Himself, He will not keep back the reward of his saints to the
+end of the world." How strange, that in the same treatise [Ibid. p.
+833.] this author should expressly maintain, that the reward of
+Abel and Abraham, and the holy prophet and lawgiver Moses, the very
+man who was commanded to write that law in Leviticus, was kept
+back,&mdash;the last for a longer period than a thousand years; the
+first well nigh four thousand years.</p>
+<p>I mention these particulars merely to point out how very
+unsatisfactory and unsound is the attempted solution of the
+difficulties which surround on every side the theory of those who
+maintain, that the reason why we have no instance of the righteous
+departed being invoked in the times of the elder covenant is, that
+they were not as yet admitted into heaven, but were kept in prison
+till the resurrection of Christ. I would also observe, even at the
+risk <span class="pagenum"><a name="page33" id=
+"page33"></a>{33}</span> of repetition, that I am here not
+maintaining any opinion as to the appointed abiding-place, the
+condition, and circumstances, the powers of consciousness, volition
+or enjoyment of the departed, before Christ's resurrection; on the
+contrary, I am rather urging the consideration of the great and
+serious caution requisite before we espouse, as an article of
+faith, any opinion which rests on so questionable a foundation, and
+which involves such interminable difficulties.</p>
+<p>But while we need not dwell longer on this immediate point, yet
+there are two considerations which appear to be altogether decisive
+as to the evidence borne against the Invocation of Saints by the
+writers of the Old Testament. If the spirits of the saints departed
+were not invoked before the resurrection of Christ, purely because
+they were not then admitted into heaven; the first consideration I
+would suggest is this: Why did the faithful and inspired servants
+of Jehovah not invoke the angels and archangels who were in heaven?
+The second is this: Why did not the inspired Apostles and faithful
+disciples of our Lord invoke the spirits of those saints after his
+resurrection; that is (according to the theory before us), after
+those saints had been taken by Christ with him into his Father's
+presence? I wish not to anticipate here our inquiry into the
+testimony borne by the writers of the New Testament as to the
+doctrine and practice of the Roman Church in this particular; and I
+will only add, that whatever be the cause of the absence from the
+Old Testament of all worship and invocation of Abel and Abraham,
+whom the Roman Church now invokes, the alleged reason that it was
+because they were not in heaven till after Christ's resurrection,
+is utterly set aside by the conduct of the Apostles and disciples
+of our Lord recorded in the New <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page34" id="page34"></a>{34}</span> Testament, for more than half
+a century after his return to his Father's glory.</p>
+<p>This, however, seems to be the proper place for entertaining the
+first consideration, Why did not the holy men of old, under the
+elder covenant, invoke angels and archangels, as the Roman Church
+now does? Writers, indeed, who have declared themselves the
+defenders of that doctrine and practice, refer us to passages,
+which they cite, as affording examples of the worship of angels;
+and we will not knowingly allow any one of those sections of Holy
+Writ to remain unexamined. We must first endeavour to ascertain the
+testimony borne by the books of the Old Testament: and that
+presents to us such a body of evidence as greatly increases our
+surprise at the perseverance with which the invocation of angels
+has been maintained by any community of men acknowledging the
+inspiration of the sacred volume.</p>
+<p>The inspired writers of the Old Testament, and those to whom
+through their mouth and pen the Divine word was addressed, were as
+fully as ourselves acquainted with the existence of angelic beings.
+They were aware of the station of those angels in the court of
+heaven, of their power as God's ambassadors, and agents for good.
+Either their own eyes had seen the mighty operations of God by the
+hands of those celestial messengers; or their ears had heard their
+fathers tell what HE had done by their instrumentality in times of
+old. Why then did not God's chosen people offer to the angels the
+same worship and invocation which the Church of Rome now addresses
+to them in common with the patriarchs and prophets of the elder
+covenant, and with saints and martyrs under the new? In the
+condition of the holy angels no one ever suggests that <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page35" id="page35"></a>{35}</span> any change,
+affecting the argument, has taken place since the time when man was
+created and made. And as the angels of heaven were in themselves
+the same, equally in the presence of God, and equally able to
+succour men through that long space of four thousand years, which
+intervened between Adam's creation and the birth of HIM who was Son
+of Adam and Son of God, so was man in the same dependent state,
+needing the guidance and protection of a power above his own. Nay,
+surely, if there was in man any difference affecting the argument,
+it would all add weight to the reason against the invocation of
+angels by Christians. The Israelites of old had no clear knowledge,
+as we have, of one great Mediator, who is ever making intercession
+for us; and yet they sought not the mediation and intercession and
+good offices of those superhuman beings, of whose existence and
+power, and employment in works of blessing to man, they had no
+doubt<a id="footnotetag8" name="footnotetag8"></a><a href=
+"#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a>. This is a point of great importance
+to our argument, and I will refer to a few passages in support of
+it.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote8" name=
+"footnote8"></a><b>Footnote 8:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag8">(return)</a>
+<p>A small section indeed of their countrymen in our Saviour's time
+denied the reality of a future state, and the existence of angels
+and spirits; but the sect was of then recent origin, and the
+overwhelming majority believed as their fathers had believed.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>When David, who had, as we know [1 Chron. xxi. 16.], visible
+demonstration afforded him of the existence and ministration of the
+angels, called upon them to unite with his own soul, and with all
+the works of creation through all places of God's dominion, in
+praising their merciful, glorious, and powerful Creator, he thus
+conveys to us the exalted ideas with which he had been filled of
+their nature, their excellence, and their ministration. "The Lord
+hath prepared his throne in the heavens, and his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page36" id="page36"></a>{36}</span> kingdom
+ruleth over all: Bless the Lord, ye his angels that excel in
+strength, that do his commandments, hearkening unto the voice of
+his word. Bless ye the Lord, all ye his hosts, ye ministers of his
+that do his pleasure." [Ps. ciii. 19-21.] David knew moreover that
+one of the offices, in the execution of which the angels do God's
+pleasure, is that of succouring and defending us on earth. For
+example, in one of the psalms used by the Church of Rome at
+complin, and with the rest repeated in the Church of England, and
+prophetic of the Redeemer, David, to whom this psalm is probably to
+be ascribed, declares of the man who had made the Most High his
+refuge and strength, "There shall no evil befall thee, neither
+shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling; for he shall give his
+angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways; they shall
+bear thee up in their hands lest thou dash thy foot against a
+stone." [Ps. xci. 10-12.] And again, with exquisitely beautiful
+imagery, he represents those same blessed servants of heaven as an
+army, as a host of God's spiritual soldiers keeping watch and ward
+over the poorest of the children of men, who would take refuge in
+his mercy: "The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that
+fear him, and delivereth them<a id="footnotetag9" name=
+"footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a>." And yet
+David, the prophet of the Lord, never addresses to these beings,
+high and glorious though they are, one single invocation: he
+neither asks them to assist him, nor to pray for him, nor to pray
+with him in his behalf.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote9" name=
+"footnote9"></a><b>Footnote 9:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag9">(return)</a>
+<p>Ps. xxxiv. 7. (Vulg. xxxiii. 8.) "Immittet angelus Domini in
+circuitu timentium eum, et eripiet eos." In the Vulgate the beauty
+of the figure is lost; which, however, Roman Catholic writers
+restore in their comments. Basil makes a beautiful use of the
+metaphor. See De Sacy in loc.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37"></a>{37}</span>
+<p>Isaiah was admitted by the Holy Spirit to witness in the fulness
+of its glory the court and the throne of heaven; and he heard the
+voices of the seraphim proclaiming their Maker's praise; he
+experienced also personally the effect of their ministration, when
+one of them said, "Lo, this hath touched thy lips, and thine
+iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged." [Isaiah vi. 7.] Still,
+though Isaiah must have regarded this angel as his benefactor under
+God, yet neither to this seraph, nor to any of the host of heaven,
+does he offer one prayer for their good offices, even by their
+intercession. He ever ascribes all to God alone; and never joins
+any other name with His either in supplication or in praise. Let us
+also take the case of Daniel. He acknowledges not only that the
+Lord's omnipotent hand had rescued him from the jaws of the lions,
+but that the deliverance was brought about by the ministration of
+an angel. "My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut the lions'
+mouths, that they have not hurt me." [Dan. vi. 22.] Yet when we
+look through Daniel's prayers, we find no allusion to any of the
+highest angels. He had seen Gabriel before his prayer; he had heard
+the voice and felt the hand of that heavenly messenger who was
+commissioned to reveal to him what should be done in the latter
+end; and immediately after the offering of his prayer, the same
+Gabriel announces himself as one who was come forth to give the
+prophet skill and understanding. And yet neither towards Gabriel,
+nor any other of the angels of God, does one word of invocation
+fall from the lips of Daniel. In the supplications of that holy,
+intrepid, and blessed servant and child of God, we search in vain
+for any thing approaching in spirit to the invocation, "Sancte
+Gabriel, ora pro nobis."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>{38}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-2-3" id="sect1-2-3">SECTION
+III.</a>&mdash;EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT (continued)</h4>
+<p>We must now briefly refer to those passages, by which Roman
+Catholic writers have endeavoured to maintain that religious
+adoration was paid to angels by the faithful sons of God. The two
+principal instances cited are, first, the case of Abraham bowing
+down before three men, whom he recognizes as messengers from
+heaven; and, secondly, the words of Jacob when he gave his
+benediction to his grandsons.</p>
+<p>With regard to the first instance, how very far the prostration
+of Abraham was in itself from implying an act of religious worship,
+being as it was the ordinary mode of paying respect to a fellow
+mortal, is evident from the very words of Scripture. The Hebrew
+word, which we translate by "bowed himself," and which the Vulgate
+unhappily renders "adoravit" ("adored"), is, letter for letter, the
+same in the case of Abraham saluting his three heavenly visitors,
+and in the case of Jacob saluting his brother Esau. The parallelism
+of the two passages is very striking.</p>
+<table summary="Passages">
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>GEN. xviii. 2.</p>
+<p>And he [Abraham] lift up his eyes, and lo! three men stood by
+him; and when he saw them, he ran to meet them from the tent door;
+and <i>bowed himself toward the ground</i>.</p>
+</td>
+<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td>
+<p>GEN. xxxiii. 1 and 3.</p>
+<p>And Jacob lifted up his eyes, and looked, and behold! Esau came
+... And he passed over, and <i>bowed himself to the ground</i>
+seven times until he came near to his brother.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page39" id="page39"></a>{39}</span>
+<p>By rendering the Hebrew word<a id="footnotetag10" name=
+"footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a>, which
+means to "bow or bend oneself," by the word "adoravit," which is
+literally "to pray to," the Latin Vulgate has laid the foundation
+for much unsound and misleading criticism. But suppose the word had
+meant, what it does not mean, an act of solemn religious worship;
+and let it be granted (as I am not only ready to grant, but
+prepared to maintain) that Abraham paid religious adoration at that
+time, what inference can fairly and honestly be drawn from that
+circumstance in favour of the invocation of angels? The ancient
+writers of the Christian Church, and those whom the Church of Rome
+habitually holds in great respect, are full and clear in
+maintaining that the person whom Abraham then addressed, was no
+created being, neither angel nor seraph; but the Angel of the
+Covenant; the Word, the eternal Son of God, Himself God<a id=
+"footnotetag11" name="footnotetag11"></a><a href=
+"#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a>. Before the visible and miraculous
+presence of the God of heaven, who for his own glory and in
+carrying on the work of man's salvation, sometimes deigned so to
+reveal Himself, the patriarchs of old bowed themselves to the
+earth. Can this, with any shadow of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page40" id="page40"></a>{40}</span> reason, be employed to
+sanction the invocation of Michael and all the myriads of angels
+who fill the court of heaven?</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote10" name=
+"footnote10"></a><b>Footnote 10:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag10">(return)</a>
+<p>Not only is the Hebrew word precisely the same, letter for
+letter, and point for point, [Hebrew: shahah], but the Septuagint
+in each case employs the same, [Greek: prosekunaesen]; and the
+Vulgate in each case renders it by the same word, "adoravit." The
+Roman Catholic commentator De Sacy renders it in each case, "se
+prosternavit," which corresponds exactly with our English version.
+The Douay Bible in each case renders it "adored."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote11" name=
+"footnote11"></a><b>Footnote 11:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag11">(return)</a>
+<p>Many early Christian writers may be cited to the same purpose:
+it is enough, however, to refer to Justin Martyr and to Athanasius;
+who are very full and elaborate in maintaining, that the angel here
+mentioned was no created being, but was the Angel of the Covenant,
+God, in the fulness of time manifested in the flesh. The passage
+from Athanasius will be quoted at some length, when we come to
+examine that father's testimony. For Justin Martyr, see Dial. cum
+Tryph. ch. 56, &amp;c. p. 150, &amp;c. (Paris, 1742.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The only other instance to which it will be necessary to call
+your attention, occurs in the forty-eighth chapter of Genesis. The
+passage, however, is so palpably and on the very face of it
+inapplicable, that its examination needs not detain us long. "And
+he [Jacob] blessed Joseph, and said, God, before whom my fathers
+Abraham and Isaac did walk, the God who fed me all my life long
+unto this day, the ANGEL which redeemed me from all evil, bless the
+lads." [Gen. xlviii. 15.] Here the patriarch speaks of God as the
+Angel, and the Angel as God: being the Angel or Messenger of the
+Covenant&mdash;God manifested to man. He speaks not of Michael or
+Gabriel, or archangel or seraph, or any created being; but of the
+Lord Himself, who appeared to him, agreeably to the revelation of
+God Himself recorded in a previous chapter, and thus communicated
+by the patriarch to Rachel and Leah: "And the ANGEL of God spake
+unto me in a dream, saying, Jacob; and I said, Here am I. And he
+said ... <i>I</i> am the GOD of Bethel, where thou anointedst the
+pillar, and vowedst a vow unto me." [Gen. xxxi. 11.] The Angel
+whose blessing he desired for the lads was the God<a id=
+"footnotetag12" name="footnotetag12"></a><a href=
+"#footnote12"><sup>12</sup></a>, to whom he had vowed a vow in
+Bethel, the Lord Himself.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote12" name=
+"footnote12"></a><b>Footnote 12:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag12">(return)</a>
+<p>It may not be superfluous to add, that this is the
+interpretation of the passage adopted by primitive writers, Among
+others see Eusebius Demonstr. Evan. lib. v. ch. 10: who declares
+that the Angel spoken of by Jacob was God the Son.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Independently, however, of this conclusive consideration, if the
+latter member of this sentence had merely expressed a wish, that an
+angel might be employed as <span class="pagenum"><a name="page41"
+id="page41"></a>{41}</span> an instrument of good in behalf of
+Ephraim and Manasseh, I could readily offer such a prayer for a
+blessing on my own children. My prayer would be addressed to the
+angel neither immediately nor transitively, but exclusively to God
+alone, supplicating Him graciously to employ the service of those
+ministering spirits for our good. Such a prayer every Catholic in
+communion with the Church of England is taught and directed to
+offer. Such a prayer is primitive and scriptural; and such is
+offered in the Church on the anniversary of Saint Michael and all
+angels:</p>
+<p>"O Everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the
+services of angels and men in a wonderful order, mercifully grant
+that as Thy holy angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by Thy
+appointment they may succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. Amen."</p>
+<p>Such is the prayer of the Church Catholic, whether of the Roman
+or the Anglican branch; it is in spirit and in truth a Christian
+prayer, fit for faithful mortals to offer on earth to the Lord of
+men and of angels in heaven. Would that the Church of Rome,
+preserving, as she has preserved, this prayer in all its original
+purity, had never been successfully tempted to mingle in the same
+service, supplications, which rob the one only God of his exclusive
+honour and glory, as the God "who heareth prayer;" and to rob
+Christ of his exclusive honour and glory, as our only Mediator and
+Advocate!</p>
+<p>Here, though unwilling, by departing from the order of our
+argument, to anticipate our examination in its place of the Roman
+ritual, I cannot refrain from contrasting this prayer, the genuine
+offspring of Christian faith, with some forms of invocation
+contained in <span class="pagenum"><a name="page42" id=
+"page42"></a>{42}</span> the Roman service on St. Michael's day, in
+which I could not join, and the adoption of which I deeply lament.
+The first is appointed to be said at the part of the Mass called
+"The Secret:" "We offer to Thee, O Lord, the sacrifice of praise,
+humbly beseeching Thee, That by the intervention of the prayers of
+the angels for us, Thou, being appeased, mayest both accept the
+same, and make them profitable for our salvation. Through ..." The
+second is offered at the Post Communion: "Supported [propped up,
+suffulti] by the intercession of Thy blessed archangel Michael, we
+humbly beseech Thee, O Lord, that what with honour we follow<a id=
+"footnotetag13" name="footnotetag13"></a><a href=
+"#footnote13"><sup>13</sup></a>, we may obtain also in mind.
+Through ..."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote13" name=
+"footnote13"></a><b>Footnote 13:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag13">(return)</a>
+<p>I do not understand the exact meaning of these words, which
+however contain no portion of that sentiment, the presence of which
+in this prayer I deplore. The original is this: "Beati archangeli
+tui Michaelis intercessione suffulti, supplices te Domine
+deprecamur, ut quod honore prosequimur, contingamus et in mente.
+Per ..." Probably the general sense is, that what we reverently
+seek we may actually realize.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Still, though here the Christian seems to be taught to rest on a
+broken reed, to support and prop himself up by a staff which must
+bend and break; yet I acknowledge that so much violence is not done
+to my Christian principles, nor do my feelings, as a believer in
+God and his ever-blessed Son, meet with so severe a shock by either
+of these prayers, as by the invocation addressed to the archangel
+himself in the "Gradual" on that same day:</p>
+<p>"O holy Michael, O archangel, defend us in battle, that we
+perish not in the dreadful judgment."</p>
+<p>Christians of the Church of Rome! for one moment meditate, I
+beseech you, on this prayer. It is not addressed to God; in it
+there is no mention made of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page43"
+id="page43"></a>{43}</span> Christ: having called upon the angels,
+and on your own soul in the words of the psalmist, to praise the
+Lord, you address your supplication to Michael himself; not even
+invoking him for his intercession, but imploring of him his
+protection. If it be said, that his intercession is all that is
+meant, with most unfeigned sincerity I request you to judge for
+yourselves, whether any prayer from poor sinful man, putting his
+whole trust in the Lord and imploring his help, could be addressed
+to our God and Saviour more immediate and direct than this? In the
+place of the name of his servant Michael, substitute the highest
+and the holiest name ever uttered in heaven or on earth, and can
+words form a prayer more direct to God? "O Lord God Almighty, O
+Lord Jesus our only Saviour, defend us in battle, that we perish
+not in the dreadful judgment. Hallelujah!"&mdash;Can this be right?
+Were the archangel allowed now, by his Lord and ours, to make his
+voice heard upon earth by Christians offering to him this prayer,
+would he utter any other words, than the angel, his fellow-servant
+and ours, once addressed to Saint John, when he fell down to
+worship before him, "See thou do it not; for I am thy
+fellow-servant: worship God."</p>
+<p>Such then is the evidence borne by the writers of the Old
+Testament. No prayer to angel or beatified spirit occurs from its
+first to its last page. The theory which would have us account for
+the absence of all prayer to the saints before the advent of
+Messiah, by reason of their not having been then admitted into
+their everlasting habitations, and the immediate presence of God
+proves to be utterly groundless. The holy angels were confessedly
+in heaven [Matt. xviii. 10.], beholding the face of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page44" id="page44"></a>{44}</span> God; but no
+invocation was ever addressed to them, by patriarch, or prophet, or
+people, as mediators or intercessors. God, and God alone, the one
+eternal Jehovah, is proclaimed by Himself throughout, and is
+acknowledged throughout to be the only object of any kind of
+spiritual worship; the only Being who heareth prayer, to whom alone
+therefore all mankind should approach with the words and with the
+spirit of invocation. It has been argued by some writers, that in
+the times of the Old Testament, prayer was not offered to God
+through a mediator at all; and that as the one Mediator was not
+then revealed in his person and his offices, the subsidiary
+intercessors could not of course act; and therefore could not be
+invoked by man. The answer to this remark is conclusive. That
+Mediator has been revealed in his person and his offices; and has
+been expressly declared to be the one Mediator between God and man:
+we therefore seek God's covenanted mercies through Him. Those
+subsidiary intercessors have never been revealed; and therefore we
+do not seek their aid. To assure us that it was the mind and will
+of our Heavenly Father that we should approach Him by secondary and
+subsidiary mediators and intercessors, the same clear and
+unquestionable revelation of their persons and their offices as
+mediators would have been required, as He has vouchsafed of the
+mediation of his Son. Had God willed that the faithful should
+approach Him by the intercessions of the saints and martyrs, is it
+conceivable that He would not have given some intimation of his
+will in this respect? If believers in the Gospel were to have
+unnumbered mediators of intercession in heaven, as well as the one
+Mediator of redemption, would not the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page45" id="page45"></a>{45}</span> Gospel
+itself have announced it? Could such declarations as these have
+remained on record without any qualifying or limiting expression,
+"He<a id="footnotetag14" name="footnotetag14"></a><a href=
+"#footnote14"><sup>14</sup></a> is able also to save to the
+uttermost them who come unto God by Him, seeing He ever liveth to
+make intercession for them." "There is one God, and one Mediator
+between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." But this involves the
+question to which the next section must be devoted. All I would
+anticipate here is, that if the irresistible argument from the Old
+Testament is sought to be evaded on the ground that no mediator at
+all was then revealed, we must require a distinct revelation of the
+existence and offices of other mediators and intercessors, before
+we can be justified in applying to them for their intervention in
+our behalf. And the question now is. Are they so revealed?</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote14" name=
+"footnote14"></a><b>Footnote 14:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag14">(return)</a>
+<p>Heb. vii. 25. I Tim. ii. 5.&mdash;Unde et salvare in perpetuum
+potest accedentes per semetipsum ad Deum, semper vivens ad
+interpellandum pro nobis.&mdash;<i>Vulg.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-2-4" id="sect1-2-4">SECTION
+IV.</a>&mdash;EVIDENCE OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.</h4>
+<p>Though such is the evidence borne against the invocation of
+saints and angels by the Old Testament, yet it has been said that
+we are living neither under the patriarchal, nor the Mosaic
+dispensation, but under the Gospel, to whom therefore as Christians
+neither the precepts nor the examples of those ancient times are
+applicable: <span class="pagenum"><a name="page46" id=
+"page46"></a>{46}</span> the injunctions consequently given of old
+to preserve the chosen people from idolatry and paganism, cannot be
+held to prohibit Christians from seeking the aid of those departed
+saints who are now reigning with Christ. But, surely, those
+precepts, and denunciations, and commands, are still most strictly
+applicable, as conveying to us a knowledge of the will of our
+Heavenly Father, that his sons and daughters on earth should
+associate no name, however exalted among the principalities and
+powers in heavenly places, with his own holy name in prayer, and
+spiritual invocation. I am throughout this address supposing myself
+to be speaking to those whose heart's desire is to fulfil the will
+of God in all things; not those who are contented to depart from
+the spirit of that will, whenever they can devise plausible
+arguments to countenance such departure.</p>
+<p>The cases both of precept and example through the Old Testament
+affording so stringent and so universal a rule against the
+association of any name with the name of the Almighty in our
+prayers; before we can conclude that Christians have a liberty
+denied to believers under the former dispensations, we must surely
+produce a declaration to that effect, clear, unequivocal, and
+precisely in point. Nothing short of an enactment, rescinding in
+terms the former prohibitory law, and positively sanctioning
+supplications and prayers to saints and angels, seems capable of
+satisfying any Christian bent on discovering the will of God, and
+resolved to worship Him agreeably to the spirit of that will as it
+has been revealed. But let us read the New Testament from its first
+to its very last word, and we shall find, that the doctrines, the
+precepts, and the examples, the pervading reigning spirit of the
+entire <span class="pagenum"><a name="page47" id=
+"page47"></a>{47}</span> volume, combine in addressing us with
+voices loud and clear. Pray to God Almighty solely in the name and
+for the sake of his dear and only Son Jesus Christ our Lord, and
+offer no prayer, no supplication, no intreaty, to any other being
+or power, saint or angel, though it be only to ask for their
+intercession with the great God. But this involves the whole
+question, and must be sifted thoroughly. Let us then review the
+entire volume with close and minute scrutiny, and ask ourselves, Is
+there a single passage, interpreted to the best of our skill, with
+the aid of those on whose integrity and learning we can rely, which
+directly and unequivocally sanctions any religious invocation of
+whatever kind to any being except God alone? And then let us calmly
+and deliberately resolve this point: In a matter of so vital
+importance, of so immense interest, and of so sacred a character as
+the worship of the Supreme Being, who declares Himself to be a
+jealous God, ought we to suffer any refinements of casuistry to
+entice us from the broad, clear light of revelation? If it were
+God's good pleasure to make exceptions to his rule&mdash;a rule so
+repeatedly, and so positively enacted and enforced&mdash;surely the
+analogy of his gracious dealings with mankind would have taught us
+to look for an announcement of the exceptions in terms equally
+forcible and explicit. Instead, however, of this, we find no single
+act, no single word, nothing which even by implication can be
+forced to sanction any prayer or religious invocation, of whatever
+kind, to any other being save to God alone.</p>
+<p>Let us first look to the language and conduct of our blessed
+Lord, whose prayers to his Father are upon record for our
+instruction and comfort, and whose precepts and example form the
+best rule of a Christian's <span class="pagenum"><a name="page48"
+id="page48"></a>{48}</span> life. So far from repealing the ancient
+law, he repeats in his own person its solemn announcement, "Hear, O
+Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord." [Mark xii. 29.] While the
+same heavenly Teacher commands us with authority, "When thou
+prayest, pray to thy Father which is in secret, and thy Father, who
+seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly." [Matt. vi. 6.] No
+allusion in any word of His do we find to any prayer from a mortal
+on this earth to an angel or saint in heaven. And yet occasions
+were multiplied on which a reference to the invocation of angels
+would have been natural, and apparently called for. He again and
+again places beyond all doubt the reality of their good services
+towards mankind, but it is as God's servants, and at God's bidding;
+not in answer to any supplication or invoking of ours. The parable
+of the rich man and Lazarus has been cited [Bellarmin, p. 895.] to
+bear contrary evidence; but, in the first place, that parable does
+not offer a case in point; in the second place, were it in point,
+it might be fairly and strongly urged against the practice of
+invoking the spirit of any departed mortal, even the father of the
+faithful himself. For what are the circumstances of the parabolic
+representation? A lost spirit in the regions of torment prays to
+Abraham in the regions of the blessed, and the spirit of the
+departed patriarch professes himself to have no power to grant the
+request of the departed and condemned spirit. [Luke xvi. 19.] The
+practice indeed of our Roman Catholic brethren would have been
+exemplified, had our blessed Lord represented the rich man's five
+brethren still on earth as pious men, and as supplicating Abraham
+in heaven to pray for themselves, or to mitigate <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page49" id="page49"></a>{49}</span> their lost
+brother's punishment and his woes. But then it would have afforded
+Christians little encouragement to follow their example, when they
+found Abraham declaring himself unable to aid them in attaining the
+object of their prayer, or in any way to assist them at all.
+Without one single exception, we find our blessed Lord's example,
+precepts, and doctrines to be decidedly against the practice of
+invoking saint or angel; whilst not one solitary act or word of His
+can be cited to countenance or palliate it.</p>
+<p>Next it follows, that we inquire into the conduct and the
+writings of Christ's Apostles and immediate followers, to whom He
+graciously promised that the Holy Spirit should guide them into all
+truth. In the Acts of the Apostles, various instances of prayer
+attract our notice, but not one ejaculation is found there to any
+other being save God alone. Neither angel nor saint is invoked. The
+Apostles prayed for guidance in the government of Christ's infant
+Church, but it was, "Thou, Lord, who knowest the hearts of all
+men." [Acts i. 24.] They prayed for their own acceptance, but it
+was "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." [Acts vii. 59.] They prayed
+for each other, as in behalf of St. Peter when in prison; but we
+are expressly told, that the prayer which was made without ceasing
+by the Church for him was addressed to GOD. [Acts xii. 5.]</p>
+<p>To deliver St. Peter from his chains, an angel was sent on an
+especial mission from heaven; but though St. Peter saw him, and
+heard his voice, and followed him, and knew of a surety that the
+Almighty had employed the ministration of an angel to liberate him
+from his bonds, yet we do not hear thereafter of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>{50}</span> Peter having
+himself prayed to an angel to secure his good offices, and his
+intercession with God, nor has he once indirectly intimated to
+others that such supplications would be of avail, or were even
+allowable. He exhorts his fellow-Christians to pray, "Watch unto
+prayer," but it is because "The eyes of the LORD are over the
+righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers." [1 Pet. iv.
+7; iii. 12.] He Himself prays for them, but it is, that the God of
+all grace might make them perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle
+them. He suggests no invocation of saint or angel to intercede with
+God for them. He bids them cast all their care upon GOD, on the
+assurance that God Himself careth for them.</p>
+<p>Precisely the same result issues from a contemplation of the
+acts and exhortation of St. Paul. He too experienced in his own
+person the comfort of an angel's ministration, bidding him cast off
+all fear when in the extreme of imminent peril. [Acts xxvii. 23,
+24.] Many a prayer of that holy Apostle is upon record; many an
+earnest exhortation to prayer was made by him; we find many a
+declaration relative to his own habits of prayer. But with him God
+and God alone is the object of prayer throughout: by him no saint
+or angel or archangel is alluded to, as one whose intercession
+might be sought by himself or by us. He could speak in glowing
+language of patriarchs, prophets, and angels, but unto none of
+these would he turn. "Be careful for nothing, but in every thing by
+prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be
+made known unto God." [Phil. iv. 6.] And let any one receive, in
+the plain meaning of his words, his prohibitory monition [Col. ii.
+18.], and say, could St. Paul have <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page51" id="page51"></a>{51}</span> uttered these words without
+any qualifying expression, had he worshipped angels by invocation,
+even asking them only to aid him by their prayers. "Let no one
+beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping
+of angels; not holding the Head," which Head he had in the first
+chapter (v. 18) declared to be the dear Son of God, "in whom we
+have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of our
+sins."</p>
+<p>The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews could bring before our
+minds with most fervent uplifting eloquence Abel and Abraham and
+David,&mdash;that goodly fellowship of the prophets, that holy army
+of martyrs; he could speak as though he were an eye-witness of what
+he describes, of the general assembly and church of the first-born,
+whose names are written in heaven. And, surely, had the thought of
+seeking the support or intercession of saint or angel by invocation
+addressed to them, been familiar to him; had the thought even
+occurred to his mind with approbation, he would not have allowed
+such an occasion to pass by, without even alluding to any benefit
+that might arise from our invoking such friends of God. So far from
+that allusion, the utmost which he says at the close of his eulogy
+is this, "These all, having obtained a good report through faith,
+received not the promise; God having provided some better thing for
+us, that they without us should not be made perfect." [Heb. xi. 39,
+40.]</p>
+<p>The beloved Apostle who could look forward in full assurance of
+faith to the day of Christ's second coming, and knew that "when He
+shall appear we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is,"
+has left us this record of his sentiments concerning prayer:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52" id="page52"></a>{52}</span>
+"This is the confidence that we have in HIM, that, if we ask any
+thing according to his will, he heareth us; and if we know that he
+hear us, whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that
+we desired of him." [1 John v. 14, 15.] St. John alludes to no
+intercessor, to no advocate, save only that "Advocate with the
+Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, who is also the propitiation
+for our sins." [1 John ii. 1.] St. John never suggests to us the
+advocacy or intercession of saint or angel; with him God in Christ
+is all in all.</p>
+<p>I will only refer to one more example, that of St. James: the
+instance is equally to the point, and is strongly illustrative of
+the truth. This Apostle is anxious to impress on his
+fellow-Christians a due sense of the efficacy of our intercessions:
+"The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much."
+[James v. 16.] He instances its power with God by the case of
+Elijah, a man so holy, that the Almighty suffered him not to pass
+through the regions of death and the grave, but translated him at
+once from this life to glory: "Elias was a man subject to like
+passions as we are, and he prayed that it might not rain; and it
+rained not on the earth by the space of three years and six months;
+and he prayed again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth
+brought forth her fruit." [James v. 17, 18.] And yet St. James is
+very far from suggesting the lawfulness or efficacy of any
+invocation to the hallowed spirit of this man, to whose prayer the
+elements and natural powers of the sky and the earth had been made
+obedient. He exhorts all men to pray, but it must be to God alone,
+and directly to God, without applying for the intervention of any
+mediators or intercessors from among angels or men. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>{53}</span> "If any of
+you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth liberally to all
+men, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him; but let him ask
+in faith, nothing wavering." [James i. 5, 6.] Like the writer to
+the Hebrews, he would have us come ourselves "boldly" and directly
+"to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace
+to help in time of need."</p>
+<p>Surely, these Apostles, chosen vessels for conveying the truths
+of salvation throughout the world, knew well how the Almighty could
+best be approached by his children on earth; and had the invocation
+of saint or angel found a place in their creed, they would not have
+kept so important a truth from us.</p>
+<p>Before leaving this part of our inquiry, I would propose the
+patient and unprejudiced weighing of the import of two passages in
+the New Testament, often quoted on this subject; one in the Acts of
+the Apostles, the other in the Apocalypse.</p>
+<p>The holy Apostles Barnabas and Paul, by the performance of a
+striking miracle, had excited feelings of religious reverence and
+devotion among the people of Lystra, who prepared to offer
+sacrifice to them as two of their fabled deities. [Acts xiv.
+11-18.] The indignant zeal with which these two holy men rushed
+forward to prevent such an act of impiety, however admirable and
+affecting, does not constitute the chief point for which reference
+is here made to this incident. They were men, still clothed with
+the tabernacle of the flesh, and the weakness of human nature; and
+the priests and people were ready to offer to them the wonted
+victims, the abomination of the heathen. Now, I am fully aware of
+the wide difference, in many <span class="pagenum"><a name="page54"
+id="page54"></a>{54}</span> particulars, between such an act and
+the act of a Christian praying to their spirits after their
+departure hence, and supplicating them to intercede with the true
+God in his behalf: and on this difference Roman Catholic writers
+have maintained the total inapplicability of this incident to the
+present state of things. But, surely, if any such prayer to
+departed saints had been familiar to their minds, instead of
+repelling the religious address of the inhabitants of Lystra at
+once and for ever, they would have altered the tone of their
+remonstrance, and not have suppressed the truth when a good
+opportunity offered itself for imparting it. And, supposing that it
+was part of their commission to announce and explain the invocation
+of saints at all, on what occasion could an explanation of the just
+and proper invocation of angels and saints departed have been more
+appropriate in the Apostles, than when they were denouncing the
+unjustifiable offering of sacrifice to themselves while living? But
+whether the more appropriate place for such an announcement were at
+Lystra, in Corinth, at Athens, or at Rome, it matters not; nor
+whether it would have been more advantageously communicated by
+their oral teaching, or in their epistles. Doubtless, had the
+Apostles, by their example or teaching, sanctioned the invocation
+of saints and angels, in the course of fifty years or more after
+our blessed Saviour's resurrection, it would infallibly have
+appeared in some page or other of the New Testament. Instead of
+this the whole tenor of the Holy Volume breathes in perfect
+accordance with the spirit of the apostolical remonstrance at
+Lystra, to the fullest and utmost extent of its meaning, "We preach
+unto you that ye should turn from these vanities to serve the
+living God."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>{55}</span>
+<p>Of the other instance, it well becomes every Catholic Christian
+to ponder on the weight and cogency. John, the beloved disciple of
+our Lord, when admitted to view with his own eyes and hear with his
+mortal ears the things of heaven, rapt in amazement and awe, fell
+down to worship before the feet of the angel who showed him these
+things. [Rev. xxii. 8, 9.] If the adoration of angels were ever
+justifiable, surely it was then; and what a testimony to the end of
+the world would have been put upon record, had the adoration of an
+angel by the blessed John at such a moment, when he had the
+mysteries and the glories of heaven before him, been received and
+sanctioned. But what is the fact? "Then saith he to me, See thou do
+it not. I am thy fellow-servant, and of thy brethren the prophets,
+and of them who keep the sayings of this book. Worship God." I
+cannot understand the criticism by which the conclusiveness of this
+direct renouncement of all religious adoration and worship is
+attempted to be set aside. To my mind these words, uttered without
+any qualification at such a time, by such a being, to such a man,
+are conclusive beyond gainsaying. The interpretation put upon this
+transaction, and the words in which it is recorded, and the
+inference drawn from them by a series of the best divines, with St.
+Athanasius at their head, presents so entirely the plain
+common-sense view of the case to our minds, that all the subtilty
+of casuists, and all the ingenuity of modern refinements, will
+never be able to substitute any other in its stead. "The angel
+(such are the words of that ancient defender of the true faith), in
+the Apocalypse, forbids John, when desiring to worship him, saying,
+'See thou <span class="pagenum"><a name="page56" id=
+"page56"></a>{56}</span> do it not; I am thy fellow-servant, and of
+thy brethren the prophets, and of them who keep the sayings of this
+book. Worship God.' Therefore, to be the object of worship belongs
+to God only; and this even the angels themselves know: though they
+surpass others in glory, but they are all creatures, and are not
+among objects of worship, but among those who worship the sovereign
+Lord." [Athan. Orat. 2. Cont. Ar. vol. i. p. 491.] To say that St.
+John was too fully illuminated by the Holy Spirit to do, especially
+a second time, what was wrong; and thence to infer that what he did
+was right, is as untenable as to maintain, that St. Peter could
+not, especially thrice, have done wrong in denying our Lord. He did
+wrong, or the angel would not have chided and warned him. And to
+say that the angel here forbade John personally to worship him,
+because he was a fellow-servant and one of the prophets; and thus
+that the prohibition only tended to exalt the prophetic character,
+not to condemn the worship of angels, is proved to be also a
+groundless assumption, from the angel's own words, who reckons
+himself as a fellow-servant with not St. John only, but all those
+also who keep the words of the book of God,&mdash;thus equally
+forbidding every faithful Christian to worship their
+fellow-servants the angels. They are almost the last words in the
+volume of inspired truth, and to me, together with those last
+words, they seem with "the voice of a great multitude, and of many
+waters, and of mighty thunderings," from the very throne itself of
+the Most High, to proclaim to every inhabiter of the earth, Fall
+down before no created being; adore no created being; pray to,
+invoke, call upon no created being, whether saint or angel: worship
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>{57}</span>
+and adore God only; pray to God only. Trust to his mercy; seek no
+other mediator or intercessor than his own only and blessed Son.
+"He who testifieth these things saith, Surely, I come quickly.
+Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ
+be with you all. Amen." [Rev. xxii. 20, 21.]</p>
+<p>Thus the New Testament, so far from mitigating the stringency of
+the former law, so far from countenancing any departure from the
+obligation of that code which limits religious worship to God
+alone, so far from suggesting to us invocation to sainted men, and
+to angels as intercessors with the eternal Giver of all good,
+reiterates the injunction, and declares, that invocation in order
+to be Christian must be addressed to God alone; and that there is
+one and only one Mediator between God and men, the man Jesus
+Christ, who is at the right hand of his Father, a merciful High
+Priest sympathizing with us in our infirmities, ever making
+intercession for us, able to save to the uttermost those who come
+unto God through Him.</p>
+<p>The present seems to be a convenient place for observing, that
+however the distinction is strongly insisted upon, or rather
+implicitly acquiesced in by many, which would admit of a worship or
+service called dulia (the Greek [Greek: douleia]) to saints and
+angels, and would limit the worship or service called latria
+([Greek: latreia]) to the supreme God only, yet that such
+distinction has no ground whatever to rest upon beyond the will and
+the imagination of those who draw it. The two words are used in the
+Septuagint translation of the Old Testament, and in the original
+Greek of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id=
+"page58"></a>{58}</span> New promiscuously, without any such
+distinction whatever. The word which this distinction would limit
+to the supreme worship of the Most High, is used to express the
+bodily service paid by the vanquished to their conquerors, as well
+as the religious service paid by idolaters to their fabled deities,
+and by the true worshippers to the Most High. The word which this
+distinction would reserve for the secondary worship paid to saints
+and angels, is employed to express not only the service paid by man
+to man, but also the service and worship paid to God alone, even
+when mentioned in contradistinction to other worship. It will be
+necessary to establish this by one or two instances; and first as
+to "latria." One single chapter in the Book of Deuteronomy supplies
+us with instances of the word used in the three senses, of service
+to men, service to idols, and service to God, xxviii. 36. 47, 48:
+"Because thou servedst [Greek: elatreusas] not the Lord thy God
+with joyfulness and gladness of heart; Therefore thou shalt serve
+[Greek: latreuseis] thine enemies which the Lord shall send against
+thee in hunger and in thirst and nakedness." "The Lord shall bring
+thee unto a nation which neither thou nor thy fathers have known;
+and there shalt thou serve [Greek: latreuseis] other gods, wood and
+stone." Next as to the word "dulia." The First Book of Samuel
+(called also the First of Kings) alone supplies us with instances
+of this word being used in each of the same three senses of service
+from man to man, from man to idols, and from man to his Maker and
+God. 1 Sam. xvii. 9. "Ye shall be our servants and serve [Greek:
+douleusite haemin] us." xii. 24. "Only fear the Lord, and serve
+[Greek: douleusate] him in truth with all your heart." xxvi. 19.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>{59}</span>
+"They have driven me out from the inheritance of the Lord, saying,
+Go, serve<a id="footnotetag15" name="footnotetag15"></a><a href=
+"#footnote15"><sup>15</sup></a> other gods."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote15" name=
+"footnote15"></a><b>Footnote 15:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag15">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: douleue]. In this case also the Vulgate translates all
+the three passages alike by the same verb, "servire."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is worthy of remark, that the same word "dulia<a id=
+"footnotetag16" name="footnotetag16"></a><a href=
+"#footnote16"><sup>16</sup></a>" is employed, when the Lord by his
+prophet speaks of the most solemn acts of religious worship; not in
+general obedience only, but in the offerings and oblations of their
+holy things. Ezek. xx. 40. "In mine holy mountain, in the mountain
+of the height of Israel, saith the Lord God, there shall all the
+house of Israel, all of them in the land, serve me [Greek:
+douleusousi. Vulg: serviet.]; there will I accept them, and there
+will I require your offerings, and the first-fruits of your
+oblations, with all your holy things." St. Matthew also uses the
+same word when he records the saying of our blessed Lord, "Ye
+cannot serve God and mammon." [Matt. vi. 24.; Greek: douleuein.
+Vulg: servire.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote16" name=
+"footnote16"></a><b>Footnote 16:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag16">(return)</a>
+<p>It is also remarkable that in all these cases, whether the
+Septuagint employs the word "dulia," or "latria," the word in the
+Hebrew is precisely the same, [Hebrew: avad]. That in the fifth
+century the words were synonymous is evident from Theodoret. I.
+319. See Edit. Halle.&mdash;Index.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I will only detain you by one more example, drawn from two
+passages, which seems the more striking because each of the two
+words "dulia" and "latria" is used to imply the true worship of God
+in a person, who was changed from a state of alienation to a state
+of holiness. The first is in St. Paul's 1st Epistle to the
+Thessalonians, i. 9. "How ye turned to God from idols, to serve
+[Greek: douleuein theo zonti] the living and true God." The second
+is in Heb. ix. 14. "How much more shall the blood of Christ, who
+through the eternal Spirit offered himself <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>{60}</span> without spot
+to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve<a id=
+"footnotetag17" name="footnotetag17"></a><a href=
+"#footnote17"><sup>17</sup></a> the living God."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote17" name=
+"footnote17"></a><b>Footnote 17:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag17">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: latoeuein theo zonti.] In each of these two cases the
+Vulgate uses "servire."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The word "hyperdulia," now used to signify the worship proper to
+the Virgin Mary, as being a worship of a more exalted character
+than the worship offered to saints and angels, archangels, and
+cherubim and seraphim, will not require a similar examination. The
+word was invented in later times, and has been used chiefly to
+signify the worship of the Virgin, and is of course found neither
+in the Scriptures, nor in any ancient classical or ecclesiastical
+author.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>{61}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap1-3" id="chap1-3">CHAPTER III.</a></h3>
+<h4><a name="sect1-3-1" id="sect1-3-1">SECTION I.</a>&mdash;THE
+EVIDENCE OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.</h4>
+<p>Before we enter upon the next branch of our proposed inquiry,
+allow me to premise that I am induced to examine into the evidence
+of Christian antiquity not by any misgiving, lest the testimony of
+Scripture might appear defective or doubtful; far less by any
+unworthy notion that God's word needs the additional support of the
+suffrages of man<a id="footnotetag18" name=
+"footnotetag18"></a><a href="#footnote18"><sup>18</sup></a>. On the
+contrary, the voice of God in his revealed word is clear, certain,
+and indisputable, commanding the invocation of Himself alone in
+acts of religious worship, and condemning any such departure from
+that singleness of adoration, as they are <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page62" id="page62"></a>{62}</span> seduced
+into, who invoke saints and angels. And it is a fixed principle in
+our creed, that where God's written word is clear and certain,
+human evidence cannot be weighed against it in the balance of the
+sanctuary. When the Lord hath spoken, well does it become the whole
+earth to be silent before him; when the eternal Judge Himself hath
+decided, the witness of man bears on its very face the stamp of
+incompetency and presumption.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote18" name=
+"footnote18"></a><b>Footnote 18:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag18">(return)</a>
+<p>While some authors seem to go far towards the substitution of
+the fathers for the written word of God, others in their abhorrence
+of that excess have run into the opposite, fancying, as it would
+seem, that they exalt the Divine oracles just in the same
+proportion as they disparage the uninspired writers of the Church.
+The great body of the Church of England adhere to a middle course,
+and adopt that golden mean, which ascribes to the written Word its
+paramount authority, from which is no appeal, and yet honours
+Catholic tradition as the handmaid of the truth.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>For myself I can say (what I have good hope these pages will of
+themselves evince) that no one can value the testimony of Christian
+tradition within its own legitimate sphere more sincerely, or more
+highly, than the individual who is now soliciting your attention to
+the conclusions which he has himself drawn from it. When Scripture
+is silent, or where its meaning is doubtful, Catholic tradition is
+to me a guide, which I feel myself bound to follow with watchful
+care and submissive reverence.</p>
+<p>Now let it be for the present supposed, that instead of the
+oracles of God having spoken, as we believe them to have spoken,
+with a voice clear, strong, and uniform against the doctrine and
+practice of the invocation of saints and angels, their voices had
+been weak, doubtful, and vague; in other words, suppose in this
+case the question had been left by the Holy Scriptures an open
+question, then what evidence would have been deducible from the
+writings of the primitive Church? What testimony do the first years
+and the first ages after the canon of Scripture was closed, bear
+upon this point? And here I would repeat the principle of inquiry,
+proposed above for our adoption in the more important and solemn
+examination of the Holy Volume itself.&mdash;We ought to endeavour
+to ascertain what may <span class="pagenum"><a name="page63" id=
+"page63"></a>{63}</span> fairly and honestly be regarded as the
+real bearing of each author's remains, and not suffer the general
+tone and spirit of a writer to be counterbalanced by single
+expressions, which may be so interpreted as to convey an opposite
+meaning. Rather we should endeavour to reconcile with that general
+spirit and pervading tendency of a writer's sentiments any casual
+expressions which may admit of two acceptations. We adopt this
+principle in our researches into the remains of classical
+antiquity; we adopt the same principle in estimating the testimony
+of a living witness. In the latter case, indeed, the ingenuity of
+the adverse advocate is often exercised in magnifying the
+discrepancies between some minor facts or incidental expressions
+with the broad and leading assertions of the witness, with a view
+to invalidate his testimony altogether, or at least to weaken the
+impression made by it. But then a wise and upright judge, assured
+of the truth of the evidence in the main, and of the integrity of
+the individual, will not suffer unessential, apparent
+inconsistencies to stifle and bury the body of testimony at large,
+but will either extract from the witness what may account for them,
+or show them to be immaterial. Inviting, therefore, your best
+thoughts to this branch of our subject, I ask you to ascertain, by
+a full and candid process of induction, this important and
+interesting point,&mdash;Whether we of the Anglican Church, by
+religiously abstaining from the presentation, in word or in
+thought, of any thing approaching prayer or supplication, entreaty,
+request, or any invocation whatever, to any other being except God
+alone, do or do not tread in the steps of the first Christians, and
+adhere to the very pattern which they set; and whether members of
+the Church of Rome by addressing angel or saint in any form of
+invocation seeking <span class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id=
+"page64"></a>{64}</span> their aid, either by their intercession or
+otherwise, have not unhappily swerved decidedly and far from those
+same footsteps, and departed widely from that pattern?</p>
+<p>In one point of view it might perhaps be preferable to enter at
+once upon our investigation, without previously stating the
+conclusions to which my own inquiries have led; but, on the whole,
+I think it more fair to make that statement, in order, that having
+the inferences already drawn placed before the mind, the inquirer
+may in each case weigh the several items of evidence bearing upon
+them separately, and more justly estimate its whole weight
+collectively at the last.</p>
+<p>After then having examined the passages collected by the most
+celebrated Roman Catholic writers, and after having searched the
+undisputed original works of the primitive writers of the Greek and
+Latin Churches, the conclusion to which I came, and in which every
+day of further inquiry and deliberation confirms me more and more
+in this:&mdash;</p>
+<p>In the first place, negatively, that the Christian writers,
+through the first three centuries and more, never refer to the
+invocation of saints and angels as a practice with which they were
+familiar: that they have not recorded or alluded to any forms of
+invocation of the kind used by themselves or by the Church in their
+days; and that no services of the earliest times contain hymns,
+litanies, or collects to angels, or to the spirits of the faithful
+departed.</p>
+<p>In the second place, positively, that the principles which they
+habitually maintain and advocate are irreconcileable with such a
+practice.</p>
+<p>In tracing the history of the worship of saints and angels, we
+proceed (gradually, indeed, though by no <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>{65}</span> means at all
+periods, and through every stage, with equal rapidity,) from the
+earliest custom established and practised in the Church,&mdash;of
+addressing prayers to Almighty God alone for the sake of the merits
+of his blessed Son, the only Mediator and Intercessor between God
+and man,&mdash;to the lamentable innovation both of praying to God
+for the sake of the merits, and through the mediation of departed
+mortals, and of invoking those mortals themselves as the actual
+dispensers of the spiritual blessings which the suppliant seeks
+from above. It is not only a necessary part of our inquiry for
+ascertaining the very truth of the case; it is also curious and
+painfully interesting, to trace the several steps, one after
+another, beginning with the doctrine maintained by various early
+writers, both Greek and Latin, that the souls of the saints are not
+yet reigning with Christ in heaven, and ending with the anathema of
+the Council of Trent, against all who should maintain that
+doctrine; beginning with prayer and thanksgiving to Almighty God
+alone, and ending with daily prayers both to saints and angels; one
+deviation from the strict line of religious duty, and the pure
+singleness of Christian worship, successively gliding into another,
+till at length the whole of Christendom, with a few remarkable
+exceptions, was seen to acquiesce in public and private devotions,
+which, if proposed, the whole of Christendom would once with
+unanimity have rejected.</p>
+<p>Before I offer to you the result of my inquiries as to the
+progressive stages of degeneracy and innovation in the worship of
+Almighty God, I would premise two considerations:</p>
+<p>First, I would observe, that the soundness of my conclusion on
+the general points at issue does not depend at all on the accuracy
+of the arrangement of those stages <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page66" id="page66"></a>{66}</span> which I have adopted. Should
+any one, for example, think there is evidence that two or more of
+those progressive steps, which I have regarded as consecutive, were
+simultaneous changes, or that any one which I have ranked as
+subsequent took rather the lead in order of time, such an opinion
+would not tend in the least to invalidate my argument; the
+substantial and essential point at issue being this: Is the
+invocation of saints and angels, as now practised in the Church of
+Rome, agreeable to the primitive usage of the earliest
+Christians?</p>
+<p>Secondly, I would observe, that the places and occasions most
+favourable for witnessing and correctly estimating the changes and
+gradual innovations in the worship of those early times, are the
+tombs of the martyrs, and the Churches in which their remains were
+deposited; and at the periods of the annual celebration of their
+martyrdom, or in some instances at what was called their
+translation,&mdash;the removal, that is, of their mortal remains
+from their former resting-place to a church, for the most part
+dedicated to their memory. On these occasions the most
+extraordinary enthusiasm prevailed; sometimes the ardour of the
+worshippers, as St. Chrysostom [St. Chrys. Paris, 1718. Vol. xii.
+p. 330.] tells us, approaching madness. But even at times of less
+excitement, by contemplating, immediately after his death, the acts
+and sufferings of the martyr, and recalling his words, and looks,
+and stedfast bearing, and exhorting each other to picture to
+themselves his holy countenance then fixed on them, his tongue
+addressing them, his sufferings before their eyes, encouraging all
+to follow his example, they began habitually to consider him as
+actually himself one of the faithful assembled round <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>{67}</span> his tomb.
+Hence they believed that he was praying with them as well as for
+them; that he heard their eulogy on his merits, and was pleased
+with the honours paid to his memory: hence they felt sure of his
+goodwill towards them, and his ability, as when on earth, to
+promote their welfare. Hence they proceeded, by a fatal step,
+first, to implore him to give them bodily relief from some present
+sufferings; then invoking him to plead their cause with God, and to
+intercede for the supply of their spiritual wants, and the ultimate
+salvation of their souls; and, lastly, they prayed to him generally
+as himself the dispenser of temporal and spiritual blessings.</p>
+<p>The following then is the order in which the innovations in
+Christian worship seem to have taken place, being chiefly
+introduced at the annual celebrations of the martyrs:&mdash;</p>
+<p>1st. In the first ages confession and prayer and praise were
+offered to the Supreme Being alone, and that for the sake of his
+Son our only Saviour and Advocate: when mention was made of saint
+or martyr, it was to thank God for the graces bestowed on his
+departed holy ones when on earth, and to pray to God for grace that
+we might follow their good examples, and attain, through Christ, to
+the same end and crown of our earthly struggles. This act of
+worship was usually accompanied by a homily setting forth the
+Christian excellences of the saint, and encouraging the survivors
+so to follow him, as he followed Christ.</p>
+<p>2nd. The second stage seems to have been a prayer to Almighty
+God, that He would suffer the supplications and intercessions<a id=
+"footnotetag19" name="footnotetag19"></a><a href=
+"#footnote19"><sup>19</sup></a> of angels and saints to prevail
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>{68}</span>
+with him, and bring down a blessing on their fellow-petitioners on
+earth; the idea having spread among enthusiastic worshippers, as I
+have already observed, that the spirits of the saints were suffered
+to be present around their tombs, and to join with the faithful in
+their addresses to the throne of grace.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote19" name=
+"footnote19"></a><b>Footnote 19:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag19">(return)</a>
+<p>The Greek word [Greek: presbeia], "embassy," employed on such
+occasions, is still used in some eastern Churches in the same
+sense.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>3rd. The third stage seems to have owed its origin to orators
+constantly dwelling upon the excellences of the saints in the
+panegyrics delivered over their remains, representing their
+constancy and Christian virtues as superhuman and divine, and as
+having conferred lasting benefits on the Church. By these benefits
+at first was meant the comfort and encouragement of their good
+example, and the honour procured to the religion of the cross by
+their bearing witness to its truth even unto death; but in process
+of time the habit grew of attaching a sort of mysterious efficacy
+to their merits; hence this third gradation in religious worship,
+namely, prayers to God that "He would hear his suppliants, and
+grant their requests for the sake of his martyred servant, and by
+the efficacy of that martyr's merits."</p>
+<p>4th. Hitherto, unauthorized and objectionable as the two last
+forms of prayer are, still the petitions in each case were directed
+to God alone. The next step swerved lamentably from that principle
+of worship, and the petitioners addressed their requests to angels
+and sainted men in heaven; at first, however, confining their
+petitions to the asking for their prayers and intercessions with
+Almighty God.</p>
+<p>5th. The last stage in this progressive degeneracy of Christian
+worship was to petition the saints and angels, directly and
+immediately themselves, at first for the temporal, and afterwards
+for the spiritual benefits which the petitioners desired to obtain
+from heaven. For it <span class="pagenum"><a name="page69" id=
+"page69"></a>{69}</span> is very curious, but not more curious than
+evident, that the worshippers seem for some time to have petitioned
+their saints for temporal and bodily benefits, before they
+proceeded to ask for spiritual blessings at their hands, or by
+their prayers. (See Basil. Oral. in Mamanta Martyrem.)</p>
+<p>Of these several gradations and stages we find traces in the
+records of Christian antiquity, after superstition and corruption
+had spread through Christian worship, and leavened the whole. Of
+all of them we have lamentable instances in the present ritual of
+the Church of Rome, as we shall see somewhat at large when we reach
+that division of our inquiry. But from the beginning it was not so.
+In the earliest ages we find only the first of these forms of
+worship exemplified, and it is the only form now retained in the
+Anglican Ritual; of which, among other examples, the following
+passage in the prayer for Christ's Church militant on earth
+supplies a beautiful specimen: "We bless Thy holy name for all Thy
+servants departed this life in Thy faith and fear; beseeching Thee
+to give us grace so to follow their good examples, that with them
+we may be partakers of Thy heavenly kingdom: Grant this, O Father,
+for Jesus Christ's sake, our only Mediator and Advocate. Amen."</p>
+<p>We now proceed to examine the invaluable remains of Christian
+antiquity, not for the purpose of testing the accuracy of the above
+catalogue of gradations <i>seriatim</i> and in order of time; but
+to satisfy ourselves on the question, whether the invocation of
+saints and angels prevailed from the first in the Christian Church;
+or whether it was an innovation introduced after pagan superstition
+had begun to mingle its poisonous corruptions with the pure worship
+of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id=
+"page70"></a>{70}</span> Almighty God. And here, I conceive, few
+persons will be disposed to doubt, that if the primitive believers
+were taught by the Apostles to address the saints reigning in
+heaven and the holy angels, and the Virgin Mother of our Lord, with
+adoration and prayers, the earliest Christian records must have
+contained clear and indisputable references to the fact, and that
+undesigned allusions to the custom would inevitably be found
+offering themselves to our notice here and there. I do not mean
+that we should expect to meet with full and explicit statements
+either of the doctrine or the practice of the primitive Church in
+this particular; much less such apologies and elaborate defences of
+the practice as abound to the overflow in later times. But, what is
+more satisfactory in proof of the general and established
+prevalence of any opinions or customs, we should surely find
+expressions incidentally occurring, which implied an habitual
+familiarity with such opinions or customs. In every record, for
+example, of primitive antiquity, from the very earliest of all,
+expressions are constantly meeting us which involve the doctrine of
+the ever-blessed Trinity, the atoning sacrifice of Christ's death,
+the influences of the Holy Spirit; habitual prayer and praise
+offered to the Saviour of the world, as very and eternal God; the
+holy Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper; with other tenets
+and practices of the Apostolic Church. It is impossible to study
+the remains of Christian antiquity without being assured beyond the
+reach of doubt, that such were the doctrines and practice of the
+universal Church from the days of the Apostles. Is the invocation
+of saints and angels and the blessed Virgin to be made an exception
+to this rule? Can it stand this test? The great anxiety and labour
+of Roman Catholic <span class="pagenum"><a name="page71" id=
+"page71"></a>{71}</span> writers to press the authors of every age
+to bear witness on their side in this behalf, proves that in their
+judgment no such exception is admissible. It is clearly beyond
+gainsaying, that if the present doctrine of the Church of Rome,
+with respect to the worship of angels and saints, as propounded by
+the Council of Trent; and if her present practice as set forth in
+her authorized liturgies and devotional services, and professed by
+her popes, bishops, clergy, and people, had been the doctrine and
+practice of the primitive Church, we should have found evident and
+indisputable traces of it in the earliest works of primitive
+antiquity, in the earliest liturgies, and in the forms of prayer
+and exhortations to prayer with which those works abound. It by no
+means follows that if some such allusions were partially
+discoverable, therefore the doctrines and practice must forthwith
+be pronounced to be apostolical; but if no such traces can be
+found, their absence bears witness that neither did those doctrines
+nor that practice exist. If, for example, through the remains of
+the first three centuries we could have discovered no trace of the
+doctrine or practice of holy Baptism and the Eucharist, we must
+have concluded that the doctrine and the practice were the
+offspring of later years. But when we read every where, in those
+remains, exhortations to approach those holy mysteries with a pure
+heart and faith unfeigned; when we find rules prescribed for the
+more orderly administration of the rites; in a word, when we
+perceive throughout as familiar references to these ordinances as
+could be now made by Catholics either of Rome or of England, while
+this would not of itself necessarily prove their divine origin, we
+should with equal plausibility question the existence of Jerusalem
+or Constantinople, or of David or Constantine, as we <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72"></a>{72}</span> should doubt
+the prevalence both of the doctrine and practice of the Church in
+these particulars, even from the Apostles' days.</p>
+<p>With these principles present to our minds, I now invite you to
+accompany me in a review of the testimonies of primitive Christian
+antiquity with regard to supplications and invocations of saints
+and angels, and of the blessed Virgin Mary.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-3-2" id="sect1-3-2">SECTION II</a>&mdash;CENTURY
+I.&mdash;THE EVIDENCE OF THE APOSTOLIC FATHERS.</h4>
+<p>It will be necessary for the satisfaction of all parties, that
+we examine, in the first place, those ancient writings which are
+ascribed to an Apostle, or to fellow-labourers of the Apostles;
+familiarly known as the writings of the Apostolic Fathers. They are
+five in number, Barnabas, Clement, Hermas, Ignatius, and Polycarp.
+Many able writers, as well of the Roman as of the Anglican
+communion, have discussed at large the genuineness of these
+writings; and have come to very different results. Some critics are
+of opposite and extreme opinions, others ranging between them with
+every degree and shade of variation. Some of these works have been
+considered spurious; others have been pronounced genuine; though,
+even these have been thought to be, in many parts, interpolated.
+The question, however, of their genuineness, though deeply
+interesting in itself, will not affect their testimony with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73"></a>{73}</span>
+regard to the subject before us<a id="footnotetag20" name=
+"footnotetag20"></a><a href="#footnote20"><sup>20</sup></a>. They
+were all in existence before the Council of Nic&aelig;a; and we
+shall probably not be wrong in assigning to the first two a date at
+the very lowest computation not less remote than the middle of the
+second century; somewhere, it may be, at the furthest, about one
+hundred years after the death of our Lord. (A.D. 130-150.) With all
+their errors and blemishes and interpolations taken at the worst,
+after every reasonable deduction for defects in matter, taste, and
+style, the writings which are ascribed to the Apostolic Fathers are
+too venerable for their antiquity, too often quoted with reverence
+and affection by some who have been the brightest ornaments of the
+Christian Church, and possess too copious a store of genuine
+evangelical truth, sound principle, primitive simplicity, and pious
+sentiment, to be passed over with neglect by any Catholic
+Christian. The few extracts <span class="pagenum"><a name="page74"
+id="page74"></a>{74}</span> made here will, I am assured, be not
+unacceptable to any one, who holds dear the religion of
+Christ<a id="footnotetag21" name="footnotetag21"></a><a href=
+"#footnote21"><sup>21</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote20" name=
+"footnote20"></a><b>Footnote 20:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag20">(return)</a>
+<p>I do not think it suitable in this address to enter upon the
+difficult field of inquiry, whether all or which of these works
+were the genuine productions of those whose names they bear; and
+whether the Barnabas, Clement, and Hermas to which three of them
+are ascribed, were the Barnabas, Clement, and Hermas of whom
+express mention is made in the pages of Holy Scripture. I have
+determined, in conducting my argument, to affix to them in each
+case the lowest proposed antiquity. The edition of Archbishop Wake,
+(who maintains the highest antiquity for these works, though I have
+not here adopted his translation,) may be consulted with much
+profit.</p>
+<p>Did the question before us relate to the genuineness and dates
+of these works, they could not, with any approach to fairness, be
+all five placed without distinction under the same category. The
+evidence for the genuineness of Clement, Ignatius in the shorter
+copy, and Polycarp, is too valuable to be confounded with that of
+the others, which are indisputably subject to much greater doubt.
+But this question has only an incidental bearing on our present
+inquiry, and will be well spared.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote21" name=
+"footnote21"></a><b>Footnote 21:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag21">(return)</a>
+<p>The edition of the works of these Apostolic Fathers used here is
+that of Cotelerius as revised by Le Clerc, Antwerp, 1698.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr />
+<h4>THE EPISTLE OF ST. BARNABAS.</h4>
+<p>In the work entitled The Catholic Epistle of Barnabas, which was
+written probably by a Jew converted to the Christian faith, about
+the close of the first century, or certainly before the middle of
+the second<a id="footnotetag22" name="footnotetag22"></a><a href=
+"#footnote22"><sup>22</sup></a>, I have searched in vain for any
+thing like the faintest trace of the invocation of saint or angel.
+The writer gives directions on the subject of prayer; he speaks of
+angels as the ministers of God; he speaks of the reward of the
+righteous at the day of judgment; but he suggests not the shadow of
+a supposition, that he either held the doctrine himself which the
+Church of Rome now holds, or was aware of its existence among
+Christians. In his very beautiful but incomplete summary of
+Christian duty [Sect. 18, 19. p. 50, 51, 52.], which he calls "The
+Way of Light," we perceive more than one most natural opening for
+reference to that doctrine, had it been familiar to his mind. In
+the midst indeed of his brief precepts of religious and moral
+obligation, he directs the Christian to seek out every day "the
+persons of the saints," but they are our fellow-believers on earth;
+those saints or holy ones, for administering to whose necessities,
+the Scripture assures us that God will not forget our work and
+labour of love [Heb. vi. 10.]: these the author bids the Christians
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75"></a>{75}</span>
+search out daily, for the purposes of religious intercourse, and of
+encouragement by the word.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote22" name=
+"footnote22"></a><b>Footnote 22:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag22">(return)</a>
+<p>Archbishop Wake considers this Epistle to have been written by
+St. Barnabas to the Jews, soon after the destruction of
+Jerusalem.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The following interesting extracts shall conclude our reference
+to this work:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"There are two ways of doctrine and authority, one of light, the
+other of darkness; and the difference between the two ways is
+great. Over the one are appointed angels of God, conductors of the
+light; over the other, angels of Satan: and the one (God) is Lord
+from everlasting to everlasting; the other (Satan) is ruler of the
+age of iniquity. The way of light is this ... Thou shalt love Him
+that made thee; thou shalt glorify Him that redeemed thee from
+death. Thou shalt be single in heart, and rich in spirit. Thou
+shalt not join thyself to those who are walking in the path of
+death. Thou shalt hate to do what is displeasing to God; thou shalt
+hate all hypocrisy. Thou shalt entertain no evil counsel against
+thy neighbour. Thou shalt not take away thy hand from thy son or
+thy daughter, but shalt teach them the fear of the Lord from their
+youth. Thou shalt communicate with thy neighbour in all things, and
+call not things thine own. Thou shalt not be of a froward tongue,
+for the mouth is the snare of death. To the very utmost of thy
+power keep thy soul chaste. Do not open thine hand to receive, and
+close it against giving. Thou shalt love as the apple of thine eye
+every one who speaketh to thee the word of the Lord. Call to
+remembrance the day of judgment, night and day. Thou shalt search
+out every day the persons of the saints<a id="footnotetag23" name=
+"footnotetag23"></a><a href="#footnote23"><sup>23</sup></a>; both
+meditating by the word, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id=
+"page76"></a>{76}</span> and proceeding to exhort them, and
+anxiously caring to save a soul by the word. Thou shalt preserve
+what thou hast received, neither adding thereto, nor taking
+therefrom. Thou shalt not come with a bad conscience to thy
+prayer."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote23" name=
+"footnote23"></a><b>Footnote 23:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag23">(return)</a>
+<p>There is much obscurity in the phraseology of this passage:
+[Greek: ekzaetaeseis kath hekastaen haemeran ta prosopa ton hagion
+kai dia logou skopion kai poreuomenos eis to parakalesai, kai
+meleton eis sosai psuchaen to logo]. In the corresponding
+exhortation among the Apostolical Constitutions (book vii. ch. 9),
+the expression is, "Thou shalt seek the person ([Greek: prosopon])
+of the saints, that thou mayest find rest (or find refreshment, or
+refresh thyself) ([Greek: in epanapanae tois logois auton]) in
+their words." The author seems evidently to allude to the
+reciprocal advantage derived by Christians from religious
+intercourse.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The closing sentences contain this blessing: "Now God, who is
+the Lord of all the world, give to you wisdom, skill,
+understanding, knowledge of his judgments, with patience. And be ye
+taught of God; seeking what the Lord requires of you, and do it,
+that ye may be saved in the day of judgment.... The Lord of glory
+and of all grace be with your spirit. Amen."</p>
+<hr />
+<h4>THE SHEPHERD OF HERMAS.</h4>
+<p>This work, which derives its title from the circumstance of an
+angelic teacher being represented as a shepherd, is now considered
+by many to have been the production of Hermas, a brother of Pius,
+Bishop of Rome<a id="footnotetag24" name=
+"footnotetag24"></a><a href="#footnote24"><sup>24</sup></a> though
+others are persuaded that the work is of a much earlier date<a id=
+"footnotetag25" name="footnotetag25"></a><a href=
+"#footnote25"><sup>25</sup></a>. The author speaks of guardian
+angels and of evil angels, and he speaks much of prayer; but not
+the faintest hint shows itself throughout the three books, of which
+the work consists, that he had <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page77" id="page77"></a>{77}</span> any idea of prayer being
+addressed to any created being, whether saint or angel. On the
+evidence of this writer I will not detain you much longer than by
+the translation of a passage as it is found in the Greek quotation
+from Hermas, made by Antiochus (Homil. 85), on a point the most
+nearly, of all that I can find, connected with the immediate
+subject of our inquiry. The Latin is found in the second book,
+ninth mandate. It contains sound spiritual advice, of universal
+application.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote24" name=
+"footnote24"></a><b>Footnote 24:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag24">(return)</a>
+<p>Ecclesiastical writers refer the appointment of Pius, as Bishop
+of Rome, to the year 153.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote25" name=
+"footnote25"></a><b>Footnote 25:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag25">(return)</a>
+<p>Archbishop Wake thinks it not improbable that this book was
+written by the same Hermas, of whom mention is made by St.
+Paul.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"Let us then remove from us double-heartedness and
+faint-heartedness, and never at all doubt of supplicating any thing
+from God; saying within ourselves, 'How can I, who have been guilty
+of so many sins against Him, ask of the Lord and receive?' But with
+thine whole heart turn to the Lord, and ask of Him without
+doubting; and thou shalt know his great mercy, that He will not
+forsake thee, but will fulfil the desire of thy soul. For God is
+not as men are, a rememberer of evil, but is Himself one who
+remembers not evil, and is moved with compassion towards his
+creature. Do thou, therefore, cleanse thy heart of doubt, and ask
+of Him, and thou shalt receive thy request. But when thou doubtest,
+thou shalt not receive. For they who doubt towards God are the
+double-hearted, and shall receive nothing whatever of their
+desires. For those who are whole in the faith, ask every thing,
+trusting in the Lord, and they receive because they ask nothing
+doubting. [See St. James i. 6.] And if thou shouldest be tardy in
+receiving, do not doubt in thy mind because thou dost not receive
+soon the request of thy soul. For the cause of the tardiness of thy
+receiving is some trial, or some transgression which thou knowest
+not of. Do thou then <span class="pagenum"><a name="page78" id=
+"page78"></a>{78}</span> not cease to offer the request of thy
+soul, and thou shalt receive it. But if thou grow faint in asking,
+accuse thyself, and not the Giver. For double-heartedness is a
+daughter of the devil, and works much mischief towards the servants
+of God. Do thou, therefore, take to thyself the faith that is
+strong."</p>
+<p>In the twelfth section of the ninth Similitude, in the third
+book, in the midst of much to the same import, and of much, too,
+which is strange and altogether unworthy of the pen from which the
+previous quotation proceeded, he thus writes, as the Latin records
+his words, the Greek of this passage having been lost.</p>
+<p>"These all are messengers to be reverenced for their dignity. By
+these, therefore, as it were by a wall, the Lord is girded round.
+But the gate is the Son of God, who is the only way to God. For no
+one shall enter in to God except by his Son." [Book iii. Simil.
+2.]</p>
+<p>On the subject of prayer, I cannot refrain from referring you to
+a beautiful similitude, illustrative of the powerful and beneficial
+effects of the intercession of Christians for each other. The
+author compares a rich man, abounding in deeds of charity, to a
+vine full of fruit supported by an elm. The elm seems not to bear
+fruit at all; but by supporting the vine, which, without that
+support, would bear no fruit to perfection, it may be said to bear
+fruit itself. So the poor man, who has nothing to give in return
+for the rich man's fruits of charity, beyond the support which his
+prayers and praises ascending to God in his behalf will obtain,
+confers a far more substantial benefit on the rich man than the
+most liberal outpouring of alms from the rich can confer on the
+poor. [Ibid.] Yet the writer, who <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page79" id="page79"></a>{79}</span> had formed such strong notions
+of the benefits mutually obtained by the prayers of Christians for
+each other, says not a word about the intercession of saints and
+angels, nor of our invoking them. He will not suffer us to be
+deterred by any consciousness of our own transgressions from
+approaching God Himself, directly and immediately ourselves; but He
+bids us draw near ourselves to the throne and mercy seat of our
+heavenly Father.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4>ST. CLEMENT, BISHOP OF ROME.</h4>
+<p>It is impossible to read the testimony borne by Eusebius, and
+other most ancient writers, to the character and circumstances of
+Clement, without feeling a deep interest in whatever production of
+his pen may have escaped the ravages of time. "Third from the
+Apostles," says Eusebius, "Clement obtained the bishopric of Rome;
+one who had seen the Apostles and conversed with them, and had
+still the sound of their preaching in his ears, and their tradition
+before his eyes;&mdash;and not he alone, for many others<a id=
+"footnotetag26" name="footnotetag26"></a><a href=
+"#footnote26"><sup>26</sup></a> at that time were still living, who
+had been taught by the Apostles. In the time of this Clement, no
+small schism having arisen among the brethren in Corinth, the
+Church in Rome sent a most important letter to the Corinthians,
+urging them to return to peace, renewing <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>{80}</span> their faith,
+and [reminding them of] the tradition which had been so lately
+received from the Apostles." [Euseb. Eccl. Hist. v. c. 6.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote26" name=
+"footnote26"></a><b>Footnote 26:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag26">(return)</a>
+<p>See St. Paul to the Philippians, iv. 3. "And I entreat thee
+also, true yoke-fellow, help those women which laboured with me in
+the gospel, with Clement also, and with other my fellow-labourers,
+whose names are in the book of life."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Of the many works which have been attributed to Clement, it is
+now generally agreed, that one, and only one, can be safely
+received as genuine, whilst some maintain that even that one is not
+altogether free from interpolations, if not itself spurious<a id=
+"footnotetag27" name="footnotetag27"></a><a href=
+"#footnote27"><sup>27</sup></a>. But though we must believe the
+other works to have been assigned improperly to Clement; yet I have
+not thought it safe to pass them by unexamined, both because some
+of them are held in high estimation by writers of the Church of
+Rome, and especially because whatever pen first composed them, of
+their very great antiquity there can be entertained no reasonable
+doubt. Indeed, the Apostolical Canons, and the Apostolical
+Constitutions, both ascribed to Clement as their author, acting
+under the direction of the Apostolic Council, stand first among the
+records of the Councils received by the Church of Rome.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote27" name=
+"footnote27"></a><b>Footnote 27:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag27">(return)</a>
+<p>Archbishop Wake concludes that this first Epistle was written
+shortly after the end of Nero's persecution, and before A.D.
+70.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To Clement's first Epistle to the Corinthians, now regarded by
+many as the only genuine work of that primitive writer, the date of
+which is considered by many to be about A.D. 90, Jerome bears this
+very interesting testimony in his book on illustrious men:</p>
+<p>"He, Clement, wrote in the person of the Church of Rome, to the
+Church in Corinth, a very useful epistle, which is publicly read in
+some places; in its character agreeing with St. Paul's Epistle to
+the Hebrews, not only in the sense, but even in the words: and
+indeed the resemblance is very striking in each." [Catalogus
+Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum, Jeron., vol. iv, part ii. p. 107,
+edit. Benedict. Paris, 1706.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page81" id="page81"></a>{81}</span>
+<p>It is impossible to read this Epistle of one of the earliest
+bishops of Christ's flock in the proper frame of mind, without
+spiritual edification. A tone of primitive simplicity pervades it,
+which is quite delightful. His witness to the redemption by the
+atoning sacrifice of Christ's death, and to the life-giving
+influences of the Spirit of grace, is clear, repeated, and direct.
+His familiar acquaintance with the ancient Scriptures is very
+remarkable; though we might not always acquiesce in the critical
+accuracy of his application. His reference to the Epistles written
+by St. Paul to the same Church at Corinth that he was then
+addressing, affords one of those unobtrusive and undesigned
+collateral evidences to the Holy Scriptures, which are as abundant
+in the primitive writings, as they are invaluable. No one can read
+this Epistle of Clement, without acquiescing in the expression of
+Jerome, that it is "very admirable."</p>
+<p>Perhaps in the present work the Epistle of Clement becomes even
+more interesting from the circumstance of his having been a bishop
+of the Church founded by the Apostles themselves in the very place
+where that Church exists, to whose members this inquiry is more
+especially addressed. In his writings I have searched diligently
+for every expression which might throw light upon the opinions and
+practice either of the author or of the Church in whose name he
+wrote; of the Church which he addressed, or of the Catholic Church
+at large to which he refers, on the subject of our inquiry. So far,
+however, from any word occurring, which could be brought to bear in
+favour of the adoration of saints and angels, or of any
+supplication to them for their succour or their prayers, the
+peculiar turn and character of his Epistle in many parts seems to
+supply <span class="pagenum"><a name="page82" id=
+"page82"></a>{82}</span> more than negative evidence against the
+prevalence of any such belief or practice. Clement speaks of
+angels; he speaks of the holy men of old, who pleased God, and were
+blessed, and were taken to their reward; he speaks of prayer; he
+urges to prayer; he specifies the object of our prayers; he
+particularizes the subjects of our prayers; but there is not the
+most distant allusion to the saints and angels as persons to whom
+supplications could be addressed. Pray for yourselves (such are the
+sentiments of this holy man); pray for your brethren who have
+fallen from their integrity; pray to God Almighty, for the sake of
+his Son, and your prayer will be heard and granted. Of any other
+intercessor or advocate, angel, saint, or Virgin Mother; of any
+other being to whom the invocations of the faithful should be
+offered, Clement seems to have had no knowledge. Could this have
+been so, if those who received the Gospel from the very
+fountain-head had been accustomed to pray to those holy men who had
+finished their course on earth, and were gone to their reward in
+heaven? Clement invites us to contemplate Enoch, and Abraham, and
+David, and Elijah, and Job, with many of their brethren in faith
+and holiness; he bids us look to them with reverence and gratitude,
+but it is only to imitate their good examples. He tells us to think
+of St. Paul and St. Peter and their brethren in faith and holiness;
+but it is in order to listen to their godly admonitions, and to
+follow them in all pious obedience to the will of our heavenly
+Father, as they followed Christ. I must content myself with a very
+few brief extracts from this Epistle<a id="footnotetag28" name=
+"footnotetag28"></a><a href="#footnote28"><sup>28</sup></a>:</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote28" name=
+"footnote28"></a><b>Footnote 28:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag28">(return)</a>
+<p>I am induced to mention here that two Epistles, ascribed to St.
+Clement, written in Arabic, and now appended to Wetstein's Greek
+Testament (Amsterdam, 1751), are believed by many to be genuine,
+whilst others say they are spurious. At all events they are
+productions of the earliest times. The manuscript was procured at
+Constantinople. I have examined the Latin translation carefully,
+and in some points submitted my doubts to a very learned Syriac
+scholar. The general subject is the conduct of those who have
+professed celibacy, whilst of the invocation of saints no trace
+whatever is to be found. The passages most closely bearing on the
+point before us are to the following effect:</p>
+<p>The writer urges Christians to be careful to maintain good
+works, especially in the cause of charity, visiting the sick and
+afflicted, praying with them, and praying for them, and persevering
+always in prayer; asking and seeking of God in joy and
+watchfulness, without hatred or malice. In the Lord's husbandry, he
+says, it well becomes us to be good workmen, who are like the
+Apostles, imitating the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, who
+are ever anxious for the salvation of men.</p>
+<p>"Therefore (he adds, at the close of the first of these
+Epistles) let us look to and imitate those faithful ones, that we
+may behave ourselves as is meet in the Lord. So shall we serve the
+Lord, and please him, in righteousness and justice without a stain.
+Finally, farewell in the Lord, and rejoice in the Lord, all ye holy
+ones. Peace and joy be with you from God the Father, by Jesus
+Christ our Lord."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83"></a>{83}</span>
+<p>Ch. 21. "Take heed, beloved, lest the many loving-kindnesses of
+the Lord prove our condemnation, if we do not live as is worthy of
+him, nor do with one accord what is good and well-pleasing in his
+sight.... Let us consider how nigh to us he is, and that nothing of
+our thoughts or reasonings is concealed from him. Justice it is
+that we should not become deserters from his will.... Let us
+venerate the Lord Jesus, whose blood was given for us."</p>
+<p>Ch. 29. "Let us then approach him in holiness of soul, lifting
+up holy and undefiled hands towards him; loving our merciful and
+tender Father who hath made us a portion of his elect."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>{84}</span>
+<p>Ch. 36. "This is the way, beloved, in which we find Jesus Christ
+our salvation, the chief-priest of our offerings, our protector,
+and the succourer of our weakness. By him let us look stedfastly to
+the heights of heaven; by him let us behold his most high and
+spotless face: by him the eyes of our heart are opened; by him our
+ignorant and darkened minds shoot forth into his marvellous light;
+by him the Supreme Governor willed that we should taste immortal
+knowledge: who, being the brightness of his magnificence, is so
+much greater than the angels, as he hath by inheritance obtained a
+more excellent name than they."</p>
+<p>Ch. 49. "He who hath love in Christ, let him keep the
+commandments of Christ. Who can tell of the bond of the love of
+God? The greatness of his goodness who can adequately express?...
+Love unites us to God.... By love the Lord took us; by the love
+which he had for us Christ our Lord gave his blood for us by the
+will of God, and his flesh for our flesh, and his life for our
+lives."</p>
+<p>Ch. 56. "Let us pray for those who are in any transgression,
+that meekness and humility may be granted to them; that they may
+submit, not to us, but to the will of God; for thus to them will
+the remembrance towards God and the saints, with mercies, be
+fruitful and perfect<a id="footnotetag29" name=
+"footnotetag29"></a><a href="#footnote29"><sup>29</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote29" name=
+"footnote29"></a><b>Footnote 29:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag29">(return)</a>
+<p>The original is obscure, and has been variously rendered,
+[Greek: outos gar estai autois egkarpos kai teleia hae pros ton
+theon kai tous hagious met oiktirmon mneia.] The Editor refers his
+readers to Rom. xii. 13. "Distributing to the necessity of saints."
+The received translation is this, "Sic enim erit ipsis fructuosa et
+perfecta qu&aelig; est apud Deum et sanctos cum misericordia
+recordatio."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Ch. 58. "The all-seeing God, the Sovereign Ruler <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>{85}</span> of spirits,
+and the Lord of all flesh, who hath chosen the Lord Jesus, and us
+through him, to be a peculiar people; grant to every soul that
+calleth on his glorious and holy name, faith, fear, peace,
+patience, long-suffering, self-control, purity, and temperance, to
+the good pleasure of his name, through our high-priest and
+protector Jesus Christ; through whom to him be glory and majesty,
+dominion and honour, now and for ever and ever, world without end.
+Amen."</p>
+<hr />
+<h4>SAINT IGNATIUS.</h4>
+<p>This martyr to the truth as it is in Jesus sealed that truth
+with his blood about seventy years after the death of our Lord.
+From Antioch in Syria, of which place he was bishop, he was sent to
+the imperial city, Rome; and there he ended his mortal career by a
+death which he had long expected, and which he was prepared to meet
+not only with resignation to the Divine will, but even with joy and
+gladness. His Epistles are written with much of the florid
+colouring of Asiatic eloquence; but they have all the raciness of
+originality, and they glow with that Christian fervour and charity
+which compels us to love him as a father and a friend, a father and
+friend in Christ. The remains of this apostolic father I have
+carefully studied, with the single view of ascertaining whether any
+vestige, however faint, might be traced in him of the invocation of
+saints and angels; but I can find none. Neither here, nor in the
+case of any of the apostolical fathers, whose remains we are
+examining, have I contented myself with merely ascertaining that
+they bear no direct and palpable evidence; I have always
+endeavoured to find, and then thoroughly to sift, any expressions
+which might with <span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id=
+"page86"></a>{86}</span> the slightest plea of justification be
+urged in testimony of primitive belief and practice sanctioning the
+invocation of saints. I find none. Brethren of the Church of Rome,
+search diligently for yourselves; "I speak as to wise men: Judge ye
+what I say."</p>
+<p>The remains of Ignatius offer to us many a passage on which a
+Christian pastor would delight to dwell: but my province here is
+not to recommend his works to the notice of Christians; I am only
+to report the result of my inquiries touching the matter in
+question; and as bearing on that question, the following extracts
+will not be deemed burdensome in this place:&mdash;</p>
+<p>In his Epistle to the Ephesians, exhorting Christians to united
+prayer, he says, "For if the prayer of one or two possesses such
+strength, how much more shall the prayer both of the bishop and of
+the whole Church?" [Page 13. &sect; 5-7.] "For there is one
+physician of a corporeal and a spiritual nature, begotten and not
+begotten; become God in the flesh, true life in death, both from
+Mary and from God; first liable to suffering, and then incapable of
+suffering." [In the majority of the manuscripts the reading is, "in
+an immortal true life."]</p>
+<p>Here we must observe that these Epistles of Ignatius have come
+down to us also in an interpolated form, abounding indeed with
+substitutions and additions, but generally resembling paraphrases
+of the original text. Of the general character of that
+supposititious work, two passages corresponding with our quotations
+from the genuine productions of Ignatius may give a sufficiently
+accurate idea. The first passage above quoted is thus paraphrased:
+"For if the prayer of one or two possesses <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>{87}</span> such
+strength that Christ stands among them, how much more shall the
+prayer both of the bishop and of the whole Church, ascending with
+one voice to God, induce him to grant all their requests made in
+Jesus Christ?" [Page 47. c. 5.] The paraphrase of the second is
+more full: "Our physician is the only true God, ungenerated and
+unapproachable; the Lord of all things, but the Father and
+Generator of the only-begotten Son. We have also as our physician
+our Lord God, Jesus Christ, who was before the world, the
+only-begotten Son and the Word, but also afterwards man of the
+Virgin Mary; 'for the Word was made flesh.' He who was incorporeal,
+now in a body; he who could not suffer, now in a body capable of
+suffering; he who was immortal in a mortal body, life in
+corruption&mdash;in order that he might free our immortal souls
+from death and corruption, and heal them, diseased with ungodliness
+and evil desires as they were." [Page 48. c. 7.]</p>
+<p>It must here be observed, that though these are indisputably not
+the genuine works of Ignatius, but were the productions of a later
+age, yet no trace is to be found in them of the doctrine, or
+practice, of the invocation of saints. In this point of view their
+testimony is nothing more nor less than that of an anonymous
+paraphrast, who certainly had many opportunities of referring to
+that doctrine and practice; but who by his total silence seems to
+have been as ignorant of them as the author himself whose works he
+is paraphrasing.</p>
+<p>To return to his genuine works: In his Epistle to the Magnesians
+we find these expressions: "For as the Lord did nothing without the
+Father, being one with <span class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id=
+"page88"></a>{88}</span> him, neither by himself, nor by his
+Apostles; so neither do ye any thing without the bishop and
+priests, nor attempt to make any thing appear reasonable to
+yourselves individually. But at one place be there one prayer, and
+one supplication, one mind, one hope in love, in blameless
+rejoicing: Jesus Christ is one; than which nothing is better. All,
+then, throng as to one temple, as to one altar, as to one Jesus
+Christ, who proceeded from one Father, and is in one, and returned
+to one." [Page 19. &sect; 7.] Again he says, "Remember me in your
+prayers, that I may attain to God. I am in need of your united
+prayer in God, and of your love."</p>
+<p>In his Epistle to the Trallians, he expresses himself in words
+to which no Anglican Catholic would hesitate to respond: "Ye ought
+to comfort the bishop, to the honour of God, and of Jesus Christ,
+and of the Apostles." [Page 25. &sect; 12.] He speaks in this
+Epistle with humility and reverence of the powers and hosts of
+heaven; but he makes no allusion to any religious worship or
+invocation of them.</p>
+<p>The following extract is from his Epistle to the Philadelphians:
+"My brethren, I am altogether poured forth in love for you; and in
+exceeding joy I make you secure; yet not I, but Jesus Christ, bound
+in whom I am the more afraid, as being already seized<a id=
+"footnotetag30" name="footnotetag30"></a><a href=
+"#footnote30"><sup>30</sup></a>; but your prayer to God will
+perfect me, that I may obtain the lot mercifully assigned to me.
+Betaking myself to the Gospel as to the flesh of Jesus, and to the
+Apostles as the presbytery of the Church; let us also love the
+prophets, because they also have proclaimed the Gospel, and hoped
+in him, and waited for him; in whom also <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>{89}</span> trusting,
+they were saved in the unity of Jesus Christ, being holy ones
+worthy of love and admiration, who have received testimony from
+Jesus Christ, and are numbered together in the Gospel of our common
+hope." [Page 32. &sect; 5.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote30" name=
+"footnote30"></a><b>Footnote 30:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag30">(return)</a>
+<p>This clause is very obscure, and perhaps imperfect.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I am induced to add the paraphrase on this passage also. "My
+brethren, I am very much poured out in loving you, and with
+exceeding joy I make you secure; not I, but by me, Jesus Christ, in
+whom bound I am the more afraid. For I am yet not perfected, but
+your prayer to God will perfect me; so that I may obtain that to
+which I was called, flying to the Gospel as the flesh of Jesus
+Christ, and to the Apostles as the presbytery of the Church. And
+the prophets also I love, as persons who announce Christ, as
+partaking of the same spirit with the Apostles. For just as the
+false prophets and false apostles have drawn one and the same
+wicked and deceitful and seducing spirit, so also the prophets and
+the apostles, one and the same holy spirit, good, leading, true,
+and instructing. For one is the God of the Old and the New
+Testament. One is Mediator between God and man, for the production
+of the creatures endued with reason and perception, and for the
+provision of what is useful, and adapted to them: and one is the
+Comforter who wrought in Moses and the prophets and the apostles.
+All the saints therefore were saved in Christ, hoping in him, and
+waiting for him; and through him they obtained salvation, being
+saints worthy of love and of admiration, having obtained a
+testimony from Jesus Christ in the Gospel of our common hope."
+[Page 81. &sect; 5.]</p>
+<p>In his Epistle to the Romans he speaks to them of his own prayer
+to God, and repeatedly implores them <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page90" id="page90"></a>{90}</span> to pray for him. "Pray to
+Christ for me, that by these instruments [the teeth of the wild
+beasts] I may become a sacrifice of God. I do not, as Peter and
+Paul, command you: they were Apostles, I am a condemned man. They
+were free; but I am still a servant. Yet if I suffer, I shall
+become the freedman of Jesus Christ, and shall rise again free: and
+now in my bonds I learn to covet nothing." [Page 28. &sect; 4.]
+Again he says, "Remember the Church in Syria in your prayers."
+[Page 30. &sect; 9.] He prays for his fellow-labourers in the Lord:
+he implores them to approach the throne of grace with supplications
+for mercy on his own soul. Of prayer to saint or angel he says
+nothing. Of any invocation offered to them by himself or his
+fellow-believers, Ignatius appears entirely ignorant.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4>SAINT POLYCARP.</h4>
+<p>The only remaining name among those, whom the Church has
+reverenced as apostolical fathers, is the venerable Polycarp. He
+suffered martyrdom by fire, at a very advanced age, in Smyrna,
+about one hundred and thirty years after his Saviour's death. Of
+Polycarp, the apostolical bishop of the Catholic Church of Smyrna,
+only one Epistle has survived. It is addressed to the Philippians.
+In it he speaks to his brother Christians of prayer, constant,
+incessant prayer; but the prayer of which he speaks is supplication
+addressed only to God<a id="footnotetag31" name=
+"footnotetag31"></a><a href="#footnote31"><sup>31</sup></a>. He
+marks out for our imitation the good example of St. Paul and the
+other Apostles; assuring us that they had not run in vain,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>{91}</span>
+but were gone to the place prepared for them by the Lord, as the
+reward of their labours. But not one word does he utter bearing
+upon the invocation of saints in prayer; he makes no allusion to
+the Virgin Mary.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote31" name=
+"footnote31"></a><b>Footnote 31:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag31">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: deaesesin aitoumenoi ton pantepoptaen Theon.] Sect
+7.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Before we close our examination of the recorded sentiments of
+the apostolical fathers on the immediate subject of our inquiry, we
+must refer, though briefly, to the Epistle generally received as
+the genuine letter from the Church of Smyrna to the neighbouring
+Churches, narrating the martyrdom of Polycarp. It belongs, perhaps,
+more strictly to this place than to the remains of Eusebius,
+because, together with the sentiments of his contemporaries who
+witnessed his death and dictated the letter, it purports to contain
+the very words of the martyr himself in the last prayer which he
+ever offered upon earth. With some variations from the copy
+generally circulated, this letter is preserved in the works of
+Eusebius. [Euseb. Paris, 1628, dedicated to the Archbishop by
+Franciscus Vigerus.] On the subject of our present research the
+evidence of this letter is not merely negative. So far from
+countenancing any invocation of saint or martyr, it contains a
+remarkable and very interesting passage, the plain common-sense
+rendering of which bears decidedly against all exaltation of
+mortals into objects of religious worship. The letter, however, is
+too well known to need any further preliminary remarks; and we must
+content ourselves with such references and extracts as may appear
+to bear most directly on our subject.</p>
+<p>"The Church of God, which is in Smyrna, to the Church in
+Philomela, and to all the branches [Greek: paroikais] <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92"></a>{92}</span> of the holy
+Catholic Church dwelling in any place, mercy, peace, and love of
+God the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ be multiplied." [Book i.
+Hist. iv. c. xv. p. 163.]</p>
+<p>"The Proconsul, in astonishment, caused it to be proclaimed
+thrice, Polycarp has confessed himself to be a Christian. On this
+they all shouted, that the Proconsul should let a lion loose on
+Polycarp. But the games were over, and that could not be done: they
+then with one accord insisted on his being burnt alive."</p>
+<p>Polycarp, before his death, offered this prayer, or rather
+perhaps we should call it this thanksgiving, to God for his mercy
+in thus deeming him worthy to suffer death for the truth, "Father
+of thy beloved and blessed Son Jesus Christ, by whom we have
+received our knowledge concerning thee, the God of angels and
+power, and of the whole creation, and of the whole family of the
+just, who live before thee; I bless thee because thou hast deemed
+me worthy of this day and this hour to receive my portion among the
+number of the martyrs, in the cup of Christ, to the resurrection
+both of soul and body in the incorruption of the Holy Ghost; among
+whom may I be received before thee this day in a rich and
+acceptable sacrifice, even as thou, the true God, who canst not
+lie, foreshowing and fulfilling, hast beforehand prepared. For
+this, and for all I praise thee, I bless thee; I glorify thee,
+through the eternal high-priest Jesus Christ thy beloved Son,
+through whom to thee, with him in the Holy Ghost, be glory both now
+and for future ages. Amen."</p>
+<p>(I cannot help suggesting a comparison between the prayer of
+this primitive martyr bound to the stake, with the prayer of Thomas
+Becket, of Canterbury, as stated in the ancient services for his
+day, when he was murdered in his own cathedral, to which we shall
+hereafter refer at length. The comparison will impress us with the
+difference between religion and superstition, between the purity of
+primitive Christian worship, and the unhappy corruptions of a
+degenerate age. "To God and the Blessed Mary, and Saint Dionysius,
+and the holy patrons of this Church, I commend myself and the
+Church.")</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>{93}</span>
+<p>After his death, the narrative proceeds, "But the envious
+adversary of the just observed the honour put upon the greatness of
+his testimony, [or of his martyrdom [Greek: to megethos autou taes
+marturias],] and his blameless life from the first, and knowing
+that he was now crowned with immortality, and the prize of
+undoubted victory, resisted, though many of us desired to take his
+body, and have fellowship with his holy flesh. Some then suggested
+to Nicetes, the father of Herod, and brother of Dalce, to entreat
+the governor not to give his body, 'Lest,' said he, 'leaving the
+crucified One they should begin to worship this man [Greek:
+sebein];' and this they said at the suggestion and importunity of
+the Jews, who also watched us when we would take the body from the
+fire. This they did, not knowing that we can never either leave
+Christ, who suffered for the salvation of all who will be saved in
+all the world, or worship any other." [The Paris translation adds
+"ut Deum."] "For him being the Son of God we worship [Greek:
+proskunumen], but the martyrs, as disciples and imitators of our
+Lord, we worthily love<a id="footnotetag32" name=
+"footnotetag32"></a><a href="#footnote32"><sup>32</sup></a>,
+because of their pre-eminent [Greek: anuperblaeton] good-will
+towards their <span class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id=
+"page94"></a>{94}</span> own king and teacher, with whom may we
+become partakers and fellow-disciples."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote32" name=
+"footnote32"></a><b>Footnote 32:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag32">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: axios agapomen]. Ruffinus translates it by "diligimus et
+veneramur," and it is so quoted by Bellarmin.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"The centurion, seeing the determination of the Jews, placed him
+in the midst, and burnt him as their manner is. And thus we
+collecting his bones, more valuable than precious stones, and more
+esteemed than gold, we deposited them where it was meet. There, as
+we are able, collecting ourselves together in rejoicing and
+gladness, the Lord will grant to us to observe the birth-day of his
+martyrdom, for the remembrance of those who have before undergone
+the conflict, and for exercise and preparation of those who are to
+come." [Greek: hos dunaton haemin sunagomenois en agalliasei kai
+chara parexei ho Kurios epitelein taen tou martyriou autou haemeran
+genethlion, eis te ton proaethlaekoton mnaemaen, kai ton mellonton
+askaesin te kai hetoimasian.]</p>
+<p>In this relic of primitive antiquity, we have the prayer of a
+holy martyr, at his last hour, offered to God alone, through Christ
+alone. Here we find no allusion to any other intercessor; no
+commending of the dying Christian's soul to saint or angel. Here
+also we find an explicit declaration, that Christians offered
+religious worship to no one but Christ, whilst they loved the
+martyrs, and kept their names in grateful remembrance, and honoured
+even their ashes when the spirit had fled. Polycarp pleads no other
+merits; he seeks no intercession; he prays for no aid, save only
+his Redeemer's. Here too we find, that the place of a martyr's
+burial was the place which the early Christians loved to frequent;
+but then we are expressly told with what intent they met
+there,&mdash;not, as in later times, to invoke the departed spirit
+of the martyr, but to call to mind, in grateful remembrance, the
+sufferings of those who had already endured the awful struggle; and
+by <span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id=
+"page95"></a>{95}</span> their example to encourage and prepare
+other soldiers of the cross thereafter to fight the good fight of
+faith; assured that they would be more than conquerors through Him
+who loved them.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>We have now examined those works which are regarded by us all,
+whether of the Roman or Anglican Church, as the remains of
+apostolical fathers,&mdash;Christians who, at the very lowest
+calculation, lived close upon the Apostles' time, and who,
+according to the firm conviction of many, had all of them conversed
+with the Apostles, and heard the word of truth from their mouths. I
+do from my heart rejoice with you, that these holy men bear direct,
+clear, and irrefragable testimony to those fundamental truths which
+the Church of Rome and the Church of England both hold
+inviolate&mdash;the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, with its
+essential and inseparable concomitants, the atonement by the blood
+of a crucified Redeemer, and the vivifying and sanctifying
+influences of the Holy Spirit.</p>
+<p>Supposing for a moment no trace of such fundamental doctrines
+could be discovered in these writings, would not the absence of
+such vestige have been urged by those who differ from us, as a
+strong argument that the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity was
+an innovation of a later date; and would not such an argument have
+been urged with reason? How, in plain honesty, can we avoid coming
+to the same conclusion on the subject of the invocation of saints?
+If the doctrine and the practice of praying to saints, or to
+angels, for their succour, or even their intercession, had been
+known <span class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id=
+"page96"></a>{96}</span> and recognised, and approved and acted
+upon by the Apostles, and those who were the very disciples of the
+Apostles, not only deriving the truth from their written works, but
+having heard it from their own living tongue,&mdash;in the nature
+of things would not some plain, palpable, intelligible, and
+unequivocal indications of it have appeared in such writings as
+these; writings in which much is said of prayer, of intercessory
+prayer, of the one object of prayer, of the subjects of prayer, of
+the nature of prayer, the time and place of prayer, the spirit in
+which we are to offer prayer, and the persons for whom we ought to
+pray? Does it accord with common sense, and common experience, with
+what we should expect in other cases, with the analogy of history,
+and the analogy of faith, that we should find a profound and total
+silence on the subject of any prayer or invocation to saints and
+angels, if prayer or invocation of saints and angels had been
+recognised, approved, and practised by the primitive Church?</p>
+<p>At the risk of repetition, or surplusage, I would beg to call
+your attention to one point in this argument. I am far from saying
+that no practice is apostolical which cannot be proved from the
+writings of these apostolical fathers: that would be a fallacy of
+an opposite kind. I ground my inference specifically and directly
+on the fact, that these writers are full, and copious, and
+explicit, and cogent on the nature and duty of prayer and
+supplications, as well for public as for private blessings; and of
+intercessions by one Christian for another, and for the whole race
+of mankind no less than for mercy on himself; and yet though
+openings of every kind palpably offered themselves for a natural
+introduction of the subject, there is in no one single instance any
+reference or allusion to the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page97"
+id="page97"></a>{97}</span> invocation of saint or angel, as a
+practice either approved or even known.</p>
+<p>When indeed I call to mind the general tendency of the natural
+man to multiply to himself the objects of religious worship, and to
+create, by the help of superstition, and the delusive workings of
+the imagination, a variety of unearthly beings whose wrath he must
+appease, or whose favour he may conciliate; when I reflect how
+great is the temptation in unenlightened or fraudulent teachers to
+accommodate the dictates of truth to the prejudices and desires of
+those whom they instruct, my wonder is rather that Christianity was
+so long preserved pure and uncontaminated in this respect, than
+that corruptions should gradually and stealthily have mingled
+themselves with the simplicity of Gospel worship. That tendency is
+plainly evinced by the history of every nation under heaven: Greek
+and Barbarian, Egyptian and Scythian, would have their gods many,
+and their lords many. From one they would look for one good; on
+another they would depend for a different benefit, in mind, body,
+and estate. Some were of the highest grade, and to be worshipped
+with supreme honours; others were of a lower rank, to whom an
+inferior homage was addressed; whilst a third class held a sort of
+middle place, and were approached with reverence as much above the
+least, as it fell short of the greatest. In the heathen world you
+will find exact types of the dulia, the hyperdulia, and the latria,
+with which unhappily the practical theology of modern Christian
+Rome is burdened. Indeed, my wonder is, that under the Christian
+dispensation, when the household and local gods, the heathen's
+tutelary deities, and the genii, had been dislodged by the light of
+the Gospel, saints and angels had not at a much <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>{98}</span> earlier
+period been forced by superstition to occupy their room.</p>
+<p>We shall be led to refer to some passages in the earliest
+Christian writers, especially in Origen, which bear immediately on
+this point, representing in strong but true colours the futility of
+deeming a multitude of inferior divinities necessary for the
+dispensation of benefits throughout the universe, whose good
+offices we must secure by acts of attention and worship. I
+anticipate the circumstance in this place merely to show that the
+tendency of the human mind, clinging to a variety of preternatural
+protectors and benefactors, was among the obstacles with which the
+first preachers of the Gospel had to struggle. In the proper place
+I shall beg you to observe how hardly possible it would have been
+for those early Christian writers, to whom I have referred above,
+to express themselves in so strong, so sweeping, and so unqualified
+a manner, had the practice of applying by invocation to saints and
+angels then been prevalent among the disciples of the Cross.</p>
+<p>We may, I believe, safely conclude, that in these primitive
+writings, which are called the works of the Apostolical Fathers,
+there is no intimation that the present belief and practice of the
+Church of Rome were received, or even known by Christians. The
+evidence is all the other way. Indeed, Bellarmin, though he appeals
+to these remains for other purposes, and boldly asserts that "all
+the fathers, Greek and Latin, with unanimous consent, sanction and
+teach the adoration of saints and angels," yet does not refer to a
+single passage in any one of these remains for establishing this
+point. He cites a clause from the spurious work strangely ascribed
+to Dionysius the Areopagite, which was the forged production, as
+the learned are all <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" id=
+"page99"></a>{99}</span> agreed, of some centuries later; and he
+cites a pious sentiment of Ignatius, expressing his hope that by
+martyrdom he might go to Christ, and thence he infers that Ignatius
+believed in the immediate transfer of the soul from this life to
+glory and happiness in heaven, though Ignatius refers there
+distinctly to the resurrection. [Epist. ad Rom. c. iv. See above,
+p. 90.] But Bellarmin cites no passage whatever from these remains
+to countenance the doctrine and practice of the adoration of saints
+and angels.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id=
+"page100"></a>{100}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap1-4" id="chap1-4">CHAPTER IV.</a></h3>
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-1" id="sect1-4-1">SECTION I.</a>&mdash;THE
+EVIDENCE OF JUSTIN MARTYR.</h4>
+<p>Justin, who flourished about the year 150, was trained from his
+early youth in all the learning of Greece and of Egypt. He was born
+in Palestine, of heathen parents; and after a patient examination
+of the evidences of Christianity, and a close comparison of them
+with the systems of philosophy with which he had long been
+familiar, he became a disciple of the Cross. In those systems he
+found nothing solid, or satisfactory; nothing on which his mind
+could rest. In the Gospel he gained all that his soul yearned for,
+as a being destined for immortal life, conscious of that destiny,
+and longing for its accomplishment. His understanding was
+convinced, and his heart was touched; and regardless of every
+worldly consideration, and devoted to the cause of truth, he openly
+embraced Christianity; and before kings and people, Jews and
+Gentiles, he pleaded the religion of the crucified One with
+unquenchable zeal and astonishing power. The evidence of such a man
+on any doctrine <span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id=
+"page101"></a>{101}</span> connected with our Christian faith must
+be looked to with great interest.</p>
+<p>In the volumes which contain Justin's works we find "Books of
+Questions," in which many inquiries, doubts, and objections, as
+well of Jews as of Gentiles, are stated and answered. It is agreed
+on all sides that these are not the genuine productions of Justin,
+but the work of a later hand. Bellarmin appeals to them,
+acknowledging at the same time their less remote origin. The
+evidence, indeed, appears very strong, which would lead us to
+regard them as the composition of a Syrian Christian, and assign to
+them the date of the fifth century; and as offering indications of
+the opinions of Christians at the time of their being put together,
+they are certainly interesting documents. When fairly quoted, the
+passages alleged in defence of the invocation of saints, so far
+from countenancing the practice, assail irresistibly that
+principle, which, with other writers, Bellarmin himself confesses
+to be the foundation of that doctrine. For these Books of Questions
+assert that the souls of the faithful are not yet in glory with
+God, but are reserved in a separate state, apart from the wicked,
+awaiting the great day of final and universal doom. In answer to
+Question 60, the author distinctly says:&mdash;"Before the
+resurrection the recompense is not made for the things done in this
+life by each individual." [Qu&aelig;stiones et Responsiones ad
+Orthodoxos, p. 464.]</p>
+<p>In reply to the 75th Question, inquiring into the condition of
+man after death, this very remarkable answer is
+returned:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"The same relative condition which souls have with the body now,
+they have not after the departure from the body. For here all the
+circumstances of the union <span class="pagenum"><a name="page102"
+id="page102"></a>{102}</span> are in common to the just and the
+unjust, and no difference is in them in this respect,&mdash;as to
+be born and to die, to be in health and to be in sickness, to be
+rich and to be poor, and the other points of this nature. But after
+the departure from the body, forthwith takes place the distinction
+of the just and the unjust: for they are conducted by the angels to
+places corresponding with their deserts: the souls of the just to
+paradise, where is the company and the sight of angels and
+archangels, and also, by vision, of the Saviour Christ, according
+to what is said, 'Being absent from the body, and present with the
+Lord;' and the souls of the unjust to the places in hades,
+according to what is said of Nebucodonosor king of Babylon, 'Hades
+from beneath hath been embittered, meeting thee.'&mdash;And in the
+places corresponding with their deserts they are kept in ward unto
+the day of the resurrection and of retribution." [Page 469.]</p>
+<p>I much regret to observe that Bellarmin omits to quote the
+latter part of this passage, stopping short with an "&amp;c." at
+the words <i>hades</i>, or <i>inferorum loca</i>, although the
+whole of the writer's testimony in it turns upon the very last
+clause. [Bellarmin, c. iv. p. 851. "Improborum autem ad inferorum
+loca."]</p>
+<p>The next question (76) runs thus: "If the retribution of our
+deeds does not take place before the resurrection, what advantage
+accrued to the thief that his soul was introduced into paradise;
+especially since paradise is an object of sense, and the substance
+of the soul is not an object of sense?</p>
+<p>"Answer. It was an advantage to the thief entering into paradise
+to learn by fact the benefits of the faith by which he was deemed
+worthy of the assembly of the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page103" id="page103"></a>{103}</span> saints, in which he is kept
+till the day of judgment and restitution; and he has the perception
+of paradise by that which is called intellectual perception, by
+which souls see both themselves and the things under them, and
+moreover also the angels and demons. For a soul doth not perceive
+or see a soul, nor an angel an angel, nor a demon a demon; except
+that according to the said intellectual perception they see both
+themselves and each other, and moreover also all corporeal
+objects." [Page 470.]</p>
+<p>On this same point I must here subjoin a passage from one of
+Justin's own undisputed works. In his Dialogue with Trypho the Jew,
+sect. 5, he says, "Nevertheless I do not say that souls all die;
+for that were in truth a boon to the wicked. But what? That the
+souls of the pious remain somewhere in a better place, and the
+unjust and wicked in a worse, waiting for the time of judgment,
+when it shall be: thus the one appearing worthy of God do not die
+any more; and the others are punished as long as God wills them
+both to exist and to be punished." [Page 107.]</p>
+<p>Not only so; Justin classes among renouncers of the faith those
+who maintain the doctrine which is now acknowledged to be the
+doctrine of the Church of Rome, and to be indispensable as the
+groundwork of the adoration of saints. In his Trypho, sect. 80, he
+states his sentiment thus strongly: "If you should meet with any
+persons called Christians, who confess not this, but dare to
+blaspheme the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of
+Jacob, and say there is no resurrection of the dead ([Greek:
+nekron]), but that their souls, at the very time of their death,
+are taken up into heaven; do not regard them as Christians." [Page
+178.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id=
+"page104"></a>{104}</span>
+<p>This, according to Bellarmin's own principle, is fatal evidence:
+if the redeemed and the saints departed are not in glory with God
+already, they cannot intercede with him for men. On the subject,
+however, of worship and prayer, Justin Martyr has left us some
+testimonies as to the primitive practice, full of interest in
+themselves, independently of their bearing on the points at issue.
+At the same time I am not aware of a single expression which can be
+so construed as to imply the doctrine or practice among Christians
+of invoking the souls of the faithful. He speaks of public and
+private prayer; he offers prayer, but the prayer of which he
+speaks, and the prayer which he offers are to God alone; and he
+alludes to no advocate or intercessor in heaven, except only the
+eternal Son of God himself. In his first Apologia (or Defence
+addressed to the Emperor Antoninus Pius) he thus describes the
+proceedings at the baptism of a convert:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Now, we will explain to you how we dedicate ourselves to God,
+being made new by Christ.... As many as are persuaded, and believe
+the things which by us are taught and declared to be true, and who
+promise that they can so live, are taught to pray and implore, with
+fasting, forgiveness of God for their former sins, we ourselves
+joining with them in fasting and prayer; and then they are taken by
+us to a place where there is water, and by the same manner of
+regeneration as we ourselves were regenerated, they are
+regenerated; for they undergo this washing in the water in the name
+of God the Father and Lord of all, and of our Saviour Jesus Christ,
+and of the Holy Ghost." [Apol. i. sect 61, page 79.]</p>
+<p>The following is his description of the Christian <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>{105}</span>
+Eucharist, subsequently to the baptism of a convert: "Afterwards we
+conduct him to those who are called brethren, where they are
+assembled together to offer earnestly our united prayers for
+ourselves and for the enlightened one [the newly baptized convert],
+and for all others every where, that we, having learned the truth,
+may be thought worthy to be found in our deeds good livers, and
+keepers of the commandments, that we may be saved with the
+everlasting salvation. Having ceased from prayers, we salute each
+other with a kiss; and then bread is brought to him who presides
+over the brethren, and a cup of water and wine; and he taking it,
+sends up prayer and praise to the Father of all, through the name
+of the Son and the Holy Spirit; and offers much thanksgiving for
+our being thought by him worthy of these things. When he has
+finished the prayers and thanksgivings, all the people present
+respond, saying, 'Amen.' Now, Amen in the Hebrew tongue means, 'So
+be it.' And when the presider has given thanks, and all the people
+have responded, those who are called Deacons among us give to every
+one present to partake of the bread and wine and water that has
+been blessed, and take some away for those who were not present."
+[Sect. 65. p. 82.]</p>
+<p>The following is Justin's account of their worship on the Lord's
+day: "In all our oblations we bless the Creator of all things,
+through his Son Jesus Christ, and through the Holy Spirit. And upon
+the day called Sunday, there is an assembly of all who dwell in the
+several cities or in the country, in one place where the records of
+the apostles, or the writings of the prophets are read, as time
+allows. When the reader has ceased, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page106" id="page106"></a>{106}</span> the presider makes a
+discourse for the edification of the people, and to animate them to
+the practice of such excellent things [or the imitation of such
+excellent persons]. At the conclusion we all rise up together and
+pray; and, as we have said, when we have ceased from prayer, the
+bread and wine and water are brought forward, and the presider
+sends up prayer and thanksgiving alike, to the utmost of his power.
+And the people respond, saying, Amen. And then is made to each the
+distribution and participation of the consecrated elements ([Greek:
+eucharistauthenton]). And of those who have the means and will,
+each according to his disposition gives what he will; and the
+collected sum is deposited with the presider, and he aids the
+orphans and widows, and those who through sickness or other cause
+are in need, and those in bonds, and strangers; and, in a word, he
+becomes the reliever of all who are in want." [Sect. 67. p.
+83.]</p>
+<hr />
+<p>In Justin Martyr I am unable to find even a single vestige of
+the invocation of Saints. With regard to Angels, however, there is
+a very celebrated passage, to which Bellarmin and others appeal, as
+conclusive evidence that the worship of them prevailed among
+Christians in his time, and was professed by Justin himself.</p>
+<p>Justin, in his first Apology, having stated that the Christians
+could never be induced to worship the demons, whom the heathen
+worshipped and invoked, proceeds thus<a id="footnotetag33" name=
+"footnotetag33"></a><a href="#footnote33"><sup>33</sup></a>:
+"Whence also we are called Atheists, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page107" id="page107"></a>{107}</span> [men without God]; and we
+confess that with regard to such supposed gods we are atheists, but
+not so with regard to the most true God, the Father of justice and
+temperance, and of the other virtues without any mixture of evil.
+But both HIM and the SON, who came from Him, and taught these
+things to us, and THE HOST OF THE OTHER GOOD ANGELS ACCOMPANYING
+AND MADE LIKE, and THE PROPHETIC SPIRIT, we reverence and worship,
+honouring them in reason and truth; and without grudging,
+delivering the doctrine to every one who is willing to learn as we
+were taught." [Page 47.] Governing the words "the host of the other
+good angels," as much as the words "Him" and "His Son," and "the
+prophetic Spirit," by the verbs "we reverence and worship,"
+Bellarmin and others<a id="footnotetag34" name=
+"footnotetag34"></a><a href="#footnote34"><sup>34</sup></a>
+maintain, that Justin bears testimony in this passage to the
+worship of angels. That this cannot be the true interpretation of
+Justin's words will be acknowledged, I think, by every Catholic,
+whether Anglican or Roman, when he contemplates it in all its naked
+plainness; all will revolt from it as impious and contrary to the
+principles professed by the most celebrated and honoured among
+Roman Catholic writers. This interpretation of the passage, when
+analysed, implies the awful thought, that we Christians pay to the
+host of angels, God's ministers and our own fellow-servants, the
+same reverence, worship, and honour which we pay to the supreme
+Father, and his ever-blessed Son, and the Holy Spirit, without any
+difference or inequality. No principles of interpretation can avoid
+that inference.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote33" name=
+"footnote33"></a><b>Footnote 33:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag33">(return)</a>
+<p>The genuineness of this passage has been doubted. But I see no
+ground for suspicion that it is spurious. It is found in the
+manuscripts of Justin's works; of which the most ancient perhaps
+are in the King's Library in Paris. I examined one there of a
+remote date.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote34" name=
+"footnote34"></a><b>Footnote 34:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag34">(return)</a>
+<p>The Benedictine Editor puts this note in the margin, "Justin
+teaches that angels following the Son are worshipped by
+Christians."&mdash;Preface, p. xxi.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id=
+"page108"></a>{108}</span>
+<p>"Him the most true Father of righteousness we reverence and
+worship, honouring him in reason and truth."</p>
+<p>"The Son who came from him, and taught us these things, we
+reverence and worship, honouring him in reason and truth."</p>
+<p>"The army of the other good angels accompanying and assimilated,
+we reverence and worship, honouring them in reason and truth."</p>
+<p>"The Prophetic Spirit we reverence and worship, honouring him in
+reason and truth."</p>
+<p>Is it possible to conceive that any Christian would thus ascribe
+the same religious worship to a host of God's creatures, which he
+would ascribe to God, as GOD? "We are accused," said Justin, "of
+being atheists, of having no God. How can this be? We do not
+worship your false gods, but we have our own most true God. We are
+not without a God. We have the Father, and the Son, and the Good
+Angels, and the Holy Spirit." If Justin meant that they honoured
+the good angels, but not as GOD, that would be no answer to those
+who called the Christians atheists. The charge was, that "they had
+no God." The answer is, "We have a God;" and then Justin describes
+the God of Christians. Can the army of angels be included in that
+description? If they are, then they are made to share in the
+adoration, worship, homage, and reverence of the one only God Most
+High; if they are not, then Justin does not answer the
+objectors<a id="footnotetag35" name="footnotetag35"></a><a href=
+"#footnote35"><sup>35</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote35" name=
+"footnote35"></a><b>Footnote 35:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag35">(return)</a>
+<p>And surely if Justin had intended to represent the holy angels
+as objects of religious worship, he would not so violently have
+thrust the mention of them among the Persons of the ever-blessed
+Trinity, assigning to them a place between the second and third
+Persons of the eternal hypostatic union.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id=
+"page109"></a>{109}</span>
+<p>To evade this charge of impiety, some writers (among others, M.
+Maran, the Benedictine editor of Justin,) have attempted to draw a
+distinction between the two verbs in this passage, alleging that
+the lower degree of reverence expressed by the latter applies to
+the angels; whilst the former verb, implying the higher degree of
+worship, alone relates to the Godhead. But this distinction rests
+on a false assumption; the two words being used equally to convey
+the idea, of the highest religious worship<a id="footnotetag36"
+name="footnotetag36"></a><a href=
+"#footnote36"><sup>36</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote36" name=
+"footnote36"></a><b>Footnote 36:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag36">(return)</a>
+<p>For example, the first word ([Greek: sebometha]), "we
+reverence," is used to mean the whole of religious worship, as well
+with regard to the true God, as with reference to Diana [Acts
+xviii. 7. 13; xix. 27.]; whilst the second word ([Greek:
+proskunoumen]), "we worship," is constantly employed in the same
+sense of divine worship, throughout the Septuagint [Exod. xxxiv.
+14. Ps. xciv. (xcv.) 6. I Sam. (1 Kings) xv. 25. 2 Kings (4 Kings)
+xvii. 36. Heb. i. 6.], (with which Justin was most familiar,) and
+is used in the Epistle to the Hebrews to signify the worship due
+from the angels themselves to God, "Let all the angels of God
+worship him." The very same word is also soon after employed by
+Justin himself (sect. xvi. p. 53) to mean the whole entire worship
+of the Most High God: "That we ought to worship ([Greek:
+proskumein]) God alone, Christ thus proves," &amp;c. Moreover, the
+word which Justin uses at the close of the sentence, "honouring
+them" ([Greek: timontes]), is the identical word four times
+employed by St. John [John v. 23.], in the same verse, to record
+our Saviour's saying, "That all men might honour the Son, even as
+they honour the Father; he that honoureth not the Son, honoureth
+not the Father, who hath sent him."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>But in determining the true meaning of an obscure passage,
+grammatically susceptible of different acceptations, the author
+himself is often his own best interpreter. If he has expressed in
+another place the same leading sentiment, yet without the same
+obscurity, and free from all doubt, the light borrowed from that
+passage <span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id=
+"page110"></a>{110}</span> will frequently fix the sense of the
+ambiguous expression, and establish the author's consistency. On
+this acknowledged principle of criticism, I would call your
+attention to a passage in the very same treatise of Justin, a few
+pages further on, in which he again defends the Christians against
+the same charge of being atheists, and on the self-same ground,
+"that they worship the Father who is maker of all; secondly, the
+Son proceeding from Him; and thirdly, the Holy Spirit." In both
+cases he refers to the same attributes of the Son as the teacher of
+Christian truth, and of the Holy Ghost, as the Prophetic Spirit.
+His language throughout the two passages is remarkably similar, and
+in the expressions on the true meaning of which we have already
+dwelt, it is most strikingly identical; but by omitting all
+allusion to the angels after the Son, his own words proving that
+the introduction of them could have no place there, (for he
+specifies that the third in order was the Holy Spirit,) Justin has
+left us a comment on the passage under consideration conclusive as
+to the object of religious worship in his creed. The whole passage
+is well worth the attention of the reader. The following extracts
+are the only parts necessary for our present purpose:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Who of sound mind will not confess that we are not Atheists,
+reverencing as we do the Maker of the Universe.... and Him, who
+taught us these things, and who was born for this purpose, Jesus
+Christ, crucified under Pontius Pilate.... instructed, as we are,
+that He is the Son of the True God, and holding Him in the second
+place; and the Prophetic Spirit in the third order, we with reason
+honour." [Sect. xiii. p. 50.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id=
+"page111"></a>{111}</span>
+<p>The impiety apparently inseparable from Bellarmin's
+interpretation has induced many, even among Roman Catholic writers,
+to discard that acceptation altogether, and to substitute others,
+which, though involving no grammatical inaccuracy, are still not
+free from difficulty.<a id="footnotetag37" name=
+"footnotetag37"></a><a href="#footnote37"><sup>37</sup></a> After
+weighing the passage with all the means in my power, and after
+testing the various interpretations offered by writers, whether of
+the Church of Rome or not, by the sentiments of Justin himself, and
+others of the same early age, I am fully persuaded that the
+following is the only true rendering of Justin's words:</p>
+<p>"Honouring in reason and truth, we reverence and worship HIM,
+the Father of Righteousness, and the Son (who proceeded from Him,
+and instructed in these things both ourselves and the host of the
+other good angels following Him and being made like unto Him), and
+the Prophetic Spirit."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote37" name=
+"footnote37"></a><b>Footnote 37:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag37">(return)</a>
+<p>Le Nourry (Apparatus ad Bibliothecam Maximam Veterum Patrum.
+Paris, 1697. vol. ii. p. 305), himself a Benedictine, rejects
+Bellarmin's and his brother Benedictine Maran's interpretation, and
+conceives Justin to mean, that the Son of God not only taught us
+those truths to which he was referring, with regard to the being
+and attributes of God, but also taught us that there were hosts of
+spiritual beings, called Angels; good beings, opposed to the demons
+of paganism. Bishop Kaye, in his excellent work on Justin Martyr,
+which the reader will do well to consult (p. 53), tells us he was
+sometimes inclined to think that Justin referred to the host of
+good angels who should surround the Son of God when he should come
+to judge the world. The view adopted by myself here was recommended
+by Grabe and by Langus, called The Interpreter of Justin; whilst
+Petavius, a Jesuit, though he does not adopt it, yet acknowledges
+that the Greek admits of our interpretation. Any one who would
+pursue the subject further may with advantage consult the preface
+to the Benedictine edition referred to in this work. Lumper Hist.
+Part ii. p. 225. August&aelig; Vindelicorum, 1784. Petavius,
+Theologicorum Dogmatum tom. vi. p. 298. lib. xv. c. v. s. 5.
+Antwerp, 1700.</p>
+<p>The whole passage is thus rendered by Langus (as read in
+Lumper), "Verum hunc ipsum, et qui ab eo venit, atque ista nos et
+aliorum obsequentium ex&aelig;quatorumque ad ejus voluntatem
+bonorum Angelorum exercitura docuit, Filium, et Spiritum ejus
+propheticum, colimus et adoramus."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This interpretation is strongly confirmed by the professed
+sentiments both of Justin and of his contemporaries, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>{112}</span> with
+regard to the Son of God and the holy angels.</p>
+<p>It was a principle generally received among the early
+Christians, that whatever the Almighty did, either by creation or
+by the communication of his will, on earth or in heaven, was done
+by the Eternal Word. It was God the Son, the Logos, who created the
+angels<a id="footnotetag38" name="footnotetag38"></a><a href=
+"#footnote38"><sup>38</sup></a>, as well as ourselves; it was He
+who spoke to Moses, to Abraham, and to Lot; and it was He who
+conveyed the Supreme will, and the knowledge of the only true God,
+to the inhabitants of the world of spirits. Agreeably to this
+principle, in the passage under consideration, Justin affirms (not
+that Christians revered and worshipped the angels, but), that God
+the Son, whom Christians worshipped as the eternal Prophet, Angel,
+and Apostle, of the Most High, instructed not only us men on earth,
+but also the host of heavenly angels<a id="footnotetag39" name=
+"footnotetag39"></a><a href="#footnote39"><sup>39</sup></a>, in
+these eternal verities, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id=
+"page113"></a>{113}</span> which embrace God's nature and the duty
+of his creatures. [Trypho, &sect; 141. p. 231.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote38" name=
+"footnote38"></a><b>Footnote 38:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag38">(return)</a>
+<p>Thus Tatian (p. 249 in the same edition of Justin), "Before men
+were prepared, the Word was the Maker of angels."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote39" name=
+"footnote39"></a><b>Footnote 39:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag39">(return)</a>
+<p>"The OTHER good angels." Justin (Apol. i. sect. lxiii. p. 81.)
+reminds us that Christ, the first-begotten of the Father, Himself
+God, was also an Angel (or Messenger), and an Apostle; and here
+Christ, as the Angel of the Covenant and the chief Apostle, is
+represented as instructing THE OTHER ANGELS in the truths of the
+economy of grace, just as he instructed his Apostles on
+earth,&mdash;"As my Father hath sent me, even so send I you."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is evident that Justin himself considered the host of angels
+to be equally with ourselves in a state of probation, requiring
+divine instruction, and partaking of it. It is also evident that
+many of his contemporaries entertained the same views; among
+others, Iren&aelig;us and Origen. [Iren&aelig;us, book ii. c. 30.
+p. 163. Origen, Hom. xxxii. in Joann. &sect; 10. vol. iv. p. 430.]
+I will not swell this dissertation by quoting the passages at
+length; though the passages referred to in the margin will well
+repay any one's careful examination. But I cannot refrain from
+extracting the words in which each of those writers confirms the
+view here taken of Justin's sentiments.</p>
+<p>Iren&aelig;us, for example, says distinctly, "The Son ever,
+anciently and from the beginning co-existing with the Father,
+always reveals the Father both to angels and archangels, and
+powers, and excellencies, and to all to whom God wishes to make a
+revelation<a id="footnotetag40" name="footnotetag40"></a><a href=
+"#footnote40"><sup>40</sup></a>." And not less distinctly does
+Origen assert the same thing,&mdash;"Our Saviour therefore teaches,
+and the Holy Spirit, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id=
+"page114"></a>{114}</span> who spake in the prophets, teaches not
+only men, but also angels and invisible excellencies."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote40" name=
+"footnote40"></a><b>Footnote 40:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag40">(return)</a>
+<p>So far did some of the early Christians include the hosts of
+angels within the covenant of the Gospel, that Ignatius (Epist. ad
+Smyrn. &sect; 6. p. 36.) does not hesitate to pronounce that the
+angels incur the Divine judgment, if they do not receive the
+doctrine of the atonement: "Let no one be deceived. The things in
+heaven, and the glory of angels, and the powers visible and
+invisible, if they do not believe on the blood of Christ&mdash;for
+them is judgment." They seem to have founded their opinion on the
+declaration of St. Paul (Eph. iii. 10): "That now to the
+principalities and powers in heavenly places might be made known
+through the Church the manifold wisdom of God."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I will only add one more ancient authority, in confirmation of
+the view here taken of Justin's words. The passage is from
+Athenagoras<a id="footnotetag41" name="footnotetag41"></a><a href=
+"#footnote41"><sup>41</sup></a> and seems to be the exact
+counterpart of Justin's paragraph.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote41" name=
+"footnote41"></a><b>Footnote 41:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag41">(return)</a>
+<p>Athenagoras presented his defence, in which these words occur,
+to the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, and his son Commodus, in the year
+177.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"Who would not wonder on hearing us called Atheists? we who call
+the Father God, and the Son God, and the Holy Ghost, showing both
+their power in the unity, and their distinction in order. Nor does
+our theology rest here; but we say, moreover, that there is a
+multitude of angels and ministers whom God, the Maker and Creator
+of the world, BY THE WORD PROCEEDING FROM HIM, distributed and
+appointed, both about the elements, and the heavens, and the world,
+and the things therein, and the good order thereof." [Sect. 10. p.
+287. edit. Just. Mart.]</p>
+<p>I have already stated my inability to discover a single word in
+Justin Martyr which could be brought to sanction the invocation of
+saints; but his testimony is far from being merely negative. He
+admonishes us strongly against our looking to any other being for
+help or assistance, than to God only. Even when speaking of those
+who confide in their own strength, and fortune, and other sources
+of good, he says, in perfect unison with the pervading principles
+and associations of his whole mind, as far as we can read them in
+his works, without any modification or any exception in favour of
+saint or angel: "In that Christ <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page115" id="page115"></a>{115}</span> said, 'Thou art my God, go
+not far from me,' He at the same time taught, that all persons
+ought to hope in God, who made all things, and seek for safety and
+health from Him alone" [Trypho, &sect; 102, p. 197.]</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-2" id="sect1-4-2">SECTION
+II.</a>&mdash;IREN&AElig;US.</h4>
+<p>Justin sealed his faith by his blood about the year 165; and
+next to him, in the noble army of martyrs, we must examine the
+evidence of Iren&aelig;us, Bishop of Lyons. Of this writer's works
+a very small proportion survives in the original Greek; but that
+little is such as might well make every scholar and divine lament
+the calamity which theology and literature have sustained by the
+loss of the author's own language. It is not perhaps beyond the
+range of hope that future researches may yet recover at least some
+part of the treasure. Meanwhile we must avail ourselves with
+thankfulness of the nervous though inelegant copy of that original,
+which the Latin translation affords; imperfect and corrupt in many
+parts, as that copy evidently is. This, however, is not the place
+for recommending a study of the remains of Iren&aelig;us; and every
+one at all acquainted with the literature of the early Church,
+knows well how valuable a store of ancient Christian learning is
+preserved even in the wreck of his works.</p>
+<p>On the subject of the invocation of saints, an appeal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id=
+"page116"></a>{116}</span> has been made only to a few passages in
+Iren&aelig;us. With regard, indeed, to one section, I would gladly
+have been spared the duty of commenting upon the unjustifiable mode
+of citing his evidence adopted by Bellarmin. It forces upon our
+notice an example either of such inaccuracy of quotation as would
+shake our confidence in him as an author, or of such
+misrepresentation as must lower him in our estimation as a man of
+integrity.</p>
+<p>Bellarmin asserts, building upon it as the very foundation-stone
+of his argument for the invocation of saints, that the souls of the
+saints are removed immediately on their dissolution by death,
+without waiting for the day of judgment, into the presence of God,
+and the enjoyment of HIM in heaven. This point, he says, must first
+be established; for if they are not already in the presence of God,
+they cannot pray for us, and prayer to them would be preposterous.
+[Bell. lib. i. c. 4. vol. ii. p. 851.] Among the authorities cited
+by him to establish this point is the evidence of Iren&aelig;us
+(book i. c. 2). [See Benedictine ed, Paris, 1710. book i. c. 10. p.
+48.] Bellarmin quotes that passage in these words: "To the just and
+righteous, and to those who keep his commandments, and persevere in
+his love, some indeed from the beginning but some from repentance,
+he giving life CONFERS by way of gift incorruption, and CLOTHES
+them with eternal glory." To the quotation he appends this note
+"Mark '<i>to some</i>' that is, to those who presently after
+baptism die, or who lay down their life for Christ; or finally to
+the perfect is given immediately life and eternal glory; to others
+not, except after repentance, that is, satisfaction made in another
+world<a id="footnotetag42" name="footnotetag42"></a><a href=
+"#footnote42"><sup>42</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote42" name=
+"footnote42"></a><b>Footnote 42:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag42">(return)</a>
+<p>Agreeably to the principles laid down in my preface, I will not
+here allude to the doctrine of purgatory, on which Bellarmin
+considers this passage to bear; nor will I say one word on the
+intermediate state of the soul between death and the resurrection,
+on which I am now showing that the words of Iren&aelig;us cannot at
+all be made to bear.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page117" id=
+"page117"></a>{117}</span>
+<p>Here I am compelled to confess that I never found a more
+palpable misquotation of an author than this. I will readily grant
+that Bellarmin may have quoted from memory, or have borrowed from
+some corrupt version of the passage; and that he has
+unintentionally changed the moods of two verbs from the subjunctive
+to the indicative, and inadvertently changed the entire
+construction and the sense of the passage. But then what becomes of
+his authority as a writer citing testimony?</p>
+<p>Iren&aelig;us in this passage is speaking not of what our Lord
+does now, but what he will do at the last day; he refers only to
+the second coming of Christ to judgment at the final consummation
+of all things, not using a single expression which can be made by
+fair criticism to have any reference whatever to the condition of
+souls on their separation from the body. I have consulted the old
+editions, some at least published before the date of Bellarmin's
+work; the suggestion offering itself to my mind, that perhaps the
+ancient translation was in error, from which he might have quoted.
+But I cannot find that to have been the case. The old Latin version
+of this passage agreeing very closely with the Greek still
+preserved in Epiphanius, and quoted by Roman Catholic writers as
+authentic, conveys this magnificent though brief summary of the
+Christian faith:</p>
+<p>"The Church spread throughout the whole world, even to the ends
+of the earth, received both from the Apostles and their disciples
+that faith which is in one <span class="pagenum"><a name="page118"
+id="page118"></a>{118}</span> God omnipotent, who made heaven and
+earth, the sea, and all things therein, and in one Jesus Christ,
+the Son of God, for our salvation made flesh, and in the Holy
+Ghost, who by the prophets announced the dispensations (of
+God<a id="footnotetag43" name="footnotetag43"></a><a href=
+"#footnote43"><sup>43</sup></a>), and the Advent, and the being
+born of a Virgin, and the suffering, and the resurrection from the
+dead, and the bodily ascension into heaven of the beloved Jesus
+Christ our Lord, and his coming from heaven in the glory of the
+Father for the consummation of all things, and for raising again
+all flesh of the human race, THAT, in order that ([Greek: ina]), to
+Christ Jesus our Lord and God, and Saviour and King, according to
+the good pleasure of the invisible Father, every knee should bow of
+things in heaven and in earth, and under the earth, and that every
+tongue should confess to Him, and that he should execute just
+judgment on all: that he should send the spirits of wickedness, and
+the transgressing and rebel angels, and the impious and unjust, and
+wicked and blaspheming men into eternal fire; but to the just and
+righteous, and to those who keep his commandments, and persevere in
+his love,&mdash;some indeed from the beginning, and some from their
+repentance,&mdash;he granting life, by way of gift, SHOULD CONFER
+incorruption, and SHOULD CLOTHE them with eternal glory."
+[H&aelig;res. xxxi. c. 30.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote43" name=
+"footnote43"></a><b>Footnote 43:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag43">(return)</a>
+<p>The words "of God" are in the Latin, but not in the Greek.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The words, "some from the beginning," "others from their
+repentance," can refer only to the two conditions of believers;
+some of whom have grace to keep the commandments, and persevere in
+the love of God from the beginning of their Christian course,
+whilst others, for a time, transgress and wax cold in love, but by
+repentance, through God's grace, are renewed and <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>{119}</span> restored
+to their former state of obedience and love. On both these classes
+of Christians, according to the faith as here summed up by
+Iren&aelig;us, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, when He comes in
+glory for the consummation of all things, and for the resurrection
+of the dead, will confer glory and immortality. No ingenuity of
+criticism can extract from this passage any allusion to the
+intercession of saints, or to their being with God before the end
+of the world<a id="footnotetag44" name="footnotetag44"></a><a href=
+"#footnote44"><sup>44</sup></a>. But I am not <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>{120}</span> here
+condemning Bellarmin's untenable criticism: what I lament is the
+negligence or the disingenuousness with which he misquotes the
+words of Iren&aelig;us, and makes him say what he never did say. To
+extract from an author's words, correctly reported, a meaning which
+he did not intend to convey, however reprehensible and unworthy a
+follower of truth, is one act of injustice: to report him, whether
+wilfully or carelessly, as using words which he never did use, is
+far worse.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote44" name=
+"footnote44"></a><b>Footnote 44:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag44">(return)</a>
+<p>It will be well to see the words of Bellarmin and those of the
+translation side by side:</p>
+<p>(Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the
+other.)</p>
+<p><i>Bellarmin</i> lib. i. c. iv. p. 851.</p>
+<p>"Quartus Iren&aelig;us, lib. i. c. 2. 'Justis, inquit, et
+&aelig;quis, et pr&aelig;cepta ejus servantibus et in dilectione
+perseverantibus, quibusdam quidem ab initio, quibusdam autem ex
+poenitentia, vitam donans, incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERT, et
+claritatem &aelig;ternam CIRCUMDAT.' Nota '<i>quibusdam</i>,' id
+est, iis qui mox a Baptismo moriuntur, vel qui pro Christo vitam
+ponunt; vel denique perfectis statim donari vitam et claritatem
+&aelig;ternam; aliis non nisi post poenitentiam, id est,
+satisfactionem in futuro s&aelig;culo actam."</p>
+<p><i>Latin Translation</i>.</p>
+<p>"Et de coelis in gloria Patris adventum ejus ad recapitulanda
+universa et resuscitandam omnem carnem humani generis, UT Christo
+Jesu Domino nostro et Deo, et Salvatori, et Regi, secundum placitum
+Patris invisibilis, 'omne genu curvet coelestium, et terrestrium,
+et infernorum, et omnis lingua confiteatur ei,' et judicium justum
+in omnibus faciat; spiritalia quidem nequiti&aelig;, et angelos
+transgresses, atque apostatas factos, et impios et injustos et
+iniquos, et blasphemos homines in &aelig;ternum ignem
+mittat;&mdash;Justis autem et &aelig;quis et pr&aelig;cepta ejus
+servantibus et in dilectione ejus perseverantibus, quibusdam quidem
+ab initio, quibusdam autem ex poenitentia, vitam donans,
+incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERAT, et claritatem &aelig;ternam
+CIRCUMDET."&mdash;Iren&aelig;i liber i. cap. x. p. 48.
+Interpretatio Vetus.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Another expression of Iren&aelig;us is appealed to by Bellarmin,
+and continues to be cited at the present day in defence of the
+invocation of saints; the precise bearing of which upon the subject
+I confess myself unable to see, whilst I am very far from
+understanding the passage from which it is an extract. Bellarmin
+cites the passage not to show that the saints in glory pray for
+us,&mdash;that argument he had dismissed before,&mdash;but to prove
+that they are to be invoked by us. The insulated passage as quoted
+by him is this: "And as she (Eve) was induced to fly from God, so
+she (Mary) was persuaded to obey God, that of the Virgin Eve the
+Virgin Mary might become the advocate." After the quotation he
+says, "What can be clearer?" [Benedict, lib. v. cap. xix. p.
+316.]</p>
+<p>In whatever sense we may suppose Iren&aelig;us to have employed
+the word here translated "advocata," it is difficult to see how the
+circumstance of Mary becoming the advocate of Eve, who lived so
+many generations before her, can bear upon the question, Is it
+lawful and right for us, now dwelling on the earth, to invoke those
+saints whom we believe to be in heaven? I will not dwell on the
+argument urged very cogently by some critics on this passage, that
+the word "advocata," found <span class="pagenum"><a name="page121"
+id="page121"></a>{121}</span> in the Latin version of
+Iren&aelig;us, is the translation of the original word, now lost
+[[Greek: paraklaetos]&mdash;paraclete], which, by the early
+writers, was used for "comforter and consoler," or "restorer;"
+because, as I have above intimated, whatever may have been the word
+employed by Iren&aelig;us, the passage proves nothing as to the
+lawfulness of our praying to the saints. If the angels at God's
+bidding minister unto the heirs of salvation; or further, if they
+plead our cause with God, that would be no reason why we should
+invoke them and pray to them. This distinction between what they
+may do for us, and what we ought to do with regard to them, is an
+essential distinction, and must not be lost sight of. We shall have
+occasion hereafter to refer to it repeatedly, especially in the
+instances of Origen and Cyprian. I will now do no more than copy in
+a note the entire passage from which the sentence now under
+consideration has been extracted, that the reader may judge whether
+on such a passage, the original of which, in whatever words
+Iren&aelig;us may have expressed himself, is utterly lost, any
+reliance can satisfactorily be placed.</p>
+<p>("Manifeste itaque in sua propria venientem Dominum et sua
+propria eum bajulantem conditione qu&aelig; bajulatur ab ipso, et
+recapitulationem ejus qu&aelig; in ligno fuit inobedienti&aelig;
+per eam qu&aelig; in ligno est obedientiam facientem, et
+seductionem illam solutam qua seducta est male illa, qu&aelig; jam
+viro destinata erat virgo Eva, per veritatem evangelizata est bene
+ab angelo jam sub viro virgo Maria. Quemadmodum enim illa per
+angeli sermonem seducta est ut effugeret Deum pr&aelig;varicata
+verbum ejus, ita et h&aelig;c per angelicum sermonem evangelizata
+est ut portaret Deum obediens ejus verbo. Et si ea inobedierat Deo,
+sed h&aelig;c suasa est obedire Deo, uti virginis Ev&aelig; virgo
+Maria fieret advocata. Et quemadmodum astrictum est morti genus
+humanum per virginem, salvatur per virginem, &aelig;qua lance
+disposita virginalis inobedientia per virginalem obedientiam. Adhuc
+enim protoplasti peccatum per correptionem primogeniti emendationem
+accipiens, et serpentis prudentia devicta in columb&aelig;
+simplicitate, vinculis autem illis resolutis, per qu&aelig;
+alligati eramus morti." St. Augustin (Paris, 1690. vol. x. p. 500.)
+refers to the latter part of this passage, as implying the doctrine
+of original sin; but since his quotation does not embrace any
+portion of the clause at present under our consideration, no
+additional light from him is thrown on the meaning of
+Iren&aelig;us.)</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page122" id=
+"page122"></a>{122}</span>
+<p>But passages occur in Iren&aelig;us, which seem to leave doubt,
+that neither in faith nor in practice would he countenance in the
+very lowest degree the adoration of saints and angels, or any
+invocation of them.</p>
+<p>For example, in one part of his works we read, "Nor does it [the
+Church] do any thing by invocations of angels, nor by incantations,
+nor other depraved and curious means, but with cleanliness, purity,
+and openness, directing prayers to the Lord who made all things,
+and calling upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, it exercises
+its powers for the benefit, and not for the seducing, of mankind."
+[Benedictine Ed. lib. ii. c. 32. &sect; 5. p. 166.] It has been
+said that, by angelic invocations, Iren&aelig;us means the
+addresses to evil angels and genii, such as the heathen
+superstitiously made. Be it so; though that is a mere assumption,
+not warranted by the passage or its context. But, surely, had
+Iren&aelig;us known that Christians prayed to angels, as well as to
+their Maker and their Saviour, he would not have used such an
+unguarded expression; he would have cautioned his readers against
+so serious, but so natural, a misapprehension of his meaning.</p>
+<p>With one more reference, we must bring our inquiry into the
+testimony of Iren&aelig;us to a close. The passage occurs in the
+fifth book, chapter 31. [Benedict. lib. v. c. 32. &sect; 2. p,
+331.] The principal and most important, though not the longest,
+part of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page123" id=
+"page123"></a>{123}</span> the passage is happily still found in
+the original Greek, preserved in the "Parallels" of Damascenus. In
+its plain, natural, and unforced sense, this passage is so
+decidedly conclusive on the question at issue, that various
+attempts have been made to explain away its meaning, so as not to
+represent Iren&aelig;us as believing that the souls of departed
+saints, between their death and the day of judgment, exist
+otherwise than in bliss and glory in heaven. But those attempts
+have been altogether unsuccessful. I believe the view here
+presented to us by the plain and obvious sense of the words of
+Iren&aelig;us, is the view at present acquiesced in by a large
+proportion of our fellow-believers. The Anglican Church has made no
+article of faith whatever on the subject. The clause within
+brackets is found both in the Latin and the Greek.</p>
+<p>"Since the Lord<a id="footnotetag45" name=
+"footnotetag45"></a><a href="#footnote45"><sup>45</sup></a> in the
+midst of the shadow of death went where the souls of the dead were,
+and then afterwards rose bodily, and after his resurrection was
+taken up, it is evident that of his disciples also, for whom the
+Lord wrought these things, [the souls go into the unseen<a id=
+"footnotetag46" name="footnotetag46"></a><a href=
+"#footnote46"><sup>46</sup></a> place assigned to them by God, and
+there remain till the resurrection, waiting for the resurrection;
+afterwards receiving again their bodies and rising perfectly
+[[Greek: holoklaeros], perfecte], that is, bodily, even as the Lord
+also rose again, so will they come into the presence of God.]
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page124" id=
+"page124"></a>{124}</span> For no disciple is above his master; but
+every one that is perfect shall be as his master. As, therefore,
+our Master did not immediately flee away and depart, but waited for
+the time of his resurrection appointed by his Father (which is
+evident, even by the case of Jonah); after the third day, rising
+again, he was taken up; so we too must wait for the time of our
+resurrection appointed by God, and fore-announced by the prophets;
+and thus rising again, be taken up, as many as the Lord shall have
+deemed worthy of this."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote45" name=
+"footnote45"></a><b>Footnote 45:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag45">(return)</a>
+<p>Bellarmin, rather than allow the testimony of Iren&aelig;us to
+weigh at all against the doctrine which he is defending, seems
+determined to combat and challenge that father himself. "Non ausus
+est dicere," "He has not dared to say, that the souls go to the
+regions below," &amp;c.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote46" name=
+"footnote46"></a><b>Footnote 46:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag46">(return)</a>
+<p>There is no word in the Greek copy corresponding with the Latin
+"invisibilem."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-3" id="sect1-4-3">SECTION
+III.</a>&mdash;CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA&mdash;ABOUT THE YEAR 180.</h4>
+<p>Contemporary with Iren&aelig;us, and probably less than twenty
+years his junior, was Clement, the celebrated Christian philosopher
+of Alexandria. I am not aware that any Roman Catholic writer has
+appealed to the testimony of Clement in favour of the invocation of
+saints, nor have I found a single passage which the defenders of
+that practice would be likely to quote; and yet there are many
+passages which no one, anxious to trace the Catholic faith, would
+willingly neglect. The tendency of Clement's mind to blend with the
+simplicity of the Gospel of Christ the philosophy in which he so
+fully abounded, renders him far less valuable as a Christian
+teacher; but his evidence as to the matter of fact, is even
+rendered more cogent and pointed by this tendency of his mind. I
+would <span class="pagenum"><a name="page125" id=
+"page125"></a>{125}</span> willingly have transferred to these
+pages whole passages of Clement, but the very nature of my address
+forbids it. Some sentences bearing on the subject immediately
+before us, we must not omit.</p>
+<p>Clement has left on record many of his meditations upon the
+efficacy, the duty, and the blessed comfort of prayer. When he
+speaks of God, and of the Christian in prayer, (for prayer he
+defines to be "communion or intercourse with God,") his language
+becomes often exquisitely beautiful, and sometimes sublime. It is
+impossible by a few detached passages to convey an adequate
+estimate of the original; and yet a few sentences may show that
+Clement is a man whose testimony should not be slighted.</p>
+<p>"Therefore, keeping the whole of our life as a feast every
+where, and on every part persuaded that God is present, we praise
+him as we till our lands; we sing hymns as we are sailing. The
+Christian is persuaded that God hears every thing; not the voice
+only, but the thoughts.... Suppose any one should say, that the
+voice does not reach God, revolving as it does in the air below;
+yet the thoughts of the saints cut not only through the air, but
+the whole world. And the divine power like the light is beforehand
+in seeing through the soul.... He" (the Christian whom he speaks of
+throughout as the man of divine knowledge) "prays for things
+essentially good.</p>
+<p>"Wherefore it best becomes those to pray who have an adequate
+knowledge of God, and possess virtue in accordance with
+Him&mdash;who know what are real goods, and what we should petition
+for, and when, and how in each case. But it is the extreme of
+ignorance to ask <span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id=
+"page126"></a>{126}</span> from those who are not gods as though
+they were gods.... Whence since there is one only good God, both we
+ourselves and the angels supplicate from Him alone, that some good
+things might be given to us, and others might remain with us. In
+this way he (the Christian) is always in a state of purity fit for
+prayer. He prays with angels, as being himself equal with angels;
+and as one who is never beyond the holy protecting guard. And if he
+pray alone he has the whole choir of angels with him." [Stromata,
+lib. vii. &sect; 7. p. 851, &amp;c.; Section xii. p. 879.]</p>
+<p>Clement has alluded to instances alleged by the Greeks of the
+effects of prayer, and he adds, "Our whole Scripture is full of
+instances of God hearing and granting every request according to
+the prayers of the just." [Lib. vi. &sect; iii. p. 753.]</p>
+<p>Having in the same section referred to the opinion of some
+Greeks as to the power of demons over the affairs of mortals, he
+adds, "But they think it matters nothing whether we speak of these
+as gods or as angels, calling the spirits of such 'demons,' and
+teaching that they should be worshipped by men, as having, by
+divine providence, on account of the purity of their lives,
+received authority to be conversant about earthly places, in order
+that they may minister to mortals." [Lib. vi. &sect; iii. p.
+755.]</p>
+<p>Is it possible to suppose that this teacher in Christ's school
+had any idea of a Christian praying to saints or angels? In the
+last passage, the language in which he quotes the errors of heathen
+superstition to refute them, so nearly approaches the language of
+the Church of Rome when speaking of the powers of saints and angels
+to assist the suppliant, that if Clement had entertained
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page127" id=
+"page127"></a>{127}</span> any thought whatever of a Christian
+praying for aid and intercession to saint or angel, he must have
+mentioned it, especially after the previous passage on the
+absurdity and gross ignorance of praying for any good at the hands
+of any other than the one true God.</p>
+<p>In common with his contemporaries, Clement considered the angels
+to be, as we mortals are, in a state requiring all the protection
+and help to be obtained by prayer; he believed that the angels pray
+with us, and carry our prayers to God: but the thought of
+addressing them by invocation does not appear to have occurred to
+his mind. At the close of his P&aelig;dagogus he has left on record
+a form of prayer to God alone very peculiar and interesting. He
+closes it by an ascription of glory to the blessed Trinity. But
+there is no allusion to saint, or angel, or virgin mother.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-4" id="sect1-4-4">SECTION
+IV.</a>&mdash;TERTULLIAN.</h4>
+<p>Tertullian, of Carthage, was a contemporary of Clement of
+Alexandria, and so nearly of the same age, that doubts have
+existed, which of the two should take priority in point of time.
+There is a very wide difference in the character and tone of their
+works, as there was in the frame and constitution of their minds.
+The lenient and liberal views of the erudite and accomplished
+master of the school of Alexandria, stand out in prominent and
+broad contrast with the harsh and austere doctrines of
+Tertullian.</p>
+<p>Tertullian fell into errors of a very serious kind by joining
+himself to the heretic Montanus; still on his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>{128}</span> mind is
+discoverable the working of that spirit which animated the early
+converts of Christianity; and his whole soul seems to have been
+filled with a desire to promote the practical influence of the
+Gospel.</p>
+<p>Jerome, the oracle on such subjects, from whom the Roman
+Catholic Church is unwilling to allow any appeal, expressly tells
+us that Cyprian<a id="footnotetag47" name=
+"footnotetag47"></a><a href="#footnote47"><sup>47</sup></a>, who
+called Tertullian the Master, never passed a single day without
+studying his works; and that after Tertullian had remained a
+presbyter of the Church to middle age, he was driven, by the envy
+and revilings of the members of the Roman Church, to fall from its
+unity, and espouse Montanism. Bellarmin calls him a heretic, and
+says he is the first heretic who denied that the saints went at
+once and forthwith to glory. [Hieron. edit. 1684. tom. i. p.
+183.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote47" name=
+"footnote47"></a><b>Footnote 47:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag47">(return)</a>
+<p>The words of Jerome, who refers to the circumstance more than
+once, are very striking: "I saw one Paulus, who said that he had
+seen the secretary (notarium) of Cyprian at Rome, who used to tell
+him that Cyprian never passed a single day without reading
+Tertullian; and that he often said to him, 'Give me the Master,'
+meaning Tertullian."&mdash;Hieron. vol. iv. part ii. p. 115.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A decided line of distinction is drawn by Roman Catholic writers
+between the works of Tertullian written before he espoused the
+errors of Montanus, and his works written after that unhappy step.
+The former they hold in great estimation, the latter are by many
+considered of far less authority. I do not see how such a
+distinction ought to affect his testimony on the historical point
+immediately before us. If indeed he had held the doctrine of the
+invocation of saints whilst he continued in the full communion of
+the Church, and rejected it afterwards, no honest and sensible
+writer would quote his later opinions against the practice. But we
+are only seeking in his works for evidence of the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>{129}</span> matter of
+fact,&mdash;Is there any proof in the works of Tertullian that the
+invocation of saints formed a part of the doctrine and practice of
+the Catholic Church in his time<a id="footnotetag48" name=
+"footnotetag48"></a><a href="#footnote48"><sup>48</sup></a>? His
+works will be found in the note, arranged under those two heads, as
+nearly as I can ascertain the preponderating sentiments of
+critics<a id="footnotetag49" name="footnotetag49"></a><a href=
+"#footnote49"><sup>49</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote48" name=
+"footnote48"></a><b>Footnote 48:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag48">(return)</a>
+<p>The reader, who may be induced to consult the work of the
+present Bishop of Lincoln, entitled, "The Ecclesiastical History of
+the second and third Centuries, illustrated from the writings of
+Tertullian," will there find, in the examination and application of
+Tertullian's remains, the union of sound judgment, diligence in
+research, clearness of perception, acuteness in discovery, and
+great erudition mingled with charity.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote49" name=
+"footnote49"></a><b>Footnote 49:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag49">(return)</a>
+<p>Works of Tertullian before he became a Montanist:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Adversus Jud&aelig;os.</p>
+<p>The Tract ad Martyres.</p>
+<p>The two Books ad Nationes.</p>
+<p>The Apology, and the Tract de Pr&aelig;scriptione
+H&aelig;reticorum.</p>
+<p>The Tract de Testimonio Anim&aelig;.</p>
+<p>The Tracts de Patientia, de Oratione, de Baptismo, de
+Poenitentia.</p>
+<p>The two books ad Uxorem.</p>
+<p>Works written after he espoused Montanism:&mdash;</p>
+<p>The Tracts de Spectaculis and de Idololatria, though others say
+these should be ranked among the first class.</p>
+<p>The Tracts de Corona, and de Fuga in persecutione, Scorpiace,
+and ad Scapulam.</p>
+<p>The Tracts de Exhortatione Castitatis, de Monogamia, de
+Pudicitia, de Jejuniis, de Virginibus Velandis, de Pallio, the five
+books against Marcion, the Tracts adversus Valentinianos, de Carne
+Christi, de Resurrectione Carnis, adversus Hermogenem, de Anima,
+adversus Praxeam, de Cultu Foeminarum.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I will detain you only by a very few quotations from this
+father.</p>
+<p>In his Apology, sect. 30, we read this very remarkable passage,
+"We invoke the eternal God, the true God, the living God, for the
+safety of the emperor.... <span class="pagenum"><a name="page130"
+id="page130"></a>{130}</span> Thither (heavenward) looking up, with
+hands extended, because they are innocent; with our head bare,
+because we are not ashamed; in fine, without a prompter, because it
+is from the heart; we Christians pray for all rulers a long life, a
+secure government, a safe home, brave armies, a faithful senate, a
+good people, a quiet world.... For these things I cannot ask in
+prayer from any other except Him from whom I know that I shall
+obtain; because both He is the one who alone grants, and I am the
+one whom it behoveth to obtain by prayer;&mdash;his servant, who
+looks to him alone, who for the sake of his religion am put to
+death, who offer to him a rich and a greater victim, which He has
+commanded; prayer from a chaste frame, from a harmless soul, from a
+holy spirit.... So, let hoofs dig into us, thus stretched forward
+to God, let crosses suspend us, let fires embrace us, let swords
+sever our necks from the body, let beasts rush upon us,&mdash;the
+very frame of mind of a praying Christian is prepared for every
+torment. This do, ye good presidents; tear ye away the soul that is
+praying for the emperor." [Page 27.]</p>
+<p>In the opening of his reflections on the Lord's Prayer, he
+says,&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Let us consider therefore, beloved, in the first place, the
+heavenly wisdom in the precept of praying in secret, by which he
+required, in a man, faith to believe that both the sight and the
+hearing of the Omnipotent God is present under our roofs and in our
+secret places; and desired the lowliness of faith, that to Him
+alone, whom he believed to hear and to see every where, he would
+offer his worship." [Page 129.]</p>
+<p>The only other reference which I will make, is to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page131" id="page131"></a>{131}</span> the
+solemn declaration of Tertullian's Creed; the last clause of which,
+though in perfect accordance with the sentiments of his
+contemporaries, seems to have been regarded with hostile eyes by
+modern writers of the Church of Rome, because it decidedly bids us
+look to the day of judgment for the saints being taken to the
+enjoyment of heaven; and consequently implies that they cannot be
+properly invoked now.</p>
+<p>"To profess now what we defend: By the rule of our faith we
+believe that God is altogether one, and no other than the Creator
+of the world, who produced all things out of nothing by his Word
+first of all sent down. That that Word, called his Son, was
+variously seen by the patriarchs in the name of God; was always
+heard in the prophets; at length, borne by the spirit and power of
+God the Father into the Virgin Mary, was made flesh in her womb,
+was born of her, and was Jesus Christ. Afterwards He preached a new
+law and a new promise of the kingdom of heaven; wrought miracles,
+was crucified, rose again the third day, and, being taken up into
+heaven, sat on the right hand of the Father; and He sent in his own
+stead the power of the Holy Ghost, to guide believers; that He
+shall come with glory to take the saints to the enjoyment of
+eternal life and the heavenly promises, and to condemn the impious
+to eternal fire, making a reviving of both classes with the
+restoration of the body." [De Pr&aelig;scriptione
+H&aelig;reticorum, &sect; 13. p. 206.]</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Some notice must here be taken of METHODIUS, a pious Christian,
+of the third century. A work (Methodius, Gl. Combes. Paris, 1644)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id=
+"page132"></a>{132}</span> formerly attributed to him has been
+quoted in proof of the early invocation of saints; but the work,
+among many others, has been long ago allowed by the best Roman
+Catholic critics to be the production of a later age. (Fabricius,
+vol. vii. p. 268, and vol. x. p. 241.) Many homilies, purporting to
+have been delivered on the festival of our Lord's presentation in
+the temple, at so early a period, must be received as the works of
+a later age, because that feast began to be observed in the Church
+so late as the fifteenth year of Justinian, in the sixth century.
+Evidently, moreover, the theological language of the homily is of a
+period long subsequent to the date assigned to Methodius. In
+speaking of our blessed Saviour, for example, he employs
+expressions to guard against the Arian heresy, and makes extracts
+apparently from the Nicene creed, "God of himself, and not by
+grace," "Very God of very God, very light of very light, who for us
+men and our salvation, &amp;c." The general opinion indeed seems to
+be that this, and many other writings formerly ascribed to the
+first Methodius, were written by persons of a subsequent age, who
+either were of the same name or assumed his. Even were the work
+genuine, it would afford just as strong a demonstration that
+Methodius believed that the city of Jerusalem could hear his
+salutation, as that the saints could hear his prayer; for he
+addresses the same "Hail" to Mary, Symeon, and the Holy City alike,
+calling it the "earthly heaven." [Greek: Chairois hae polis, ho
+epigeios ouranos.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id=
+"page133"></a>{133}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-5" id="sect1-4-5">SECTION V.</a>&mdash;THE
+EVIDENCE OF ORIGEN.</h4>
+<p>Jerome informs us that Tertullian, whose remains we have last
+examined, lived to a very advanced age. Long, therefore, before his
+death flourished Origen, one of the most celebrated lights of the
+primitive Church. He was educated a Christian. Indeed his father is
+said to have suffered martyrdom about the year 202. Origen was a
+pupil of Clement of Alexandria. His virtues and his labours have
+called forth the admiration of all ages; and though he cannot be
+implicitly followed as a teacher, what still remains of his works
+will be delivered down as a rich treasure to succeeding times. He
+was a most voluminous writer; and Jerome asked the members of his
+church, "Who is there among us that can read as many books as
+Origen has composed?" [Vol. iv. epist. xli. p. 346.] A large
+proportion of his works are lost; and of those which remain, few
+are preserved in the original Greek. We are often obliged to study
+Origen through the medium of a translation, the accuracy of which
+we have no means of verifying. A difficult and delicate duty also
+devolves upon the theological student to determine which of the
+works attributed to Origen are genuine and which are spurious; and
+what parts, moreover, of the works received on the whole as genuine
+came from his pen. Of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page134" id=
+"page134"></a>{134}</span> the spurious works, some are so palpably
+written in a much later age, and by authors of different religious
+views, that no one, after weighing the evidence, can be at a loss
+what decision to make concerning them; in the case of others,
+claims and objections may appear to be more evenly balanced. I
+trust on the one hand to refer to no works for Origen's testimony
+which are not confessedly his, nor on the other to exclude any
+passage which is not decidedly spurious; whilst in one particular
+case more immediately connected with our subject, I am induced to
+enter further in detail into a critical examination of the
+genuineness and value of a passage than the character of this work
+generally requires. The great importance attached to the testimony
+of that passage by some defenders of the worship paid to angels,
+may be admitted to justify the fulness of the criticism. Lest,
+however, its insertion in the body of the work might seem
+inconveniently to interfere with the reader's progress in our
+argument, I have thought it best to include it in a supplementary
+section at the close of our inquiry into the evidence of
+Origen.</p>
+<p>Coccius, in his elaborate work, quotes the two following
+passages as Origen's, without expressing any hesitation or doubt
+respecting their genuineness, in which he is followed by writers of
+the present day. The passages are alleged in proof that Origen held
+and put in practice the doctrine of the invocation of saints; and
+they form the first quotations made by Coccius under the section
+headed by this title: "That the saints are to be invoked, proved by
+the testimony of the Greek Fathers."</p>
+<p>The first passage is couched in these words: "I will
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id=
+"page135"></a>{135}</span> begin to throw myself upon my knees, and
+pray to all the saints to come to my aid; for I do not dare, in
+consequence of my excess of wickedness, to call upon God. O Saints
+of God, you I pray with weeping full of grief, that ye would
+propitiate his mercies for me miserable. Alas me! Father Abraham,
+pray for me, that I be not driven from thy bosom, which I greatly
+long for, and yet not worthily, because of the greatness of my
+sins."</p>
+<p>Coccius cites this passage as from "Origen in Lament," and it
+has been recently appealed to under the title of "Origen on the
+Lamentations." Here, however, is a very great mistake. Origen's
+work on the Lamentations, called also "Selecta in Threnos," and
+inserted in the Benedictine edition (Vol. iii. p. 321.), is
+entirely a different production from the work which contains the
+above extract. This apocryphal work, on the other hand, does not
+profess to be the comment of Origen on the Lamentations, but the
+Lament or Wailing of Origen himself; or, as it used to be called,
+the Penitence of Origen. (In the Paris edition of 1519 it is called
+"Planctus, seu Lamentum Origenis." Pope Gelasius refers to it as
+"Poenitentia Origenis.") That this work has no pretensions whatever
+to be regarded as Origen's, has been long placed beyond doubt. Even
+in the edition of 1545, this treatise is prefaced by Erasmus in
+these words, "This Lamentation was neither written by Origen nor
+translated by Jerome, but is the fiction of some unlearned man, who
+attempted, under colour of this, to throw disgrace upon Origen."
+[Basil, 1545. vol. i. p. 498.] In the Benedictine edition (Paris,
+1733.) no trace of this work is to be found. They do not admit it
+among the doubtful, or even the spurious works; they do not so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id=
+"page136"></a>{136}</span> much as give room for it in the
+appendix; on the contrary, they drop it altogether as utterly
+unworthy of being any longer preserved. Instead, however, of
+admitting the work itself, these editors have supplied abundant
+reason for its exclusion, by inserting the sentiments of Huetius,
+or Huet, the very learned bishop of Avranches. He tells us, that
+formerly to Origen's work on Principles used to be appended a
+treatise called, the Lament of Origen, the Latin translation of
+which Guido referred to Jerome. After quoting the passage of
+Erasmus (as above cited from the edition of 1545) in proof of its
+having been "neither written by Origen nor translated by Jerome,
+but the fabrication of some unlearned man, who attempted, under
+colour of this, to throw disgrace on Origen, just as they forged a
+letter in Jerome's name, lamenting that he had ever thought with
+Origen," Huet proceeds thus: "And Gelasius in the Roman Council
+writes, 'The book which is called The Repentance of Origen,
+apocryphal.' It is wonderful, therefore, that without any mark of
+its false character, it should be sometimes cited by some
+theologians in evidence. Here we may smile at the supineness of a
+certain heterodox man of the present age, who thought the 'Lament,'
+ascribed to Origen, to be something different from the Book of
+Repentance." [Vol. iv. part ii. p. 326.]</p>
+<p>The Decree here referred to of Pope Gelasius, made in the Roman
+Council, A.D. 494, by that pontiff, in conjunction with seventy
+bishops, contains these strong expressions, before enumerating some
+few of the books then condemned: "Other works written by heretics
+and schismatics, the Catholic and Apostolic Church by <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page137" id="page137"></a>{137}</span> no means
+receives; of them we think it right to subjoin a few which have
+occurred to our memory, and are to be avoided by Catholics." [Conc.
+Labb. vol. iv. p. 1265.] Then follows a list of prohibited works,
+among which we read, "the book called The Repentance of Origen,
+apocryphal," the very book which Huet identifies with the "Lament
+of Origen," still cited as evidence even in the present day. (See
+Appendix A.)</p>
+<p>The second passage cited by Coccius, and also by writers of the
+present time, as Origen's, without any allusion to its spurious and
+apocryphal character, is from the second book of the work called
+Origen on Job. The words cited run thus: "O blessed Job, who art
+living for ever with God, and remainest conqueror in the sight of
+the Lord the King, pray for us wretched, that the mercy of the
+terrible God may protect us in all our afflictions, and deliver us
+from all oppressions of the wicked one; and number us with the
+just, and enrol us among those who are saved, and make us rest with
+them in his kingdom, where for ever with the saints we may magnify
+him."</p>
+<p>This work, like the former, has no claim whatever to be regarded
+as Origen's. It has long been discarded by the learned. Indeed so
+far back as 1545, Erasmus, in his Censura, proved that it was
+written long after the time of Origen by an Arian. (Basil, 1545.
+vol. i. p. 408; and "Censura.") By the Benedictine editors it is
+transferred to an appendix as the Commentary of an anonymous writer
+on Job; and they thus express their judgment as to its being a
+forgery: "The Commentary of an anonymous writer on Job, in previous
+editions, is ascribed to Origen; <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page138" id="page138"></a>{138}</span> but that it is not his,
+Huet proves by unconquerable arguments. This translation is
+assigned to Hilary, the bishop; but although it is clear from
+various proofs of Jerome, that St. Hilary translated the tracts or
+homilies of Origen on Job, yet there is no reason why that man who
+wrote with the highest praise against the Arians, should be
+considered as the translator of this work, which is infected with
+the corruption of Arianism, and which is not Origen's." [Vol. ii.
+p. 894.] Erasmus calls the prologue to this treatise on Job "the
+production of a silly talkative man, neither learned nor
+modest."</p>
+<p>It is impossible not to feel, with regard to these two works,
+the sentiments which, as we have already seen, the Bishop of
+Avranches has so strongly expressed on one. "It is wonderful, that
+they should be sometimes cited in evidence by some theologians,
+without any mark of their being forgeries."</p>
+<p>Proceeding with our examination of the sentiments of Origen, I
+would here premise, that not the smallest doubt can be entertained
+that Origen believed the angels to be ministering spirits, real,
+active, zealous workmen and fellow-labourers with us in the
+momentous and awful business of our eternal salvation. He
+represents the angels as members of the same family with ourselves,
+as worshippers of the same God, as servants of the same master, as
+children of the same father, as disciples of the same heavenly
+teacher, as learners of one and the same heavenly doctrine. He
+contemplates them as members of our Christian congregations, as
+joining with us in prayer to our heavenly Benefactor, as taking
+pleasure when they hear in our <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page139" id="page139"></a>{139}</span> assemblies what is
+agreeable to the will of God, and as being present too not only
+generally in the Christian Church, but also with individual members
+of it<a id="footnotetag50" name="footnotetag50"></a><a href=
+"#footnote50"><sup>50</sup></a>. But does Origen, therefore,
+countenance any invocation of them? Let us appeal to himself.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote50" name=
+"footnote50"></a><b>Footnote 50:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag50">(return)</a>
+<p>One or two references will supply abundant proof of this: "I do
+not doubt that in our congregation angels are present, not only in
+general to the whole Church, but also individually with those of
+whom it is said, 'Their angels do always behold the face of my
+Father who is in heaven.' A twofold Church is here: one of men, the
+other of angels. If we say any thing agreeably to reason and the
+mind of Scripture, the angels rejoice to pray with us." And a
+little above, "Our Saviour, therefore, as well as the Holy Spirit,
+who spoke by the prophets, instructs not only men, but angels and
+invisible powers."&mdash;Hom, xxiii. in Luc. vol. iii. p. 961.</p>
+<p>"Whoever, therefore, confessing his sins, repents, or confesses
+Christ before men in persecutions, is applauded by his brethren.
+For there is joy and gladness to the angels in heaven over one
+sinner that repenteth. By them, therefore, as by brethren (for both
+men and angels are sons of the same Creator and Father) they are
+praised."&mdash;In Genes. Hom. xvii. p. 110.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Celsus accused the Christians of being atheists, godless, men
+without God, because they would not worship those gods many and
+lords many, and those secondary, subordinate, auxiliary, and
+ministering divinities with which the heathen mythology abounded:
+Origen answers, we are not godless, we are not without an object of
+our prayer; we pray to God Almighty alone through the mediation
+only of his Son.</p>
+<p>"We must pray to God alone ([Greek: Mono gar proseukteon to epi
+pasi Theo]), who is over all things; and we must pray also to the
+only-begotten and first-born of every creature, the Word of God;
+and we must implore him as our High Priest to carry our prayer,
+first coming to him, to his God and our <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page140" id="page140"></a>{140}</span> God, to
+his Father and the Father of those who live agreeably to the word
+of God." [Cont. Cels. &sect; 8. c. xxvi. vol. i. p. 761.]</p>
+<p>But Celsus, in this well representing the weakness and failings
+of human nature, still urged on the Christian the necessity, or at
+all events the expediency, of conciliating those intermediate
+beings who executed the will of the Supreme Being, and might haply
+have much left at their own will and discretion to give or to
+withhold; and therefore the desirableness of securing their good
+offices by prayer. To this Origen answers:</p>
+<p>"The one God ([Greek: Hena oun ton epi pasi theon haemin
+exenmenisteon])&mdash;the God who is over all, is to be propitiated
+by us, and to be appeased by prayer; the God who is rendered
+favourable by piety and all virtue. But if he (Celsus) is desirous,
+after the supreme God, to propitiate some others also, let him bear
+in mind, that just as a body in motion is accompanied by the motion
+of its shadow, so also by rendering the supreme God favourable, it
+follows that the person has all his (God's) friends, angels, souls,
+spirits, favourable also; for they sympathize with those who are
+worthy of God's favour; and not only do they become kindly affected
+towards the worthy, but they also join in their work with those who
+desire to worship the supreme God; and they propitiate him, and
+they pray with us, and supplicate with us; so that we boldly say,
+that together with men who on principle prefer the better part, and
+pray to God, ten thousands of holy powers join in prayer UNASKED
+([Greek: aklaetoi])," [UNBIDDEN, UNCALLED upon.] [Cont. Cels. lib.
+viii. &sect; 64. vol. i. p. 789.]</p>
+<p>What an opportunity was here for Origen to have stated, that
+though Christians do not call upon demons and the subordinate
+divinities of heathenism to aid <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page141" id="page141"></a>{141}</span> them, yet that they do call
+upon the ministering spirits, the true holy angels, messengers and
+servants of the most High God! But whilst speaking of them, and
+magnifying the blessings derived to man through their ministry, so
+far from encouraging us to ask them for their good offices, his
+testimony on the contrary is not merely negative; he positively
+asserts that when they assist mankind, it is without any request or
+prayer from man. Could this come from one who invoked angels?</p>
+<p>Another passage, although it adds little to the evidence of the
+above extract, I am unwilling to pass by, because it beautifully
+illustrates by the doctrine and practice of Origen the prayer, the
+only one adopted by the Anglican Church, offered by the Church to
+God for the succour and defence of the holy angels. Speaking of the
+unsatisfactory slippery road which they tread, who either depend
+upon the agency of demons for good, or are distressed by the fear
+of evil from them, Origen adds, "How far better ([Greek: poso
+Beltion]) were it to commit oneself to God who is over all, through
+Him who instructed us in this doctrine, Jesus Christ, and OF HIM to
+ask for every aid from the holy angels and the just, that they may
+rescue us from the earthly demons." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii. &sect;
+60. vol. i. p. 786.]</p>
+<p>In the following passage Origen answers the question of Celsus:
+"If you Christians admit the existence of angels, tell us what you
+consider their nature to be?" [Cont. Cels. lib. v. &sect; 4. p.
+579.]</p>
+<p>"Come," replies Origen, "let us consider these points. Now we
+confessedly say, that the angels are ministering spirits, and sent
+to minister on account of those who are to be heirs of salvation;
+that they ascend, bearing with them the supplications of men into
+the most pure <span class="pagenum"><a name="page142" id=
+"page142"></a>{142}</span> heavenly places of the world; and that
+they again descend from thence, bearing to each in proportion to
+what is appointed by God for them to minister to the well-doers.
+And learning that these are, from their work, called angels
+([Greek: aggeloi], messengers, ministers sent to execute some
+commission), we find them, because they are divine, sometimes
+called even gods in the Holy Scriptures; but not so, as for any
+injunction to be given to us to worship and adore, instead of God,
+those who minister, and bring to us the things of God. For every
+request and prayer, and supplication and thanksgiving, must be sent
+up to Him who is God above all, through the High Priest, who is
+above all angels, even the living Word of God. And we also make our
+requests to the Word, and supplicate Him, and moreover offer our
+prayer to Him; if we can understand the difference between the
+right use and the abuse of prayer. For it is not reasonable for us
+to call upon angels, without receiving a knowledge concerning them
+which is above man. But supposing the knowledge concerning them,
+wonderful and unutterable as it is, had been received; that very
+knowledge describing their nature, and those to whom they are
+respectively assigned, would not give confidence in praying to any
+other than to Him who is sufficient for every thing, God who is
+above all, through our Saviour, the Son of God, who is the word,
+and wisdom, and the truth, and whatsoever else the writings of the
+prophets of God, and the Apostles of Jesus say concerning Him. But
+for the angels of God to be favourable to us, and to do all things
+for us, our disposition towards God is sufficient; we copy them to
+the utmost of human strength, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page143" id="page143"></a>{143}</span> as they copy God. And our
+conception concerning his Son, the Word, according to what is come
+to us, is not opposed to the more clear conception of the holy
+angels concerning Him, but is daily approximating towards it in
+clearness and perspicuity."</p>
+<p>Again, he thus writes: "But Celsus wishes us to dedicate the
+first-fruits unto the demons; but we to Him who said, Let the earth
+bring forth grass, &amp;c. But to whom we give the first-fruits, to
+him we send up also our prayers; having a great High Priest who is
+entered into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God; and this confession
+we hold fast as long as we live, having God favourable unto us, and
+his only-begotten Son being manifested among us, Jesus Christ. But
+if we wish to have a multitude favourable unto us, we learn that
+thousand thousands stand by Him, and ten thousand thousands
+minister unto Him; who, regarding those as kinsfolks and friends
+who imitate their piety to God, work together for the salvation of
+them who call upon God and pray sincerely; appearing also, and
+thinking that they ought to listen to them, and as if upon one
+watchword to go forth for the benefit and salvation of those who
+pray to God, to whom they also pray." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii.
+&sect; 34. (Benedict, p. 766.)]</p>
+<p>After these multiplied declarations of Origen, not only
+confessing that Christians did not pray to the angels, but
+vindicating them from the charge of impiety brought against them by
+their enemies for their neglect of the worship of angels, is it
+possible to regard him as a witness in favour of prayer to
+angels?</p>
+<p>But it has been said that Origen in another passage (Cont. Cels.
+lib. viii. &sect; 13. p. 751.) <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page144" id="page144"></a>{144}</span> plainly implies, that he
+would not be unwilling to discuss the question of some worship
+being due to angels and archangels, provided the idea of that
+worship, and the acts of the worshippers, were first cleared of all
+misapprehension. And I would not that any Catholic, whether in
+communion with the Church of England or of Rome, should make any
+other answer than Origen here gave to Celsus. Let me speak freely
+on this point. I should not respect the memory of Origen as I do,
+had he taught differently. The word which he uses is the Greek word
+"therapeusis," precisely the same word with that which the learned
+in medicine now use to describe the means of healing diseases. It
+is a word of very wide import. It signifies the care which a
+physician takes of his patient; the service paid to a master; the
+attention given to a superior; the affectionate attendance of a
+friend; the allegiance of a subject; the worship of the Supreme
+Being. Origen says, Provided Celsus will specify what kind of
+"therapeusis" he would wish to be paid to those angels and
+archangels whose existence we acknowledge, I am ready to enter upon
+the subject with him. This is all he says. And we of the Anglican
+Church are ready from our hearts to join him. Call it by what name
+we may, we are never backward in acknowledging ourselves bound to
+render it. We pay to the angels and archangels, and all the company
+of heaven, the homage of respect, and veneration, and love. They
+are indeed our fellow-servants; they are, like ourselves, creatures
+of God's hand; but they are exalted far above us in nature and in
+office. By the grace of God, we would daily endeavour to become
+less distant from <span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id=
+"page145"></a>{145}</span> them in purity, in zeal, in obedience.
+Origen here speaks not one word of adoration, of invocation, of
+prayer. He speaks of a feeling and a behaviour, which the Greeks
+called "therapeusis," and which we best render by "respect,
+veneration, and love." Far from us be the thought of lowering the
+holy angels in the eyes of our fellow-creatures; equally far from
+us be the thought of invoking them, of asking them even for their
+prayers. They are holy creatures and holy messengers: we will think
+and speak of them with reverence, and gratitude, and affection; but
+they are creatures and messengers still, and when we think or speak
+of the object of prayer, we think and speak solely and exclusively
+of God.</p>
+<p>With regard to Origen's opinion, as to the invocation of the
+souls of saints departed, a very few words will suffice. He clearly
+records his opinion that the faithful are still waiting for us, and
+that till we all rejoice together, their joy will not be full: he
+leaves among the mysteries not to be solved now the question
+whether the departed can benefit the human race at all; and he has
+added reflections, full of edifying and solemn admonition, which
+would dissuade his fellow-believers from placing their confidence
+in any virtues, or intercessions, or merits of saints, and in any
+thing except the mere mercy of God, through Jesus Christ, and our
+own individual labour in the work of the Lord.</p>
+<p>In his seventh homily on Leviticus, in a passage partly quoted
+by Bellarmin, we read<a id="footnotetag51" name=
+"footnotetag51"></a><a href=
+"#footnote51"><sup>51</sup></a>&mdash;"Not even the Apostles have
+yet received their joy, but even they are waiting, in order that I
+also may become a partaker of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page146" id="page146"></a>{146}</span> their joy. For the saints
+departing hence do not immediately receive all the rewards of their
+deserts; but they wait even for us, though we be delaying and
+dilatory<a id="footnotetag52" name="footnotetag52"></a><a href=
+"#footnote52"><sup>52</sup></a>. For they have not perfect joy as
+long as they grieve for our errors, and mourn for our sins." Then,
+having quoted the Epistle to the Hebrews, he proceeds,&mdash;"You
+see, therefore, that Abraham is yet waiting to obtain those things
+that are perfect; so is Isaac and Jacob; and so all the prophets
+are waiting for us, that they might obtain eternal blessedness with
+us. Wherefore, even this mystery is kept, to the last day of
+delayed judgment."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote51" name=
+"footnote51"></a><b>Footnote 51:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag51">(return)</a>
+<p>Vol. ii. p. 222. Nondum enim receperunt l&aelig;titiam suam, ne
+apostoli quidem, &amp;c. But see Huetius on Origen, lib. ii. q. 11.
+No. 10.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote52" name=
+"footnote52"></a><b>Footnote 52:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag52">(return)</a>
+<p>He thinks it probable, that the saints departed feel an interest
+in the welfare of men on earth. See vol. iv. p. 273.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Modern Roman Catholic writers tell us, that we must consider
+Origen here as only referring to the reunion of the soul with the
+body; but his words cannot be so interpreted. The cause of the
+saints still waiting for their consummation of bliss, is stated to
+be the will of God, that all the faithful should enter upon their
+full enjoyment of blessedness together.</p>
+<p>Again: it may be asked, whether the following passage could have
+come from the pen of one who prayed to the saints, as already
+reigning with Christ in heaven.</p>
+<p>"But now whether the saints who are removed from the body and
+are with Christ, act at all, and labour for us, like the angels who
+minister to our salvation; or whether, again, the wicked removed
+from the body act at all according to the purpose of their own
+mind, like the bad angels, with whom, it is said by Christ, that
+they will be sent into eternal fires;&mdash;let this too be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id=
+"page147"></a>{147}</span> considered among the secret things of
+God, mysteries not to be committed to writing." [Epist. ad Rom.
+lib. ii. (Benedict. vol. iv. p. 479.) "Jam vero si etiam,"
+&amp;c.]</p>
+<p>In a passage found in Origen's Comment on Ezekiel's text,
+"Though Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it, they should deliver
+neither son nor daughter, they should deliver only their own souls
+by their righteousness," [Hom. iii. vol. iii. p. 372.]
+independently of the testimony borne to the point before us, we
+read a very interesting and awakening lesson of general
+application:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"First, let us expound the passage agreeably to its plain sense,
+in consequence of the ignorance of some who maintain the ideas of
+their own mind to be the truth of God, and often say, 'Every one of
+us will be able by his prayers to snatch whomsoever he will from
+hell,' and introduce iniquity to the Lord; not seeing that the
+righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the
+wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him; so that each shall die
+in his own sin, and each live in his own person. My father being a
+martyr profits me nothing, if I shall not live well, and adorn the
+nobleness of my race,&mdash;that is, his testimony and confession,
+by which he was glorified in Christ. It profiteth not the Jews to
+say, 'We were not born of fornication, we have one father, the
+Lord;' and, a little after, 'Abraham is our father.' Whatever they
+may say, whatever they will assume, if they have not the faith of
+Abraham they make their boast in vain; for they will not be saved
+on account of their being children of Abraham. Since, therefore,
+some have formed incorrect notions, we have necessarily brought in
+the plain sense of the passage as to the letter, saying, Noah,
+Daniel, and Job will not rescue sons or daughters; they only will
+be saved. Let no <span class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id=
+"page148"></a>{148}</span> one of us put his trust in a just
+father, a holy mother, chaste brethren. Blessed is the man who hath
+his hope in himself, and in the right way. But to those who place
+confident trust in the saints, we bring forward no improper
+example,&mdash;'Cursed is the man whose hope is in man;' and again,
+'Trust ye not in man.' And this also, 'It is good to trust in the
+Lord rather than in princes<a id="footnotetag53" name=
+"footnotetag53"></a><a href="#footnote53"><sup>53</sup></a>.' If we
+must hope in some object, leaving all others, let us hope in the
+Lord, saying, 'Though a host of men were set against me, yet shall
+not my heart be afraid.'"</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote53" name=
+"footnote53"></a><b>Footnote 53:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag53">(return)</a>
+<p>These observations may perhaps refer more especially to the
+saints still on earth; but they apply to all helpers, save God
+alone.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>He finishes the homily thus: "The righteous see three periods;
+the present, the period of change when the Lord will judge, and
+that which will be after the resurrection,&mdash;that is, the
+eternity of life in heaven in Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and
+dominion for ever and ever. Amen."</p>
+<p>Can this confessor of the Christian faith have ever taught his
+fellow-believers to plead the merits of the saints, or to pray for
+their intercessions? How strongly are the above sentiments
+contrasted with a passage in the third of the spurious homilies
+called In Diversos; the first clause of which is referred to by
+Bellarmin, as containing Origen's approbation of giving honour to
+the saints<a id="footnotetag54" name="footnotetag54"></a><a href=
+"#footnote54"><sup>54</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote54" name=
+"footnote54"></a><b>Footnote 54:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag54">(return)</a>
+<p>I hardly need detain the reader by any proof of the spuriousness
+of this passage; the whole work from which it is taken is rejected
+altogether by the Benedictine editors: "Reliqua ejusmodi spuria
+omittenda censuimus, qualia sunt ... Homili&aelig; in diversos;"
+and they have not allowed a single line of it to appear in their
+volumes, not even in the small character.&mdash;Vol. iv. p. 1.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"The memory of these (the Innocents) is always <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>{149}</span>
+celebrated, as is right, in the Churches. These, therefore, since
+they were unjustly or impiously put to death in peace and rest,
+having suffered much for the name of the Lord, were taken from this
+world, to remain in the eternal Church for ever in Christ. But
+their parents for the merits of their suffering will receive a
+worthy recompense of reward from the just and eternal Lord God."
+Here we have strongly marked indeed the difference between Origen
+himself, and the errors fastened upon him by the design or
+ignorance of subsequent times.</p>
+<p>Were not his testimony a subject of great moment, I should plead
+guilty to having detained my readers too long on Origen; and yet I
+cannot dismiss him without first refreshing our minds with the
+remembrance of some of his beautiful reflections on a Christian's
+prayer. We need not read them with a controversial eye, and they
+may be profitable to us all.</p>
+<p>"I think, then, (says this early teacher in Christ's school)
+that when proceeding to prayer, a Christian will be more readily
+disposed, and be in a better tone for the general work of prayer,
+if he will first tarry a little, and put himself into the right
+frame, casting off every distracting and disturbing thought, and
+with his best endeavour recalling to mind the vastness of HIM to
+whom he is drawing near, and how unholy a thing it is to approach
+him with a carelessness and indifference, and, as it were,
+contempt; laying aside also every thing foreign to the
+subject;&mdash;so to come to prayer as one who stretcheth forth his
+soul first, before his hands; and lifts up his mind first, before
+his eyes, to God; and before he stands up, raising from the ground
+the leading <span class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id=
+"page150"></a>{150}</span> principle of his nature, and lifting
+that up to the Lord of all. So far casting away all remembrance of
+evil towards any of those who may seem to have injured him, as he
+wishes God not to remember evil against him, who has himself been
+guilty, and has trespassed against many of his neighbours, or in
+whatever he is conscious to have done contrary to right reason."
+[De Oratione, vol. i. &sect; 31. p. 267.]</p>
+<p>"Having divided prayer into its several parts" (he continues),
+"I may bring my work to a close. There are then four parts of
+prayer requiring description, which I have found scattered in the
+Scriptures, all of which every one should embody in his
+prayer:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"First, we must offer glory (doxologies) to the best of our
+ability in the opening and commencement of our prayer, to God
+through Christ who is glorified with Him in the Holy Spirit, who is
+praised together. After this each person should offer general
+thanksgivings both for the blessings granted to all, and for those
+which he has individually obtained from God. After the
+thanksgiving, it appears to me right, that becoming, as it were, a
+bitter accuser of his own sins to God, he should petition first of
+all for a remedy to release him from the habit which impels him to
+transgress, and then for remission of the past. And after the
+confession, I think he ought in the fourth place, to add a
+supplication for great and heavenly things, both individual and
+universal, and for his relations and friends. After all, he should
+close his prayer with an ascription of glory to God through Christ
+in the Holy Ghost." [Sect. 33. p. 271.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id=
+"page151"></a>{151}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-6" id="sect1-4-6">SECTION
+VI.</a>&mdash;SUPPLEMENTARY SECTION ON ORIGEN.</h4>
+<p>I have above intimated my intention of reserving for a separate
+section our examination of a passage ascribed to Origen, in which
+he is represented as having invoked an angel to come down from
+heaven, to succour him and his fellow-creatures on earth. The
+passage purports to be part of Origen's comment on the opening
+verse of the prophecy of Ezekiel, "The heavens were opened." After
+the fullest investigation, and patient weighing of the whole
+section, I am fully persuaded, first, that the passage is an
+interpolation, never having come from the pen of Origen; and
+secondly, that, whoever were its author, it can be regarded only as
+an instance of those impassioned apostrophes, which are found in
+great variety in the addresses of ancient Christian orators. But
+since some of the most respected writers of the Church of Rome have
+regarded it as genuine, and deemed it worthy of being cited in
+evidence, I feel it incumbent to state at length, for those readers
+who may desire to enter at once fully into the question, the
+reasons on which my judgment is founded; whilst others, who may
+perhaps consider the discussion of the several points here as too
+great an interruption to the general argument, may for the present
+pass this section, and reserve it for subsequent inquiry.</p>
+<p>It will be, in the first place, necessary to quote the whole
+passage entire, however long; for the mere extract of that portion
+which is cited as Origen's prayer to an <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>{152}</span> angel,
+might leave a false impression as to the real merits of the
+case.</p>
+<p>"The heavens are opened. The heavens were closed, and at the
+coming of Christ they were opened, IN ORDER THAT THEY BEING LAID
+OPEN THE HOLY GHOST MIGHT COME UPON HIM in the appearance of a
+dove. For he could not come to us unless he had first descended on
+one who partook of his own nature. Jesus ascended up on high, he
+led captivity captive, he received gifts for men. He who descended
+is the same who ascended above all heavens, that he might fill all
+things; and he gave some as apostles, some as prophets, some as
+evangelists, some as pastors and masters, for the perfecting of the
+saints." [Vol. iii. p. 358. Hom. i. in Ezek.]</p>
+<p>"[The heavens were opened. It is not enough for one heaven to be
+opened: very many are opened, that not from one, but from all,
+angels may descend to those who are to be saved; angels who
+ascended and descended upon the Son of man, and came to him, and
+ministered to him. Now the angels descended because Christ first
+descended, fearing to descend before the Lord of all powers and
+things commanded. But when they saw the chieftain of the army of
+heaven dwelling in earthly places, then they entered through the
+opened road, following their Lord, and obeying his will, who
+distributes them as guardians of those that believe on his name.
+Thou yesterday wast under a devil, to-day thou art under an angel.
+Do not ye, saith the Lord, despise one of the least of those who
+are in the Church? Verily, I say unto you, that their angels
+through all things see the face of the Father who is in heaven. The
+angels attend on thy salvation; they were granted for the ministry
+of the Son of God, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id=
+"page153"></a>{153}</span> they say among themselves, If he
+descended, and descended into a body, if he is clothed in mortal
+flesh, and endured the cross, and died for man, why are we resting
+idle? Why do we spare ourselves? Haste away! Let all of us angels
+descend from heaven! Thus also was there a multitude of the
+heavenly host praising and blessing God when Christ was born. All
+things are full of angels. COME, ANGEL, take up one who by the word
+is converted from former error, from the doctrine of demons, from
+iniquity speaking on high, and taking him up like a good physician,
+cherish him, and instruct him. He is a little child, to-day he is
+born, an old man again growing young; and undertake him, granting
+him the baptism of the second regeneration; and summon to thyself
+other companions of thy ministry, that you all may together train
+for the faith those who have been sometime deceived. For there is
+greater joy in heaven over one sinner repenting, than over ninety
+and nine just persons who need no repentance. Every creature
+exults, rejoices with, and with applause addresses those who are to
+be saved; for the expectation of the creature waiteth for the
+manifestation of the sons of God. And although those who have
+interpolated the apostolical writings are unwilling that such
+passages should be in their books as may prove Christ to be the
+Creator, yet every creature waiteth for the sons of God when they
+shall be freed from sin, when they shall be taken away from the
+hand of Zabulon<a id="footnotetag55" name=
+"footnotetag55"></a><a href="#footnote55"><sup>55</sup></a>, when
+they shall be regenerated by Christ. But now it is time that we
+touch somewhat on the present place. The Prophet sees not a vision,
+but visions of God. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id=
+"page154"></a>{154}</span> Why did he see not one, but many
+visions? Hear the Lord promising and saying, I have multiplied
+visions. 8. 'The fifth month.' This was the fifth year of the
+captivity of king Joachim. In the thirtieth year of Ezekiel's age,
+and the fifth of the captivity of Joachim, the prophet is sent to
+the Jews. The most merciful Father did not despise the people, nor
+leave them a long time unadmonished. It is the fifth year. How much
+time intervened? Five years elapsed since they were captives in
+bondage.]</p>
+<p>(The portion between brackets is what I regard as an
+interpolation.)</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote55" name=
+"footnote55"></a><b>Footnote 55:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag55">(return)</a>
+<p>This word is frequently used for "Diabolum." Thus in a hymn used
+in the Roman ritual on Michaelmas-day we read, "Michaelem in
+virtute conterentem Zabulum."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"Immediately the Holy Spirit descends. He opened the heavens,
+that they who were oppressed by the yoke of bondage might see those
+things which were seen by the prophet. For when he says, The
+heavens were opened, in some measure they see with the eyes of
+their heart what he had seen even with the eyes of his flesh."</p>
+<p>Now the question is, Can this apostrophe to an angel be admitted
+as evidence that Origen held, and in his own person acted upon the
+doctrine of the Invocation of Angels?</p>
+<p>The nature of the present work precludes us from entering at
+length on the broad question, how far we can with safety regard the
+several writings which now purport to be translations of Origen's
+compositions, as on the whole the works of that early Christian
+writer. A multitude of those works which, until almost the middle
+of the sixteenth century, were circulated as Origen's, have long
+been by common consent excluded from the catalogue of his
+works<a id="footnotetag56" name="footnotetag56"></a><a href=
+"#footnote56"><sup>56</sup></a>. On this subject I <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>{155}</span> would
+refer any one, who desires to enter upon the inquiry, to the
+several prefaces of the Benedictine editors, who point out many
+sources of information, as well from among their friends as from
+those with whom they differ. Our inquiry must be limited within far
+narrower bounds, though I trust our arguments may assist somewhat
+in establishing the principles on which the student may at first
+guide himself in the wider range of investigation.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote56" name=
+"footnote56"></a><b>Footnote 56:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag56">(return)</a>
+<p>See preface to vol. iv. of the Benedictine edition.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We will first look to the external evidence bearing on the
+passage in question, and then to the internal character of the
+passage itself.</p>
+<p>Origen's Commentaries on Ezekiel were divided into no fewer than
+twenty-five volumes, which he is said to have begun in
+C&aelig;sarea of Palestine, and to have finished in Athens. Of
+these only one single fragment remains, namely, part of the
+twenty-first volume<a id="footnotetag57" name=
+"footnotetag57"></a><a href="#footnote57"><sup>57</sup></a>. Jerome
+says that he translated fourteen of Origen's homilies on Ezekiel.
+Of these not one passage in the original language of Origen is
+known to be in existence. We must now, therefore, either receive
+the existing translations generally as Origen's, (whether they are
+Jerome's translations or not,) or we must consider Origen's
+homilies on Ezekiel as altogether lost to us. But supposing that we
+receive these works as containing, on the whole, traditionary
+translations of Origen, the genuineness of any one passage may yet
+become the subject of fair criticism. And whilst some persons
+reject whole masses of them altogether, the history of his works
+cannot but suggest some very perplexing points of suspicion and
+doubt.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote57" name=
+"footnote57"></a><b>Footnote 57:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag57">(return)</a>
+<p>See Benedictine edition, vol. iii. p. 351. and Eusebius, Eccl.
+Hist. lib. vi. c. 6. there referred to.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id=
+"page156"></a>{156}</span>
+<p>The great body of his homilies, Origen probably delivered
+extempore in the early part of his ministry to the Christians of
+C&aelig;sarea. Eusebius tells us, that not before Origen had
+reached his sixtieth year did he sanction the notaries (persons
+well known to history and corresponding to the short-hand
+writers<a id="footnotetag58" name="footnotetag58"></a><a href=
+"#footnote58"><sup>58</sup></a> of the present day) in publishing
+any of his homilies. [Eccles. Hist. lib. vi. c. 36.] But the
+Benedictine editor, De la Rue, conceives that those men might
+surreptitiously and against the preacher's wishes have published
+some of Origen's homilies. Be this as it may. Suppose that the
+homilies on Ezekiel were published by Origen himself, and were
+translated by Jerome himself, our doubts are not removed even by
+that supposition. The same editor in the same preface tells us, "It
+is known to the learned that it was Jerome's habit, in translating
+Greek, sometimes to insert some things of his own<a id=
+"footnotetag59" name="footnotetag59"></a><a href=
+"#footnote59"><sup>59</sup></a>." Not that I for a moment conceive
+the passage under consideration to have come in its Latin dress
+from the pen of Jerome; for my conviction being that it is an
+interpolation of a much later date, I mention the circumstance to
+show, that even when Jerome, with his professed accuracy, is the
+translator, we can in no case feel sure that we are reading the
+exact and precise sentiments of Origen.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote58" name=
+"footnote58"></a><b>Footnote 58:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag58">(return)</a>
+<p>The Latin word "notarius" (notary) does not come so near as our
+own English expression, "short-hand writer," to the Greek word used
+by Eusebius,&mdash;"tachygraphus," "quick-writer." The report of
+Eusebius as to the homilies of Origen having been delivered
+extempore, and taken down by these "quick-writers," is confirmed by
+Pamphilus the martyr, as quoted by Valesius, in the annotations on
+this passage of Eusebius.&mdash;Apol. Orig. lib. i.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote59" name=
+"footnote59"></a><b>Footnote 59:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag59">(return)</a>
+<p>Cui in vertendis Gr&aelig;cis sciunt eruditi solemne esse
+nonnulla interdum de suo inserere.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id=
+"page157"></a>{157}</span>
+<p>Ruffinus, his celebrated contemporary, accused Jerome of many
+inaccuracies in his translations; and yet what were the principles
+of translation adopted by Ruffinus himself, as his own, we are not
+left to infer; for we learn it from his own pen. His voluntary
+acknowledgment in the peroration which he added to Origen's Comment
+on the Epistle of St. Paul to the Romans, strongly and painfully
+exhibits to us how little dependence can safely be placed on such
+translations whenever the original is lost; how utterly
+insufficient and unsatisfactory is any evidence drawn from them, as
+to the real genuine sentiments and expressions of the author.
+Ruffinus informs us, that with regard to many of the various works
+of Origen, he changed the preacher's extemporary addresses, as
+delivered in the Church, into a more explanatory form, "adding,
+supplying, filling up what he thought wanting<a id="footnotetag60"
+name="footnotetag60"></a><a href=
+"#footnote60"><sup>60</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote60" name=
+"footnote60"></a><b>Footnote 60:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag60">(return)</a>
+<p>Dum supplere cupimus ea qu&aelig; ab Origene in auditorio
+Ecclesi&aelig; extempore (non tam explanationis quam
+&aelig;dificationis intentione) perorata sunt.... Si addere quod
+videar, et explere qu&aelig; desunt.&mdash;Orig. vol. iv. p.
+688.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Moreover, he proceeds so far as to tell us<a id="footnotetag61"
+name="footnotetag61"></a><a href="#footnote61"><sup>61</sup></a>
+that his false <span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id=
+"page158"></a>{158}</span> friends had remonstrated with him for
+not publishing the works under his own name, instead of retaining
+Origen's, his changes having been so great; a point, which he was
+far from unwilling to acknowledge. This must appear to every one
+unsatisfactory in the extreme, and to shake one's confidence in any
+evidence drawn from such a source. Indeed, the Benedictine editor,
+with great cause and candour, laments this course of proceeding on
+the part of Ruffinus, as throwing a doubt and uncertainty, and
+suspicion, over all the works so tampered with. "This one thing
+(observes that honest editor) would the learned desire, that
+Ruffinus had spared himself the labour of filling up what he
+thought deficient. For since the Greek text has perished, it can
+scarcely with certainty be distinguished, where Origen himself
+speaks, or where Ruffinus obtrudes his own merchandise upon us."
+This is more than enough to justify our remarks. I must, however,
+refer to the conduct of another editor and translator of Origen, of
+a similar tendency. It unhappily shows the disposition to sacrifice
+every thing to the received opinions of the Church of Rome, rather
+than place the whole evidence of antiquity before the world, and
+abide by the result. How many works this principle, in worse hands,
+may have mutilated, or utterly buried in oblivion, and left to
+perish, it is impossible to conjecture; that the principle is
+unworthy the spirit of Christianity will not now be questioned.
+That editor and translator, in his advertisement on the Commentary
+upon St. John, thus professes the principles which he had adopted:
+"Know, moreover, that I have found nothing in this book which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page159" id=
+"page159"></a>{159}</span> seemed to be inconsistent with the
+decrees of holy Mother Church: for had I found any, I would not
+have translated the book, or would have marked the suspected
+place." [Quoted by the Benedictine, vol. iv. p. viii.] The
+Benedictine proceeds to say, that the writer had not kept his word,
+but had allowed many heterodox passages to escape, whilst he had
+deliberately withdrawn others.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote61" name=
+"footnote61"></a><b>Footnote 61:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag61">(return)</a>
+<p>His words, as indicative of his principles of translation, and
+bearing immediately on the question, as to the degree of authority
+which should be assigned to the remains of Origen, when the
+original is lost, deserve a place here: "I am exposed to a new sort
+of charge at their hands; for thus they address me,&mdash;In your
+writings, since very many parts in them (plurima in eis) are
+considered to be of your own production, give the title of your own
+name, and write, for example, The Books of Explanations of Ruffinus
+on the Epistle to the Romans,&mdash;but the whole of this they
+offer me, not from any love of me, but from hatred to the author.
+But I, who consult my conscience more than my fame, even if I am
+seen to add some things, and to fill up what are wanting, or to
+shorten what are too long, yet I do not think it right to steal the
+title of him, who laid the foundations of the works, and supplied
+the materials for the buildings. Yet, in truth, it may be at the
+option of the reader, when he shall have approved of the work, to
+ascribe the merits to whom he will."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Many works probably, of the earliest ages, have been wholly or
+in part lost to us from the working of the same principle in its
+excess. Rather than perpetuate any sentiments at variance with the
+received doctrines of the Church, it was considered the duty of the
+faithful to let works, in themselves valuable, but containing such
+sentiments, altogether perish, or to exclude the objectionable
+passages.</p>
+<p>I would now invite you to examine the passage itself, and
+determine whether it does not bear within it internal evidence of
+its having been altogether interpolated.</p>
+<p>In the first place, on the words upon which it professes to be a
+comment, the author had already given his comment, and assigned to
+them another meaning. "The heavens were opened," he says: "Before
+the time of Christ the heavens were shut; but at his advent they
+were opened, THAT THE HOLY SPIRIT MIGHT DESCEND FIRST ON HIM;"
+quoting also among others the passage which speaks of Christ taking
+captivity captive. And then after the passage in question, in which
+he assigns a totally different reason for the opening of the
+heavens; without any allusion to the intervening ideas, he carries
+on, and concludes the comment which he had begun,&mdash;in words
+which fit on well with the close of that comment, but which, as
+they stand now at the close of the intervening passage about the
+angels, are abrupt and incoherent&mdash;"Forthwith the Holy Spirit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page160" id=
+"page160"></a>{160}</span> descended;" recurring also again to the
+idea which he had before introduced of Christ benefiting those who
+were in captivity. A passage which affixes to the words commented
+upon, a different interpretation from one already given in the same
+paragraph; and which forces itself abruptly and incoherently in the
+middle of a brief comment, must offer itself to our examination
+under strong grounds of suspicion, that it has been interpolated.
+But when we examine the substance of the passage, its sentiments,
+the ideas conveyed, and the associations suggested, and then think
+of the author to whom it is ascribed, few probably will be disposed
+to regard it as a faithful mirror in which to contemplate the real
+sentiments of Origen.</p>
+<p>How utterly unworthy of the sublime burst of Christian eloquence
+which now delights us in undoubted works of Origen, is this strange
+and degrading fiction! The true Origen THERE represents the tens of
+thousands of angelic spirits ten thousand times told, as ever
+surrounding the throne of God, and ministering for the blessing of
+those in whose behalf God himself wills them to serve. [Vol. i. p.
+767. Contr. Cels. viii. 34.] Here he represents the revelation of
+the holiest of holies as a throwing open of the various divisions
+or compartments of the celestial kingdom for all the angels to
+hasten forth together, from their several places of indolence and
+carelessness and self-indulgence, (for such he represents their
+state to have been,) to visit this earth. Surely such a comment
+would better suit the mythology of the cave and dens of &AElig;olus
+and his imprisoned winds (velut agmine facto qua data porta ruunt)
+than the awfully sublime revelation vouchsafed to the prophet
+Ezekiel. And how unworthy and degrading is that representation of
+the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id=
+"page161"></a>{161}</span> heavenly host, resting inactive, and
+sparing themselves from toil, until they witnessed Christ's descent
+and humiliation; and then when chid and put to shame and rebuke,
+and mutually roused to action by their fellows, coming down to
+visit this earth, and rushing through the opened portals of
+heaven.</p>
+<p>Again, we see how incoherent is the whole section which contains
+the alleged prayer to angels: "Thou wast yesterday under a demon,
+to-day thou art under an angel: the angels minister to thy
+salvation; they are granted for the ministry of the Son of God,
+&amp;c. All things are full of angels. Come, Angel, take up one who
+is converted from his ancient error, &amp;c. And call to thee other
+companions of thy ministry, that all of you alike may train up to
+the faith those who were once deceived." Indeed the passage seems
+to carry within itself its own condemnation so entirely, that what
+we have before alleged, both of internal and external evidence, may
+appear superfluous. Surely the conceit of a preacher of God's word
+addressing an angel, (which of them he thus individually addresses
+does not appear; for he says not "My Angel," as though he were
+appealing to one whom he regarded as his guardian, the view
+gratuitously suggested in the marginal note of the Benedictine
+editor, "the invocation of a guardian angel,") and bidding some one
+angel, as a sort of summoner, to go and call to himself all the
+angels of heaven to come in one body, and instruct those who are in
+error, is, even as a rhetorical apostrophe, as unworthy the mind of
+a Christian philosopher, as it is in the light of a prayer totally
+inconsistent with the plain sentiments of Origen on the very
+subject of angelic invocation. Even had Origen not left us his
+deliberate opinions in works of undoubted genuineness, such a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162" id=
+"page162"></a>{162}</span> strange, incoherent, and childish
+rhapsody could never be relied upon by sober and upright men as a
+precedent sanctioning a Christian's prayer to angels; no one would
+rely upon such evidence in points of far less moment, even were it
+uncontradicted by the same witness.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-7" id="sect1-4-7">SECTION VII.</a>&mdash;ST.
+CYPRIAN.</h4>
+<p>In the middle of the third century, Cyprian [Jerom, vol. iv. p.
+342.], a man of substance and a rhetorician of Carthage, was
+converted to Christianity. He was then fifty years of age; and his
+learning, virtues, and devotedness to the cause which he had
+espoused, very soon raised him to the dignity, the responsibility,
+and, in those days, the great danger, of the Episcopate. (Cyprian
+is said to have been converted about A.D. 246, to have been
+consecrated A.D. 248, and to have suffered martyrdom A.D. 258.)
+Many of his writings of undoubted genuineness are preserved, and
+they have been appealed to in every age as the works of a faithful
+son of the Catholic Church. On the subject of prayer he has written
+very powerfully and affectingly; but I find no expression which can
+by possibility imply that he practised or countenanced the
+invocation of saints and angels. I have carefully examined every
+sentence alleged by its most strenuous defenders, and I cannot
+extract from them one single grain of evidence which can bear the
+test of inquiry. Even did the passages quoted require to be taken
+in the sense affixed to them <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page163" id="page163"></a>{163}</span> by those advocates, they
+prove nothing; they do not bear even remotely upon the subject,
+whilst I am persuaded that to every unprejudiced mind a meaning
+will appear to have been attached to them which the author did not
+intend to convey.</p>
+<p>The first quotation to which our attention is called is from the
+close of his treatise De Habitu Virginum, which contains some very
+edifying reflections. In the last clause of that treatise the
+advocates for the invocation of saints represent Cyprian as
+requesting the virgins to remember him in their prayers at the
+throne of grace when they shall have been taken to heaven. "As we
+have borne the image of Him who is of the earth, let us also bear
+the image of him who is from heaven. This image the virgin-state
+bears,&mdash;integrity bears it, holiness and truth bear it; rules
+of discipline mindful of God bear it, retaining justice with
+religion, firm in the faith, humble in fear, strong to endure all
+things, gentle to receive an injury, readily disposed to pity, with
+one mind and with one heart in brotherly peace. All which ye ought,
+O good virgins, to observe, to love and fulfil; ye who, retired for
+the service of God and Christ, with your greater and better part
+are going before towards the Lord to whom you have devoted
+yourselves. Let those who are advanced in age exercise rule over
+the younger; ye younger, offer to your equals a stimulus; encourage
+yourselves by mutual exhortations; by examples emulous of virtue
+invite each other to glory; remain firm; conduct yourselves
+spiritually; gain the end happily. Only remember us then, when your
+virgin-state shall begin to be honoured." [Tantum mementote tunc
+nostri, cum incipiet in vobis virginitas honorari.&mdash;Page
+180.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page164" id=
+"page164"></a>{164}</span>
+<p>The second instance, from the close of his letter to Cornelius,
+puts before us a beautiful act of friendship and brotherly
+affection worthy of every Christian brother's and friend's
+imitation. But how it can be applied in supporting the cause of the
+invocation of saints, I cannot see. The supporters of that doctrine
+say that Cyprian suggests to his friend, still living on earth,
+that whichever of the two should be first called away, he should
+continue when in heaven to pray for the survivor on earth. Suppose
+it to be so. That has not any approximation to our praying to one
+who is already dead and gone to his reward. But Cyprian surely
+intended to convey a very different meaning, namely this, that the
+two friends should continue to pray, each in his place, mutually
+for each other and for their friends, and relieve each other's
+wants and necessities whilst both survived; and whenever death
+should remove the one from earth to happiness, the survivor should
+not forget their bond of friendship, but should still continue to
+pray to God for their brothers and sisters. The passage translated
+to the letter, runs thus: "Let us be mutually mindful of each
+other, with one mind and one heart. On both sides, let us always
+pray for each other; let us by mutual love relieve each other's
+pressures and distresses; and if either of us from hence, by the
+speed of the Divine favour, go on before the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page165" id="page165"></a>{165}</span> other,
+let our love persevere before the Lord; for our brothers and
+sisters with the Father's mercy let not prayer cease. My desire,
+most dear brother, is that you may always prosper." [Epist. 57.
+Benedict, p. 96.&mdash;Memores nostri invicem simus concordes atque
+unanimes: utrobique pro nobis semper oremus, pressuras et angustias
+mutua caritate relevemus, et si quis istinc nostrum prior
+divin&aelig; dignationis celeritate pr&aelig;cesserit, perseveret
+apud Dominum nostra dilectio; pro fratribus et sororibus nostris
+apud misericordiam Patris non cesset oratio. Opto te, frater
+carissime, semper bene valere.&mdash;This epistle is by some
+editors numbered as the 60th, by others as the 61st, the 7th, and
+the 69th, &amp;c.]</p>
+<p>Whether the above view of this passage be founded in reason or
+not, it matters little to the point at issue. Let both these
+passages be accepted in the sense assigned to them by some Roman
+Catholic writers, yet there is not a shadow of analogy between the
+language and conduct of Cyprian, and the language and conduct of
+those who now invoke saints departed. In each case Cyprian, still
+in the body, was addressing fellow-creatures still sojourning on
+earth. The very utmost which these passages could be forced to
+countenance would be, that the righteous, when in heaven, may be
+mindful in their prayers of their friends, who are still exposed to
+the dangers from which they have themselves finally escaped, and
+who, when both were on earth, requested them to remember the
+survivors in their prayers. But this is a question totally
+different from our addressing them in supplication and prayer; a
+difference which I am most anxious that both myself and my readers
+should keep in mind throughout.</p>
+<p>In the extract from Cyprian's letter, a modern author having
+rendered the single word "utrobique," by the words "in this world
+and the next" I am induced to add a few further observations on the
+passage. (The Latin original and the version here referred to, will
+be placed side by side in the Appendix.) It will, I think, appear
+to most readers on a careful examination of the passage, that the
+expression "utrobique<a id="footnotetag62" name=
+"footnotetag62"></a><a href="#footnote62"><sup>62</sup></a>" "on
+both sides," or "on both parts," whatever be its precise
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id=
+"page166"></a>{166}</span> meaning, so far from referring to "this
+world and the next," must evidently be confined to the condition of
+both parties now in this life, because it stands in direct
+contradistinction to what follows, the supposed case of the death
+of either of the two; and because it applies no less to the mutual
+relief of each other's sufferings and afflictions during their
+joint lives, than to their mutual prayers: it cannot mean that all
+the mutual benefits to be derived from their mutual remembrance of
+each other, were to come solely through the means of their prayers.
+They were doubtless mutually to pray for each other; but, in
+addition to their prayers, they were also to relieve each other's
+pressures and difficulties with mutual love, and that too before
+the event afterwards contemplated, namely, the removal of one of
+them by death.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote62" name=
+"footnote62"></a><b>Footnote 62:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag62">(return)</a>
+<p>Utrobique is rendered by Facciolati [Greek:
+hekaterothi]&mdash;"in utraque parte, utrimque."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Bishop Fell thus comments on the passage: "The sense seems to
+be, When either of us shall die; whether I, who preside at
+Carthage, or you, who are presiding at Rome, shall be the survivor,
+let the prayer to God of him whose lot shall be to remain the
+longest among the living, persevere, and continue." "Meanwhile,"
+continues the Bishop<a id="footnotetag63" name=
+"footnotetag63"></a><a href="#footnote63"><sup>63</sup></a>, "we by
+no means doubt that souls admitted into heaven apply to God, the
+best and greatest of Beings, that he would have compassion on those
+who are dwelling on the earth. But it does not thence follow, that
+prayers should be offered to the saints. THE MAN WHO PETITIONS THEM
+MAKES THEM GODS (Deos qui rogat ille facit)." [Oxford, 1682, p.
+143.] Rigaltius, himself <span class="pagenum"><a name="page167"
+id="page167"></a>{167}</span> a Roman Catholic, doubts whether,
+when Cyprian wrote this letter, he had any idea before his mind of
+saints departed praying for the living. He translates "utrobique"
+very much as I have done, "with reciprocal love, with mutual
+charity." His last observations on this passage are very
+remarkable. After having confessed the sentiments to be worthy of a
+Christian, that the saints pray for us, and having argued that
+Cyprian could not have thought it necessary to ask a saint to
+retain his brotherly kindness in heaven, for he could not be a
+saint if he did not continue to love his brethren, he thus
+concludes: "In truth it is a pious and faithful saying, That of
+those who having already put off mortality are made joint-heirs
+with Christ, and of those who surviving on earth will hereafter be
+joint-heirs with Christ, the Church is one, and is by the Holy
+Spirit so well joined together as not to be torn asunder by the
+dissolution of the body. They pray to God for us, and we praise God
+for them, and thus with mutual affection (utrobique) we always pray
+for each other." [Paris, 1666. p. 92.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote63" name=
+"footnote63"></a><b>Footnote 63:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag63">(return)</a>
+<p>See the note of the Benedictine editors on this passage (p.
+467), in which they refer to the sentiments of Rigaltius, Pamelius,
+and Bishop Fell, whom they call "the most illustrious Bishop of
+Oxford."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I will detain you only by one or two more extracts from Cyprian;
+one forming part of the introduction to his Comment on the Lord's
+Prayer, which is fitted for the edification of Christians in every
+age; the other closing his treatise on Mortality, one of those
+beautiful productions by which, during the plague which raged at
+Carthage in the year 252, he comforted and exhorted the Christians,
+that they might meet death without fear or amazement, in sure and
+certain hope of eternal blessedness in heaven. The sentiments in
+the latter passage will be responded to by every good Catholic,
+whether in communion with the Church of Rome or <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page168" id="page168"></a>{168}</span> with the
+Church of England; whilst in the former we are reminded, that to
+pray as Cyprian prayed, we must address ourselves to God alone in
+the name and trusting to the merits only of his blessed Son.</p>
+<p>"He who caused us to live, taught us also to pray, with that
+kindness evidently by which He deigns to give and confer on us
+every other blessing; that when we speak to the Father in the
+prayer and supplication which his Son taught, we might the more
+readily be heard. He had already foretold, that the hour was coming
+when the true worshippers should worship the Father in spirit and
+in truth; and He fulfilled what He before promised, that we, who
+have received the spirit and truth from his sanctification, may
+from his instruction offer adoration truly and spiritually. For
+what prayer can be more spiritual than that which is given to us by
+Christ, by whom even the Holy Spirit is sent to us? What can be a
+more true prayer with the Father than that which came from the lips
+of the Son, who is Truth? So that to pray otherwise than He taught,
+is not only ignorance, but a fault; since He has himself laid it
+down and said, Ye reject the Commandment of God to establish your
+own traditions. Let us pray then, most beloved brethren, as our
+teacher, God, has instructed us. It is a welcome and friendly
+prayer to petition God from his own, to mount up to his ears by the
+prayer of Christ. Let the Father recognize the words of his Son.
+When we offer a prayer let Him who dwelleth inwardly in our breast,
+Himself be in our voice; and since we have Him as our advocate with
+the Father for our sins, when as sinners we are petitioning for our
+sins let us put forth the words of our Advocate." [De Orat. Dom. p.
+204.]</p>
+<p>"We must consider, (he says at the close of his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>{169}</span> treatise
+on the Mortality [Page 236.],) most beloved brethren, and
+frequently reflect that we have renounced the world, and are
+meanwhile living here as strangers and pilgrims. Let us embrace the
+day which assigns each to his own home ... which restores us to
+paradise and the kingdom of heaven, snatched from hence and
+liberated from the entanglements of the world. What man, when he is
+in a foreign country, would not hasten to return to his native
+land?... We regard paradise as our country.... We have begun
+already to have the patriarchs for our parents. Why do we not
+hasten and run that we may see our country, and salute our parents?
+There a large number of dear ones are waiting for us, of parents,
+brothers, children; a numerous and full crowd are longing for us;
+already secure of their own immortality, and still anxious for our
+safety. To come to the sight and the embrace of these, how great
+will be the mutual joy to them and to us! What a pleasure of the
+kingdom of heaven is there without the fear of dying, and with an
+eternity of living! How consummate and never-ending a happiness!
+There is the glorious company of the apostles; there is the
+assembly of exulting prophets; there is the unnumbered family of
+martyrs crowned for the victory of their struggles and suffering;
+there are virgins triumphing, who, by the power of chastity, have
+subdued the lusts of the flesh and the body; there are the merciful
+recompensed, who with food and bounty to the poor have done the
+works of righteousness, who keeping the Lord's commands have
+transferred their earthly inheritance into heavenly treasures. To
+these, O most dearly beloved brethren, let us hasten with most
+eager longing; <span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id=
+"page170"></a>{170}</span> let us desire that our lot may be to be
+with these speedily; to come speedily to Christ. Let God see this
+to be our thought; let our Lord Christ behold this to be the
+purpose of our mind and faith, who will give more abundant rewards
+of his glory to them, whose desires for himself have been the
+greater."</p>
+<p>Such is the evidence of St. Cyprian.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-8" id="sect1-4-8">SECTION
+VIII.</a>&mdash;LACTANTIUS.</h4>
+<p>Cyprian suffered martyrdom about the year 260. Towards the close
+of this century, and at the beginning of the fourth, flourished
+Lactantius. He was deeply imbued with classical learning and
+philosophy. Before he became a writer (as Jerome informs us [Jerom,
+vol. iv. part ii. p. 119. Paris, 1706]) he taught rhetoric at
+Nicomedia; and afterwards in extreme old age he was the tutor of
+C&aelig;sar Crispus, son of Constantine, in Gaul. Among many other
+writings which Jerome enumerates, he specifies the book, "On the
+Anger of God," as a most beautiful work. Bellarmin, however, speaks
+of him disparagingly, as one who had fallen into many errors, and
+was better versed in Cicero than in the Holy Scriptures. His
+testimony is allowed by the supporters of the adoration of spirits
+and angels to be decidedly against them; they do not refer to a
+single passage likely to aid their cause; and they are chiefly
+anxious to depreciate his evidence. I will call your attention only
+to two passages in his works. The <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page171" id="page171"></a>{171}</span> one is in his first book on
+False Religion: "God hath created ministers, whom we call
+messengers (angels);... but neither are these gods, nor do they
+wish to be called gods, nor to be worshipped, as being those who do
+nothing beyond the command and will of God." [Vol. i. p. 31.]</p>
+<p>The other passage is from his work on a Happy Life: "Nor let any
+one think that souls are judged immediately after death. For all
+are kept in one common place of guard, until the time come when the
+great Judge will institute an inquiry into their deserts. Then
+those whose righteousness shall be approved, will receive the
+reward of immortality; and those whose sins and crimes are laid
+open shall not rise again, but shall be hidden in the same darkness
+with the wicked&mdash;appointed to fixed punishments." [Chap. xxi.
+p. 574.]</p>
+<p>This composition is generally believed to have been written
+about the year 317.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-9" id="sect1-4-9">SECTION
+IX.</a>&mdash;EUSEBIUS.</h4>
+<p>The evidence of Eusebius, on any subject connected with
+primitive faith and practice, cannot be looked to without feelings
+of deep interest. He flourished about the beginning of the fourth
+century, and was Bishop of Caesarea, in Palestine. His testimony
+has always been appealed to in the Catholic Church, as an authority
+not likely to be gainsaid. He was a voluminous writer, and his
+writings were very diversified in their character. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page172" id="page172"></a>{172}</span> Whatever
+be our previous sentiments we cannot too carefully examine the
+remains of this learned man. But in his writings, historical,
+biographical, controversial, or by whatever name they may be
+called, overflowing as they are with learning, philosophical and
+scriptural, I can find no one single passage which countenances the
+decrees of the Council of Trent; not one passage which would
+encourage me to hope that I prayed as the primitive Church was wont
+to pray, if by invocation I requested an angel or a saint to
+procure me any favour, or to pray for me. The testimony of Eusebius
+has a directly contrary tendency.</p>
+<p>Among the authorities quoted by the champions of the invocation
+of saints, I can find only three from Eusebius; and I sincerely
+lament the observations which truth and justice require me to make
+here, in consequence of the manner in which his evidence has been
+cited. The first passage to which I refer is quoted by Bellarmin
+from the history of Eusebius, to prove that the spirit of a holy
+one goes direct from earth to heaven. This passage is not from the
+pen of Eusebius; and if it were, it would not bear on our inquiry.
+The second is quoted by the same author, from the Evangelica
+Pr&aelig;paratio, to prove that the primitive Christians offered
+prayers to the saints. Neither is this from the pen of Eusebius.
+The third Extract, from the account of the martyrdom of Polycarp,
+is intended to prove that the martyrs were worshipped. Even this,
+one of the most beautiful passages in ancient history, as it is
+represented by Bellarmin and others, is interpolated.</p>
+<p>The first passage, which follows a description of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page173" id=
+"page173"></a>{173}</span> martyr Potami&aelig;na's sufferings, is
+thus quoted by Bellarmin: "In this manner the blessed virgin,
+Potamni&aelig;na, emigrated from earth to heaven." [Hoc modo beata
+Virgo emigravit e terris ad coelum. Vol. ii. p. 854.] And such,
+doubtless, is the passage in the translation of Eusebius, ascribed
+to Ruffinus [Basil, 1535. p. 134]; but the original is, "And such a
+struggle was thus accomplished by this celebrated virgin;" ([Greek:
+kai ho men taes aoidimou koraes toioutos kataegoisisto athlos];
+Tale certamen ab hac percelebri et gloriosa virgine confectum
+fait.); and such is the Parisian translation of 1581.</p>
+<p>The second misquotation is far more serious. Bellarmin thus
+quotes Eusebius: "These things we do daily, who honouring the
+soldiers of true religion as the friends of God, approach to their
+respective monuments, and make OUR PRAYERS TO THEM, as holy men, by
+whose intercession to God, we profess to be not a little aided."
+[H&aelig;c nos, inquit, quotidie factitamus qui veras pietatis
+milites ut Dei amicos honorantes, ad monumenta quoque eorum
+accedimus, votaque ipsis facimus tanquam viris sanctis quorum
+intercessione ad Deum non parum juvari profitemur.&mdash;p. 902. He
+quotes it as c. 7.]</p>
+<p>By one who has not by experience become familiar with these
+things it would scarcely be believed, that whilst the readers of
+Bellarmin have been taught to regard these as the words of
+Eusebius, in the original there is no mention whatever made of the
+intercession of the saints; that there is no allusion to prayer to
+them; that there is no admission even of any benefit derived from
+them at all. This quotation Bellarmin makes from the Latin version,
+published in Paris in 1581, or from some common source: it is word
+for word the same. We must either allow him to be ignorant of the
+truth, or to have designedly preferred error. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>{174}</span> The copy
+which I have before me of the "Evangelica Pr&aelig;paratio," in
+Greek and Latin, was printed in 1628, and dedicated by Viger
+Franciscus, a priest of the order of Jesuits, to the Archbishop of
+Paris.</p>
+<p>Eusebius, marking the resemblance in many points between Plato's
+doctrine and the tenets of Christianity, on the reverence which,
+according to Plato, ought to be paid to the good departed, makes
+this observation: "And this corresponds with what takes place on
+the death of those lovers of God, whom you would not be wrong in
+calling the soldiers of the true religion. Whence also it is our
+custom to proceed to their tombs, and AT THEM [the tombs] to make
+our prayers, and to honour their blessed souls, inasmuch as these
+things are with reason done by us." [Greek: kai tauta de armozei
+epi tae ton theophilon teleutae ous stratiotas taes alaethous
+eusebeius ouk an hamartois eipon paralambanesthai othen kai epi tas
+thaekas auton ethos haemin parienai kai tas euchas para tautais
+poieisthai, timan te tas makarias auton psychas, os eulogos kai
+touton uph haemon giguomenon.] This translation agrees to a certain
+extent with the Latin of Viger's edition ("Qu&aelig; quidem in
+hominum Deo carissimorum obitus egregie conveniunt, quos ver&aelig;
+pietatis milites jure appellaris. Nam et eorum sepulchra celebrare
+et preces ibi votaque nuncupare et beatas illorum animas venerari
+consuevimus, idque a nobis merito fieri statuimus"); though the
+translator there has employed words more favourable to the doctrine
+of the saints' adoration, than he could in strictness justify.</p>
+<p>The celebrated letter from the Church of Smyrna (Euseb. Cantab.
+1720. vol. i. p. 163), relating the martyrdom of Polycarp, one of
+the most precious relics of Christian antiquity, has already been
+examined by us, when we were inquiring into the recorded
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id=
+"page175"></a>{175}</span> sentiments of Polycarp; and to our
+reflections in that place we have little to add. The interpolations
+to which we have now referred, are intended to take off the edge of
+the evidence borne by this passage of Eusebius against the
+invocation of saints. First, whereas the Christians of Smyrna are
+recorded by Eusebius to have declared, without any limitation or
+qualification whatever, that they could never worship any
+fellow-mortal however honoured and beloved, the Parisian edition
+limits and qualifies their declaration by interpolating the word
+"as God," implying that they would offer a secondary worship to a
+saint. Again, whereas Eusebius in contrasting the worship paid to
+Christ, with the feelings of the Christians towards a martyr,
+employs only the word "love," Bellarmin, following Ruffinus,
+interpolates the word "veneramur" after "diligimus," a word which
+may be innocently used with reference to the holy saints and
+servants of God, though it is often in ancient writers employed to
+mean the religious worship of man to God. Still how lamentable is
+it to attempt by such tampering with ancient documents to maintain
+a cause, whatever be our feelings with regard to it!</p>
+<p>With two more brief quotations we will close our report of
+Eusebius. They occur in the third chapter of the third book of his
+Demonstratio Evangelica, and give the same view of the feelings and
+sentiments of the primitive Christians towards the holy angels,
+which we have found Origen and all the other fathers to have
+acknowledged.</p>
+<p>"In the doctrine of his word we have learned that there exists,
+after the most high God, certain powers, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page176" id="page176"></a>{176}</span> in their
+nature incorporeal and intellectual, rational and purely virtuous,
+who ([Greek: choreuousas]) keep their station around the sovereign
+King,&mdash;the greater part of whom, by certain dispensations of
+salvation, are sent at the will of the Father even as far as to
+men; whom, indeed, we have been taught to know and to honour,
+according to the measure of their dignity, rendering to God alone,
+the sovereign King, the honour of worship." ([Greek: gnorizein kai
+timain kata to metron taes axias edidachthaemen, mono toi
+pambasilei Theoi taen sebasmion timaen aponemontes]) Again:
+"Knowing the divine, the serving and ministering powers of the
+sovereign God, and honouring them to the extent of propriety; but
+confessing God alone, and Him alone worshipping." ([Greek: theias
+men dynameis hypaeretikas tou pambasileos Theou kai leitourgikas
+eidotes, kai kata to prosaekon timontes monon de Theon
+homologountes, kai monon ekeinon sebontes]) [Demonst. Evang. Paris,
+1628. p. 106.; Pr&aelig;par. Evang. lib. vii. c. 15. p. 237.]</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-10" id="sect1-4-10">SECTION
+X.</a>&mdash;APOSTOLICAL CANONS AND CONSTITUTIONS.</h4>
+<p>The works known by the name of the Apostolical Constitutions and
+Apostolical Canons, though confessedly not the genuine productions
+of the Apostles, or of their age, have been always held in much
+veneration by the Church of Rome. The most learned writers fix
+their date at a period not more remote than the beginning of the
+fourth century. (See Cotelerius; vol. i. p. 194 and 424. Beveridge,
+in the same vol. p. 427. Conc. Gen. Florence, 1759, tom. i. p. 29
+and 254.) I invite the reader <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page177" id="page177"></a>{177}</span> to examine both these
+documents, but especially the Constitutions, and to decide whether
+they do not contain strong and convincing evidence, that the
+invocation of saints was not practised or known in the Church when
+they were written. Minute rules are given for the conducting of
+public worship; forms of prayer are prescribed to be used in the
+Church, by the bishops and clergy, and by the people; forms of
+prayer and of thanksgiving are recommended for the use of the
+faithful in private, in the morning, at night, and at their meals;
+forms, too, there are of creeds and confessions;&mdash;but not one
+single allusion to any religious address to angel or saint; whilst
+occasions most opportune for the introduction of such doctrine and
+practice repeatedly occur, and are uniformly passed by. Again and
+again prayer is directed to be made to the one only living and true
+God, exclusively through the mediation and intercession of the one
+only Saviour Jesus Christ. Honourable mention is made of the saints
+of the Old Testament, and the apostles and martyrs of the New;
+directions are also given for the observance of their festivals
+[Book viii. p. 415]; but not the shadow of a thought appears that
+their good offices could benefit us; much less the most distant
+intimation that Christians might invoke them for their prayers and
+intercessions. There is indeed very much in these early productions
+of the Christian world to interest every Catholic Christian; and
+although a general admiration of the principles for the most part
+pervading them does not involve an entire approbation of them all,
+yet perhaps few would think the time misapplied which they should
+devote to the examination of these documents.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id=
+"page178"></a>{178}</span>
+<p>In book v. c. 6. of the Constitutions, the martyr is represented
+as "trusting in the one only true God and Father, through Jesus
+Christ, the great High Priest, the Redeemer of souls, the Dispenser
+of rewards; to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen." [Cotel. vol.
+i. p. 304.]</p>
+<p>In the same book and in the following chapter we find an
+exceedingly interesting dissertation on the general resurrection,
+but not one word of saint or martyr being beforehand admitted to
+glory; on the contrary, the declaration is distinct, that not the
+martyrs only, but all men will rise. Surely such an opportunity
+would not have been lost of stating the doctrine of martyrs being
+now reigning with Christ, had such been the doctrine of the Church
+at that early period.</p>
+<p>In the eighth chapter is contained an injunction to honour the
+martyrs in these words: "We say that they should be in all honour
+with you, as the blessed James the bishop and our holy
+fellow-minister Stephen were honoured with us. For they are blessed
+by God and honoured by holy men, pure from all blame, never bent
+towards sins, never turned away from good,&mdash;undoubtedly to be
+praised. Of whom David spake, 'Honourable before God is the death
+of his saints;' and Solomon, 'The memory of the just is with
+praise.' Of whom the prophet also said, 'Just men are taken away.'"
+[p. 309.]</p>
+<p>And in book viii. c. 13. we read this exhortation,&mdash;"Let us
+remember the holy martyrs, that we may be counted worthy to be
+partakers of their conflict." [p. 404.]</p>
+<p>Does this sound any thing at all like adoration or invocation?
+The word which is used in the above <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page179" id="page179"></a>{179}</span> passage, <i>honour</i>
+[[Greek: tim&ecirc;] p. 241], is employed when (book ii. c. 28.)
+the respect is prescribed which the laity ought to show to the
+clergy.</p>
+<p>To the very marked silence as to any invocation or honour, to be
+shown to the Virgin Mary, I shall call your attention in our
+separate dissertation on the worship now offered to her.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-11" id="sect1-4-11">SECTION
+XI.</a>&mdash;SAINT ATHANASIUS.</h4>
+<p>The renowned and undaunted defender of the Catholic faith
+against the errors which in his day threatened to overwhelm
+Gospel-truth, Athanasius (the last of those ante-Nicene writers
+into whose testimony we have instituted this inquiry), was born
+about the year 296, and, after having presided in the Church as
+Bishop for more than forty-six years, died in 373, on the verge of
+his eightieth year. It is impossible for any one interested in the
+question of primitive truth to look upon the belief and practice of
+this Christian champion with indifference. When I first read
+Bellarmin's quotations from Athanasius, in justification of the
+Roman Catholic worship in the adoration of saints, I was made not a
+little anxious to ascertain the accuracy of his allegations. The
+inquiry amply repaid me for my anxiety and the labour of research;
+not merely by proving the unsoundness of Bellarmin's
+representation, but also by directing my thoughts more especially,
+as my acquaintance with his <span class="pagenum"><a name="page180"
+id="page180"></a>{180}</span> works increased, to the true and
+scriptural views taken by Athanasius of the Christian's hope and
+confidence in God alone; the glowing fervour of his piety centering
+only in the Lord; his sure and certain hope in life and in death
+anchored only in the mercies of God, through the merits and
+mediation of Jesus Christ alone.</p>
+<p>Bellarmin, in his appeal to Athanasius as a witness in behalf of
+the invocation of saints, cites two passages; the one of which,
+though appearing in the edition of the Benedictines, amongst the
+works called doubtful, has been adjudged by those editors [Vol. ii.
+p. 110 and 122] to be not genuine; the other is placed by them
+among the confessedly spurious works, and is treated as a
+forgery.</p>
+<p>The first passage is from a treatise called De Virginitate, and
+even were that work the genuine production of Athanasius, would
+make against the religious worship of the saints rather than in its
+favour, for it would show, that the respect which the author
+intended to be paid to them, was precisely the same with what he
+would have us pay to holy men in this life, who might come to visit
+us. "If a just man enter into thine house, thou shalt meet him with
+fear and trembling, and shalt worship before his feet to the
+ground: for thou wilt not worship him, but God who sent him."</p>
+<p>The other passage would have been decisive as to the belief of
+Athanasius, had it come from his pen. "Incline thine ear, O Mary,
+to our prayers, and forget not thy people. We cry to thee. Remember
+us, O Holy Virgin. Intercede for us, O mistress, lady, queen, and
+mother of God." [Vol. ii. p. 390-401.]</p>
+<p>Had Bellarmin been the only writer, or the last who cited this
+passage as the testimony of St. Athanasius, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>{181}</span> it would
+have been enough for us to refer to the judgment of the Benedictine
+editors, who have classed the homily containing these words among
+the spurious works ascribed to Athanasius; or rather we might have
+appealed to Bellarmin himself. For it is very remarkable, that
+though in his anxiety to enlist every able writer to defend the
+cause of the invocation of saints, he has cited this passage in his
+Church Triumphant as containing the words of Athanasius, without
+any allusion to its decided spuriousness, or even to its suspicious
+character; yet when he is pronouncing his judgment on the different
+works assigned to Athanasius, declaring the evidence against this
+treatise to be irresistible, he condemns it as a forgery. [Bellarm.
+de Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis, Cologne, 1617, vol. vii. p.
+50.]</p>
+<p>Since, however, this passage has been cited in different Roman
+Catholic writers of our own time as containing the words of
+Athanasius, and in evidence of his genuine belief and practice, and
+that without an allusion even to any thing doubtful and
+questionable in its character, it becomes necessary to enter more
+in detail into the circumstances under which the passage is offered
+to our notice.</p>
+<p>The passage is found in a homily called The Annunciation of the
+Mother of God. How long this homily has been discarded as spurious,
+or how long its genuineness had been suspected before the time of
+Baronius, I have not discovered; but certainly two centuries and a
+half ago, and repeatedly since, it has been condemned as totally
+and indisputably spurious, and has been excluded from the works of
+Athanasius as a forgery, not by members of the Reformed Church, but
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page182" id=
+"page182"></a>{182}</span> by most zealous and steady adherents to
+the Church of Rome, and the most strenuous defenders of her
+doctrines and practice.</p>
+<p>The Benedictine editors<a id="footnotetag64" name=
+"footnotetag64"></a><a href="#footnote64"><sup>64</sup></a>, who
+published the remains of St. Athanasius in 1698, class the works
+contained in the second volume under two heads, the doubtful and
+the spurious; and the homily under consideration is ranked, without
+hesitation, among the spurious. In the middle of that volume they
+not only declare the work to be unquestionably a forgery, assigning
+the reasons for their decision, but they fortify their judgment by
+quoting at length the letter written by the celebrated Baronius,
+more than a century before, to our countryman, Stapleton. Both
+these documents are very interesting.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote64" name=
+"footnote64"></a><b>Footnote 64:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag64">(return)</a>
+<p>Here I would observe, that though the Benedictine editors differ
+widely from each other in talent, and learning, and candour, yet,
+as a body, they have conferred on Christendom, and on literature,
+benefits for which every impartial and right-minded man will feel
+gratitude. In the works of some of these editors, far more than in
+others, we perceive the same reigning principle&mdash;a principle
+which some will regard as an uncompromising adherence to the faith
+of the Church; but which others can regard only in the light of a
+prejudice, and a rooted habit of viewing all things through the
+eyes of Rome.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Benedictine editors begin their preface thus: "That this
+discourse is spurious, there is NO LEARNED MAN WHO DOES NOT NOW
+ADJUDGE ... The style proves itself more clear than the sun, to be
+different from that of Athanasius. Besides this, very many trifles
+show themselves here unworthy of any sensible man whatever, not to
+say Athanasius ... and a great number of expressions unknown to
+Athanasius ... so that it savours of inferior Greek. And truly his
+subtle disputation <span class="pagenum"><a name="page183" id=
+"page183"></a>{183}</span> on the hypostasis of Christ, and on the
+two natures in Christ, persuades us, that he lived after the
+councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon; of which councils moreover he
+uses the identical words, whereas his dissertation on the two wills
+in Christ seems to argue, that he lived after the spreading of the
+error of the Monothelites. But (continue these Benedictine editors)
+we would add here the dissertation of Baronius on this subject,
+sent to us by our brethren from Rome. That illustrious annotator,
+indeed, having read only the Latin version of Nannius, which is
+clearer than the Greek, did not observe the astonishing perplexity
+of the style<a id="footnotetag65" name="footnotetag65"></a><a href=
+"#footnote65"><sup>65</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote65" name=
+"footnote65"></a><b>Footnote 65:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag65">(return)</a>
+<p>Even in the Bibliotheca Patrum Concionatoria the homily is
+declared to be not the work of Athanasius, but to have been written
+after the sixth general council. "It is evident," say the editors,
+"that it is the monument of a very learned man, though he has his
+own blemishes, on which, for the most part, we have remarked in the
+margin." Paris, 1662. p. 336.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The dissertation which the Benedictine editors append, was
+contained in a letter written by Baronius to Stapleton, in
+consequence of some animadversions which Stapleton had communicated
+to Cardinal Allen on the judgment of Baronius. The letter is dated
+Rome, November, 1592. The judgment of Baronius on the spurious
+character of this homily had been published to the world some time
+previously; for after some preliminary words of kindness and
+respect to his correspondent, Baronius proceeds to say, that when
+he previously published his sentiments on this homily, it was only
+cursorily and by the way, his work then being on another subject.
+Nevertheless he conceived, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page184"
+id="page184"></a>{184}</span> that the little he had then stated
+would be sufficient to show, that the homily was not the production
+of Athanasius, and that all persons of learning, WHO WERE DESIROUS
+OF THE TRUTH, would freely agree with him; nor was he in this
+expectation disappointed; for very many persons expressed their
+agreement with him, congratulating him on separating legitimate
+from spurious children. He then states the arguments which the
+Benedictine editors adopted after him, and which we need not
+repeat. But he also urges this fact, that though Cyril had the
+works of Athanasius in his custody, and though both the disputing
+parties ransacked every place for sentiments of Athanasius
+countenancing their tenets, yet neither at Ephesus nor at Chalcedon
+was this homily quoted, though it must have altogether driven
+Eutyches and Nestorius from the field, so exact are its definitions
+and statements on the points then at issue. Baronius then adds,
+that so far from reversing the judgment which he had before passed
+against the genuineness of this homily, he was compelled in justice
+to declare his conviction, that it could not have been written till
+after the heresy of the Monothelites had been spread abroad. This
+we know would fix its date, at the very earliest, subsequently to
+the commencement of the SEVENTH century, three hundred years after
+Athanasius attended the Council of Nice. Among the last sentiments
+of Baronius in this letter, is one which implies a principle worthy
+of Christian wisdom, and which can never be neglected without
+injury to the cause of truth. "These sentiments concerning
+Athanasius I do not think are affirmed with any detriment to the
+Church; for the Church does not suffer a loss on this account; who
+being the pillar <span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id=
+"page185"></a>{185}</span> and ground of the truth, very far
+shrinks from seeking, like &AElig;sop's Jackdaw, helps and
+ornaments which are not her own: the bare truth shines more
+beautiful in her own naked simplicity." Were this principle acted
+upon uniformly in our discussions on religious points of faith or
+practice, controversy would soon be drawn within far narrower
+limits; and would gradually be softened into a friendly interchange
+of sentiments, and would well-nigh be banished from the world. No
+person does the cause of truth so much injury, as one who attempts
+to support it by arguments which will not bear the test of full and
+enlightened investigation. And however an unsound principle may be
+for a while maintained by unsound arguments, the momentary triumph
+must ultimately end in disappointment.</p>
+<p>Coccius also cites two passages as conveying the evidence of
+Athanasius on this same point; one from the spurious letter
+addressed to Felix, the pope; the other from the treatise to
+Marcellus, on the interpretation of the Psalms. On the former, I
+need not detain you by any observation; it would be fighting with a
+shadow. The latter, which only recognises what I have never
+affirmed or denied here,&mdash;the interest in our welfare taken by
+holy souls departed, and their co-operation with us when we are
+working out our own salvation,&mdash;contains a valuable suggestion
+on the principles of devotion.</p>
+<p>"Let no one, however, set about to adorn these Psalms for the
+sake of effect with words from without, [artificial and secular
+phrases,] nor transpose, nor alter the expressions. But let every
+one inartificially read and repeat what is written, that those holy
+persons who employed themselves in their production, recognising
+their own works, may join with us in prayer; or <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>{186}</span> rather
+that the Holy Spirit, who spake in those holy men, observing the
+words with which his voice inspired them, may assist us. For just
+as much as the life of those holy men is more pure than ours, so
+far are their words preferable to any production of our own."</p>
+<p>But whilst there is not found a single passage in Athanasius to
+give the faintest countenance to the invocation of saints, there
+are various arguments and expressions which go far to demonstrate
+that such a belief and such practices as are now acknowledged and
+insisted upon by the Church of Rome, were neither adopted nor
+sanctioned by him. Had he adopted that belief and practice for his
+own, he would scarcely have spoken, as he repeatedly has, of the
+exclusion of angels and men from any share in the work of man's
+restoration, without any expressions to qualify it, and to protect
+his assertions from being misunderstood. Again, he bids us look to
+the holy men and holy fathers as our examples, in whose footsteps
+we should tread, if we would be safe; but not a hint escapes him
+that they are to be invoked.</p>
+<p>I must detain you by rather a long quotation from this father,
+and will, therefore, now do nothing more than refer you to two
+passages expressive of those sentiments to which I have above
+alluded. In the thirteenth section of his Treatise on the
+Incarnation of the Word of God, he argues, that neither could men
+restore us to the image of God, nor could angels, but the word of
+God, Jesus Christ, &amp;c. [Vol. i. part i. p. 58.] In his Epistle
+to Dracontius, he says, "We ought to conduct ourselves agreeably to
+the principles of the saints and fathers, and to imitate
+them,&mdash;assured that if we <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page187" id="page187"></a>{187}</span> swerve from them, we become
+alienated also from their communion." [Vol. i. part i, p. 265.]</p>
+<p>The passage, however, to which I would invite the reader's
+patient and impartial thoughts, occurs in the third oration against
+the Arians, when he is proving the unity of the Father and the Son,
+from the expression of St. Paul in the eleventh verse of the third
+chapter of his first Epistle to the Thessalonians.</p>
+<p>"Thus then again ([Greek: outo g' oun palin]), when he is
+praying for the Thessalonians, and saying, 'Now our God and Father
+himself and the Lord Jesus Christ direct our way to you,' he
+preserves the unity of the Father and the Son. For he says not 'may
+THEY direct ([Greek: kateuthunoien]),' as though a twofold grace
+were given from Him AND Him, but 'may HE direct ([Greek:
+katenthunai]),' to show that the Father giveth this through the
+Son. For if there was not an unity, and the Word was not the proper
+offspring of the Father's substance, as the eradiation of the
+light, but the Son was distinct in nature from the Father,&mdash;it
+had sufficed for the Father alone to have made the gift, no
+generated being partaking with the Maker in the gifts. But now such
+a giving proves the unity of the Father and the Son. Consequently,
+no one would pray to receive any thing from God AND the angels, or
+from any other created being; nor would any one say 'May God AND
+the angels give it thee;' but from the Father and the Son, because
+of their unity and the oneness of the gift. For whatever is given,
+is given through the Son,&mdash;nor is there any thing which the
+Father works except through the Son; for thus the receiver has the
+gracious favour without fail. But if the patriarch Jacob, blessing
+his descendants Ephraim and Manasseh, said, 'The God who nourished
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id=
+"page188"></a>{188}</span> me from my youth unto this day, the
+Angel who delivered me from all the evils, bless these lads;' he
+does not join one of created beings, and by nature angels, with God
+who created them; nor dismissing Him who nourished him, God, does
+he ask the blessing for his descendants from an angel, but by
+saying 'He who delivered me from all the evils,' he showed that it
+was not one of created angels, but the WORD OF GOD; and joining him
+with the Father, he supplicated him through whom also God delivers
+whom he will. For he used the expression, knowing him who is called
+the Messenger of the great counsel of the Father to be no other
+than the very one who blessed and delivered from evil. For surely
+he did not aspire to be blessed himself by God, and was willing for
+his descendants to be blessed by an angel. But the same whom he
+addressed, saying, I will not let Thee go, except thou bless me
+(and this was God, as he says, 'I saw God face to face'), Him he
+prayed to bless the sons of Joseph. The peculiar office of an angel
+is to minister at the appointment of God; and often he went onwards
+to cast out the Amorite, and is sent to guard the people in the
+way; but these are not the doings of him, but of God, who appointed
+him and sent him,&mdash;whose also it is to deliver whom he will."
+[Vol i. p. 561.]</p>
+<p>"For this cause David addressed no other on the subject of
+deliverance but God Himself. But if it belongs to no other than God
+to bless and deliver, and it was no other who delivered Jacob than
+the Lord Himself, and the patriarch invoked for his descendants Him
+who delivered him, it is evident that he connected no one in his
+prayer except His Word, whom for this reason he called an angel,
+because he alone reveals the Father."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page189" id=
+"page189"></a>{189}</span>
+<p>"But this no one would say of beings produced and created; for
+neither when the Father worketh does any one of the angels, or any
+other of created beings, work the things; for no one of such beings
+is an effective cause, but they themselves belong to things
+produced. The angels then, as it is written, are ministering
+spirits sent to minister; and the gifts given by Him through the
+Word they announce to those who receive them."</p>
+<p>Now if the invocation of angels had been practised by the Church
+at that time, can it be for a moment believed, that a man of such a
+mind as was the mind of Athanasius, a mind strong, clear, logical,
+cultivated with ardent zeal for the doctrines of the Church, and
+fervent piety, would have suffered such passages as these to fall
+from him, without one saving clause in favour of the invocation of
+angels? He tells us in the most unqualified manner, that they act
+merely as ministers; ready indeed, and rejoicing to be employed on
+errands of mercy, but not going one step without the commands of
+the Lord, or doing one thing beyond his word. Had the idea been
+familiar to the mind of Athanasius, of the lawfulness, the duty,
+the privilege, the benefit of invoking them, would he have avoided
+the introduction of some words to prevent his expressions from
+being misunderstood and misapplied, as subsequent writers did long
+before the time when the denial of the doctrine might seem to have
+made such precaution more necessary?</p>
+<p>I close then the catalogue of our witnesses before the Council
+of Nic&aelig;a with the testimony of St. Athanasius; whose genuine
+and acknowledged works afford not one jot or tittle in support of
+the doctrine and practice of the invocation of angels and saints,
+as now insisted upon by the Church of Rome; and the direct
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page190" id=
+"page190"></a>{190}</span> tendency of whose evidence is decidedly
+hostile both to that doctrine and that practice.</p>
+<p>I have seen it observed by some who are satisfied, that the
+records of primitive antiquity do not contain such references to
+the invocation of saints and angels, as we might have expected to
+find had the custom then prevailed, that the earliest Christians
+kept back the doctrine and concealed it, though they held it;
+fearing lest their heathen neighbours should upbraid them with
+being as much polytheists as themselves<a id="footnotetag66" name=
+"footnotetag66"></a><a href="#footnote66"><sup>66</sup></a>. This
+is altogether a gratuitous assumption, directly contrary to
+evidence, and totally inconsistent with their conduct. Had those
+first Christians acted upon such a debasing principle, they would
+have kept back and concealed their worship of the Son and of the
+Holy Ghost, as exposing them to a similar charge. They were
+constantly upbraided with worshipping a crucified <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>{191}</span> mortal;
+but instead of either meeting that charge by denying that they
+worshipped Jesus as their God, or of concealing the worship of Him,
+lest they should expose themselves again to such upbraidings, they
+publicly professed, that He whom the Jews had murdered, they
+believed in as the Son of God, Himself their God. They gloried in
+the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, and did not fear what men
+might do to them, or say of them in consequence. Had they believed
+in the duty of invoking saints and angels, the high principle of
+Christian integrity would not have suffered them to be ashamed to
+confess it, or to practise openly what they believed.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote66" name=
+"footnote66"></a><b>Footnote 66:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag66">(return)</a>
+<p>Bishop Morley, (London, 1683,) in a letter written whilst he was
+in exile at Breda, to J. Ulitius, refers to Cardinal Perron,
+"R&eacute;plique &agrave; la Resp. du Roy de la Grande Bret." p.
+1402 and 4, for this sentiment: "The Fathers do not always speak
+what they think, but conceal their real sentiments, and say that
+which best serves the cause which they sustain, so as to protect it
+against the objections of the gentiles. The Fathers, as much as in
+them lies, and as far as they can, avoid and decline all occasions
+of speaking about the invocation of saints then practised in the
+Church, fearing lest to the gentiles there might appear a sort of
+similarity, although untrue and equivocal, between the worship paid
+to the saints by the Church, and by the Pagans to their false
+divinities; and lest the Pagans might thence seize a handle,
+however unfair, of retorting upon them that custom of the Church."
+Had a member of the Anglican Church thus spoken of the Fathers, and
+thus pleaded in their name guilty of subterfuge and duplicity, he
+would have been immediately charged with irreverence and wanton
+insult, and that with good reason. These sentiments of the Cardinal
+are in p. 982 of the Paris edition of 1620.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id=
+"page192"></a>{192}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>PART II.</h2>
+<h3><a name="chap2-1" id="chap2-1">CHAPTER I.</a></h3>
+<h4>STATE OF WORSHIP AT THE TIME OF THE REFORMATION.</h4>
+<p>One of the points proposed for our inquiry was the state of
+religious worship, with reference to the invocation of saints, at
+the time immediately preceding the reformation. Very far from
+entertaining a wish to fasten upon the Church of Rome now, what
+then deformed religion among us, in any department where that
+Church has practically reformed her services, I would most
+thankfully have found her ritual in a more purified state than it
+is. My more especial object in referring to this period is twofold:
+first, to show, that consistently with Catholic and primitive
+principles, the Catholic Christians of England ought not to have
+continued to participate in the worship which at that time
+prevailed in our country; and, secondly, by that example both to
+illustrate the great danger of allowing ourselves to countenance
+the very first stages of superstition, and also to impress upon our
+minds the duty of checking in its germ any the least deviation from
+the primitive principles of faith and worship; convinced that by
+the general tendency of human nature, one wrong step will, though
+imperceptibly, yet almost inevitably lead to another; and that only
+whilst we adhere with uncompromising steadiness <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page193" id="page193"></a>{193}</span> to the
+Scripture as our foundation, and to the primitive Church, under
+God, as a guide, can we be saved from the danger of making
+shipwreck of our faith.</p>
+<p>On this branch of our subject I propose to do no more than to
+lay before my readers the witness borne to the state of religion in
+England at that time, by two works, which have been in an especial
+manner forced upon my notice. Many other testimonies of a similar
+tendency might readily be adduced; but these will probably appear
+sufficient for the purposes above mentioned; and to dwell longer
+than is necessary on this point would be neither pleasant nor
+profitable.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect2-1-1" id="sect2-1-1">SECTION I.</a></h4>
+<p>The first book to which I shall refer is called The Hours of the
+most blessed Virgin Mary, according to the legitimate use of the
+Church of Salisbury. This book was printed in Paris in the year
+1526. The prayers in this volume relate chiefly to the Virgin: and
+I should, under other circumstances, have reserved all allusion to
+it for our separate inquiry into the faith and practice of the
+Church of Rome with regard to her. But its historical position and
+general character seemed to recommend our reference to it here.
+Without anticipating, therefore, the facts or the arguments, which
+will hereafter be submitted to the reader's consideration on the
+worship of the Virgin, I refer to this work now solely as
+illustrative of the lamentable state of superstition which three
+centuries ago overran our country.</p>
+<p>The volume abounds with forms of prayer to the Virgin, many of
+them prefaced by extraordinary notifications of indulgences
+promised to those who duly utter <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page194" id="page194"></a>{194}</span> the prayers. These
+indulgences are granted by Popes and by Bishops; some on their own
+mere motion, others at the request of influential persons. They
+guarantee remission of punishment for different spaces of time,
+varying from forty days to ninety thousand years; they undertake to
+secure freedom from hell; they promise pardon for deadly sins, and
+for venial sins to the same person for the same act; they assure to
+those who comply with their directions a change of the pain of
+eternal damnation into the pain of purgatory, and the pain of
+purgatory into a free and full pardon.</p>
+<p>It may be said that the Church of Rome is not responsible for
+all these things. But we need not tarry here to discuss the
+question how far it was then competent for a church or nation to
+have any service-book or manual of devotion for the faithful,
+without first obtaining the papal sanction. For clear it is beyond
+all question, that such frightful corruptions as these, of which we
+are now to give instances, were spread throughout the land; that
+such was the religion then imposed on the people of England; and it
+was from such dreadful enormities, that our Reformation, to
+whatever secondary cause that reformation is to be
+attributed&mdash;by the providence of Almighty God rescued us. No
+one laments more than I do, the extremes into which many opponents
+of papal Rome have allowed themselves to run; but no one can feel a
+more anxious desire than myself to preserve our Church and people
+from a return of such spiritual degradation and wretchedness; and
+to keep far from us the most distant approaches of such lamentable
+and ensnaring superstitions. In this feeling moreover I am assured
+that I am joined by many of the most respected and influential
+members of the Roman Catholic Church among us. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>{195}</span> Still
+what has been may be; and it is the bounden duty of all members of
+Christ's Catholic Church, to whatever branch of it they belong, to
+join in guarding his sanctuary against such enemies to the truth as
+it is in HIM.</p>
+<p>At the same time it would not be honest and candid in me, were I
+to abstain from urging those, who, with ourselves, deprecate these
+excesses, to carry their reflections further; and determine whether
+the spirit of the Gospel does not require a total rejection, even
+in its less startling forms, of every departure from the principle
+of invoking God alone; and of looking for acceptance with Him
+solely to the mediation of his Son, without the intervention of any
+other merits. As we regard it, it is not a question of degree; it
+is a question of principle: one degree may be less revolting to our
+sense of right than another, but it is not on that account
+justifiable.</p>
+<p>The following specimens, a few selected from an overabundant
+supply, will justify the several particulars in the summary which I
+have above given:</p>
+<p>1. "The Right Reverend Father in God, Laurence<a id=
+"footnotetag67" name="footnotetag67"></a><a href=
+"#footnote67"><sup>67</sup></a>, Bishop of Assaven, hath granted
+forty days of pardon to all them that devoutly say this prayer in
+the worship of our blessed Lady, being penitent, and truly
+confessed of all their sins. Oratio, 'Gaude Virgo, Mater Christi,'
+&amp;c. Rejoice, Virgin, Mother of Christ. [Fol. 35.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote67" name=
+"footnote67"></a><b>Footnote 67:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag67">(return)</a>
+<p>This was Laurence Child, who, by papal provision, was made
+Bishop of St. Asaph, June 18, 1382. He is called also Penitentiary
+to the Pope. Le Neve, p. 21. Beatson, vol. i. p. 115.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>2. "To all them that be in the state of grace, that daily say
+devoutly this prayer before our blessed Lady of Pity, she will show
+them her blessed visage, and warn them the day and the hour of
+death; and in their last <span class="pagenum"><a name="page196"
+id="page196"></a>{196}</span> end the angels of God shall yield
+their souls to heaven; and<a id="footnotetag68" name=
+"footnotetag68"></a><a href="#footnote68"><sup>68</sup></a> he
+shall obtain five hundred years, and so many Lents of pardon,
+granted by five holy fathers, Popes of Rome. [Fol. 38.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote68" name=
+"footnote68"></a><b>Footnote 68:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag68">(return)</a>
+<p>The language in many of these passages is very imperfect; but I
+have thought it right to copy them verbatim.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>3. "This prayer showed our Lady to a devout person, saying, that
+this golden prayer is the most sweetest and acceptablest to me: and
+in her appearing she had this salutation and prayer written with
+letters of gold in her breast, 'Ave Rosa sine spinis'&mdash;Hail
+Rose without thorns. [Fol. 41.]</p>
+<p>4. "Our holy Father, Sixtus the fourth, pope, hath granted to
+all them that devoutly say this prayer before the image of our Lady
+the sum of XI.M. [eleven thousand] years of pardon. 'Ave
+Sanctissima Maria, Mater Dei, Regina Coeli,' &amp;c. Hail most holy
+Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven. [Fol. 42.]</p>
+<p>5. "Our holy Father, Pope Sixtus, hath granted at the instance
+of the highmost and excellent Princess Elizabeth, late Queen of
+England, and wife to our sovereign liege Lord, King Henry the
+Seventh, (God have mercy on her sweet soul, and on all Christian
+souls,) that every day in the morning, after three tollings of the
+Ave bell, say three times the whole salutation of our Lady Ave
+Maria gratia; that is to say, at 6 the clock in the morning 3 Ave
+Maria, at 12 the clock at noon 3 Ave M., and at 6 the clock at
+even, for every time so doing is granted of the SPIRITUAL TREASURE
+OF HOLY CHURCH 300 days of pardon totiens quotiens; and also our
+holy father, the Archbishop of Canterbury and York, with other nine
+Bishops of this realm, have <span class="pagenum"><a name="page197"
+id="page197"></a>{197}</span> granted 3 times in the day 40 days of
+pardon to all them that be in the state of grace able to receive
+pardon: the which begun the 26th day of March, Anno MCCCCXCII. Anno
+Henrici VII.<a id="footnotetag69" name="footnotetag69"></a><a href=
+"#footnote69"><sup>69</sup></a> And the sum of the indulgence and
+pardon for every Ave Maria VIII hondred days an LX totiens
+quotiens, this prayer shall be said at the tolling of the Ave Bell,
+'Suscipe,' &amp;c. Receive the word, O Virgin Mary, which was sent
+to thee from the Lord by an angel. Hail, Mary, full of grace: the
+Lord with thee, &amp;c. Say this 3 times, &amp;c. [Fol. 42.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote69" name=
+"footnote69"></a><b>Footnote 69:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag69">(return)</a>
+<p>Henry VII. began to reign in 1485.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>6. "This prayer was showed to St. Bernard by the messenger of
+God, saying, that as gold is the most precious of all other metals,
+so exceedeth this prayer all other prayers, and who that devoutly
+sayeth it shall have a singular reward of our blessed Lady, and her
+sweet Son Jesus. 'Ave,' &amp;c. Hail, Mary, most humble handmaid of
+the Trinity, &amp;c. Hail, Mary, most prompt Comforter of the
+living and the dead. Be thou with me in all my tribulations and
+distresses with maternal pity, and at the hour of my death take my
+soul, and offer it to thy most beloved Son Jesus, with all them who
+have commended themselves to our prayers. [Fol. 46.]</p>
+<p>7. "Our holy father, the Pope Bonifacius, hath granted to all
+them that devoutly say this lamentable contemplation of our blessed
+Lady, standing under the Cross weeping, and having compassion with
+her sweet Son Jesus, 7 years of pardon and forty Lents, and also
+Pope John the 22 hath granted three hondred days of pardon. 'Stabat
+Mater dolorosa.' [Fol. 47.]</p>
+<p>8. "To all them that before this image of Pity devoutly say 5
+Pat. Nos., and 5 Aves, and a Credo, piteously beholding these arms
+of Christ's passion, are <span class="pagenum"><a name="page198"
+id="page198"></a>{198}</span> granted XXXII.M.VII hondred, and LV
+(32755) years of pardon; and Sixtus the 4th, Pope of Rome hath made
+the 4 and the 5 prayer, and hath doubled his aforesaid pardon.
+[Fol. 54.]</p>
+<p>9. "Our holy Father the Pope John 22 hath granted to all them
+that devoutly say this prayer, after the elevation of our Lord Jesu
+Christ, 3000 days of pardon for deadly sins. [Fol. 58.]</p>
+<p>10. "This prayer was showed to Saint Augustine by revelation of
+the Holy Ghost, and who that devoutly say this prayer, or hear
+read, or beareth about them, shall not perish in fire or water,
+nother in battle or judgment, and he shall not die of sudden death,
+and no venom shall poison him that day, and what he asketh of God
+he shall obtain if it be to the salvation of his soul; and when thy
+soul shall depart from thy body it shall not enter hell." This
+prayer ends with three invocations of the Cross, thus: "O Cross of
+Christ [cross] save us, O Cross of Christ [cross] protect us, O
+Cross of Christ [cross] defend us. In the name of the [cross]
+Father, [cross] Son, and Holy [cross] Ghost. Amen." [Fol. 62.]</p>
+<p>11. "Our holy Father Pope Innocent III. hath granted to all them
+that say these III prayers following devoutly, remission of all
+their sins confessed and contrite. [Fol. 63.]</p>
+<p>12. "These 3 prayers be written in the Chapel of the Holy Cross,
+in Rome, otherwise called Sacellum Sanct&aelig; Crucis septem
+Romanorum; who that devoutly say them shall obtain X.C.M. [ninety
+thousand] years of pardon for deadly sins granted of our holy
+Father, John 22, Pope of Rome. [Fol. 66.]</p>
+<p>13. "Who that devoutly beholdeth these arms of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>{199}</span> our Lord
+Jesus Christ, shall obtain six thousand years of pardon of our holy
+Father Saint Peter, the first pope of Rome, and of XXX [thirty]
+other popes of the Church of Rome, successors after him; and our
+holy Father, Pope John 22, hath granted unto all them very contrite
+and truly confessed, that say these devout prayers following in the
+commemoration of the bitter passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, 3000
+years of pardon for DEADLY SINS, and other 3000 for venial sins."
+[Fol. 68.]</p>
+<p>I will only add one more instance. The following announcement
+accompanies a prayer of St. Bernard: "Who that devoutly with a
+contrite heart daily say this orison, if he be that day in a state
+of eternal damnation, then this eternal pain shall be changed him
+in temporal pain of purgatory; then if he hath deserved the pain of
+purgatory it shall be forgotten and forgiven through the infinite
+mercy of God."</p>
+<p>It is indeed very melancholy to reflect that our country has
+witnessed the time, when the bread of life had been taken from the
+children, and such husks as these substituted in its stead.
+Accredited ministers of the Roman Catholic Church have lately
+assured us that the pardons and indulgences granted now, relate
+only to the remission of the penances imposed by the Church in this
+life, and presume not to interfere with the province of the Most
+High in the rewards and punishments of the next. But, I repeat it,
+what has been in former days may be again; and whenever Christians
+depart from the doctrine and practice of prayer to God alone,
+through Christ alone, a door is opened to superstitions and abuses
+of every kind; and we cannot too anxiously and too jealously guard
+and fence about, with all our power and skill, the fundamental
+principle, one God and one Mediator.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page200" id=
+"page200"></a>{200}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect2-1-2" id="sect2-1-2">SECTION
+II.</a>&mdash;SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET, ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS
+MARTYRDOM, DEC. 29.</h4>
+<p>The other instance by which I propose to illustrate the state of
+religion in England before the reformation, is the service of
+Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, a canonized saint and
+martyr of the Church of Rome. The interest attaching to so
+remarkable a period in ecclesiastical history, and to an event so
+intimately interwoven with the former state of our native land,
+appears to justify the introduction of the entire service, rather
+than extracts from it, in this place. Whilst it bears throughout
+immediately on the subject of our present inquiry, it supplies us
+at the same time with the strong views entertained by the authors
+of the service, on points which gave rise to great and repeated
+discussion, not only in England, but in various parts also of
+continental Europe, with regard to the moral and spiritual merits
+or demerits of Becket, as a subject of the realm and a Christian
+minister. It is, moreover, only by becoming familiar in all their
+details with some such remains of past times, that we can form any
+adequate idea of the great and deplorable extent to which the
+legends had banished the reading and expounding of Holy Scriptures
+from our churches; and also how much the praises of mortal man had
+encroached upon those hours of public worship, which should be
+devoted to meditations on our Maker, Redeemer, and Sanctifier; to
+the exclusive praises of his holy name; and to supplications
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id=
+"page201"></a>{201}</span> to Him alone for blessings at his hand,
+and for his mercy through Christ.</p>
+<p>There is much obscurity in the few first paragraphs. The
+historical or biographical part begins at Lesson the First, and
+continues throughout, only interspersed with canticles in general
+referring to the incidents in the narrative preceding each.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>THE SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET<a id="footnotetag70" name=
+"footnotetag70"></a><a href="#footnote70"><sup>70</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote70" name=
+"footnote70"></a><b>Footnote 70:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag70">(return)</a>
+<p>The copies which I have chiefly consulted for the purposes of
+the present inquiry, are two large folio manuscripts, in good
+preservation, No. 1512 and No. 2785 of the Harleian MSS. in the
+British Museum. The service commences about the 49th page, B. of
+No. 2785. This MS. is considered to be of a date somewhere about
+1430. The first parts of the service are preserved also in a
+Breviary printed in Paris in 1556, with some variations and
+omissions. There are various other copies in the British Museum, as
+well printed as in manuscript.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Let them without change of vestments and without tapers in their
+hands, proceed to the altar of St. Thomas the Martyr, chanting the
+requiem, the chanter beginning,</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><i>Req.</i> The grain lies buried beneath the straw;</p>
+<p class="i4">The just man is slain by the spear of the wicked;</p>
+<p class="i4">The guardian of the vine falls in the vineyard,</p>
+<p class="i4">The chieftain in the camp, the husbandman in the
+threshing-floor.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Then the prose is said by all who choose, in surplices before
+the altar.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Let the Shepherd sound his trumpet of horn."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Let the choir respond to the chant of the prose after every
+verse, upon the letter [super litteram].</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page202" id=
+"page202"></a>{202}</span>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>That the vineyard of Christ might be free,</p>
+<p>Which he assumed under a robe of flesh,</p>
+<p>He liberated it by the purple cross.</p>
+<p>The adversary, the erring sheep,</p>
+<p>Becomes bloodstained by the slaughter of the shepherd.</p>
+<p>The marble pavements of Christ</p>
+<p>Are wetted, ruddy with sacred gore;</p>
+<p>The martyr presented with the laurel of life.</p>
+<p>Like a grain cleansed from the straw,</p>
+<p>Is translated to the divine garners.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>But whilst the prose is being sung, let the priest incense the
+altar, and then the image of the blessed Thomas the Martyr; and
+afterwards shall be said with an humble voice: Pray for us, Blessed
+Thomas.</p>
+<p><i>The Prayer<a id="footnotetag71" name=
+"footnotetag71"></a><a href="#footnote71"><sup>71</sup></a>.</i> O
+God for whose Church the glorious <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page203" id="page203"></a>{203}</span> high-priest and martyr
+Thomas fell beneath the swords of the wicked, grant, we beseech
+thee, that all who implore his aid may obtain the salutary effect
+of their petition, through Christ.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote71" name=
+"footnote71"></a><b>Footnote 71:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag71">(return)</a>
+<p>This Collect is still preserved in the Roman ritual, and is
+offered on the anniversary of Becket's death. In a very ancient
+pontifical, preserved in the chapter-house of Bangor, and which
+belonged to Anianus, who was Bishop of that see (1268), among the
+"Proper Benedictions for the circuit of the year," are two relating
+to Thomas Becket; one on the anniversary of his death, the other on
+the day of his translation. The former is couched in these words:
+"O God, who hast not without reason mingled the birthday of the
+glorious high-priest, Thomas, with the joys of thy nativity, by the
+intervention of his merits" (ipsius mentis intervenientibus), "make
+these thy servants venerate thy majesty with the reverence of due
+honour. Amen. And as he, according to the rule of a good shepherd,
+gave his life for his sheep, so grant thou to thy faithful ones, to
+fear no tyrannical madness to the prejudice of Catholic truth.
+Amen. We ask that they, by his example, for obedience to the holy
+laws, may learn to despise persons, and by suffering manfully to
+triumph over tyrannical madness. Amen." The latter runs thus: "May
+God, by whose pity the bodies of saints rest in the sabbath of
+peace, turn your hearts to the desire of the resurrection to come.
+Amen. And may he who orders us to bury with honour due the members
+of the saints whose death is precious, by the merits of the
+glorious martyr, Thomas, vouchsafe to raise you from the dust of
+vanity. Amen. Where at length by the power of his benediction ye
+may be clothed with doubled festive robes of body and soul.
+Amen."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The shepherd slain in the midst of the flock,</p>
+<p>Purchased peace at the price of his blood.</p>
+<p>O joyous grief, in mournful gladness!</p>
+<p>The flock breathes when the shepherd is dead;</p>
+<p>The mother wailing, sings for joy in her son,</p>
+<p>Because he lives under the sword a conqueror.</p>
+<p>The solemnities of Thomas the Martyr are come.</p>
+<p>Let the Virgin Mother, the Church, rejoice;</p>
+<p>Thomas being raised to the highest priesthood,</p>
+<p>Is suddenly changed into another man.</p>
+<p>A monk, under [the garb of?] a clerk, secretly clothed with
+haircloth,</p>
+<p>More strong than the flesh subdues the attempts of the
+flesh;</p>
+<p>Whilst the tiller of the Lord's field pulls up the thistles,</p>
+<p>And drives away and banishes the foxes from the vineyard.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>The First Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>Dearest Brethren, celebrating now the birth-day of the martyr
+Thomas, because we have not power to recount his whole life and
+conversation, let our brief discourse run through the manner and
+cause of his passion. The blessed Thomas, therefore, as in the
+office of Chancellor, or Archdeacon, he proved incomparably
+strenuous <span class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id=
+"page204"></a>{204}</span> in the conduct of affairs, so after he
+had undertaken the office of pastor, he became devoted to God
+beyond man's estimation. For, when consecrated, he suddenly is
+changed into another man: he secretly put on the hair shirt, and
+wore also hair drawers down to the knee. And under the respectable
+appearance of the clerical garb, concealing the monk's dress, he
+entirely compelled the flesh to obey the spirit; studying by the
+exercise of every virtue without intermission to please God.
+Knowing, therefore, that he was placed a husbandman in the field of
+the Lord, a shepherd in the fold, he carefully discharged the
+ministry entrusted to him. The rights and dignities of the Church,
+which the public authority had usurped, he deemed it right to
+restore, and to recall to their proper state. Whence a grave
+question on the ecclesiastical law and the customs of the realm,
+having arisen between him and the king of the English, a council
+being convened, those customs were proposed which the king
+pertinaciously required to be confirmed by the signatures as well
+of the archbishop as of his suffragans. The archbishop with
+constancy refused, asserting that in them was manifest the
+subversion of the freedom of the Church. He was in consequence
+treated with immense insults, oppressed with severe losses, and
+provoked with innumerable injuries. At length, being threatened
+with death, (because the case of the Church had not yet become
+fully known, and the persecution seemed to be personal,) he
+determined that he ought to give place to malice. Being driven,
+therefore, into exile, he was honourably received by our lord the
+pope Alexander<a id="footnotetag72" name=
+"footnotetag72"></a><a href="#footnote72"><sup>72</sup></a> at
+Senon, and recommended <span class="pagenum"><a name="page205" id=
+"page205"></a>{205}</span> with especial care to the Monastery of
+Pontinea (Pontigny).</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote72" name=
+"footnote72"></a><b>Footnote 72:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag72">(return)</a>
+<p>Pope Alexander III. was at this time residing as a refugee at
+Sens, having been driven from Italy a few years before by Frederick
+Barbarossa.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Malice, bent on the punishment of Thomas,</p>
+<p>Condemns to banishment the race of Thomas.</p>
+<p>The whole family goes forth together.</p>
+<p>No order, sex, age, or condition</p>
+<p>Here enjoys any privilege.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Lesson the Second.</i></p>
+<p>Meanwhile in England all the revenues of the archbishop are
+confiscated, his estates are laid waste, his possessions are
+plundered, and by the invention of a new kind of punishment, the
+whole kin of Thomas is proscribed together. For all his friends or
+acquaintance, or whoever was connected with him, by whatever title,
+without distinction of state or fortune, dignity or rank, age or
+sex, were alike exiled. For as well the old and decrepit, as
+infants in the cradle and women lying in childbirth, were driven
+into banishment; whilst as many as had reached the years of
+discretion were compelled to swear upon the holy [Gospels]<a id=
+"footnotetag73" name="footnotetag73"></a><a href=
+"#footnote73"><sup>73</sup></a> that immediately on crossing the
+sea they would present themselves to the Archbishop of Canterbury;
+in order that being so oftentimes pierced even by the sword of
+sympathy, he would bend his strength of mind to the king's
+pleasure. But the man of God, putting his hand to deeds of
+fortitude, with constancy bore exile, reproaches, insults, the
+proscription of parents and friends, for the name of Christ; he was
+never, by any injury, at all broken or changed. For so great was
+the firmness of this confessor of Christ, that he seemed to teach
+all his fellow exiles, that every soil is the brave man's
+country.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote73" name=
+"footnote73"></a><b>Footnote 73:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag73">(return)</a>
+<p>Tactis sacrosanctis. It may mean reliques, or other sacred
+things.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page206" id=
+"page206"></a>{206}</span>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thomas put his hands to deeds of fortitude,</p>
+<p>He despised losses, he despised reproaches,</p>
+<p>No injury breaks down Thomas:</p>
+<p>The firmness of Thomas exclaimed to all,</p>
+<p>"Every soil is the brave man's country."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Third Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>The king therefore hearing of his immoveable constancy, having
+directed commendatory letters by some abbots of the Cistertian
+order to the General Chapter, caused him to be driven from
+Pontinea. But the blessed Thomas fearing that, by occasion of his
+right, injury would befal the saints, retired of his own accord.
+Yet before he set out from thence he was comforted by a divine
+revelation: a declaration being made to him from heaven, that he
+should return to his Church with glory, and by the palm of
+martyrdom depart to the Lord. When he was disturbed and sent from
+his retreat at Pontinea, Louis, the most Christian king of the
+French, received him with the greatest honour, and supported him
+most courteously till peace was restored. But even he too was
+often, though in vain, urged not to show any grace of kindness
+towards a traitor to the king of England. The hand of fury
+proceeded further, and a cruelty dreadful for pious ears to hear.
+For whereas the Catholic Church prays even for heretics, and
+schismatics, and faithless Jews, it was forbidden that any one
+should assist him by the supplications of prayer. Exiled, then, for
+six continuous years, afflicted with varied and unnumbered
+injuries, and like a living stone squared by various cuttings and
+pressures for the building of the heavenly edifice, the more he was
+thrust at that he might fall, the more firm and immoveable was he
+enabled to stand. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id=
+"page207"></a>{207}</span> For neither could gold so carefully
+tried be burned away, nor a house, founded on a firm rock, be torn
+down. Neither does he suffer the wolves to rage against the lambs,
+nor the vineyard to pass into a garden of herbs.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The best of men, holy, and renowned is banished,</p>
+<p>Lest the dignity of the Church should yield to the unworthy.</p>
+<p>The estates of the exiled man are the spoil of the
+malignant,</p>
+<p>But when placed in the fire, the fire burns him not.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Fourth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>At length by the exertions, as well of the aforesaid pontiff as
+of the king of the French, many days were appointed for
+re-establishing peace: and because the servant of God would not
+accept of peace, unless with safety to the honour of God, and the
+character of the Church, they departed in discord from each other.
+At length the supreme Pontiff, pitying the desolation of the
+Anglican Church, with difficulty at the last extorted by
+threatening measures, that peace should be restored to the Church.
+The realms indeed rejoiced, that the King had been reconciled to
+the Archbishop, whilst some believed that the affair was carried on
+in good faith, and others formed different conjectures.
+Consequently in the seventh year of his exile the noble pastor
+returned into England, that he might either rescue the sheep of
+Christ from the jaws of the wolves, or sacrifice himself for the
+flock intrusted to his care. He is received by the clergy and the
+people with incalculable joy; all shedding tears, and saying,
+Blessed is he who cometh in the name of the Lord. But after a few
+days he was again afflicted by losses and miseries beyond measure
+and number. Whoever offered to him, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page208" id="page208"></a>{208}</span> or to any one connected
+with him, a cheerful countenance was reckoned a public enemy. In
+all these things his mind was unbroken; but his hand was still
+stretched out for the liberation of the Church. For this he
+incessantly sighed; for this he persevered in watchings, fastings,
+and prayers; to obtain this he ardently desired to sacrifice
+himself.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>From the greatest joy of affairs,</p>
+<p>The greatest wailing is in the Church,</p>
+<p>For the absence of so great a patron.</p>
+<p>But when the miracles return,</p>
+<p>Joy to the people returns.</p>
+<p>The crowd of sick flock together,</p>
+<p>And obtain the grace of benefits.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Fifth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>Now on the fifth day after the birth-day of our Lord, four
+persons of the palace came to Canterbury, men indeed of high birth,
+but famous for their wicked deeds; and having entered, they attack
+the archbishop with reproachful words, provoke him with insults,
+and at length assail him with threats. The man of God modestly
+answered, to every thing, whatever reason required, adding that
+many injuries had been inflicted upon him and the Church of God,
+since the re-establishment of peace, and there was no one to
+correct what was wrong; that he neither could nor would dissemble
+thereafter, so as not to exercise the duties of his function. The
+men, foolish in heart, were disturbed by this, and having loudly
+given utterance to their iniquity they forthwith went out. On their
+retiring, the prelate proceeded to the Church, to offer the evening
+praises to Christ. The mail-clad satellites of Satan followed him
+from behind with drawn swords, a <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page209" id="page209"></a>{209}</span> large band of armed men
+accompanying them. On the monks barring the entrance to the Church,
+the priest of God, destined soon to become a victim of Christ,
+running up re-opened the door to the enemy; "For," said he, "a
+Church must not be barricaded like a castle." As they burst in, and
+some shouted with a voice of phrenzy, "Where is the traitor?"
+others, "Where is the Archbishop?" the fearless confessor of Christ
+went to meet them. When they pressed on to murder him, he said,
+"For myself I cheerfully meet death for the Church of God; but on
+the part of God I charge you to do no hurt to any of
+mine"&mdash;imitating Christ in his passion, when he said, "If ye
+seek me, let these go their way." Then rush the ravening wolves on
+the pious shepherd, degenerate sons on their own father, cruel
+lictors on the victim of Christ, and with fatal swords cut off the
+consecrated crown of his head; and hurling down to the ground the
+Christ [the anointed] of the Lord, in savage manner, horrible to be
+said, scattered the brains with the blood over the pavement.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thus does the straw press down the grain of corn;</p>
+<p>Thus is slain the guard of the vineyard in the vineyard;</p>
+<p>Thus the general in the camp, the shepherd in the fold, the</p>
+<p class="i2">husbandman in the threshing-floor.</p>
+<p>Thus the just, slain by the unjust, has changed his house of</p>
+<p class="i2">clay for a heavenly palace.</p>
+<p>Rachel, weeping, now cease thou to mourn</p>
+<p>That the flower of the world is bruised by the world.</p>
+<p>When the slain Thomas is borne to his funeral,</p>
+<p>A new Abel succeeds to the old.</p>
+<p>The voice of blood, the voice of his scattered brains,</p>
+<p>Fills heaven with a marvellous cry.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page210" id=
+"page210"></a>{210}</span>
+<p><i>Sixth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>But the last words of the martyr, which from the confused
+clamour could scarcely be distinguished, according to the testimony
+of those who stood near, were these,&mdash;"To God, and the blessed
+Mary, and Saint Dionysius, and the holy patrons of this Church, I
+commend myself and the cause of the Church<a id="footnotetag74"
+name="footnotetag74"></a><a href="#footnote74"><sup>74</sup></a>."
+Moreover, in all the torments which this unvanquished champion of
+God endured, he sent forth no cry, he uttered no groan, he opposed
+neither his arm nor his garment to the man who struck him, but held
+his head, which he had bent towards the swords, unmoved till the
+consummation came; prostrated as if for prayer, he fell asleep in
+the Lord. The perpetrators of the crime, returning into the palace
+of the holy prelate, that they might make the passion of the
+servant more fully resemble the passion of his Lord, divided among
+them his garments, the gold and silver and precious vessels, choice
+horses, and whatever of value they could find, allotting what each
+should take. These things therefore the soldiers did. Who, without
+weeping, can relate the rest? So great was the sorrow of all, so
+great the laments of each, that you would think the prophecy were a
+second time fulfilled, "A voice is heard in Rama, lamentation and
+great mourning." Nevertheless the divine mercy, when temptation was
+multiplied, made a way to escape; and by certain visions, giving as
+it were a prelude to the future miracles, [declared that] the
+martyr was thereafter to be glorified by wonders, that joy would
+return after sorrow, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page211" id=
+"page211"></a>{211}</span> and a crowd of sick would obtain the
+grace of benefits.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote74" name=
+"footnote74"></a><b>Footnote 74:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag74">(return)</a>
+<p>I have already suggested a comparison between this prayer and
+the commendatory prayer of the Martyr Polycarp, page 92.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>O Christ Jesus<a id="footnotetag75" name=
+"footnotetag75"></a><a href="#footnote75"><sup>75</sup></a>, BY THE
+WOUNDS OF THOMAS,</p>
+<p>Loosen the sins which bind us;</p>
+<p>Lest the enemy, the world, or the works of the flesh.</p>
+<p>Bear us captive to hell.</p>
+<p>By<a id="footnotetag76" name="footnotetag76"></a><a href=
+"#footnote76"><sup>76</sup></a> THEE, O Thomas ...</p>
+<p>Let the right hand of God embrace us.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The satellites of Satan rushing into the temple</p>
+<p>Perpetrate an unexampled, unheard-of, crime.</p>
+<p>Thomas proceeds to meet their drawn swords:</p>
+<p>He yields not to threats, to swords, nor even to death.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Happy place! Happy Church,</p>
+<p>In which the memory of Thomas lives!</p>
+<p>Happy the land which gave the prelate!</p>
+<p>Happy the land which supported him in exile!</p>
+<p>Happy Father! succour us miserable,</p>
+<p>That we may be happy, and joined with those above!</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote75" name=
+"footnote75"></a><b>Footnote 75:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag75">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Christe Jesu per Thom&aelig; vulnera,</p>
+<p>Qu&aelig; nos ligant relaxa scelera</p>
+<p>Ne captivos ferant ad infera</p>
+<p>Hostis, mundus, vel carnis opera.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote76" name=
+"footnote76"></a><b>Footnote 76:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag76">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Per te, Thoma, post l&aelig;v&aelig; munera</p>
+<p>Amplexetur nos Dei dextera.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Seventh Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>Jesus said unto his disciples, I am the good shepherd. The good
+shepherd layeth down his life for the sheep.</p>
+<p>THE HOMILY OF S. GREGORY, POPE.</p>
+<p>Ye have heard, most dear brethren, from the reading of the
+Gospel, your instruction; ye have heard also <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page212" id="page212"></a>{212}</span> your
+danger. For behold! he who is not from any gift happening to him,
+but who is essentially good, says, I am the good shepherd; and he
+adds the character of the same goodness, which we may imitate,
+saying, The good shepherd layeth down his life for his sheep. He
+did what he taught; he showed what he commanded. The good shepherd
+laid down his life for his sheep; that in our sacrament he might
+change his body and blood, and satisfy, by the nourishment of his
+flesh, the sheep which he had redeemed. Here is shown to us the
+way, concerning the contempt of death, which we should follow; the
+character is placed before us to which we should conform. [In the
+first place, we should of our pity sacrifice our external good for
+his sheep; and at last, if it be necessary, give up our own life
+for the same sheep. From that smallest point we proceed to this
+last and greater. But since the soul by which we live is
+incomparably better than the earthly substance which we outwardly
+possess, who would not give for the sheep his substance, when he
+would give his life for them? And there are some who, whilst they
+love their earthly substance more than the sheep, deservedly lose
+the name of shepherd: of whom it is immediately added, But the
+hireling who is not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not,
+seeth the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep and fleeth. He is
+called not a shepherd, but a hireling, who feeds the Lord's sheep
+not for inward love, but with a view to temporal wages. He is a
+mercenary who seeks indeed the place of shepherd, but seeks not the
+gain of souls.]</p>
+<p>(The sentences between brackets are not in MS. No. 1512.)</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>To Thomas all things yield and are obedient:</p>
+<p>Plagues, diseases, death, and devils,</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page213" id=
+"page213"></a>{213}</span>
+<p>Fire, air, land, and seas.</p>
+<p>Thomas filled the world with glory.</p>
+<p>The world offers obeisance to Thomas<a id="footnotetag77" name=
+"footnotetag77"></a><a href="#footnote77"><sup>77</sup></a>.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote77" name=
+"footnote77"></a><b>Footnote 77:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag77">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thom&aelig; cedunt et parent omnia:</p>
+<p>Pestes, morbi, mors, et d&aelig;monia,</p>
+<p>Ignis, aer, tellus, et maria.</p>
+<p>Thomas mundum replevit gloria.</p>
+<p>Thom&aelig; mundus pr&aelig;stat obsequia.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Eighth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>In good truth, the holy Thomas, the precious champion of God,
+was to be worthily glorified. For if the cause, yea, forasmuch as
+the cause makes the martyr, did ever a title of holy martyrs exist
+more glorious? Contending for the Church, in the Church he
+suffered; in a holy place, at the holy time of the Lord's nativity,
+in the midst of his fellow-priests and the companies of the
+religious: since in the agony of the prelate all the circumstances
+seemed so to concur, as perpetually to illustrate the title of the
+sufferer, and reveal the wickedness of his persecutors, and stain
+their name with never-ending infamy. But so did the divine
+vengeance rage against the persecutors of the martyr, that in a
+short time, being carried away from the midst, they nowhere
+appeared. And some, without confession, or the viaticum, were
+suddenly snatched away; others tearing piecemeal their own fingers
+or tongues; others pining with hunger, and corrupting in their
+whole body, and racked with unheard-of tortures before their death,
+and broken up by paralysis; others bereft of their intellects;
+others expiring with madness;&mdash;left manifest proofs that they
+were suffering the penalty of unjust persecution and premeditated
+murder. Let, therefore, the Virgin Mother, the Church, rejoice that
+the new martyr has borne away the triumph over the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page214" id="page214"></a>{214}</span> enemies.
+Let her rejoice that a new Zacharias has been for her freedom
+sacrificed in the temple. Let her rejoice that a new Abel's blood
+hath cried unto God for her against the men of blood. For the voice
+of his blood shed, the-voice of his brain scattered by the swords
+of those deadly satellites, hath filled heaven at once and the
+world with its far-famed cry.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thomas shines with new miracles;</p>
+<p>He adorns with sight those who had lost their eyes;</p>
+<p>He cleanses those who were stained with the spots of
+leprosy;</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>He looses those that were bound with the bonds of death.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Ninth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>For at the cry of this blood the earth was moved and trembled.
+Nay, moreover, the powers of the heavens were moved; so that, as if
+for the avenging of innocent blood, nation rose against nation, and
+kingdom against kingdom; nay, a kingdom was divided against itself,
+and terrors from heaven and great signs took place. Yet, from the
+first period of his martyrdom, the martyr began to shine forth with
+miracles, restoring sight to the blind, walking to the lame,
+hearing to the deaf, language to the dumb. Afterwards, cleansing
+the lepers, making the paralytic sound, healing the dropsy, and all
+kinds of incurable diseases; restoring the dead to life; in a
+wonderful manner commanding the devils and all the elements: he
+also put forth his hand to unwonted and unheard-of signs of his own
+power; for persons deprived of their eyes merited by his merits to
+obtain new members. But some <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page215" id="page215"></a>{215}</span> who presumed to disparage
+his miracles, struck on a sudden, were compelled to publish them
+even unwillingly. At length, against all his enemies the martyr so
+far prevailed, that almost every day you might see that to be
+repeated in the servant which is read of the Only-begotten: "They
+who spoke evil of thee shall come unto thee, and adore the traces
+of thy feet." Now the celebrated champion and martyr of God,
+Thomas, suffered in the year from the incarnation of the Lord,
+according to Dionysius, 1171, on the fourth of the kalends of
+January, on the third day of the week, about the eleventh hour,
+that the birth-day of the Lord might be for labour, and his for
+rest; to which rest the same our God and Lord Jesus Christ
+vouchsafe to bring us; who with the Father and the Holy Spirit
+liveth and reigneth God, for ever and ever. Amen.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>O good Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS,</p>
+<p>Forgive us our debts;</p>
+<p>Visit the house, the gate, the grave;</p>
+<p>And raise us from the threefold death.</p>
+<p>What has been lost by act, in mind, or use,</p>
+<p>Restore with thy wonted pity.</p>
+<p class="i4">Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>N.B. This appears to be the end of the first service in honour
+of Thomas Becket<a id="footnotetag78" name=
+"footnotetag78"></a><a href="#footnote78"><sup>78</sup></a>; and at
+this point <span class="pagenum"><a name="page216" id=
+"page216"></a>{216}</span> another service seems to commence, with
+a kind of new heading, "In the commemoration of St. Thomas<a id=
+"footnotetag79" name="footnotetag79"></a><a href=
+"#footnote79"><sup>79</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote78" name=
+"footnote78"></a><b>Footnote 78:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag78">(return)</a>
+<p>All the Lessons between this passage and "In Lauds," are wanting
+in MS. 1512.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote79" name=
+"footnote79"></a><b>Footnote 79:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag79">(return)</a>
+<p>Another Feast was kept in honour of his translation, on the 7th
+of July.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>The First Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>When Archbishop Theobald, of happy memory, in a good old age,
+slept with his fathers, Thomas, archdeacon of the Church of
+Canterbury, is solemnly chosen, in the name of the Holy Trinity, to
+be archbishop and primate of all England, and afterwards is
+consecrated. Then pious minds entertained firm hope and confidence
+in the Lord<a id="footnotetag80" name="footnotetag80"></a><a href=
+"#footnote80"><sup>80</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote80" name=
+"footnote80"></a><b>Footnote 80:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag80">(return)</a>
+<p>There is much of obscurity in the next paragraph. Reference
+seems to be made to his twofold character of a regular and a
+secular clergyman, and to his improved state morally. The Latin is
+this: "Erat autem piis mentibus spes firma et fiducia in Domino,
+quod idem consecratus utriusque hominis, habitu mutato moribus
+melioratus pr&aelig;sideret. Probatissimum siquidem tenebatur sedem
+illam sedem sanctorum esse sanctam recipere aut facere, vel citius
+et facile indignum abicere, quod et in beato Thoma Martyre
+misericorditer impletum est."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Second Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>Therefore the chosen prelate of God being elected, and anointed
+with the sanctifying of the sacred oil, immediately obtained a most
+hallowed thing, and was filled with manifold grace of the Holy
+Spirit. For walking in newness of life, a new man, he was changed
+into another man, all things belonging to whom were changed for the
+better; and with so great grace did he consecrate the commencement
+of his bishopric, that clothing himself with a monk's form
+secretly, he fulfilled the work and merit of a monk.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page217" id=
+"page217"></a>{217}</span>
+<p><i>Third Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>But he, who after the example of the Baptist, with constancy had
+conceived in a perfect heart that the zeal of righteousness should
+be purified, studied also to imitate him in the garb of penitence.
+For casting off the fine linen which hitherto he had been
+accustomed to use, whilst the soft delicacies of kings pleased him,
+he was clothed on his naked body with a most rough hair shirt. He
+added, moreover, hair drawers, that he might the more effectually
+mortify the flesh, and make the spirit live. But these, as also the
+other exercises of his spiritual life, very few indeed being aware
+of it, he removed from the eyes and knowledge of men by superadding
+other garments, because he sought glory not from man, but from God.
+Even then the man of virtue entering upon the justifications of
+God, began to be more complete in abstinence, more frequent in
+watching, longer in prayer, more anxious in preaching. The pastoral
+office intrusted to him by God, he executed with so great
+diligence, as to suffer the rights neither of the clergy nor of the
+Church to be in any degree curtailed.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>There seems here also to be another commencement, for the next
+lesson is called the First.</p>
+<p><i>Lesson First.</i></p>
+<p>So large a grace of compunction was he wont to possess, between
+the secrets of prayer or the solemnities of masses, that with eyes
+trained to weeping he would be wholly dissolved in tears; and in
+the office <span class="pagenum"><a name="page218" id=
+"page218"></a>{218}</span> of the altar his appearance was as
+though he was witnessing the Lord's passion in the flesh. Knowing
+also that mercy softens justice, and that pity hath the promise of
+the life that now is, and of that which is to come, therefore
+towards the poor and the afflicted did he bear the bowels of mercy
+piteously, and was anxious to reach the poor by the blessings of
+his alms.</p>
+<p><i>Lesson Second.</i></p>
+<p>The more humble of those whom a character for religion raised
+high, he made his acquaintance and intimates; and that he might
+learn from them to hunger and thirst after righteousness, he
+enjoyed more frequently their secret conversation. Towards such
+servants and soldiers of Christ this merciful man preferred to be
+liberal and abundant in food and raiment, he who determined in
+himself to be moderate and sparing. For what would he deny to
+Christ, who for Christ was about to shed his blood? He who owed his
+coat or cloak to one who asked it, desired to add, moreover, his
+own flesh. For he knew that the man would never freely give his own
+flesh, who showed himself greedy of any temporal thing.</p>
+<p><i>Lesson Third.</i></p>
+<p>Hitherto the merciful Lord, who maketh poor and enricheth,
+bringeth low and lifteth up, wished to load his servant with
+riches, and exalt him with honours; and afterwards he was pleased
+to try him with adversity. By trying whether he loved Him, He
+proved it the more certainly; but He supplied grace more
+abundantly. For with the temptation He made a way to escape, that
+he might be able to bear it. Therefore, the envious enemy,
+considering that the new prelate <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page219" id="page219"></a>{219}</span> and the new man was
+flourishing with so manifold a grace of virtues, devised to send a
+burning blight of temptation, which might suffocate the germ of his
+merits already put forth. Nor was there any delay. He who severs a
+man from his God, and one friend from his neighbour, sowed
+irreconcileable quarrels between the king and the archbishop.</p>
+<p>Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.</p>
+<p><i>In Lauds.</i></p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>A grain falls and gives birth to an abundance of corn.</p>
+<p>The alabaster-box is broken, and the odour of the</p>
+<p class="i2">ointment is powerful.</p>
+<p>The whole world vies in love to the martyr,</p>
+<p>Whose wonderful signs strike all with astonishment.</p>
+<p>The water for Thomas five times changing colour,</p>
+<p>Once was turned into milk, four times into blood.</p>
+<p>At the shrine<a id="footnotetag81" name=
+"footnotetag81"></a><a href="#footnote81"><sup>81</sup></a> of
+Thomas four times the light</p>
+<p class="i2">came down,</p>
+<p>And to the glory of the saint kindled the wax-tapers.</p>
+<p>DO THOU BY THE BLOOD OF THOMAS, WHICH HE<a id="footnotetag82"
+name="footnotetag82"></a><a href=
+"#footnote82"><sup>82</sup></a></p>
+<p>SHED FOR THEE;</p>
+<p>MAKE US, O CHRIST, ASCEND,</p>
+<p>Whither Thomas has ascended.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Extend<a id="footnotetag83" name="footnotetag83"></a><a href=
+"#footnote83"><sup>83</sup></a> succour to us, O Thomas,</p>
+<p>Guide those who stand,</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page220" id=
+"page220"></a>{220}</span>
+<p>Raise up those who fall,</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Correct our morals, actions, and life;</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>And guide us into the way of peace.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote81" name=
+"footnote81"></a><b>Footnote 81:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag81">(return)</a>
+<p>Ad Thom&aelig; memoriam.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote82" name=
+"footnote82"></a><b>Footnote 82:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag82">(return)</a>
+<p>Tu per Thom&aelig; sanguinem quem pro te impendit, Fac nos,
+Christe, scandere, quo Thomas ascendit.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote83" name=
+"footnote83"></a><b>Footnote 83:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag83">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Opem nobis, O Thoma, porrige,</p>
+<p>Rege stantes, jacentes erige,</p>
+<p>Mores, actus, et vitam corrige,</p>
+<p>Et in pacis nos viam dirige.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Final Anthem.</i></p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Hail, O Thomas, the Rod of Justice;<a id="footnotetag84" name=
+"footnotetag84"></a><a href="#footnote84"><sup>84</sup></a></p>
+<p>The Brightness of the World;</p>
+<p>The Strength of the Church;</p>
+<p>The Love of the People;</p>
+<p>The Delight of the Clergy.</p>
+<p>Hail, glorious Guardian of the Flock;</p>
+<p>Save those who rejoice in thy glory.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote84" name=
+"footnote84"></a><b>Footnote 84:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag84">(return)</a>
+<p>Salve, Thomas, Virga Justiti&aelig;, Mundi Jubar, Robur
+Ecclesi&aelig;, Plebis Amor, Cleri Delicia. Salve Gregis Tutor
+egregie, Salva tu&aelig; gaudentes glori&aelig;.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The end of the service of Thomas of Canterbury.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Now for a few moments only let us meditate on this service. I
+have already referred to the lamentable practice of substituting
+biographical legends for the word of God. And what is the tendency
+of this service? What impression was it likely to make, and to
+leave on minds of ordinary powers and instruction? Must it not, of
+necessity, tend to withdraw them from contemplating Christ, and to
+fix their thoughts on the powers, the glory, the exaltation, the
+merits of a fellow-sinner? It will be said, that they will look
+beyond the martyr, and trace the blessings, here enumerated, to
+Christ, as their primary cause, and will think of the merits of
+Thomas as efficacious only through the merits of their Saviour;
+that in their invocation of Thomas they will implore him only to
+pray for them. But can this be so? Does not the ascription of
+miracles to him <span class="pagenum"><a name="page221" id=
+"page221"></a>{221}</span> and to his power; does not the very form
+of enumerating those miracles tend much to exalt the servant to an
+equality with the Master?</p>
+<p>Whilst Thomas by being thus, in words at least, presented to the
+people as working those miracles by his own power, (for there is
+throughout a lamentable absence of immediate ascription of glory to
+God,) is raised to an equality with Christ our Lord; many passages
+in this service have the tendency also of withdrawing the minds of
+the worshippers from an implicit and exclusive dependence on the
+merits of Christ alone, and of tempting them to admit the merits of
+Thomas to share at least with Christ in the work of grace and
+salvation. Let us place some texts of Scripture and some passages
+of this service side by side.</p>
+<p>[Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the
+other.]</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p><i>Scripture.</i></p>
+<p>But after that the kindness and love of God towards man
+appeared, not by works of righteousness which we have done, but
+according to his mercy he saved us.&mdash;Titus iii. 4, 5.</p>
+<p>He who spared not his own Son, but gave him up for us all, how
+shall he not with him also freely give us all things?&mdash;Rom.
+viii. 32.</p>
+<p>The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin.&mdash;1
+John i. 7.</p>
+<p>One Mediator.&mdash;1 Tim. ii. 5.</p>
+<p>Who also maketh intercession for us.&mdash;Rom. viii. 34.</p>
+<p>He ever liveth to make intercession for them.&mdash;Heb. vii.
+25.</p>
+<p><i>Service of Thomas Becket.</i></p>
+<p>O Christ Jesus, by the wounds of Thomas loosen the sins which
+bind us.</p>
+<p>O blessed Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS, forgive us our debts,
+raise us from the threefold death, and restore what has been lost
+with thy accustomed pity.</p>
+<p>Do thou, O Christ, by the blood of Thomas, which he shed for
+thee, make us ascend whither Thomas has ascended.</p>
+<p>Holy Thomas, pray for us.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And if this service thus seems to mingle the merits of Christ,
+the merits of his blood and of his death, with <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page222" id="page222"></a>{222}</span> the
+merits of a mortal man, the immediate address to that mortal as the
+giver of good things temporal and spiritual, very awfully
+trespasses on that high, exclusive, and incommunicable prerogative
+of the one Lord God Omnipotent, which his Spirit hath proclaimed
+solemnly and repeatedly, and which he has fenced around against all
+invasion with so many warnings and denunciations.</p>
+<table summary="Becket">
+<tr>
+<td><i>Scripture.</i></td>
+<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td><i>Service of Becket</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1. O thou that hearest prayer, unto thee shall all flesh
+come.&mdash; Ps. lxv. [vulg. lxiv.] 2.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>1. For they sake, O Thomas, let the right hand of God embrace
+us.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>By prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your
+requests be made known unto God.&mdash;Phil. iv. 6.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>2. Lord, be thou my helper.&mdash;Ps. xxx. [xxix.] 10.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>2. Send help to us, O Thomas;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>3. Thou shalt guide me by thy counsel.&mdash;Ps. lxxiii.
+[lxxii.] 24.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>3. Guide thou those who stand;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>He, The Holy Spirit, shall guide you into all truth.&mdash;John
+xvi. 13.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>4. The Lord upholdeth all that fall, and raiseth up all those
+that be bowed down.&mdash;Psalm cxlv. [cxliv.] 14.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>4. Raise up those who fall;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>5. Create in me a clean heart, O God.&mdash;Ps. li. [l.]
+10.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>5. Correct our morals, actions and life;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>6. The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord. Though he
+fall, he shall not be utterly cast down, for the Lord upholdeth
+him.&mdash;Ps. xxxvii. [xxxvi.] 23.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>6. And guide us into the way of peace.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>The day-spring from on high hath visited us, to guide our feet
+into the way of peace.&mdash;Luke i. 78, 79.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>And then again, in celebrating the praises of a mortal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page223" id=
+"page223"></a>{223}</span> man, recourse is had to language which
+can fitly be used only in our hymns and praises to the supreme Lord
+of our destinies, the eternal Creator, Redeemer, and Comforter, the
+only wise God our Saviour.</p>
+<table summary="Comparison">
+<tr>
+<td><i>Address to Thomas.</i></td>
+<td></td>
+<td><i>Language of Scripture.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1. Hail, Thomas, Rod of Justice!</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>1. There shall come a rod out of the stem of Jesse. Ye denied
+the Holy One, and the Just&mdash;Isaiah xi. 1. Acts iii. 14.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>2. The brightness of the world.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>2. The brightness of his glory. I am the light of the
+world&mdash;Heb. i. 3. John viii. 12.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>3. The strength of the Church.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>3. I can do all things through Christ, that strengthened me.
+Christ loved the Church, and gave himself for it.&mdash;Phil. iv.
+13. Eph. v. 25.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>4. The love of the people: the delight of the Clergy.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>4. Grace be with all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ in
+sincerity. Delight thyself in the Lord.&mdash;Eph. vi. 24. Ps.
+xxxvii. 4.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>5. Hail, glorious Guardian of the Flock. Save those who rejoice
+in thy glory.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>5. Our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep. Give ear,
+O Shepherd of Israel; come and save us. He that glorieth, let him
+glory in the Lord.&mdash;Heb. xiii. 20. Psalm lxxx. [lxxix.] 1. 1
+Cor. i. 31.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>Can that worship become the disciples of the Gospel and the
+Cross, which addresses such prayers and such praises to the spirit
+of a mortal man? Every prayer, and every form of praise here used
+in honour of Thomas Becket, it would well become Christians to
+offer to the Giver of all good, trusting solely and exclusively to
+the mediation of Christ Jesus our Lord for acceptance; and
+pleading-only the merits of his most precious blood. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page224" id="page224"></a>{224}</span> And yet I
+am bound to confess, that in principle, in spirit, and in fact, I
+can find no substantial difference between this service of Thomas
+of Canterbury, and the service which all in communion with the
+Church of Rome are under an obligation to use even at the present
+hour.</p>
+<p>This point remains next for our inquiry, and we will draw from
+the well-head. I would, however, first suggest the application of a
+general test for ascertaining the real <i>bona-fide</i> nature of
+these prayers and praises. The test I would apply is, to try with
+the change only of the name, substituting the holiest name ever
+named in heaven or in earth for the name of Thomas of
+Canterbury&mdash;whether these prayers and praises should not be
+offered to the Supreme Being alone through the atoning merits of
+his Blessed Son; whether they are not exclusively appropriate to
+HIM.</p>
+<p>To (Thomas/God Almighty) all things bow and are obedient.</p>
+<p>Plagues, diseases, death, and devils, Fire, air, land, and sea.
+(Thomas/The Almighty) fills the world with glory.</p>
+<p>The world offers obeisance to (Thomas/Almighty God).</p>
+<p>(The Martyr Thomas/Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ) began to
+shine forth with miracles [John ii. 11]; restoring sight to the
+blind [Luke vii. 21]; walking to the lame; hearing to the deaf;
+speech to the dumb; cleansing to the lepers [Matt. xi. 5]; making
+the paralytic sound [Matt. iv. 24]; healing the dropsy [Luke xiv.
+4]; and all kinds of incurable diseases [Luke iv. 40]; restoring
+the dead to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page225" id=
+"page225"></a>{225}</span> life [Luke viii. 43. 55]; in a wonderful
+manner commanding the devils [Matt. viii. 16], and all the elements
+[Luke viii. 25]. He put forth his hand to unwonted and unheard-of
+signs of his own power [Mark ii. 12. John ix. 30].</p>
+<p>Do thou, O Lord, by the blood of (Thomas/Christ) cause us to
+ascend whither (Thomas/Christ) has ascended. (O Thomas/O God), send
+help to us. Guide those who stand; raise up those who fall; correct
+our morals, actions, and life; and guide us into the way of
+peace.</p>
+<p>Hail, (Thomas!/Jesus!) Rod of Justice, the Brightness of the
+world, the Strength of the Church, the Love of the people, the
+Delight of the Clergy. Hail, Glorious Guardian of the flock! Save
+Thou those who delight in Thy glory.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>We shall apply this same test to many of the collects and
+prayers used, and of necessity to be used, because they are
+authorized and appointed, even at the present day, in the
+ministrations of the Church of Rome. The impiety in many of those
+instances is not couched in such startling language; but it is not
+the less real. God forbid that we should charge our
+fellow-creatures with idolatry, who declare that they offer divine
+worship to the Supreme Being only; or that we should pronounce any
+professed Christian to have cast off his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page226" id="page226"></a>{226}</span>
+dependence on the merits of Christ alone, who assures us that he
+looks for mercy only through those merits. But I know and feel,
+that according to the standard of Christian truth, and of the pure
+worship of Almighty God, which the Scriptures and primitive
+antiquity compel me to adopt, I should stain my own soul with the
+guilt of idolatry, and with the sin of relying on other merits than
+Christ's, were I myself to offer those prayers.</p>
+<p>That this service excited much disgust among the early
+reformers, we learn from various writers<a id="footnotetag85" name=
+"footnotetag85"></a><a href="#footnote85"><sup>85</sup></a>. On the
+merits of the struggle between Becket and his king; on the question
+of Becket's moral and religious worth, (a question long and often
+discussed among the exercises of the masters of Paris in the full
+assembly of the Sorbonne<a id="footnotetag86" name=
+"footnotetag86"></a><a href="#footnote86"><sup>86</sup></a>,) or on
+the motives which influenced Henry the Eighth, I intend not to say
+one word: those points belong not to our present inquiry. It may
+not, however, be thought irrelevant here to quote a passage
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page227" id=
+"page227"></a>{227}</span> from the ordinance of this latter
+monarch for erasing Becket's service out of the books, and his name
+from the calendar of the saints.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote85" name=
+"footnote85"></a><b>Footnote 85:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag85">(return)</a>
+<p>See Mornay "De la Messe," Saumur, 1604. p. 826. Becon, in his
+"New Year's Gift," London, 1564, p. 183, thus speaks: "What saint
+at any time thought himself so pure, immaculate, and without all
+spot of sin, that he durst presume to die for us, and to avouch his
+death to be an oblation and sacrifice for our lives to God the
+Father, except peradventure we will admit for good payment these
+and such like blasphemies, which were wont full solemnly to be sung
+in the temples unto the great ignominy of the glorious name of God,
+and the dishonour of Christ's most precious blood." Then quoting
+the lines from the service of Thomas Becket, on which we have above
+commented, he adds, "I will let pass many more which are easy to be
+searched and found out." Becon preached and wrote in the reign of
+Henry VIII. and was then persecuted for his religion, as he was
+afterwards in the reign of Mary.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote86" name=
+"footnote86"></a><b>Footnote 86:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag86">(return)</a>
+<p>We are told that forty-eight years after his death, the masters
+of Paris disputed whether Thomas was a condemned sinner, or
+admitted into heaven.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In Henry the Eighth's proclamation, dated Westminster, 16th
+November, in the thirtieth year of his reign, printed by Bertholet,
+is the following very curious passage:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>"ITEM, for as moche as it appereth now clerely, that Thomas
+Becket, sometyme Archbyshop of Canterburie, stubburnly to withstand
+the holsome lawes establyshed agaynste the enormities of the
+clergie, by the kynges highness mooste noble progenitour, kynge
+HENRY the Seconde, for the common welthe, reste, and tranquillitie
+of this realme, of his frowarde mynde fledde the realme into
+Fraunce, and to the bishop of Rome, mayntenour of those enormities,
+to procure the abrogation of the sayd lawes, whereby arose moch
+trouble in this said realme, and that his dethe, which they
+untruely called martyrdome, happened upon a reskewe by him made,
+and that, as it is written, he gave opprobrious wordes to the
+gentyllmen, whiche than counsayled hym to leave his stubbernesse,
+and to avoyde the commocion of the people, rysen up for that
+rescue. And he not only callyd the one of them bawde, but also toke
+Tracy by the bosome, and violently shoke and plucked hym in suche
+maner, that he had almoste overthrowen hym to the pavement of the
+Churche; so that upon this fray one of their company, perceivynge
+the same, strake hym, and so in the thronge Becket was slayne. And
+further that his canonization was made onely by the bysshop of
+Rome, bycause he had ben a champion of maynteyne his usurped
+auctoritie, and a bearer of the iniquitie of the clergie, for these
+and for other great and urgent causes, longe to recyte, the Kynge's
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page228" id=
+"page228"></a>{228}</span> Maiestie, by the advyse of his
+counsayle, hath thought expedient to declare to his lovynge
+subjectes, that notwithstandynge the sayde canonization, there
+appereth nothynge in his lyfe and exteriour conversation, wherby he
+shuld be callyd a sainct, but rather estemed to have ben a rebell
+and traytour to his prynce. Therefore his Grace strayghtly chargeth
+and commandeth that from henseforth the sayde Thomas Becket shall
+not be estemed, named, reputed, nor called a sayncte, but bysshop
+Becket; and that his ymages and pictures, through the hole realme,
+shall be putte downe, and avoyded out of all churches, chapelles,
+and other places; and that from henseforthe, the dayes used to be
+festivall in his name shall not be observed, nor the service,
+office, antiphoners, colletes, and prayers, in his name redde, but
+rased and put out of all the bokes<a id="footnotetag87" name=
+"footnotetag87"></a><a href="#footnote87"><sup>87</sup></a>."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote87" name=
+"footnote87"></a><b>Footnote 87:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag87">(return)</a>
+<p>In the Roman Breviary, adapted to England, several biographical
+lessons are appointed for the Anniversary of "St. Thomas, bishop
+and martyr," interspersed with canticles. In one of these we read,
+"This is truly a martyr, who, for the name of Christ, shed blood;
+who feared not the threats of judges, nor sought the glory of
+earthly dignity. But he reached the heavenly
+kingdom."&mdash;Norwich, 1830. Hiem. p. 251.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id=
+"page229"></a>{229}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap2-2" id="chap2-2">CHAPTER II.</a></h3>
+<h4>COUNCIL OF TRENT.</h4>
+<p>In the process of ascertaining the real state of doctrine and
+practice in the worship of the Church of Rome at the present day,
+we must first gain as clear and accurate a knowledge of the decree
+of the Council of Trent, as its words will enable us to form. Into
+the character of that Council, and of those who constituted it, our
+present investigation does not lead us to inquire. It is now, I
+believe, generally understood, that its decrees are binding on all
+who profess allegiance to the Sovereign Roman Pontiff; and that the
+man would be considered to have renounced the Roman Catholic
+Communion, who should professedly withhold his assent from the
+doctrines there promulgated as vital, or against the oppugners of
+which the Council itself pronounced an anathema.</p>
+<p>Ecclesiastical writers<a id="footnotetag88" name=
+"footnotetag88"></a><a href="#footnote88"><sup>88</sup></a> assure
+us, that the wording of the decrees of that Council was in many
+cases on purpose framed ambiguously and vaguely. The latitude,
+however, of the expressions employed, does not in itself
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page230" id=
+"page230"></a>{230}</span> of necessity imply any of those sinister
+and unworthy motives to which it has been usual with many writers
+to attribute it. In charity, and without any improbable assumption,
+it may be referred to an honest and laudable desire of making the
+terms of communion as wide as might be, with a view of
+comprehending within what was regarded the pale of the Catholic
+Church, the greatest number of those who professed and called
+themselves Christians. Be this as it may, the vagueness and
+uncertainty of the terms employed, compel us in many instances to
+have recourse to the actual practice of the Church of Rome, as the
+best interpreter of doubtful expressions in the articles of that
+Council. The decree which bears on the subject of this volume is
+drawn up in the following words:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote88" name=
+"footnote88"></a><b>Footnote 88:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag88">(return)</a>
+<p>See Mosheim, xvi. Cent. c. i. vol. iv. p. 196. London, 1811.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote>
+<p>"SESSION XXV.<a id="footnotetag89" name=
+"footnotetag89"></a><a href="#footnote89"><sup>89</sup></a></p>
+<p>"On the invocation, veneration, and reliques of saints, and of
+sacred images.</p>
+<p>"The Holy Council commands all bishops and others bearing the
+office and care of instruction, that according to the usage of the
+Catholic and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive times of
+the Christian religion, and the consent of holy fathers, and
+decrees of sacred councils, they in the first place should instruct
+the faithful concerning the intercession and invocation of saints,
+the honour of reliques, and the lawful use of images, teaching
+them, that the SAINTS REIGNING TOGETHER WITH CHRIST, offer their
+own <span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id=
+"page231"></a>{231}</span> prayers for men to God: that it is good
+and profitable SUPPLIANTLY TO INVOKE THEM: and to fly to their
+PRAYERS, HELP, and ASSISTANCE, for obtaining benefits from God, by
+his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer and
+Saviour. But that those who deny that the saints, enjoying
+everlasting happiness in heaven, are to be invoked; or who assert
+either that they do not pray for us; or that the invocation of them
+to pray for us even as individuals is idolatry, or is repugnant to
+the word of God, and is opposed to the honour of the one Mediator
+of God and man, Jesus Christ; or that it is folly, by voice or
+mentally, to supplicate those who reign in heaven, hold impious
+sentiments.</p>
+<p>"That the bodies also of the holy martyrs and others living with
+Christ, which were living members of Christ, and a temple of the
+Holy Ghost to be raised by Him to eternal life, and to be
+glorified, are to be worshipped by the faithful; by means of which
+many benefits are conferred on men by God; so that those who affirm
+that worship and honour are not due to the reliques of the saints,
+or that they and other sacred monuments are unprofitably honoured
+by the faithful; and that the shrines of the saints are frequented
+in vain for the purpose of obtaining their succour, are altogether
+to be condemned, as the Church has long ago condemned them, and now
+also condemns them."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote89" name=
+"footnote89"></a><b>Footnote 89:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag89">(return)</a>
+<p>The Latin, which will be found in the Appendix, is a transcript
+from a printed copy of the Acts of the Council of Trent, preserved
+in the British Museum, to which are annexed the autograph
+signatures of the secretaries (notarii), and their seals.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>An examination of this decree, in comparison with the form and
+language of other decrees of the same Council, forces the remark
+upon us, That the Council does not assert that the practice of
+invoking saints has any foundation in Holy Scripture. The absence
+of all such declaration is the more striking and important, because
+in the very decree immediately preceding this, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page232" id="page232"></a>{232}</span> which
+establishes Purgatory as a doctrine of the Church of Rome, the
+Council declares that doctrine to be drawn from the Holy
+Scriptures. In the present instance the Council proceeds no further
+than to charge with impiety those who maintain the invocation of
+saints to be contrary to the word of God. Many a doctrine or
+practice, not found in Scripture, may nevertheless be not contrary
+to the word of God; but here the Council abstains from affirming
+any thing whatever as to the scriptural origin of the doctrine and
+practice which it authoritatively enforces. In this respect the
+framers of the decree acted with far more caution and wisdom than
+they had shown in wording the decree on Purgatory; and with far
+more caution and wisdom too than they exercised in this decree,
+when they affirmed that the doctrine of the invocation of saints
+was to be taught the people according to the usage of the Catholic
+and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive times of the
+Christian religion, and the consent of the holy fathers. I have
+good hope that these pages have already proved beyond gainsaying,
+that the invocation of saints is a manifest departure from the
+usage of the Primitive Church, and contrary to the testimony of
+"the holy fathers." However, the fact of the Council not having
+professed to trace the doctrine, or its promulgation, to any
+authority of Holy Scripture, is of very serious import, and
+deserves to be well weighed in all its bearings.</p>
+<p>With regard to the condemnatory clauses of this decree, I would
+for myself observe, that I should never have engaged in preparing
+this volume, had I not believed, "that it was neither good nor
+profitable to invoke the saints, or to fly to their prayers, their
+assistance, and succour." I am bound, with this decree <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>{233}</span> before
+me, to pronounce, that it is a vain thing to offer supplications,
+either by the voice or in the mind, to the saints, even if they be
+reigning in heaven; and that it is also in vain for Christians to
+frequent the shrines of the saints for the purpose of obtaining
+their succour.</p>
+<p>I am, moreover, under a deep conviction, that the invocation of
+them is both at variance with the word of God, and contrary to the
+honour of the one Mediator between God and man, Jesus Christ.</p>
+<p>On this last point, indeed, I am aware of an anxious desire
+prevailing on the part of many Roman Catholics, to establish a
+distinction between a mediation of Redemption, and a mediation of
+Intercession: and thus by limiting the mediation of the saints and
+angels to intercession, and reserving the mediation of redemption
+to Christ only, to avoid the setting up of another to share the
+office of Mediator with Him, who is so solemnly declared in
+Scripture to be the one Mediator between God and man. But this
+distinction has no foundation in the revealed will of God; on the
+contrary, it is directly at variance with the words and with the
+spirit of many portions of the sacred volume. There we find the two
+offices of redemption and mediation joined together in Christ. "If
+any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
+Righteous, and He is the propitiation for our sins." [1 John ii. 1,
+2. Heb. ix. 12. vii. 25.] In the Epistle to the Hebrews, the same
+Saviour who is declared "by his own blood to have obtained eternal
+redemption," is announced also as the Mediator of Intercession.
+"Wherefore he is able to save them to the uttermost who come unto
+God through him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for
+them." The <span class="pagenum"><a name="page234" id=
+"page234"></a>{234}</span> redemption wrought by Christ, and the
+intercession still made in our behalf by Christ, are both equally
+declared to us by the most sure warrant of Holy Scripture; of any
+other intercession by saints in glory, by angels, or Virgin, to be
+sought by our suppliant invocations to them, the covenant of God
+speaks not.</p>
+<p>It may be observed, that the enactment of this decree by the
+Council of Trent, has been chiefly lamented by some persons on the
+ground of its presenting the most formidable barrier against any
+reconciliation between the Church of Rome, and those who hold the
+unlawfulness of the invocation of saints. Indeed persons of
+erudition, judgment, piety, and charity, in communion with Rome,
+have not been wanting to express openly their regret, that decrees
+so positive, peremptory, and exclusive, should have been adopted.
+They would have been better satisfied with the terms of communion
+in the Church to which they still adhered, had individuals been
+left to their own responsibility on questions of disputable origin
+and doubtful antiquity, involving rather the subtilty of
+metaphysical disquisitions, than agreeable to the simplicity of
+Gospel truth, and essential Christian doctrine. On this point I
+would content myself with quoting the sentiments of a Roman
+Catholic author. Many of the facts alleged in his interesting
+comments deserve the patient consideration of every Christian. Here
+(observes the commentator on Paoli Sarpi's History of the Council
+of Trent<a id="footnotetag90" name="footnotetag90"></a><a href=
+"#footnote90"><sup>90</sup></a>) the Council makes it a duty to
+pray to saints, though the ancient Church never regarded it as
+necessary. The practice cannot be proved to be introduced into
+public worship <span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id=
+"page235"></a>{235}</span> before the sixth century; and it is
+certain, that in the ancient liturgies and sacramentaries no direct
+invocation is found. Even in our modern missals, being those of our
+ecclesiastical books in which the ancient form has been longest
+retained, scarcely is there a collect [those he means in which
+mention is made of the saints] where the address is not offered
+directly to God, imploring Him to hear the prayers of the saints
+for us; and this is the ancient form of invocation. It is true,
+that in the Breviaries and other ecclesiastical books, direct
+prayers to the saints have been subsequently introduced, as in
+litanies, hymns, and even some collects. But the usage is more
+modern, and cannot be evidence for ancient tradition. For this
+[ancient tradition] only some invocations addressed to saints in
+public harangues are alleged, but which ought to be regarded as
+figures of rhetoric, <i>apostrophes</i>, rather than real
+invocations; though at the same time some fathers laid the
+foundation for such a practice by asserting that one could address
+himself to the saints, and hope for succour from them.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote90" name=
+"footnote90"></a><b>Footnote 90:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag90">(return)</a>
+<p>Histoire du Conc. de Trent, par Fra. Paoli Sarpi, traduit par
+Pierre Fran&ccedil;ois de Courayer. Amsterdam, note 31. 1751. vol.
+iii. p. 182.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We have already alluded to the very great latitude of
+interpretation which the words of this Council admit. The
+expressions indeed are most remarkably elastic; capable of being
+expanded widely enough to justify those of the Church of Rome who
+allow themselves in the practice of asking for aid and assistance,
+temporal and spiritual, to be expected from the saints themselves;
+and at the same time, the words of the decree admit of being so far
+contracted as not in appearance palpably to contradict those who
+allege, that the Church of Rome never addresses a saint with any
+other petition, than purely and simply that the saint would by
+prayer intercede for the worshippers. The words "suppliantly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page236" id=
+"page236"></a>{236}</span> to invoke them," and "to fly to their
+prayers, HELP, and SUCCOUR," are sufficiently comprehensive to
+cover all kinds of prayer for all kinds of benefits, whilst "the
+invocation of them to pray for us even individually," will
+countenance those who would restrict the faithful to an entreaty
+for their prayers only.</p>
+<p>Whatever may be the advantage of this latitude of
+interpretation, in one point of view it must be a subject of
+regret. Complaints had long been made in Christendom, that other
+prayers were offered to the saints, besides those which petitioned
+only for their intercession; and if the Council of Trent had
+intended it to be a rule of universal application, that in whatever
+words the invocations of the saints might be couched, they should
+be taken to mean only requests for their prayers, it may be
+lamented, that no declaration to that effect was given.</p>
+<p>The manner in which writers of the Church of Rome have attempted
+to reconcile the prayers actually offered in her ritual, with the
+principle of invoking the saints only for their prayers, is indeed
+most unsatisfactory. Whilst to some minds the expedient to which
+those writers have had recourse carries with it the stamp of mental
+reservation, and spiritual subterfuge, and moral obliquity; others
+under the influence of the purest charity will regret in it the
+absence of that simplicity, and direct openness in word and deed,
+which we regard as characteristic of the religion of the Gospel;
+and will deprecate its adoption as tending, in many cases
+inevitably, to become a most dangerous snare to the conscience. I
+will here refer only to the profession of that principle as made by
+Bellarmin. Subsequent writers seem to have adopted his sentiments,
+and to have expressed themselves very much in his words.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id=
+"page237"></a>{237}</span>
+<p>Bellarmin unreservedly asserts that Christians are to invoke the
+saints solely and exclusively for their prayers, and not for any
+benefits as from the saints themselves. But then he seems to
+paralyse that declaration by this refinement: "It must nevertheless
+be observed that we have not to do with words, but with the meaning
+of words; for as far as concerns the words, it is lawful to say,
+'Saint Peter, have mercy on me! Save me! Open to me the entrance of
+heaven!' So also, 'Give to me health of body, Give me patience,
+Give me fortitude!' Whilst only we understand 'Save me, and have
+mercy upon me BY PRAYING for me: Give me this and that, BY THY
+PRAYERS AND MERITS.' For thus Gregory of Nazianzen, in his Oratio
+in Cyprianum; and the Universal Church, when in the hymn to the
+Virgin she says,</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Mary, Mother of Grace,</p>
+<p>Mother of Mercy,</p>
+<p>Do thou protect us from the enemy,</p>
+<p>And take us in the hour of death.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>"And in that of the Apostles,</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>'To whose command is subject'</p>
+<p>The health and weakness of all:</p>
+<p>Heal us who are morally diseased;</p>
+<p>Restore us to virtue.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>"And as the Apostle says of himself 'that I might save some,'
+[Rom. xi.] and 'that he might save all,' [I Cor. ix.] not as God,
+but Thy prayer and counsel."</p>
+<p>I wish not to enter upon the question how far this distinction
+is consistent with that openness and straightforward undisguised
+dealing which is alone allowable when we are contending for the
+truth; nor how far the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id=
+"page238"></a>{238}</span> charge of moral obliquity and double
+dealing, often brought against it, can be satisfactorily met. But
+suppose for a moment that we grant (what is not the case) that in
+the metaphysical disquisitions of the experienced casuist such a
+distinction might be maintained, how can we expect it to be
+recognized, and felt, and acted upon by the large body of
+Christians? Abstractedly considered, such an interpretation in a
+religious act of daily recurrence by the mass of unlearned
+believers would, I conceive, appear to reflecting minds most
+improbable, if not utterly impossible. And as to its actual
+<i>bona-fide</i> result in practice, a very brief sojourn in
+countries where the religion of Rome is dominant, will suffice to
+convince us, that such subtilties of the casuist are neither
+received nor understood by the great body of worshippers; and that
+the large majority of them, when they pray to an individual saint
+to deliver them from any evil, or to put them in possession of some
+good, do in very deed look to the saint himself for the fulfilment
+of their wishes. It is a snare to the conscience only too evidently
+successful.</p>
+<p>And I regret to add, that in the errors into which such language
+of their prayers may unhappily betray them, they cannot be
+otherwise than confirmed as well by the recorded sentiments of men
+in past years, whom they have been taught to reverence, as by the
+sentiments which are circulated through the world now, even by what
+they are accustomed to regard as the highest authority on
+earth<a id="footnotetag91" name="footnotetag91"></a><a href=
+"#footnote91"><sup>91</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote91" name=
+"footnote91"></a><b>Footnote 91:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag91">(return)</a>
+<p>See in subsequent parts of this work the references to
+Bonaventura, Bernardin Sen., Bernardin de Bust., &amp;c.; and also
+the encyclical letter of the present (A.D. 1840) reigning
+pontiff.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To this point, however, we must repeatedly revert <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page239" id="page239"></a>{239}</span>
+hereafter; at present, I will only add one further consideration.
+If, as we are now repeatedly told, the utmost sought by the
+invocation of saints is that they would intercede for the
+supplicants; that no more is meant than we of the Anglican Church
+mean when we earnestly entreat our fellow-Christians on earth to
+pray for us,&mdash;why should not the prayers to the saints be
+confined exclusively to that form of words which would convey the
+meaning intended? why should other forms of supplicating them be
+adopted, whose obvious and direct meaning implies a different
+thing? If we request a Christian friend to pray for us, that we may
+be strengthened and supported under a trial and struggle in our
+spiritual warfare, we do not say, "Friend, strengthen me; Friend,
+support me." That entreaty would imply our desire to be, that he
+would visit us himself, and comfort and strengthen us by his own
+kind words and cheering offices of consolation and encouragement.
+To convey our meaning, our words would be, "Pray for me; remember
+me in your supplications to the throne of grace. Implore God, of
+his mercy, to give me the strength and comfort of his Holy Spirit."
+If nothing more is ever intended to be conveyed, than a similar
+request for their prayers, when the saints are "suppliantly
+invoked," in a case of such delicacy, and where there is so much
+danger of words misleading, why have other expressions of every
+variety been employed in the Roman Liturgies, as well as in the
+devotions of individuals, which in words appeal to the saints, not
+for their prayers, but for their own immediate exertion in our
+behalf, their assistance, succour, defence, and
+comfort,&mdash;"Protect us from our enemies&mdash;Heal the diseases
+of our minds&mdash;Release us from our sin&mdash;Receive us at the
+hour of death?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page240" id=
+"page240"></a>{240}</span>
+<p>In the present work, however, were it not for the example and
+warning set us by this still greater departure from Scripture and
+the primitive Church, we need not have dwelt on this immediate
+point; because we maintain that any invocation of saint or angel,
+even if it were confined to a petitioning for their prayers and
+intercessions, is contrary both to God's word and to the faith and
+practice of the primitive, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. We now
+proceed to the next portion of our proposed inquiry,&mdash;the
+present state of Roman Catholic worship, with respect to the
+invocation of saints and angels.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page241" id=
+"page241"></a>{241}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap2-3" id="chap2-3">CHAPTER III.</a></h3>
+<h4>PRESENT SERVICE IN THE CHURCH OF ROME.</h4>
+<p>In submitting to the reader's consideration the actual state of
+Roman Catholic worship at the present hour, I disclaim all desire
+to fasten upon the Church of Rome any of the follies and
+extravagancies of individual superstition. Probably many English
+Roman Catholics have been themselves shocked and scandalized by the
+scenes which their own eyes have witnessed in various parts of
+continental Europe. It would be no less unfair in us to represent
+the excesses of superstition there forced on our notice as the
+genuine legitimate fruits of the religion of Rome, than it would be
+in Roman Catholics to affiliate on the Catholics of the Anglican
+Church the wild theories and revolting tenets of all who assume the
+name of opponents to Rome. Well indeed does it become us of both
+Churches to watch jealously and adversely as against ourselves the
+errors into which our doctrines, if not preserved and guarded in
+their purity and simplicity, might have a tendency to seduce the
+unwary. And whilst I am fully alive to the necessity of us Anglican
+Catholics prescribing to ourselves a <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page242" id="page242"></a>{242}</span> practical application of
+the same rule in various points of faith and discipline, I would
+with all delicacy and respect invite Roman Catholics to do
+likewise. Especially would I entreat them to reflect with more than
+ordinary scrutiny and solicitude on the vast evils into which the
+practice of praying to saints and angels, and of pleading their
+merits at the throne of grace, has a tendency to betray those who
+are unenlightened and off their guard; and unless my eyes and my
+ears and my powers of discernment have altogether often deceived
+and failed me, I must add, actually betrays thousands. Often when I
+have witnessed abroad multitudes of pilgrims prostrate before an
+image of the Virgin, their arms extended, their eyes fixed on her
+countenance, their words in their native language pouring forth her
+praises and imploring her aid, I have asked myself, If this be not
+religious worship, what is? If I could transport myself into the
+midst of pagans in some distant part of the world at the present
+day; or could I have mingled with the crowd of worshippers
+surrounding the image of Minerva in Athens, or of Diana in Ephesus,
+when the servants of the only God called their fellow-creatures
+from such vanities, should I have seen or heard more unequivocal
+proofs that the worshippers were addressing their prayers to the
+idols as representations of their deities? Would any difference
+have appeared in their external worship? When the Ephesians
+worshipped their "great goddess Diana and the image which fell down
+from Jupiter," could their attitude, their eyes, or their words
+more clearly have indicated an assurance in the worshipper, that
+the Spirit of the Deity was especially present in that image, than
+the attitude, the eyes, the words of the pilgrims at Einsiedlin for
+example, are indications of the same <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page243" id="page243"></a>{243}</span> belief and assurance with
+regard to the statue of the Virgin Mary? These thoughts would force
+themselves again and again on my mind; and though since I first
+witnessed such things many years have intervened, chequered with
+various events of life, yet whilst I am writing, the scenes are
+brought again fresh to my remembrance; the same train of thought is
+awakened; and the lapse of time has not in the least diminished the
+estimate then formed of the danger, the awful peril, to which the
+practice of addressing saints and angels in prayer, even in its
+most modified and mitigated form, exposes those who are in
+communion with Rome. I am unwilling to dwell on this point longer,
+or to paint in deeper or more vivid colours the scenes which I have
+witnessed, than the necessity of the case requires. But it would
+have been the fruit of a morbid delicacy rather than of brotherly
+love, had I disguised, in this part of my address, the full extent
+of the awful dread with which I contemplate any approximation to
+prayers, of whatever kind, uttered by the lips or mentally
+conceived, to any spiritual existence in heaven above, save only to
+the one God exclusively. It is indeed a dread suggested by the
+highest and purest feelings of which I believe my frame of mind to
+be susceptible; it is sanctioned and enforced by my reason; and it
+is confirmed and strengthened more and more by every year's
+additional reflection and experience. Ardently as I long and pray
+for Christian unity, I could not join in communion with a Church,
+one of whose fundamental articles accuses of impiety those who deny
+the lawfulness of the invocations of saints.</p>
+<p>But I return from this digression on the peril of idolatry, to
+which as well the theory as the practice of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page244" id="page244"></a>{244}</span> the Roman
+Catholic Church exposes her members; and willingly repeat my
+disclaimer of any wish or intention whatever to fasten and filiate
+upon the Church of Rome the doctrines or the practice of
+individuals, or even of different sections of her communion. Still,
+in the same manner as I have referred to the extravagancies which
+offend us in many parts of Christendom now, I would recall some of
+the excesses into which renowned and approved authors of her
+communion have been betrayed. I seek not to fix on those members of
+the Roman Church who disclaim any participation in such excesses,
+the folly or guilt of others; but when we find many of the most
+celebrated among her sons tempted into such lamentable departures
+from primitive Christian worship, we are naturally led to ascertain
+whether the doctrine be not itself the genuine cause and source of
+the mischief;&mdash;whether the malady be not the immediate and
+natural effect of the tenet and practice operating generally, and
+not to be referred to the idiosyncrasy of the patient. A voice
+seems to address us from every side, when such excesses are
+witnessed, Firmly resist the beginnings of the evil; oppose its
+very commencement; it is not a question of degree, exclude the
+principle itself from your worship; give utterance to no
+invocation; mentally conceive no prayer to any being, save God
+alone; plead no other merits with Him than the merits of his only
+Son. Then, and then only, are you safe. Then, and then only, is
+your prayer catholic, primitive, apostolic, and scriptural.</p>
+<p>The<a id="footnotetag92" name="footnotetag92"></a><a href=
+"#footnote92"><sup>92</sup></a> most satisfactory method of
+conducting this <span class="pagenum"><a name="page245" id=
+"page245"></a>{245}</span> branch of our inquiry seems to be, that
+we should examine the Roman Ritual with reference to those several
+and progressive stages to which I have before generally referred;
+from the mere rhetorical apostrophe to the direct prayer for
+spiritual blessings petitioned for immediately from the person
+addressed. I am neither anxious to establish the progress
+historically, nor do I wish to tie myself down in all cases to the
+exact order of those successive stages, in my present citation of
+testimonies from the Roman Ritual. My anxiety is to give a fair
+view of what is now the real character of Roman Catholic worship,
+rather than to draw fine distinctions. I shall therefore survey
+within the same field of view the two fatal errors by which, as we
+believe, the worship of the Church of Rome is rendered unfit for
+the family of Christ to acknowledge it generally as their own: I
+mean the adoration of saints, and the pleading of their merits at
+the throne of grace, instead of trusting to the alone exclusive
+merits of the one only Mediator Jesus Christ our Lord, and
+addressing God Almighty alone.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote92" name=
+"footnote92"></a><b>Footnote 92:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag92">(return)</a>
+<p>I believe the method best calculated to supply us with the very
+truth is, as I have before observed, to trace the conduct of
+Christians at the shrines of the martyrs, and follow them in their
+successive departures further and further from primitive purity and
+simplicity, on the anniversaries of those servants of God. What was
+hailed there first in the full warmth of admiration and zeal for
+the honour and glory of a national or favourite martyr, crept
+stealthily, and step by step, into the regular and stated services
+of the Church.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I. In the original form of those prayers in which mention was
+made of the saints departed, Christians addressed the Supreme Being
+alone, either in praise for the mercies shown to the saints
+themselves, and to the Church through their means; or else in
+supplication, that the worshippers might have grace to follow their
+example, and profit by their instruction. Such, for instance, is
+the prayer in the Roman ritual<a id="footnotetag93" name=
+"footnotetag93"></a><a href="#footnote93"><sup>93</sup></a> on St.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page246" id=
+"page246"></a>{246}</span> John's day<a id="footnotetag94" name=
+"footnotetag94"></a><a href="#footnote94"><sup>94</sup></a> which
+is evidently the foundation of the beautiful Collect now used in
+the Anglican Church,&mdash;"Merciful Lord, we beseech thee to cast
+thy bright beams of light upon thy Church, that it being
+enlightened by the doctrine of thy Apostle and Evangelist St. John,
+may so walk in the light of thy truth, that it may at length attain
+to the light of everlasting life, through Jesus our Lord. Amen."
+Such too is the close of the Prayer for the whole state of Christ's
+Church militant here on earth, offered in our Anglican
+service,&mdash;"We bless thy holy name for all thy servants
+departed this life in thy faith and fear, beseeching thee to give
+us grace so to follow their good examples, that with them we may be
+partakers of thy heavenly kingdom. Grant this, O Father, for the
+sake of Jesus Christ our only Mediator and Advocate. Amen."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote93" name=
+"footnote93"></a><b>Footnote 93:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag93">(return)</a>
+<p>The references will generally be given to the Roman Breviary as
+edited by F.C. Husenbeth, Norwich, 1830. That work consists of four
+volumes, corresponding with the four quarters of the ecclesiastical
+year&mdash;Winter, Hiem.; Spring, Vern.; Summer,
+<i>&AElig;stiv</i>.; Autumn, Aut.; and the volumes will be
+designated by the corresponding initials, H. V. &AElig;. A.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote94" name=
+"footnote94"></a><b>Footnote 94:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag94">(return)</a>
+<p>"Ecclesiam, tuam, Domine, benignus illustra, ut beati Johannis
+Apostoli tui et evangelist&aelig; illuminata doctrinis, ad dona
+perveniat sempiterna. Per Dominum."&mdash;Husen. H. p. 243.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>II. The second stage supplies examples of a kind of rhetorical
+apostrophe; the speaker addressing one who was departed as though
+he had ears to hear. Were not this the foundation stone on which
+the rest of the edifice seems to have been built, we might have
+passed it by unnoticed. Of this we have an instance in the address
+to the Shepherds on Christmas-day. "Whom have ye seen, ye
+shepherds? Say ye, tell ye, who hath appeared on the earth? Say ye,
+what saw ye? Announce to us the nativity of Christ<a id=
+"footnotetag95" name="footnotetag95"></a><a href=
+"#footnote95"><sup>95</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote95" name=
+"footnote95"></a><b>Footnote 95:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag95">(return)</a>
+<p>Quem vidistis, Pastores? Dicite, Annunciate nobis. In terris
+quis apparuit? Dicite quidnam vidistis? Et annunciate Christi
+nativitatem.&mdash;H. 219.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page247" id=
+"page247"></a>{247}</span>
+<p>Another instance is seen in that beautiful song ascribed to
+Prudentius and used on the day of Holy Innocents:</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Hail! ye flowers of Martyrs." [Salvete flores martyrum. H.
+249.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>It is of the same character with other songs, said to be from
+the same pen, in which the town of Bethlehem is addressed, and even
+the Cross.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"O Thou of mighty cities." [O sola magnarum urbium. H. 306.]</p>
+<p>"Bend thy boughs, thou lofty tree...." [Flecte ramos arbor alta,
+&amp;c. Aut. 344.]</p>
+<p>"Worthy wast thou alone</p>
+<p>To bear the victim of the world."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Thus, on the feast of the exaltation of the Cross, this anthem
+is sung,&mdash;"O blessed Cross, who wast alone worthy to bear the
+King of the heavens and the Lord." [O crux benedicta, qu&aelig;
+sola fuisti digna portare Regem coelorum et Dominum. Alleluia. A.
+345.] Though unhappily, in an anthem on St. Andrew's day, this
+apostrophe becomes painful and distressing, in which not only is
+the cross thus apostrophised, but it is prayed to, as though it had
+ears to hear, and a mind to understand, and power to
+act,&mdash;"Hail, precious Cross! do thou receive the disciple of
+Him who hung upon thee, my master, Christ." [Salve, crux pretiosa
+suscipe discipulum ejus, qui pependit in te, magister meus
+Christus. A. 547.] The Church of Rome, in this instance, gives us a
+vivid example of the ease with which exclamations and apostrophes
+are made the ground-work of invocations. In the legend of the day
+similar, though not the same, words form a part of the salutation,
+which St. Andrew is there said to have addressed <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page248" id="page248"></a>{248}</span> to the
+cross of wood prepared for his own martyrdom, and then bodily
+before his eyes. There are many such addresses to the Cross, in
+various parts of the Roman ritual. (See A. 344.)</p>
+<p>In such apostrophes the whole of the Song of the Three Children
+abounds; and we meet with many such in the early writers.</p>
+<p>III. The third stage supplies instances of prayer to God,
+imploring him to allow the supplication of his saints to be offered
+for us. Of this we find examples in the Collects for St. Andrew's
+Eve and Anniversary, for the feast of St. Anthony, and various
+others.</p>
+<p>"We beseech thee, Almighty God, that he whose feast we are about
+to celebrate may implore thy aid for us," &amp;c. [Qu&aelig;sumus
+omnipotens Deus, ut beatus Andreas Apostolus cujus pr&aelig;venimus
+festivitatem, tuum pro nobis imploret auxilium. A. 545.]</p>
+<p>"That he may be for us a perpetual intercessor." [Ut apud te sit
+pro nobis perpetuus intercessor. A. 551.]</p>
+<p>"We beseech thee, O Lord, let the intercession of the blessed
+Anthony the Abbot commend us, that what we cannot effect by our own
+merits, we may obtain by his patronage [Ejus patrocinio assequamur.
+H. 490.]: through the Lord."</p>
+<p>These prayers I could not offer in faith. I am taught in the
+written word to look for no other intercessor in heaven, than one
+who is eternal and divine, therefore I can need no other. Had God,
+by his revealed word, told me that the intercessions of his
+servants departed should prevail with Him, provided I sought that
+benefit by prayer, I should, without any misgiving, have implored
+Him to receive their <span class="pagenum"><a name="page249" id=
+"page249"></a>{249}</span> prayers in my behalf; but I can find no
+such an intimation in the covenant. In that covenant the word of
+the God of truth and mercy is pledged to receive those, and to
+grant the prayers of those who come to him through his blessed Son.
+In that covenant, I am strictly commanded and most lovingly invited
+to approach boldly the Supreme Giver of all good things myself, and
+to ask in faith nothing wavering, with an assurance that He who
+spared not his own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, will, with
+Him, also freely give us all things. In this assurance I place
+implicit trust; and as long as I have my being in this earthly
+tabernacle, I will, by his gracious permission and help, pray for
+whatever is needful for the soul and the body; I will pray not for
+myself only, but for all, individually and collectively, who are
+near and dear to me, and all who are far from me; for my friends,
+and for those who wish me ill; for my fellow Christians, and for
+those who are walking still in darkness and sin;&mdash;I will pray
+for mercy on all mankind. And I will, as occasion offers, desire
+others among the faithful on earth to pray for me; and will take
+comfort and encouragement and holy hope from the reflection that
+their prayers are presented to God in my behalf, and that they will
+continue to pray for me when my own strength shall fail and the
+hour of my departure shall draw nigh. But for the acceptance of my
+own prayers and of theirs I can depend on no other Mediator in the
+world of spirits, than on HIM, whom his own Word declares to be the
+one Mediator between God and men, who prayed for me when He was on
+earth, who is ever making intercession for me in heaven. I know of
+no other in the unseen world, by whom I can have access to the
+Father; I find no other offered to me, I seek no <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page250" id="page250"></a>{250}</span> other, I
+want no other. I trust my cause,&mdash;the cause of my present
+life, the cause of my soul's eternal happiness,&mdash;to HIM and to
+his intercession. I thank God for the blessing. I am satisfied; and
+in the assurance of the omnipotence of his intercession, and the
+perfect fulness of his mediation, I am happy.</p>
+<p>On this point it were well to compare two prayers both offered
+to God; the one pleading with Him the intercession of the passion
+of his only Son, the other pleading the prayers of a mortal man.
+The first prayer is a collect in Holy Week, the second is a collect
+on St. Gregory's Day.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>We beseech thee, Almighty God, that we who among so many
+adversities from our own infirmity fail, the passion of thy only
+begotten Son interceding for us, may revive. V. 243.</p>
+<p>O God, who hast granted the rewards of eternal blessedness<a id=
+"footnotetag96" name="footnotetag96"></a><a href=
+"#footnote96"><sup>96</sup></a> to the soul of thy servant Gregory,
+mercifully grant that we who are pressed down by the weight of our
+sins, may, by his prayers with Thee, be raised up. V. 480.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote96" name=
+"footnote96"></a><b>Footnote 96:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag96">(return)</a>
+<p>I can never read this, and such passages as this, without asking
+myself, can such an assertion be in accordance with the inspired
+teaching?&mdash;"Judge nothing before the time, until the Lord
+come, who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness,
+and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts: and then shall
+every man have praise of God." I Cor. iv. 5.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>IV. The next form of prayer to which I would invite your serious
+attention, is one from which my judgment and my feelings revolt far
+more decidedly even than from the last-mentioned; and I have the
+most clear denouncement of my conscience, that by offering it I
+should do a wrong to my Saviour, and ungratefully disparage his
+inestimable merits, and the full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice
+and satisfaction of his omnipotent <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page251" id="page251"></a>{251}</span> atonement: I mean those
+prayers, still addressed to God, which supplicate that our present
+and future good may be advanced by the merits of departed mortals,
+that by their merits our sins may be forgiven, and our salvation
+secured; that by their merits our souls may be made fit for
+celestial joys, and be finally admitted into heaven.</p>
+<p>Of these prayers the Roman Breviary contains a great variety of
+examples, some exceeding others very much in their apparent
+forgetfulness and disregard of the merits of the only Saviour, and
+consequently far more shocking to the reason and affections of us
+who hold it a point of conscience to make the merits of Christ
+alone, all in all, exclusive of any other to be joined with them,
+the only ground of our acceptance with God.</p>
+<p>We find an example of this prayer in the collect on the day of
+St. Saturnine. "O God, who grantest us to enjoy the birth-day of
+the blessed Saturnine, thy martyr, grant that we may be aided by
+his merits, through the Lord." [Ejus nos tribue meritis adjuvari
+per Dominum. A. 544.]</p>
+<p>Another example, in which the supplicants plead for deliverance
+from hell, to be obtained by the merits and prayers of the saint
+together, is the Collect for December 6th, the day of St.
+Nicolas.</p>
+<p>"O God, who didst adorn the blessed Pontiff Nicolas with
+unnumbered miracles, grant, we beseech Thee, that by his merits and
+prayers we may be set free from the fires of hell, through,"
+&amp;c. [Ut ejus meritis et precibus &agrave; gehenn&aelig;
+incendiis liberemur. H. 436.]</p>
+<p>Another example, in like manner specifying both the merits and
+intercession of the departed saint, contains <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page252" id="page252"></a>{252}</span>
+expressions very unacceptable to many of those who are accustomed
+to make the Bible their study. It is a prayer to Joseph, the
+espoused husband of the Virgin Mary. Of him mention is made by name
+in the Gospel just before and just after the birth of Christ, as an
+upright, merciful man, to whom God on three several occasions made
+a direct revelation of his will, by the medium of a dream, with
+reference to the incarnate Saviour. Again, on the holy family
+visiting Jerusalem, when our Lord was twelve years of age, Mary,
+his mother, in her remonstrance with her Son, speaks to Him of
+Joseph thus: "Why hast Thou thus dealt with us? Behold thy father
+and I have sought Thee sorrowing." Upon which not one word was
+uttered by our Saviour that would enable us to form an opinion as
+to his own will with regard to Joseph. Our Lord seems purposely to
+have drawn their thoughts from his earthly connexion with them, and
+to have raised their minds to a contemplation of his unearthly, his
+heavenly, and eternal origin. "How is it that ye sought me? Wist ye
+not that I must be about my Father's business?" After this time,
+though the writings of the Holy Book, either historical, doctrinal,
+or prophetic, at the lowest calculation embrace a period of
+fourscore years, no allusion is made to Joseph as a man still
+living, or to his memory as one already dead. And yet he is one of
+those for the benefit of whose intercession the Church of Rome
+teaches her members to pray to God, and from whose merits they are
+taught to hope for succour.</p>
+<p>On the 19th of March the following Collect is offered to the
+Saviour of the world:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"We beseech thee, O Lord, that we may be succoured by the merits
+of the husband of thy most holy mother, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>{253}</span> so that
+what we cannot obtain by our own power, may be granted to us by his
+intercession. Who livest," &amp;c. [V. 486.]</p>
+<p>It is anticipating our instances of the different stages
+observable in the invocation of saints, to quote here direct
+addresses to Joseph himself; still it may be well to bring at once
+to a close our remarks with regard to the worship paid to him. We
+find that in the Litany of the Saints, "St. Joseph, pray for us,"
+is one of the supplications; but on his day (March 19) there are
+three hymns addressed to Joseph, which appear to be full of
+lamentable superstition, assigning, as they do, to him a share at
+least in the work of our salvation, and solemnly stating, as a
+truth, what, whether true or not, depends upon a groundless
+tradition, namely, that our blessed Lord and Mary watched by him at
+his death; ascribing to Joseph also that honour and praise, which
+the Church was wont to offer to God alone. The following are
+extracts from those hymns:</p>
+<p>First hymn. "Thee, Joseph, let the companies of heaven
+celebrate; thee let all the choirs of Christian people resound;
+who, bright in merits, wast joined in chaste covenant with the
+renowned Virgin. Others their pious death consecrates after death;
+and glory awaits those who deserve the palm. Thou alive, equal to
+those above, enjoyest God, more blessed by wondrous lot. O Trinity,
+most High, spare us who pray; grant us to reach heaven [to scale
+the stars] BY THE MERITS OF JOSEPH, that at length we may
+perpetually offer to thee a grateful song." [Te Joseph celebrent
+agmina coelitum. V. 485.]</p>
+<p>Second hymn. "O, Joseph, the glory of those in heaven, and the
+sure hope of our life, and the safeguard <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>{254}</span> of the
+world, benignly ACCEPT THE PRAISES WHICH WE joyfully sing TO
+THEE.... Perpetual praise to the most High Trinity, who granting to
+thee honours on high, give to us, BY THY MERITS, the joys of a
+blessed life." [Coelitum, Joseph, Decus. V. 486.]</p>
+<p>Third hymn. "He whom we, the faithful, worship with joy, whose
+exalted triumphs we celebrate, Joseph, on this day obtained by
+merit the joys of eternal life. O too happy! O too blessed! at
+whose last hour Christ and the Virgin together, with serene
+countenance, stood watching. Hence, conqueror of hell, freed from
+the bands of the flesh, he removes in placid sleep to the
+everlasting seats, and binds his temples with bright chaplets. Him,
+therefore, reigning, let us all importune, that he would be present
+with us, and that he obtaining pardon for our transgressions, would
+assign to us the rewards of peace on high. Be praises to thee, be
+honours to thee, O Trine God, who reignest, and assignest golden
+crowns to thy faithful servant for ever. Amen." [Iste, quem
+l&aelig;ti colimus fideles. V. 490.]</p>
+<p>It is painful to remark, that in these last clauses the very
+same word is employed when the Church of Rome applies to Joseph to
+assign to the faithful the rewards of peace, and when she ascribes
+glory to God for assigning to his faithful servants crowns of gold.
+Indeed these hymns contain many expressions which ought to be
+addressed to the Saviour alone, whose "glory is in the heavens,"
+who is "the hope of us on earth," and "the safeguard of the
+world."</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Under this fourth head I will add only one more specimen. Would
+it were not to be found in the Roman <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page255" id="page255"></a>{255}</span> Liturgies since the Council
+of Trent: God grant it may ere long be wiped out of the book of
+Christian worship! It is a collect in which the Church of Rome
+offers this prayer to God the Son:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"O God, whose right hand raised the blessed Peter when walking
+on the waves, that he sank not; and rescued his fellow-apostle
+Paul, for the third time suffering shipwreck, from the depth of the
+sea; mercifully hear us, and grant that by the merits of both we
+may obtain the glory of eternity." [H. 149.]</p>
+<p>Now suppose for a moment it had been intended in any one prayer
+negatively to exclude the merits of Christ from the great work of
+our eternal salvation, and to limit our hopes of everlasting glory
+to the merits of St. Peter and St. Paul, could that object have
+been more effectually and fully secured than by this prayer? Not
+one word alluding to the redemption which is in Christ can be found
+in this prayer. The sentiment in the first member of the prayer
+refers us to the power exercised by the Son of God, and Son of man,
+when he was intabernacled in our flesh; and the second expression
+teaches us to contemplate the providence of our Almighty Saviour in
+his deeds of beneficence. But no reference, even by allusion, is
+here made to the merits of Christ's death&mdash;none to his merits
+as our great Redeemer; none to his merits as our never-ceasing and
+never-failing Intercessor. We are led to approach the throne of
+grace only with the merits of the two Apostles on our tongue. If
+those who offer it hope for acceptance through THE MEDIATION of
+Jesus Christ, and for the sake of his merits, that hope is neither
+suggested nor fostered by this prayer. The truth, as it is in
+Jesus, would compel us in addressing <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page256" id="page256"></a>{256}</span> Him, the Saviour of the
+world, to think of the merits of neither Peter nor Paul, of neither
+angel nor spirit. Instead of praying to him that we may obtain the
+glories of eternity for their merits, true faith in Christ would
+bid us throw ourselves implicitly on his omnipotent merits alone,
+and implore so great a blessing for his own mercy's sake. If we
+receive the whole truth, can it appear otherwise than a
+disparagement of his perfect and omnipotent merits, to plead with
+Him the merits of one, whom the Saviour himself rebuked with as
+severe a sentence as ever fell from his lips, "Get thee behind me,
+Satan, thou art an offence to me; for thou savourest not the things
+that be of God, but those that be of men;" [Matt. xvi. 23.] and of
+another who after his conversion, when speaking of the salvation
+wrought by Christ, in profound humility confesses himself to be a
+chief of those sinners for whom the Saviour died, "This is a
+faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus
+came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief?" [1 Tim.
+i. 15.] We feel, indeed, a sure and certain hope that these two
+fellow-creatures, once sinners, but by God's grace afterwards
+saints, have found mercy with God, and will live with Christ for
+ever; but to pray for the same mercy at his gracious hands for the
+sake of their merits is repugnant to our first principles of
+Christian faith. When we think of merits, for which to plead for
+mercy, we can think of Christ's, and of Christ's alone.</p>
+<p>V. Our thoughts are next invited to that class of prayers which
+the Church of Rome authorizes and directs to be addressed
+immediately to the Saints themselves. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page257" id="page257"></a>{257}</span> Of these
+there are different kinds, some far more objectionable than others,
+though all are directly at variance with that one single and simple
+principle, to which, as we believe, a disciple of the cross can
+alone safely adhere&mdash;prayer to God, and only to God. The words
+of the Council of Trent are, as we have already observed, very
+comprehensive on this subject. They not only declare it to be a
+good and useful thing supplicantly to invoke the saints reigning
+with Christ: but also for the obtaining of benefits from God,
+through Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer and
+Saviour, to fly to their prayers, HELP, and ASSISTANCE. Whether
+these last words can be interpreted as merely words of surplusage,
+or whether they must be understood to mean that the faithful must
+have recourse to some help and assistance of the saints beyond
+their intercession, is a question to which we need not again
+revert. If it had been intended to embrace other kinds of
+beneficial succour, and other help and assistance, perhaps it would
+be difficult to find words more expressive of such general aid and
+support as a human being might hope to derive, in answer to prayer
+from the Giver of all good. And certainly they are words employed
+by the Church, when addressing prayers directly to God. Be this as
+it may, the public service-books of the Church of Rome
+unquestionably, by no means adhere exclusively to such addresses to
+the saints, as supplicate them to pray for the faithful on earth.
+Many a prayer is couched in language which can be interpreted only
+as conveying a petition to them immediately for their assistance,
+temporal and spiritual.</p>
+<p>But let us calmly review some of the prayers, supplications,
+invocations, or by whatever name religious addresses now offered to
+the saints may be called; and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page258" id="page258"></a>{258}</span> first, we will examine that
+class in which the petitioners ask merely for the intercession of
+the saints.</p>
+<p>We have an example of this class in an invocation addressed to
+St. Ambrose on his day, December 7; the very servant of Christ in
+whose hymns and prayers no address of prayer or invocation to any
+saint or martyr can be found.</p>
+<p>"O thou most excellent teacher, the light of the Holy Church, O
+blessed Ambrose, thou lover of the divine law, deprecate for us [or
+intercede for us with] the Son of God<a id="footnotetag97" name=
+"footnotetag97"></a><a href="#footnote97"><sup>97</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote97" name=
+"footnote97"></a><b>Footnote 97:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag97">(return)</a>
+<p>H. 438. "Deprecare pro nobis Filium Dei." This invocation to
+Ambrose is instantly followed by this prayer to God: "O God, who
+didst assign to thy people the blessed Ambrose as a minister of
+eternal salvation, grant, we beseech Thee, that we may deserve to
+have him as our intercessor in heaven, whom we had as a teacher of
+life on earth."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Church of Rome has wisely availed herself of the pious
+labours of Ambrose, Bishop of Milan; and has introduced into her
+public worship many of the hymns usually ascribed to him. Would she
+had followed his example, and addressed her invocations to no one
+but our Creator, our Redeemer, and our Sanctifier! Could that holy
+man hear the supplications now offered to him, and could be make
+his voice heard in return among those who now invoke him, that
+voice, we believe, would only convey a prohibitory monition like
+that of the Angel to St. John when he fell down before him, See
+thou do it not; I am thy fellow-servant; worship God.</p>
+<p>It is needless to multiply instances of this fifth kind of
+invocation. In the "Litany of the Saints" more than fifty different
+saints are enumerated by name, and are invoked to pray and
+intercede for those who join in <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page259" id="page259"></a>{259}</span> it. Among the persons
+invoked are Raphael [&AElig;. cxcii.], Gervasius, Protasius, and
+Mary Magdalene; whilst in the Litany [&AElig;. cxcvi.] for the
+recommendation of the soul of the sick and dying, the names of
+Abel, and Abraham, are specified.</p>
+<p>Under this head I will call your attention only to one more
+example. Indeed I scarcely know whether this hymn would more
+properly be classed under this head, or reserved for the next;
+since it appears to partake of the nature of each. It supplicates
+the martyr to obtain by his prayers spiritual blessings, and yet
+addresses him as the person who is to grant those blessings. It
+implores him to liberate us by the love of Christ; but so should we
+implore the Father of mercies himself. Still, as the more safe
+course, I would regard it as a prayer to St. Stephen only to
+intercede for us. But it may be well to derive from it a lesson on
+this point; how easily the transition glides from one false step to
+a worse; how infinitely wiser and safer it is to avoid evil in its
+very lowest and least noxious appearance:</p>
+<p>"Martyr of God [or Unconquered Martyr], who, by following the
+only Son of the Father, triumphest over thy conquered enemies, and,
+as conqueror, enjoyest heavenly things; by the office of thy prayer
+wash out our guilt; driving away the contagion of evil; removing
+the weariness of life. The bands of thy hallowed body are already
+loosed; loose thou us from the bands of the world, by the love of
+the Son of God [or by the gift of God Most High]." [H. 237.]</p>
+<p>In the above hymn the words included within brackets are the
+readings adopted in the last English edition of the Roman Breviary;
+and in this place, when we are about to refer to many hymns now in
+use, it may be well to observe, that in the present day we find
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page260" id=
+"page260"></a>{260}</span> various readings in the hymns as they
+are still printed for the use of Roman Catholics in different
+countries. In some instances the changes are curious and striking.
+Grancolas, in his historical commentary on the Roman Breviary
+(Venice, 1734, p. 84), furnishes us with interesting information as
+to the chief cause of this diversity. He tells us that Pope Urban
+VIII., who filled the papal throne from 1623 to 1644, a man well
+versed in literature, especially in Latin poetry, and himself one
+of the distinguished poets of his time, took measures for the
+emendation of the hymns in the Roman Breviary. He was offended by
+the many defects in their metrical composition, and it is said that
+upwards of nine hundred and fifty faults in metre were corrected,
+which gave to Urban occasion to say that the Fathers had begun
+rather than completed the hymns. These, as corrected, he caused to
+be inserted in the Breviary. Grancolas proceeds to tell us that
+many complained of these changes, alleging that the primitive
+simplicity and piety which breathed in the hymns had been
+sacrificed to the niceties of poetry. "Accessit Latinitas, et
+recessit pietas." The verse was neater, but the thought was
+chilled.</p>
+<p>VI. But the Roman Church by no means limits herself to this kind
+of invocation; prayers are addressed to saints, imploring them to
+hear, and, as of themselves, to grant the prayers of the faithful
+on earth, and to release them from the bands of sin, without any
+allusion to prayers to be made by those saints. It grieves me to
+copy out the invocation made to St. Peter on the 18th of January,
+called the anniversary of the Chair of St. Peter at Rome; the words
+of our Blessed Lord himself, and of his beloved and inspired
+Apostle, seem to rise up in judgment against that prayer, and
+condemn it. It <span class="pagenum"><a name="page261" id=
+"page261"></a>{261}</span> will be well to place that hymn
+addressed to St. Peter, side by side with the very word of God, and
+then ask, Can this prayer be safe?</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>1. Now, O good Shepherd, 1. Jesus saith, I am the good merciful
+Peter, Shepherd. John x. 11.</p>
+<p>2. Accept the prayers of us 2. Whatsoever ye shall ask in who
+supplicate, my name, that will I do. That whatsoever ye shall ask
+the Father in my name, he may give it you. John xiv. 13; xv.
+16.</p>
+<p>3. And loose the bands of our 3. The blood of Jesus Christ sins,
+by the power committed to his Son cleanseth us from all sin. thee,
+1 John i. 7.</p>
+<p>4. By which thou shuttest 4. These things saith he that heaven
+against all by a word, is holy, he that is true, he that and
+openest it<a id="footnotetag98" name="footnotetag98"></a><a href=
+"#footnote98"><sup>98</sup></a>. openeth and no man shutteth, and
+shutteth and no man openeth. Rev. iii. 7.</p>
+<p class="i10">I am he that liveth and was dead, and am alive for
+evermore, and have the keys of hell and of death. Rev. i. 18.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote98" name=
+"footnote98"></a><b>Footnote 98:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag98">(return)</a>
+<p>This hymn is variously read. In the edition of Mr. Husenbeth (H.
+497.) it is: "O Peter, blessed shepherd, of thy mercy receive the
+prayers of us who supplicate, and loose by thy word the bands of
+our sins, thou to whom is given the power of opening heaven to the
+earth, and of shutting it when open."&mdash;"Beate pastor, Petre,
+clemens accipe voces precantum, criminumque vincula verbo resolve,
+cui potestas tradita aperire terris coelum, apertum claudere." H.
+497.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Let it not be answered that many a Christian minister is now
+called a good shepherd. Let it not be said that the very words of
+our ordination imply the conveyance of the power of loosing and
+binding, of opening and shutting the gates of heaven. When prayer
+is contemplated, we can think only of One, HIM, who has
+appropriated the title of Good Shepherd to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page262" id="page262"></a>{262}</span> himself.
+And we must see that Peter cannot, by any latitude of
+interpretation, be reckoned now among those to whom the awful duty
+is assigned of binding and loosing upon earth.</p>
+<p>The same unsatisfactory associations must be excited in the mind
+of every one who takes a similar view of Christian worship with
+myself, by the following supplication to various saints on St.
+John's day:</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Let the heaven exult with praises<a id="footnotetag99" name=
+"footnotetag99"></a><a href="#footnote99"><sup>99</sup></a>,</p>
+<p>Let the earth resound with joy;</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page263" id=
+"page263"></a>{263}</span>
+<p>The sacred solemnities sing</p>
+<p>The glory of the Apostles.</p>
+<p>O ye Just Judges of the age,</p>
+<p>And true lights of the world,</p>
+<p>We pray you with the vows of our hearts,</p>
+<p>Hear the prayers of your suppliants.</p>
+<p>Ye who shut the heaven by a word,</p>
+<p>And loose its bars,</p>
+<p>Loose us by command, we beseech you,</p>
+<p>From all our sins.</p>
+<p>Ye to whose word is subject</p>
+<p>The health and weakness of all,</p>
+<p>Cure us who are diseased in morals,</p>
+<p>Restore us to virtues.</p>
+<p>So that when Christ shall come,</p>
+<p>The Judge at the end of the world,</p>
+<p>He may make us partakers</p>
+<p>Of eternal joy.</p>
+<p>To God the Father be Glory,</p>
+<p>And to his only Son,</p>
+<p>With the Spirit the Comforter,</p>
+<p>Now and for ever. Amen<a id="footnotetag100" name=
+"footnotetag100"></a><a href=
+"#footnote100"><sup>100</sup></a>."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote99" name=
+"footnote99"></a><b>Footnote 99:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag99">(return)</a>
+<p>Having inserted in the text a translation of this hymn from a
+copy with which I had been long familiar, I think it right to
+insert here the two forms side by side. They supply an example of
+the changes to which we have already alluded.</p>
+<table summary="Versions">
+<tr>
+<td>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><i>Lille</i>, 1823.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>OLD VERSION.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Exultet coelum laudibus,</p>
+<p>Resultet terra gaudiis,</p>
+<p>Apostolorum gloriam</p>
+<p>Sacra canunt solemnia.</p>
+<p>Vos s&aelig;cli justi judices</p>
+<p>Et vera mundi lamina,</p>
+<p>Votis precamur cordium</p>
+<p>Audite preces supplicum.</p>
+<p>Qui coelum verbo clauditis</p>
+<p>Serasque ejus solvitis,</p>
+<p>Nos a peccatis omnibus</p>
+<p>Solvite jussu, qu&aelig;sumus.</p>
+<p>Quorum pr&aelig;cepto subditur</p>
+<p>Salus et languor omnium,</p>
+<p>Sanate &aelig;gros moribus,</p>
+<p>Nos reddentes virtutibus.</p>
+<p>Ut cum judex advenerit</p>
+<p>Christus in fine s&aelig;culi,</p>
+<p>Nos sempiterni gaudii</p>
+<p>Faciat esse compotes.</p>
+<p>Deo Patri sit gloria,</p>
+<p>Ejusque soli Filio,</p>
+<p>Cum Spiritu paracleto,</p>
+<p>Et nunc et in perpetuum.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Amen.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</td>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><i>Norwich</i>, 1830.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>POPE URBAN'S VERSION.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Exultet orbis gaudiis,</p>
+<p>Coelum resultet laudibus,</p>
+<p>Apostolorum gloriam</p>
+<p>Tellus et astra concinunt.</p>
+<p>Vos s&aelig;culorum judices</p>
+<p>Et vera mundi lumina,</p>
+<p>Votis precamur cordium</p>
+<p>Audite voces supplicum.</p>
+<p>Qui templa coeli clauditis</p>
+<p>Serasque verbo solvitis,</p>
+<p>Nos a reatu noxios</p>
+<p>Solvi jubete qu&aelig;sumus.</p>
+<p>Pr&aelig;cepta quorum protinus</p>
+<p>Languor salusque sentiunt,</p>
+<p>Sanate mentes languidas,</p>
+<p>Augete nos virtutibus.</p>
+<p>Ut cum redibit arbiter</p>
+<p>In fine Christus s&aelig;culi,</p>
+<p>Nos sempiterni gaudii</p>
+<p>Concedat esse compotes.</p>
+<p>Jesu, tibi sit gloria</p>
+<p>Qui natus es de virgine,</p>
+<p>Cum Patre et Almo Spiritu,</p>
+<p>In sempiterna s&aelig;cula.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Amen. (H. 243.)</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote100" name=
+"footnote100"></a><b>Footnote 100:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag100">(return)</a>
+<p>Or as in the present Roman Breviary:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Let the world exult with joy,</p>
+<p>Let the heaven resound with praise;</p>
+<p>The earth and stars sing together</p>
+<p>The glory of the Apostles.</p>
+<p>Ye judges of the ages</p>
+<p>And true lights of the world,</p>
+<p>With the prayers of our hearts we implore,</p>
+<p>Hear the voices of your suppliants.</p>
+<p>Ye who shut the temples of heaven,</p>
+<p>And loose its bars by a word,</p>
+<p>Command ye us, who are guilty,</p>
+<p>To be released from our sins; we pray.</p>
+<p>Ye whose commands forthwith</p>
+<p>Sickness and health feel,</p>
+<p>Heal our languid minds,</p>
+<p>Increase us in virtues,</p>
+<p>That when Christ, the Judge, shall return,</p>
+<p>In the end of the world,</p>
+<p>He may grant us to be partakers</p>
+<p>Of eternal joy.</p>
+<p>Jesus, to thee be glory,</p>
+<p>Who wast born of a virgin,</p>
+<p>With the Father and the Benign Spirit,</p>
+<p>Through eternal ages. Amen.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page264" id=
+"page264"></a>{264}</span>
+<p>Many a pious and humble Catholic of the Roman Communion, I have
+no doubt, would regard these prayers as little more than an
+application to Peter and the rest of the Apostles for absolution,
+and would interpret its several clauses as an acknowledgment only
+of that power, which Christ himself delegated to them of binding
+and loosing sins on earth. But the gulf fixed between these
+prayers, and the lawful use of the power given to Christ's ordained
+ministers on earth, is great indeed. To satisfy the mind of this,
+it is not necessary to enter upon even the confines of the wide
+field of controversy, as to what was really conveyed by Christ to
+his Apostles. I would ask only two questions. Could any of us
+address these same words to one of Christ's ministers on earth? And
+could we address our blessed Saviour himself in stronger or more
+appropriate language, as the Lord of our destinies&mdash;the God
+who heareth prayer&mdash;the Physician of our souls?</p>
+<p>Suppose for example we were celebrating the anniversary of
+Christ's Nativity, of his Resurrection, or his Ascension, what word
+in this hymn, expressive of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page265"
+id="page265"></a>{265}</span> power, and honour, and justice, and
+mercy, would not be appropriate? What word would not apply to Him,
+in most perfect accordance with Scripture language? And can we
+without offence, without doing wrong to his great Name, address the
+same to our fellow-servants, even though we may believe them to be
+with Him in glory?</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Let the heaven exult with praises&mdash;</p>
+<p>Let the earth resound with joy;</p>
+<p>The sacred solemnities sing</p>
+<p>The glory of the Lord.</p>
+<p>O Thou just Judge of the age,</p>
+<p>And true light of the world,</p>
+<p>We pray Thee with the supplications of our hearts</p>
+<p>Hear the prayers of Thy suppliants,</p>
+<p>Thou who shuttest the heavens by a word,</p>
+<p>And loosest its bars.</p>
+<p>Loose us by command, we beseech Thee,</p>
+<p>From all our sins.</p>
+<p>Thou to whose word is subject</p>
+<p>The health and weakness of all,</p>
+<p>Cure us who are diseased in morals,</p>
+<p>Restoring us to virtue.</p>
+<p>So that when Thou shalt come,</p>
+<p>The Judge at the end of the world,</p>
+<p>Thou mayest make us partakers</p>
+<p>Of eternal joy.</p>
+<p>Glory to Thee, O Lord,</p>
+<p>Who wast born of a virgin,</p>
+<p>With the Father and the Holy Spirit,</p>
+<p>For ever and ever. Amen.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Only for a moment let us see how peculiarly all these
+expressions are fitting in a hymn of prayer and praise <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page266" id="page266"></a>{266}</span> to our
+God and Saviour, recalling to our minds the words of inspiration;
+and then again let us put the question to our conscience, Is this
+language fit for us to use to a fellow-creature?</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Let the heaven exult with praises, Let the heavens rejoice, and
+Let the earth resound with joy: let the earth be glad ... (exultet
+is the very word used in the Vulgate translation of the
+Psalm)&mdash;before the Lord, for He cometh to judge the
+earth.&mdash;Ps. xcvi (xcv). 11.</p>
+<p>The holy solemnities sing Ye shall have a song, as in the The
+glory of the Lord. night when a holy solemnity is kept ... And the
+Lord shall cause His glorious voice to be heard. Isa. xxx. 29. Let
+the heaven and earth praise Him. Ps. lxix (lxviii). 34.</p>
+<p>Thou just Judge of mankind, All judgment is committed And true
+light of the world, unto the Son. John v. 22. That was the true
+Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. John i.
+9.</p>
+<p>With the prayers of our hearts we With my whole heart have I
+pray Thee, sought Thee. Ps. cxix (cxviii). Hear the prayers of Thy
+suppliants. 10. Hear my prayer, O God. Ps. lxi (lx). 1. Whom have I
+in heaven but Thee? Ps. lxxiii (lxxii). 25. And this is the
+confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask any thing according
+to His will, He heareth us. 1 John v. 14.</p>
+<p>Thou who shuttest heaven by I have the keys of death and of Thy
+word, hell. These things saith He that And loosest its bars, is
+holy, He that is true: He that hath the key of David. He that
+openeth and no man shutteth, and shutteth and no man <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page267" id="page267"></a>{267}</span> openeth.
+I have set before thee an open door, and no man can shut it. Rev.
+i. 18; iii. 7,8</p>
+<p>Release us by command, we pray Thy sins be forgiven thee. Thee,
+Matt. ix. 22. Bless the Lord, O From all our sins. my soul ... who
+forgiveth all thine iniquities. Ps. ciii. 2. This is your blood of
+the New Testament, which is shed for many for the remission of
+sins. Matt. xxvi. 28. Have mercy upon me, O God ... according to
+the multitude of Thy tender mercies, blot out my transgressions.
+Wash me throughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.
+Ps. li (l).</p>
+<p>Thou to whose word is subject Bless the Lord, O my soul ... The
+health and weakness of all, who healeth all thy diseases. Ps. ciii
+(cii). 2, 3.</p>
+<p>Do Thou heal us who are morally Create in me a clean heart, O
+diseased, God, and renew a right spirit Restoring us to virtue;
+within me. Ps. li. 10 (4.) That when Thou, the Judge, shalt appear
+in the end of the world, Thou mayest grant us to be partakers of
+eternal joy.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This would be a Christian prayer, a primitive prayer, a
+scriptural prayer, a prayer well fitting mortal man to utter by his
+tongue and from his heart, to the God who heareth prayer; and him
+who shall in sincere faith offer such a prayer, Christ will never
+send empty away. But if this prayer, fitted as it seems only to be
+addressed to God, be offered to the soul of a departed
+saint&mdash;I will not talk of blasphemy, and deadly sin, and
+idolatry,&mdash;I will only ask members of the Church of Rome to
+weigh all these things well, one by one. These are not subjects for
+crimination and recrimination.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page268" id=
+"page268"></a>{268}</span>
+<p>We have had far too much of those unholy weapons on both sides.
+Speaking the truth in love, I should be verily guilty of a sin in
+my own conscience were I, with my views of Christian worship, to
+offer this prayer to the soul of a man however holy, however
+blessed, however exalted.</p>
+<p>The next part of our work will be given exclusively to the
+worship of the Blessed Virgin Mary.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page269" id=
+"page269"></a>{269}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>PART III.</h2>
+<h3><a name="chap3-1" id="chap3-1">CHAPTER I.</a></h3>
+<h4><a href="#sect3-1-1" id="sect3-1-1" name="sect3-1-1">SECTION
+I.</a>&mdash;THE VIRGIN MARY.</h4>
+<p>The worship of the blessed Virgin Mary is so highly exalted in
+the Church of Rome, as to require the formation of a new name to
+express its high character. Neither could the Latin language
+provide a word which would give an adequate idea of its excellence,
+nor could any word previously employed by the writers in Greek,
+meet the case satisfactorily. The newly invented term Hyperdulia,
+meaning "a service above others," seems to place the service of the
+Virgin on a footing peculiarly its own, as raised above the worship
+of the saints departed, and of the angels of God, cherubim and
+seraphim, with all the hosts of principalities and powers in
+heavenly places. The service of the Virgin Mary thus appears not
+only to justify, but even to require a separate and distinct
+examination in this volume. The general principles, however, which
+we have already endeavoured to establish and illustrate with regard
+as well to the study of the Holy Scriptures as to the evidence of
+primitive antiquity, are equally applicable here; and with those
+principles present to our minds, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page270" id="page270"></a>{270}</span> we will endeavour now to
+ascertain the truth with regard to the worship of the Virgin as now
+witnessed in the Roman Catholic Church.</p>
+<p>Of the Virgin Mary, think not, brethren of the Church of Rome,
+that a true member of the Anglican branch of the Catholic Church
+will speak disparagingly or irreverently. Were such an one found
+among us, we should say of him, he knows not what spirit he is of.
+Our church, in her Liturgy, her homilies, her articles, in the
+works too of the best and most approved among her divines and
+teachers, ever speaks of Saint Mary, the blessed Virgin, in the
+language of reverence, affection, and gratitude.</p>
+<p>She was a holy virgin and a holy mother. She was highly
+favoured, blessed among women. The Lord was with her, and she was
+the mother of our only Saviour. She was herself blessed, and
+blessed was the fruit of her womb. We delight in the language of
+our ancestors, in which they were used to call her "Mary, the
+Blissful Maid." Should any one of those who profess and call
+themselves Christians and Catholics, entertain a wish to interrupt
+the testimony of every succeeding age, and to interpose a check to
+the fulfilment of her own recorded prophecy, "All generations shall
+call me blessed," certainly the Anglican Catholic Church will never
+acknowledge that wish to be the genuine desire of one of her own
+sons. The Lord hath blessed her; yea, and she shall be blessed.</p>
+<p>But when we are required either to address our supplications to
+her, or else to sever ourselves from the communion of a large
+portion of our fellow-Christians, we have no room for hesitation;
+the case offers us no alternative. Our love of unity must yield to
+our love <span class="pagenum"><a name="page271" id=
+"page271"></a>{271}</span> of truth; we cannot join in that worship
+which in our conscience we believe to be a sin against God. Whether
+we are right or wrong in this matter, God will himself judge: and,
+compared with his acquittal and approval, the severity of man's
+judgment cannot turn us aside from our purpose. But before any one
+pronounces a sentence of condemnation against us, or of approval on
+himself, it well becomes him patiently and dispassionately to weigh
+the evidence; lest his decision may not be consistent with justice
+and truth.</p>
+<p>In addition to what has been already said on the general subject
+of addressing our invocation to any created being&mdash;to any one
+among the principalities and thrones, dominions, powers, angels,
+archangels, and all the hosts of heaven, to any one among the
+saints, martyrs, confessors, and holy men departed hence in the
+Lord&mdash;I would submit to my brethren of the Roman Catholic
+Church some considerations specifically applicable to the case of
+the blessed Virgin, and to the practice of the Church of Rome in
+the religious worship paid to her.</p>
+<p>First, it will be well for us to possess ourselves afresh of
+whatever light is thrown on this subject by the Scriptures
+themselves.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-1-2" id="sect3-1-2">SECTION
+II.</a>&mdash;EVIDENCE OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.</h4>
+<p>The first intimation given to us that a woman was in the
+providence of God appointed to be the instrument, or channel by
+which the Saviour of mankind should be brought into the world, was
+made immediately after the Fall, and at the very first dawn of the
+day of salvation. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page272" id=
+"page272"></a>{272}</span> I am fully aware how the various
+criticisms on the words in which that first promise of a Saviour is
+couched, have been the well-spring of angry controversy. I will not
+enter upon that field. The authorized English version thus renders
+the passage: "I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and
+between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou
+shalt bruise his heel." [Gen. iii. 15.] The Roman Vulgate, instead
+of the word "it," reads "she." Surely such a point as this should
+be made a subject of calm and enlightened criticism, without warmth
+or heart-burnings on either side. But for our present purpose, it
+matters little what turn that controversy may take. I believe our
+own to be the true rendering: but whether the word dictated here by
+the Holy Spirit to Moses should be so translated as to refer to the
+seed of the woman generally, as in our authorized version, or to
+the male child, the descendant of the woman, as the Septuagint
+renders it, or to the word "woman" itself; and if the latter,
+whether it refer to Eve, the mother of every child of a mortal
+parent, or to Mary, the immediate mother of our Saviour: whatever
+view of that Hebrew word be taken, no Christian can doubt, that
+before the foundations of the world were laid, it was foreordained
+in the counsels of the Eternal Godhead, that the future Messiah,
+the Redeemer of Mankind, should be of the seed of Eve, and in the
+fulness of time be born of a Virgin of the name of Mary, and that
+in the mystery of that incarnation should the serpent's head be
+bruised. I wish not to dwell on this, because it bears but remotely
+and incidentally on the question at issue. I will, therefore, pass
+on, quoting <span class="pagenum"><a name="page273" id=
+"page273"></a>{273}</span> only the words of one of the most
+laborious among Roman Catholic commentators, De Sacy. "The sense is
+the same in the one and in the other, though the expression varies.
+The sense of the Hebrew is, The Son of the Woman, Jesus Christ, Son
+of God, and Son of a Virgin, shall bruise thy head, and by
+establishing the kingdom of God on earth, destroy thine. The sense
+of the Vulgate is, The woman, by whom thou hast conquered man,
+shall bruise thy head, not by herself, but by Jesus Christ." [Vol.
+i. p. 132.]</p>
+<p>The only other passage in which reference appears to be made in
+the Old Testament to the Mother of our Lord, contains that
+celebrated prophecy in the seventh chapter of Isaiah, about which I
+am not aware that any difference exists between the Anglican and
+the Roman Churches. "A Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son, and
+shall call his name Immanuel." [Isaiah vii. 4.]</p>
+<p>I find no passage in the Old Testament which can by any
+inferential application be brought to bear on the question of
+Mary's being a proper object of invocation.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>In the New Testament, mention by name is made of the Virgin Mary
+by St. Matthew, St. Mark, and St. Luke, and by St. John in his
+Gospel, as the Mother of our Lord, but not by name; and by no other
+writer. Neither St. Paul in any one of his many Epistles, though he
+mentions the names of many of our Lord's disciples, nor St. James,
+nor St. Peter, who must often have seen her during our Lord's
+ministry, nor St. Jude, nor St. John in any of his three Epistles,
+or in the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page274" id=
+"page274"></a>{274}</span> Revelation (though, as we learn from his
+own Gospel, she had of especial trust been committed to his
+care)&mdash;no one of these either mentions her as living, or
+alludes to her memory as dead.</p>
+<p>The first occasion on which any reference is made in the New
+Testament to the Virgin Mary is the salutation of the Angel, as
+recorded by St. Luke in the opening chapter of his Gospel. The last
+occasion is when she is mentioned by the same Evangelist, as "Mary
+the Mother of Jesus," in conjunction with his brethren and with the
+Apostles and the women all continuing in prayer and supplication,
+immediately after the ascension of our blessed Lord. Between these
+two occasions the name of Mary occurs under a variety of
+circumstances, on every one of which we shall do well to
+reflect.</p>
+<p>The first occasion, we have already said, is the salutation of
+Mary by the angel, announcing to her that she should be the Mother
+of the Son of God. Surely no daughter of Eve was ever so
+distinguished among women; and well does it become us to cherish
+her memory with affectionate reverence. The words addressed to her
+when on earth by the angel in that announcement, with a little
+variation of expression, are daily addressed to her by the Roman
+Catholic Church, now that she is no longer seen, but is removed to
+the invisible world. "Hail, thou that art highly favoured!" (or as
+the Vulgate reads it, "full of grace") "the Lord is with thee.
+Blessed art thou among women." [Luke i. 28.] On the substitution of
+the expression, "full of grace," for "highly favoured," or, as our
+margin suggests, "graciously accepted, or much graced," I am not
+desirous <span class="pagenum"><a name="page275" id=
+"page275"></a>{275}</span> of troubling you with any lengthened
+remark. I could have wished that since the Greek is different in
+this passage, and in the first chapter of St. John, where the words
+"full of grace" are applied to our Saviour, a similar distinction
+had been observed in the Roman translation. But the variation is
+unessential. The other expression, "Blessed art thou among women,"
+is precisely and identically the same with the ascription of
+blessedness made by an inspired tongue, under the elder covenant,
+to another daughter of Eve. "Blessed above women," or (as both the
+Septuagint and the Vulgate render the word) "Blessed among women
+shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be." [Judges v. 24.] We can
+see no ground in such ascription of blessedness for any posthumous
+adoration of the Virgin Mary.</p>
+<p>The same observation applies with at least equal strictness to
+that affecting interview between Mary and Elizabeth, when,
+enlightened doubtless by an especial revelation, Elizabeth returned
+the salutation of her cousin by addressing her as the Mother of her
+Lord, and hailing her visit as an instance of most welcome and
+condescending kindness, "Whence is this to me, that the mother of
+my Lord should come unto me?" [Luke i. 43.] Members of the Anglican
+Church are taught to refer to this event in Mary's life with
+feelings of delight and gratitude. On this occasion she uttered
+that beautiful hymn, "The Song of the blessed Virgin Mary," which
+our Church has selected for daily use at Evening Prayer. These
+incidents bring before our minds the image of a spotless Virgin,
+humble, pious, obedient, holy: a chosen servant of God&mdash;an
+exalted pattern for her fellow-creatures; but still a
+fellow-creature, and a fellow-servant: <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page276" id="page276"></a>{276}</span> a virgin
+pronounced by an angel blessed on earth. But further than this we
+cannot go. We read of no power, no authority, neither the power and
+influence of intercession, nor the authority or right of command
+being ever, even by implication, committed to her; and we dare not
+of our own minds venture to take for granted a statement of so vast
+magnitude, involving associations so awful. We reverence her memory
+as a blessed woman, the virgin mother of our Lord. We cannot
+supplicate any blessing at her hand; we cannot pray to her for her
+intercession.</p>
+<p>The angel's announcement to Joseph, whether before or after the
+birth of Christ, the visit of the Magi, the flight into Egypt, and
+the return thence, in the record of all of which events by St.
+Matthew the name of Mary occurs, however interesting and important
+in themselves, seem to require no especial attention with reference
+to the immediate subject of our inquiry. To Joseph the angel speaks
+of the blessed Virgin as "Mary thy wife." [Matt. i. 20.] In every
+other instance she is called "The young child's mother," or "His
+mother."</p>
+<p>In relating the circumstances of Christ's birth the Evangelist
+employs no words which seem to invite any particular examination.
+Joseph went up into the city of David to be taxed with Mary his
+espoused wife; and there she brought forth her first-born son, and
+wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger. And the
+shepherds found Mary and Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger.
+And Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her heart.
+[Luke ii. 19.]</p>
+<p>Between the birth of Christ, and the flight into Egypt, St. Luke
+records an event to have happened by no means unimportant&mdash;the
+presentation of Christ in <span class="pagenum"><a name="page277"
+id="page277"></a>{277}</span> the temple. "And when the days of her
+purification according to the law of Moses were accomplished, they
+brought him to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord. And he
+(Simeon) came by the Spirit into the temple; and when the parents
+brought in the child Jesus to do for him after the custom of the
+law, then took he him up in his arms, and blessed God, and said,
+Lord, &amp;c. And Joseph and his mother marvelled at those things
+which were spoken of him. And Simeon blessed them, and said unto
+Mary his mother, Behold, this child is set for the fall and rising
+again of many in Israel; and for a sign that shall be spoken
+against, (yea, a sword shall pierce through thine own soul also)
+that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed." [Luke ii. 28.]
+In this incident it is worthy of remark, that Joseph and Mary are
+both mentioned by name, that they are both called the parents of
+the young child; that both are equally blessed by Simeon; and that
+the good old Israelite, illumined by the spirit of prophecy, when
+he addresses himself immediately to Mary, speaks only of her future
+sorrow, and does not even most remotely or faintly allude to any
+exaltation of her above the other daughters of Abraham. "A sword
+shall pass through thine own soul also," a prophecy, as St.
+Augustine interprets it, accomplished when she witnessed the
+sufferings and death of her Son. (See De Sacy, vol. xxxii. p.
+138.)</p>
+<p>The next occasion on which the name of the Virgin Mary is found
+in Scripture, is the memorable visit of herself, her husband, and
+her Son, to Jerusalem, when he was twelve years old. And the manner
+in which this incident is related by the inspired Evangelist, so
+far from intimating that Mary was destined to be an object of
+worship to the believers in her Son, affords <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page278" id="page278"></a>{278}</span> evidence
+which exhibits strongly a bearing the direct contrary. Here again
+Joseph and Mary are both called his parents: Joseph is once
+mentioned by name, and so is Mary. If the language had been so
+framed as on purpose to take away all distinction of preference or
+superiority, it could not more successfully have effected its
+purpose. But not only so, of the three addresses recorded as having
+been made by our blessed Lord to his beloved mother (and only three
+are recorded in the New Testament), the first occurs during this
+visit to Jerusalem. It was in answer to the remonstrance made by
+Mary, "Son, why hast thou thus dealt with us? Behold, thy father
+and I have sought thee sorrowing." [Luke ii. 48.] "How is it that
+ye sought me? Knew ye not that I must be about my Father's
+business?"&mdash;[or in my Father's house, as some render it.] He
+lifts up their minds from earth to heaven, from his human to his
+eternal origin. He makes no distinction here,&mdash;"Wist YE not."
+Again, I would appeal to any dispassionate person to pronounce,
+whether this reproof, couched in these words, countenances the idea
+that our blessed Lord intended his human mother to receive such
+divine honour from his followers to the end of time as the Church
+of Rome now pays? and whether St. Luke, whose pen wrote this
+account, could have been made cognizant of any such right invested
+in the Virgin?</p>
+<p>The next passage calling for our consideration is that which
+records the first miracle: "And the third day there was a marriage
+in Cana of Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there, and both
+Jesus was called and his disciples to the marriage. And when they
+wanted wine (when the wine failed), the mother of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page279" id="page279"></a>{279}</span> Jesus
+saith unto him, They have no wine. Jesus saith unto her, Woman,
+what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come." [John ii.
+1.]</p>
+<p>I have carefully read the comments on this passage, which
+different writers of the Roman Catholic communion have recommended
+for the adoption of the faithful, and I desire not to make any
+remarks upon them. Let the passage be interpreted in any way which
+enlightened criticism and the analogy of Scripture will sanction,
+and I would ask, after a careful weighing of this incident, the
+facts, and the words in all their bearings, would any unprejudiced
+mind expect that the holy and beloved person, towards whom the meek
+and tender and loving Jesus employed this address, was destined by
+that omniscient and omnipotent Saviour to be an object of those
+religious acts with which, as we shall soon be reminded, the Church
+of Rome now daily approaches her?</p>
+<p>It is pain and grief to me thus to extract and to comment upon
+these passages of Holy Writ. The feelings of affection and of
+reverence approaching awe, with which I hold the memory of that
+blessed Virgin Mother of my Lord, raise in me a sincere repugnance
+against dwelling on this branch of our subject, beyond what the
+cause of the truth as it is in Jesus absolutely requires; and very
+little more of the same irksome task awaits us. You will of course
+expect me to refer to an incident recorded with little variety of
+expression, and with no essential difference, by the first three
+Evangelists. St. Matthew's is the most full account, and is
+this,&mdash;"While he yet talked to the people, behold his mother
+and his brethren stood without desiring to speak with him. Then one
+said unto him, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page280" id=
+"page280"></a>{280}</span> Behold, thy mother and thy brethren
+stand without, desiring to speak with thee. But he answered and
+said unto him that told him, Who is my mother, and who are my
+brethren? And he stretched forth his hand toward his disciples and
+said, Behold my mother and my brethren. For whosoever shall do the
+will of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother and
+sister and mother." [Matt. xii. 46.] Or, as St. Luke expresses
+it,&mdash;"And he answered and said unto them, My mother and my
+brethren are these, who hear the word of God and do it." [Luke
+viii. 21.]</p>
+<p>Humanly speaking, could a more favourable opportunity have
+presented itself to our blessed Lord of referring to his beloved
+mother, in such a manner as to exalt her above her fellow daughters
+of Eve,&mdash;in such a manner too, as that Christians in after
+days, when the Saviour's bodily presence should have been taken
+away from them, and the extraordinary communications of the Spirit
+of truth should have been withdrawn, might have remembered that He
+had spoken these things, and have been countenanced by his words in
+doing her homage? But so far is this from the plain and natural
+tendency of the words of her blessed Son, that, had He of
+acknowledged purpose (and He has condescended to announce to us, in
+another place (John xiii. 19, &amp;c.), the purpose of his words)
+wished to guard his disciples, whilst the world should last,
+against being seduced by any reverence and love which they might
+feel towards Himself into a belief that they ought to exalt his
+mother above all other created beings, and pay her holy worship, we
+know not what words He could have adopted more fitted for that
+purpose. There was nothing in the communication which seemed to
+call for <span class="pagenum"><a name="page281" id=
+"page281"></a>{281}</span> such a remark. A plain message announces
+to Him as a matter of fact one of the most common occurrences of
+daily life. And yet He fixes upon the circumstance as the
+groundwork not only of declaring the close union which it was his
+good pleasure should exist between obedient and true believers and
+Himself, but of cautioning all against any superstitious feelings
+towards those who were nearly allied to Him by the ties of his
+human nature. With reverence I would say, it is as though He
+desired to record his foreknowledge of the errors into which his
+disciples were likely to be seduced, and warned them beforehand to
+shun and resist the temptation. The evidence borne by this passage
+against our offering any religious worship to the Virgin, on the
+ground of her having been the mother of our Lord, seems clear,
+strong, direct, and inevitable. She was the mother of the Redeemer
+of the world, and blessed is she among women; but that very
+Redeemer Himself, with his own lips, assures us that every faithful
+servant of his heavenly Father shall be equally honoured with her,
+and possess all the privileges which so near and dear a
+relationship with Himself might be supposed to convey.&mdash;Who is
+my mother? Or, who are my brethren? Behold my mother and my
+brethren! Whosoever shall do the will of my Father in heaven, the
+same is my brother, and my sister, and my mother.</p>
+<p>No less should we be expected in this place to take notice of
+that most remarkable passage of Holy Scripture, [Luke xi. 27.] in
+which our blessed Lord is recorded under different circumstances to
+have expressed the same sentiments, but in words which will appear
+to many even more strongly indicative of his desire to prevent any
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page282" id=
+"page282"></a>{282}</span> undue exaltation of his mother. "As he
+spake these things, a certain woman of the company lifted up her
+voice and said unto him, Blessed is the womb that bare thee, and
+the paps which thou hast sucked." On the truth or wisdom of that
+exclamation our Lord makes no remark; He refers not to his mother
+at all, not even to assure them (as St. Augustine in after-ages
+taught, see De Sacy, vol. xxxii. p. 35.), that however blessed Mary
+was in her corporeal conception of the Saviour, yet far more
+blessed was she because she had fully borne Him spiritually in her
+heart. He alludes not to his mother except for the purpose of
+instantly drawing the minds of his hearers from contemplating any
+supposed blessedness in her, and of fixing them on the sure and
+greater blessedness of his true, humble, faithful, and obedient
+disciples, to the end of time. "But he said, Yea, rather [or, as
+some prefer, yea, verily, and] blessed are they that hear the word
+of God, and keep it." Again, it must be asked, could such an
+exclamation have been met by such a reply, had our Lord's will been
+to exalt his mother, as she is now exalted by the Church of Rome?
+Rather, we would reverently ask, would He have given this turn to
+such an address, had He not desired to check any such feeling
+towards her?</p>
+<p>That most truly affecting and edifying incident recorded by St.
+John as having taken place whilst Jesus was hanging in his agony on
+the cross, an incident which speaks to every one who has a mind to
+understand and a heart to feel, presents to us the last occasion on
+which the name of the Virgin Mother of our Lord occurs in the
+Gospels. No paraphrase could add force, or clearness, or beauty to
+the simple narrative of the Evangelist; no exposition could bring
+out its parts more prominently or <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page283" id="page283"></a>{283}</span> affectingly. The calmness
+and authority of our blessed Lord, his tenderness and affection,
+his filial love in the very midst of his agony, it is impossible to
+describe with more heart-stirring and heart-soothing pathos than is
+conveyed in the simple language of him whom the Saviour at that
+awful hour addressed, as He committed his mother to him of especial
+trust. But not one syllable falls from the lips of Christ, or from
+the pen of the beloved disciple, who records this act of his
+blessed Master's filial piety, which can by possibility be
+construed to imply, that our blessed Lord intended Mary to be held
+in such honour by his disciples, as would be shown in the offering
+of prayer and praise to her after her dissolution. He who could by
+a word, rather by the mere motion of his will, have bidden the
+whole course of nature and of providence, so to proceed as that all
+its operations should provide for the health and safety, the
+support and comfort of his mother&mdash;He, when He was on the
+cross, and when He was on the point of committing his soul into the
+hands of his Father, leaves her to the care of one whom He loved,
+and whose sincerity and devotedness to Him He had, humanly
+speaking, long experienced. He bids him treat Mary as his own
+mother, He bids Mary look to John as to her own son for support and
+solace: "Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother, and his
+mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene.
+When Jesus, therefore, saw his mother and the disciple standing by
+whom he loved, he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son;
+then saith he to the disciple, Behold thy mother." [John xix. 25.]
+And He added no more. If Christ willed that his beloved mother
+should end her days in peace, removed equally <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page284" id="page284"></a>{284}</span> from want
+and the desolation of widowhood on the one hand, and from splendour
+and notoriety on the other, nothing could be more natural than such
+conduct in such a Being at such a time. But if his purpose was to
+exalt her into an object of religious adoration, that nations
+should kneel before her, and all people do her homage, then the
+words and the conduct of our Lord at this hour seem altogether
+unaccountable: and so would the words of the Evangelist also be,
+"And from that hour that disciple took her unto his own home."</p>
+<p>After this not another word falls from the pen of St. John which
+can be made to bear on the station, the character, the person, or
+circumstances of Mary. After his resurrection our Saviour remained
+on earth forty days before He finally ascended into heaven. Many of
+his interviews and conversations with his disciples during that
+interval are recorded in the Gospel. Every one of the four
+Evangelists relates some act or some saying of our Lord on one or
+more of those occasions. Mention is made by name of Mary Magdalene,
+of Mary [the mother] of Joses, of Mary [the mother] of James, of
+Salome, of Joanna, of Peter, of Cleophas, of the disciple whom
+Jesus loved, at whose house the mother of our Lord then was; of
+Thomas, of Nathanael. The eleven also are mentioned generally. But
+by no one of the Evangelists is reference made at all to Mary the
+mother of our Lord, as having been present at any one of those
+interviews; her name is not alluded to throughout.</p>
+<p>On one solitary occasion subsequently to the ascension of
+Christ, mention is made of Mary his mother, in company with many
+others, and without any further distinction to separate her from
+the rest: "And when <span class="pagenum"><a name="page285" id=
+"page285"></a>{285}</span> they were come in (from having witnessed
+the ascension of our Saviour), they went up into an upper room,
+where abode both Peter, and James, and John, and Andrew, Philip,
+and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew, James the son of Alphaeus, and
+Simon Zelotes, and Judas the brother of James. These all continued
+with one accord in prayer and supplication with the women, and Mary
+the mother of Jesus, and with his brethren." [Acts i. 13.] Not one
+word is said of Mary having been present to witness even the
+ascension of her blessed Son; we read no command of our Lord, no
+wish expressed, no distant intimation to his disciples that they
+should even show to her marks of respect and honour; not an
+allusion is there made to any superiority or distinction and
+preeminence. Sixty years at the least are generally considered to
+be comprehended within the subsequent history of the New Testament
+before the Apocalypse was written; but neither in the narrative,
+nor in the Epistles, nor yet in the prophetic part of the Holy
+Book, is there the most distant allusion to Mary. Of him to whose
+loving care our dying Lord committed his beloved mother of especial
+trust, we hear much. John, we find, putting forth the miraculous
+power of Christ at the Beautiful Gate of the Temple; we find him
+imprisoned and arraigned before the Jewish authorities; but not one
+word is mentioned as to what meanwhile became of Mary. We find John
+confirming the Church in Samaria; we find him an exile in the
+island of Patmos; but no mention is made of Mary. Nay, though we
+have three of his epistles, and the second of them addressed to one
+"whom he loved in the truth," we find neither from the tongue nor
+from the pen of St. John, one single allusion to the mother of our
+Lord alive or dead. And then, whatever may have been the matter
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page286" id=
+"page286"></a>{286}</span> of fact as to St. Paul, neither the many
+letters of that Apostle, nor the numerous biographical incidents
+recorded of him, intimate in the most remote degree that he knew
+any thing whatever concerning her individually. St. Paul does
+indeed refer to the human nature of Christ derived from his human
+mother, and had he been taught by his Lord to entertain towards her
+such sentiments as the Roman Church now professes to entertain, he
+could not have had a more inviting occasion to give utterance to
+them. But instead of thus speaking of the Virgin Mary, he does not
+even mention her name or state at all, but refers only in the most
+general way to her nature and her sex as a daughter of Adam: "But
+when the fulness of time was come, God sent forth his Son, MADE OF
+A WOMAN, made under the law; to redeem them that were under the
+Law, that we might receive the adoption of sons." [Gal. iv. 4.]
+From a time certainly within a few days of our Saviour's ascension
+the Scriptures are totally silent throughout as to Mary, whether in
+life or in death.</p>
+<p>Here we might well proceed to contrast this view which the
+Scriptures of eternal truth give of the blessed Virgin Mary with
+the authorized and appointed worship of that branch of the
+Christian Church which is in communion with Rome. We must first,
+however, here also examine the treasures of Christian antiquity,
+and ascertain what witness the earliest uninspired records bear on
+this immediate point.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page287" id=
+"page287"></a>{287}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap3-2" id="chap3-2">CHAPTER II.</a>&mdash;EVIDENCE
+OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.</h3>
+<p>Closing the inspired volume, and seeking at the fountain-head
+for the evidence of Christian antiquity, what do we find? For
+upwards of three centuries and a half (the limit put to our present
+inquiry) we discover in no author, Christian or heathen, any trace
+whatever of the invocation of the Virgin Mary by Catholic
+Christians. I have examined every passage which I have found
+adduced by writers of the Church of Rome, and have searched for any
+other passages which might appear to deserve consideration as
+bearing favourably on their view of the subject; and the worship of
+the Virgin, such as is now insisted upon by the Council of Trent,
+prescribed by the Roman ritual, and practised in the Church of
+Rome, is proved by such an examination to have had neither name,
+nor place, nor existence among the early Christians. Forgive my
+importunity if I again and again urge you to join us in weighing
+these facts well; and to take your view of them from no advocate on
+the one side or the other. Search the Scriptures for yourselves,
+search the earliest writers for yourselves, and for yourselves
+search with all diligence into the authentic and authorized
+liturgies of your own Church, your missals, and breviaries, and
+formularies. Hearsay evidence, testimony <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page288" id="page288"></a>{288}</span> taken at
+second or third hand, vague rumours and surmises will probably
+expose us, on either side, to error. Let well-sifted genuine
+evidence be brought by an upright and an enlightened mind to bear
+on the point at issue, and let the issue joined be this, Is the
+practice of praying to the Virgin, and praising her, in the
+language of the prayers and praises now used in the prescribed
+formularies of the Roman Church, primitive. Catholic,
+Apostolical?</p>
+<p>I am aware that among those who adhere to the Tridentine
+Confession of faith, there are many on whom this investigation will
+not be allowed to exercise any influence.</p>
+<p>The sentiments of Huet, wherever they are adopted, would operate
+to the total rejection of such inquiries as we are instituting in
+this work. His words on the immaculate conception of the Virgin are
+of far wider application than the immediate occasion on which he
+used them, "That the blessed Mary never conceived any sin in
+herself is in the present day an established principle of the
+Church, and confirmed by the Council of Trent. In which it is our
+duty to acquiesce, rather than in the dicta of the ancients, if any
+seem to think otherwise, among whom must be numbered Origen."
+[Origen's Works, vol. iv. part 2, p. 156.]</p>
+<p>In this address, however, we take for granted that the reader is
+open to conviction, desirous of arriving at the truth, and, with
+that view, ready to examine and sift the evidence of primitive
+antiquity.</p>
+<p>In that investigation our attention is very soon called to the
+remarkable fact, that, whereas in the case of the invocation of
+saints and angels, the defenders of that doctrine and practice
+bring forward a great variety of passages, in which mention is
+supposed to be made of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page289" id=
+"page289"></a>{289}</span> those beings as objects of honour and
+reverential and grateful remembrance, the passages quoted with a
+similar view, as regards the Virgin Mary, are very few indeed:
+whilst the passages which intimate that the early Christians paid
+her no extraordinary honour (certainly not more than we of the
+Anglican Church do now) are innumerable.</p>
+<p>I have thought that it might be satisfactory here to refer to
+each separately of those earliest writers, whose testimony we have
+already examined on the general question of the invocation of
+saints and angels, and, as nearly as may be, in the same order.</p>
+<p>In the former department of our investigation we first
+endeavoured to ascertain the evidence of those five primitive
+writers, who are called the Apostolical Fathers; and, with regard
+to the subject now before us, the result of our inquiry into the
+same works is this:</p>
+<p>1. In the Epistle ascribed to BARNABAS we find no allusion to
+Mary.</p>
+<p>2. The same must be affirmed of the book called The Shepherd of
+HERMAS.</p>
+<p>3. In CLEMENT of Rome, who speaks of the Lord Jesus having
+descended from Abraham according to the flesh, no mention is made
+of that daughter of Abraham of whom he was born.</p>
+<p>4. IGNATIUS in a passage already quoted (Ad Eph. vii. p. 13 and
+16) speaks of Christ both in his divine and human nature as Son of
+God and man, and he mentions the name of Mary, but it is without
+any adjunct or observation whatever, "both of Mary and of God." In
+another place he speaks of her virgin state, and the fruit of her
+womb; and of her having borne our God Jesus the Christ; but he adds
+no <span class="pagenum"><a name="page290" id=
+"page290"></a>{290}</span> more; not even calling her "The
+blessed," or "The Virgin." In the interpolated Epistle to the
+Ephesians, the former passage adds "the Virgin" after "Mary," but
+nothing more.</p>
+<p>5. In the Epistle of POLYCARP we find an admonition to virgins
+(Page 186), how they ought to walk with a spotless and chaste
+conscience, but there is no allusion to the Virgin Mary.</p>
+<p>JUSTIN MARTYR. In this writer I do not find any passage so much
+in point as the following, in which we discover no epithet
+expressive of honour, or dignity, or exaltation, though it refers
+to Mary in her capacity of the Virgin mother of our Lord:&mdash;"He
+therefore calls Himself the Son of Man, either from his birth of a
+virgin, who was of the race of David, and Jacob, and Isaac, and
+Abraham, or because Abraham himself was the father of those persons
+enumerated, from whom Mary drew her origin." [Trypho, &sect; 100.
+p. 195.] And a little below he adds, "For Eve being a virgin and
+incorrupt, having received the word from the serpent, brought forth
+transgression and death; but Mary the Virgin having received faith
+and joy (on the angel Gabriel announcing to her the glad tidings,
+that the Spirit of the Lord should come upon her, and the power of
+the Highest overshadow her) answered, Be it unto me according to
+thy word. And of her was born He of whom we have shown that so many
+Scriptures have been spoken; He by whom God destroys the serpent,
+and angels and men resembling [the serpent]; but works a rescue
+from death for such as repent of evil and believe in Him." One more
+passage will suffice, "And according to the command of God, Joseph,
+taking Him with Mary, went into Egypt." [Trypho, &sect; 102. p.
+196.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page291" id=
+"page291"></a>{291}</span>
+<p>Among those "Questions" to which we have referred under the head
+of Justin Martyr's works, but which are confessedly of a much less
+remote date, probably of the fifth century, an inquiry is made, How
+could Christ be free from blame, who so often set at nought his
+parent? The answer is, that He did not set her at nought; that He
+honoured her in deed, and would not have hurt her by his
+words;&mdash;but then the respondent adds, that Christ chiefly
+honoured Mary in that view of her maternal character, under which
+all who heard the word of God and kept it, were his brothers and
+sisters and mother; and that she surpassed all women in virtue.
+[Qu. 136. p. 500.]</p>
+<p>IREN&AElig;US. To the confused passage relied upon by Bellarmin,
+in which Iren&aelig;us is supposed to represent Mary as the
+advocate of Eve, we have already fully referred (page 120 of this
+work). In that passage there is no allusion to any honour paid, or
+to be paid to her, nor to any invocation of her. In every passage
+to which my attention has been drawn, Iren&aelig;us speaks of the
+mother of our Lord as Mary, or the Virgin, without any adjunct, or
+term of reverence.</p>
+<p>CLEMENT of Alexandria speaks of the Virgin, and refers to an
+opinion relative to her virgin-state, but without one word of
+honour. [Stromat. vii. 16. p. 889.]</p>
+<p>TERTULLIAN<a id="footnotetag101" name=
+"footnotetag101"></a><a href="#footnote101"><sup>101</sup></a>. The
+passages in which this ancient writer refers to the mother of our
+Lord are very far from countenancing the religious worship now paid
+to her by Roman Catholics: "The brothers of the Lord had not
+believed on him, as it is contained in the Gospel published
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page292" id=
+"page292"></a>{292}</span> before Marcion. His mother likewise is
+not shown to have adhered to him; whereas others, Marys and
+Marthas, were frequently in his company." (See Tert. De carne
+Christi, c. 7. (p. 364. De Sacy, 29. 439.)) And he tells us that
+Christ was brought forth by a virgin, who was also about to be
+married once after the birth, that the two titles of sanctity might
+be united in Christ by a mother who was both a virgin and also once
+married<a id="footnotetag102" name="footnotetag102"></a><a href=
+"#footnote102"><sup>102</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote101" name=
+"footnote101"></a><b>Footnote 101:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag101">(return)</a>
+<p>Paris, 1675. De carne Christi, vii. p. 315. De Monogamia, vii.
+p. 529. N.B. Both these treatises were probably written after he
+became a Montanist.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote102" name=
+"footnote102"></a><b>Footnote 102:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag102">(return)</a>
+<p>On the works once ascribed to Methodius, but now pronounced to
+be spurious, see above, p. 131.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>ORIGEN thus speaks: "Announcing to Zacharias the birth of John,
+and to Mary the advent of our Saviour among men." [Comment on John,
+&sect; 24. vol. iv. p. 82.] In his eighth homily on Leviticus, he
+refers to Mary as a pure Virgin. [Vol. ii. p. 228.] In the forged
+work of later times, the writer, speaking of our Saviour, says, "He
+had on earth an immaculate and chaste mother, this much blessed
+Virgin Mary." [Hom. iii. in Diversos.]</p>
+<p>In CYPRIAN we do not find one word expressive of honour or
+reverence towards the Virgin Mary. Nor is her name mentioned in the
+letter of his correspondent Firmilian, Bishop of Cappadocia.</p>
+<p>LACTANTIUS speaks of "a holy virgin" [Vol. i. p. 299.] chosen
+for the work of Christ but not one other word of honour, or tending
+to adoration; though whilst dwelling on the incarnation of the Son
+of God, had he or his fellow-believers paid religious honour to
+her, he could scarcely have avoided all allusion to it.</p>
+<p>EUSEBIUS speaks of the Virgin Mary, but is altogether silent as
+to any religious honour of any kind being due to her. In the
+Oration of the Emperor Constantine (as it is recorded by Eusebius),
+direct mention is made of the "chaste virginity," and of the maid
+who was mother <span class="pagenum"><a name="page293" id=
+"page293"></a>{293}</span> of God, and yet remained a virgin. But
+the object present to the author's mind was so exclusively God
+manifest in the flesh, that he does not throughout even mention the
+name of Mary, or allude to any honour paid or due to her. [Cantab.
+1720. &sect; 11. p. 689. and &sect; 19. p. 703.]</p>
+<p>ATHANASIUS, bent ever on establishing the perfect divinity and
+humanity of Christ, thus speaks: "The general scope of Holy
+Scripture is to make a twofold announcement concerning the Saviour,
+that He was always God, and is a Son; being the Word and the
+brightness and wisdom of the Father, and that He afterwards became
+man for us, taking flesh of the Virgin Mary, who bare God ([Greek:
+taes theotokou])." [Athan. Orat. iii. Cont. Arian. p. 579.]</p>
+<p>The work which we have already examined, called The Apostolical
+Constitutions, compiled probably about the commencement of the
+fourth century, cannot be read without leaving an impression clear
+and powerful on the mind, that no religious honour was paid to the
+Virgin Mary at the time when they were written; certainly not more
+than is now cheerfully paid to her memory by us of the Anglican
+Church. Take, for example, the prayer prescribed to be used on the
+appointment of a Deaconess; the inference from it must be, that
+others with whom the Lord's Spirit had dwelt, were at least held in
+equal honour with Mary: "O Eternal God, Father of our Lord Jesus
+Christ, Maker of male and female, who didst fill with thy Spirit
+Miriam, and Hannah, and Holda, and didst not disdain that thy Son
+should be born of a woman," &amp;c. [Book viii. c. 20.] Thus,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page294" id=
+"page294"></a>{294}</span> too, in another passage, Mary is spoken
+of just as other women who had the gift of prophecy; and of her
+equally and in conjunction with the others it is said, that they
+were not elated by the gift, nor lifted themselves up against the
+men. "But even have women prophesied; in ancient times Miriam, the
+sister of Aaron and Moses; after her Deborah; and afterwards Huldah
+and Judith; one under Josiah, the other under Darius; and the
+mother of the Lord also prophesied, and Elizabeth her kinswoman;
+and Anna; and in our day the daughters of Philip; yet they were not
+lifted up against the men, but observed their own measure.
+Therefore among you also should any man or woman have such a grace,
+let them be humble, that God may take pleasure in them." [Book
+viii. c. 2.]</p>
+<p>In the Apostolical Canons I find no reference to Mary; nor
+indeed any passage bearing on our present inquiry, except the last
+clause of all, containing the benediction. In this passage not only
+is the prayer for spiritual blessings addressed to God alone, but
+it is offered exclusively through the mediation of Christ alone,
+without alluding to intercessions of angels saints, or the Virgin:
+"Now may God, the only unproduced Being, the Creator of all things,
+unite you all by peace in the Holy Ghost; make you perfect unto
+every good work, not to be turned aside, unblameable, not deserving
+reproof; and may He deem you worthy of eternal life with us, by the
+mediation of his beloved Son Jesus Christ our God and Saviour: with
+whom be glory to Him the Sovereign God and Father, in the Holy
+Ghost the Comforter, now and ever, world without end. Amen." [Vol.
+i. p. 450.]</p>
+<p>I have not intentionally omitted any ancient author <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page295" id="page295"></a>{295}</span> falling
+within the limits of our present inquiry, nor have I neglected any
+one passage which I could find bearing testimony to any honour paid
+to the Virgin. The result of my research is, that I have not
+discovered one solitary expression which implies that religious
+invocation and honour, such as is now offered to Mary by the Church
+of Rome, was addressed to her by the members of the primitive
+Catholic Church.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page296" id=
+"page296"></a>{296}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap3-3" id="chap3-3">CHAPTER III.</a>&mdash;THE
+ASSUMPTION OF THE VIRGIN MARY.</h3>
+<p>By the Church of England, two festivals are observed in grateful
+commemoration of two events relating to Mary as the mother of our
+Lord:&mdash;the announcement of the Saviour's birth by the message
+of an angel, called, "The Annunciation of the blessed Virgin Mary,"
+and "The Presentation of Christ in the Temple," called also, "The
+Purification of Saint Mary the Virgin." In the service for the
+first of these solemnities, we are taught to pray that, as we have
+known the incarnation of the Son of God by the message of an angel,
+so by his Cross and Passion we may be brought to the glory of his
+resurrection. In the second, we humbly beseech the Divine Majesty
+that, as his only-begotten Son was presented in the Temple in the
+substance of our flesh, so we may be presented unto Him with pure
+and clean hearts by the same, his Son Jesus Christ our Lord. These
+days are observed to commemorate events declared to us on the most
+sure warrant of Holy Scripture; and these prayers are primitive and
+evangelical. They pray only to God for spiritual blessings through
+his Son. The second prayer was used in the Church <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page297" id="page297"></a>{297}</span> from very
+early times, and is still retained in the Roman Breviary (Hus.
+Brev. Rom. H. 536.); whereas, instead of the first<a id=
+"footnotetag103" name="footnotetag103"></a><a href=
+"#footnote103"><sup>103</sup></a>, we find there unhappily a prayer
+now supplicating that those who offer it, "believing Mary to be
+truly the Mother of God, might be aided by her intercessions with
+Him." [V. 496.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote103" name=
+"footnote103"></a><b>Footnote 103:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag103">(return)</a>
+<p>This collect also is found in the Roman Missal, as a Prayer at
+the Post Communion; though it does not appear in the Breviarium
+Romanum.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the Roman Catholic Church, on the other hand, feasts are
+observed to the honour of the Virgin Mary, in which the Anglican
+Church cannot join; such as the Nativity of the Virgin Mary, and
+the immaculate conception of her by her mother. On the origin and
+nature of these feasts it is not my intention to dwell. I can only
+express my regret, that by appointing a service and a collect
+commemorative of the Conception of the Virgin<a id="footnotetag104"
+name="footnotetag104"></a><a href="#footnote104"><sup>104</sup></a>
+in her mother's womb, and praying that the observance of that
+solemnity may procure the votaries an increase of peace, the Church
+of Rome has given countenance to a superstition, against which at
+its commencement, so late as the 12th century, St. Bernard strongly
+remonstrated, in an epistle to the monks of Lyons; a superstition
+which has been supported and explained by discussions in no way
+profitable to the head or the heart. [Epist. 174. Paris, 1632, p.
+1538.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote104" name=
+"footnote104"></a><b>Footnote 104:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag104">(return)</a>
+<p>Ut quibus beat&aelig; Virginis partus exstitit salutis exordium,
+conceptionis ejus votiva solemnitas pacis tribuat incrementum. H.
+445.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Of all these institutions however in honour of the Virgin, the
+Feast of the ASSUMPTION appears to be as it were the crown and the
+consummation<a id="footnotetag105" name=
+"footnotetag105"></a><a href="#footnote105"><sup>105</sup></a>.
+This festival <span class="pagenum"><a name="page298" id=
+"page298"></a>{298}</span> is kept to celebrate the miraculous
+taking up (assumptio) of the Virgin Mary into heaven. And its
+celebration, in Roman Catholic countries, is observed in a manner
+worthy a cause to which our judgment would give deliberately its
+sanction; in which our feelings would safely and with satisfaction
+rest on the firmness of our faith; from joining in which a truly
+pious mind would have no ground for inward misgiving, nor for the
+aspiration, Would it were founded in truth!</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote105" name=
+"footnote105"></a><b>Footnote 105:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag105">(return)</a>
+<p>"The Assumption of the Virgin Mary is the greatest of all the
+festivals which the Church celebrates in her honour. It is the
+consummation of all the other great mysteries by which her life was
+rendered most wonderful. It is the birthday of her true greatness
+and glory, and the crown of all the virtues of her whole life,
+which we admire single in her other festivals." Alban Butler, vol.
+viii. p. 175.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Before such a solemn office of praise and worship were ever
+admitted among the institutions of the religion of truth, its
+originators and compilers should have built upon sure grounds;
+careful too should they also be who now join in the service, and so
+lend it the countenance of their example; more especially should
+those sift the evidence well, who, by their doctrine and writings,
+uphold, and defend, and advance it; lest they prove at the last to
+love Rome rather than the truth as it is in Jesus. So solemn, so
+marked, a religious service in the temples and at the altar of HIM
+who is the truth, a service so exalted above his fellows, ought
+beyond question to be founded on the most sure warrant of Holy
+Scripture, or at the least on undisputed historical evidence, as to
+the alleged matter of fact on which it is built,&mdash;the certain,
+acknowledged, uninterrupted, and universal testimony of the Church
+Catholic from the very time. They incur a momentous responsibility
+who aid in propagating for religious truths the inventions of
+men<a id="footnotetag106" name="footnotetag106"></a><a href=
+"#footnote106"><sup>106</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote106" name=
+"footnote106"></a><b>Footnote 106:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag106">(return)</a>
+<p>Very different opinions are held by Roman Catholic writers as to
+the antiquity of this feast. All, indeed, maintain that it is of
+very ancient introduction; but whilst some, with Lambecius (lib.
+viii. p. 286), maintain the antiquity of the festival to be so
+remote, that its origin cannot be traced; and thence infer that it
+was instituted by a silent and unrecorded act of the Apostles
+themselves; others (among whom Kollarius, the learned annotator on
+the opinion of Lambecius) acknowledged, that it was introduced by
+an ordinance of the Church, though not at the same time in all
+countries of Christendom. That annotator assigns its introduction
+at Rome to the fourth century; at Constantinople to the sixth; in
+Germany and France to the ninth.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page299" id=
+"page299"></a>{299}</span>
+<p>But what is the real state of the case with regard to the fact
+of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary? It rests (as we shall soon
+see) on no authentic history; it is supported by no primitive
+tradition. I profess my surprise to have been great, when I found
+the most celebrated defenders of the Roman Catholic cause, instead
+of citing such evidence as would bear with it even the appearance
+of probability, appealing to histories written more than a thousand
+years after the alleged event, to forged documents and vague
+rumours. I was willing to doubt the sufficiency of my research;
+till I found its defenders, instead of alleging and establishing by
+evidence what God was by them said to have done, contenting
+themselves with asserting his omnipotence, in proof that the
+doctrine implied no impossibility; dwelling on the fitness and
+reasonableness of his working such a miracle in the honour of her
+who was chosen to be the mother of his eternal Son; and whilst they
+took the fact as granted, substituting for argument glowing and
+fervent descriptions of what might have been the joy in heaven, and
+what ought to be the feelings of mortals on earth.</p>
+<p>At every step of the inquiry into the merits of this case, the
+principle recurs to the mind, that, as men really and in earnest
+looking onward to a life after this, our duty is to ascertain to
+the utmost of our <span class="pagenum"><a name="page300" id=
+"page300"></a>{300}</span> power, not what God could do, not what
+we or others might pronounce it fit that God should do, but what He
+has done; not what would be agreeable to our feelings, were it
+true, but what, whether agreeably or adversely to our feelings or
+wishes, is proved to be true. The very moment a Christian writer
+refers me from evidence to possibilities, I feel that he knows not
+the nature of Christianity; he throws me back from the sure and
+certain hope of the Gospel to the "beautiful fable" of
+Socrates,&mdash;"It were better to be there than here, IF THESE
+THINGS ARE TRUE."</p>
+<p>But let us inquire into the facts of the case.</p>
+<p>First, I would observe that it is by no means agreed among all
+who have written upon the subject, what was the place, or what was
+the time of the Virgin's death. Whilst some have maintained that
+she breathed her last at Ephesus, the large majority assert that
+her departure from this world took place at Jerusalem. And as to
+the time of her death, some have assigned it to the year 48 of the
+Christian era, about the time at which Paul and Barnabas (as we
+read in Holy Scripture) returned to Antioch; whilst others refer it
+to a later date. I am not, however, aware of any supposition which
+fixes it at a period subsequent to that at which the canon of
+Scripture closes. Epiphanius indeed, towards the close of the
+fourth century, reminding us that Scripture is totally and purely
+silent on the subject as well of Mary's death and burial, as of her
+having accompanied St. John in his travels or not, without alluding
+to any tradition as to her assumption, thus sums up his sentiments:
+"I dare to say nothing; but considering it, I observe silence."
+[Epiph. vol. i. p. 1043.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page301" id=
+"page301"></a>{301}</span>
+<p>Should any of my readers have deliberately adopted as the rule
+of their faith the present practice of the Church of Rome, I cannot
+hope that they will take any interest in the following inquiry; but
+I have been assured, by most sensible and well-informed members of
+that Church, that there is a very general desire entertained to
+have this and other questions connected with our subject examined
+without prejudice, and calmly placed before them. To such persons I
+trust this chapter may not appear altogether unworthy of their
+consideration. Those who would turn from it on the principle to
+which we have here alluded, will find themselves very closely
+responding to the sentiments professed by St. Bernard, "Exalt her
+who is exalted above the choirs of angels to the heavenly kingdom.
+These things the Church sings to me of her, and has taught me to
+sing the same to others. For my part, what I have received from it,
+I am secure in holding and delivering; which also, I confess, I am
+not OVER-SCRUPULOUS in admitting. (Quod non scrupulosius fateor
+admiserim.) I have received in truth from the Church that that day
+is to be observed with the highest veneration on which she was
+TAKEN up (assumpta) from this wicked world, and carrying with her
+into heaven feasts of the most celebrated joys<a id=
+"footnotetag107" name="footnotetag107"></a><a href=
+"#footnote107"><sup>107</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote107" name=
+"footnote107"></a><b>Footnote 107:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag107">(return)</a>
+<p>See Lambecius, book viii. p. 286. The letter of St. Bernard is
+addressed to the Canons of Lyons on the Conception of the holy
+Mary. Paris, 1632, p. 1538. His observations in that letter, with a
+view of discountenancing the rising superstition, in juxtaposition
+with these sentiments, are well deserving the serious consideration
+of every one.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Let us then, with the authorized and enjoined service of the
+Church of Rome for the 15th of August before us, examine the
+evidence on which that religious <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page302" id="page302"></a>{302}</span> service, the most solemn
+consummation of all the rest, is founded.</p>
+<p>In the service of the Assumption, more than twice seven times is
+it reiterated in a very brief space, and with slight variations of
+expression, that Mary was taken up into heaven; and that, not on
+any general and indefinite idea of her beatific and glorified
+state, but with reference to one specific single act of divine
+favour, performed at a fixed time, effecting her assumption, as it
+is called, "to-day." [&AElig;s. 595.] "To-day Mary the Virgin
+ascended the heavens. Rejoice, because she is reigning with Christ
+for ever." "Mary the Virgin is taken up into heaven, to the
+ethereal chamber in which the King of kings sits on his starry
+throne." "The holy mother of God hath been exalted above the choirs
+of angels to the heavenly realms." "Come, let us worship the King
+of kings, to whose ethereal heaven the Virgin Mother was taken up
+to-day." And that it is her bodily ascension, her corporeal
+assumption into heaven, and not merely the transit of her
+soul<a id="footnotetag108" name="footnotetag108"></a><a href=
+"#footnote108"><sup>108</sup></a> from mortal life to eternal
+bliss, which the Roman Church maintains and propagates by this
+service, is put beyond doubt by the service itself. In the fourth
+and sixth reading<a id="footnotetag109" name=
+"footnotetag109"></a><a href="#footnote109"><sup>109</sup></a>, or
+lesson, for example, we find these <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page303" id="page303"></a>{303}</span> sentences:&mdash;"She
+returned not into the earth but is seated in the heavenly
+tabernacles." "How could death devour, how could those below
+receive, how could corruption invade, THAT BODY, in which life was
+received? For it a direct, plain, and easy path to heaven was
+prepared."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote108" name=
+"footnote108"></a><b>Footnote 108:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag108">(return)</a>
+<p>Lambecius, indeed (book viii. p. 306), distinctly affirms, that
+one object which the Church had in view was to condemn the HERESY
+of those who maintain that the reception of the Virgin into heaven,
+was the reception of her soul only, and not also of her body. "Ut
+damnet eorum h&aelig;resin qui sanctissim&aelig; Dei genetricis
+rcceptionem in coelum ad animam ipsius tantum, non vero simul etiam
+ad corpus pertinere existimant."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote109" name=
+"footnote109"></a><b>Footnote 109:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag109">(return)</a>
+<p>Non reversa est in terram, sed ... in coelestibus tabernaculis
+collocatum. Quomodo mois devoraret, quomodo inferi susciperent,
+quomodo corruptio invaderit CORPUS ILLUD in quo vita suscepta est?
+Huic recta plana et facilis ad coelum parata est via. &AElig;s.
+603, 604.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Now, on what authority does this doctrine rest? On what
+foundation stone is this religious worship built? The holy
+Scriptures are totally and profoundly silent, as to the time, the
+place, the manner of Mary's death. Once after the ascension of our
+Lord, and that within eight days, we find mentioned the name of
+Mary promiscuously with others; after that, no allusion is made to
+her in life or in death; and no account, as far as I can find,
+places her death too late for mention to have been made of it in
+the Acts of the Apostles. The historian, Nicephorus Callistus,
+refers it to the 5th year of Claudius, that is about A.D. 47: after
+which period, events through more than fifteen years are recorded
+in that book of sacred Scripture.</p>
+<p>But closing the holy volume, what light does primitive antiquity
+enable us to throw on this subject?</p>
+<p>The earliest testimony quoted by the defenders of the doctrine,
+that Mary was at her death taken up bodily into heaven, is a
+supposed entry in the Chronicon of Eusebius, opposite the year of
+our Lord 48. This is cited by Coccius without any remark; and even
+Baronius rests the date of Mary's assumption upon this testimony.
+[Vol. i. 403.] The words referred to are these,&mdash;"Mary the
+Virgin, the mother of Jesus, was taken up into heaven; as some
+write that it had been revealed to them."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page304" id=
+"page304"></a>{304}</span>
+<p>Now, suppose for one moment that this came from the pen of
+Eusebius himself, to what does it amount? A chronologist in the
+fourth century records that some persons, whom he does not name,
+not even stating when they lived, had written down, not what they
+had heard as matter of fact, or received by tradition, but that a
+revelation had been made to them of a fact alleged to have taken
+place nearly three centuries before the time of that writer. But
+instead of this passage deserving the name of Eusebius as its
+author, it is now on all sides acknowledged to be altogether a
+palpable interpolation. Suspicions, one would suppose, must have
+been at a very remote date suggested as to the genuineness of this
+sentence. Many manuscripts, especially the seven in the Vatican,
+were known to contain nothing of the kind; and the Roman Catholic
+editor of the Chronicon at Bordeaux, A.D. 1604, tells us that he
+was restrained from expunging it, only because nothing certain as
+to the assumption of the Virgin could be substituted in its stead.
+[P. 566.] Its spuriousness however can no longer be a question of
+dispute or doubt; it is excluded from the Milan edition of 1818, by
+Angelo Maio and John Zohrab; and no trace of it is to be found in
+the Armenian<a id="footnotetag110" name=
+"footnotetag110"></a><a href="#footnote110"><sup>110</sup></a>
+version, published by the monks of the Armenian convent at Venice,
+in 1818.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote110" name=
+"footnote110"></a><b>Footnote 110:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag110">(return)</a>
+<p>The author visited that convent whilst this edition of the
+Chronicon of Eusebius was going through the press, and can testify
+to the apparent anxiety of the monks to make it worthy of the
+patronage of Christians.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The next authority, to which we are referred, is a letter<a id=
+"footnotetag111" name="footnotetag111"></a><a href=
+"#footnote111"><sup>111</sup></a> said to have been written by
+Sophronius the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page305" id=
+"page305"></a>{305}</span> presbyter, about the commencement of the
+fifth century. The letter used to be ascribed to Jerome; Erasmus
+referred it to Sophronius; but Baronius says it was written "by an
+egregious forger of lies," ("egregius mendaciorum concinnator,")
+who lived after the heresies of Nestorius and Eutyches had been
+condemned. I am not at all anxious to enter upon that point of
+criticism; that the letter is of very ancient origin cannot be
+doubted. This document would lead us to conclude, that so far from
+the tradition regarding the Virgin's assumption being general in
+the Church, it was a point of grave doubt and discussion among the
+faithful, many of whom thought it an act of pious forbearance to
+abstain altogether from pronouncing any opinion on the subject.
+Whoever penned the letter, and whether we look to the sensible and
+pious sentiments contained in it, or to its undisputed antiquity,
+the following extract cannot fail to be interesting<a id=
+"footnotetag112" name="footnotetag112"></a><a href=
+"#footnote112"><sup>112</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote111" name=
+"footnote111"></a><b>Footnote 111:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag111">(return)</a>
+<p>The letter is entitled "Ad Paulam et Eustochium de Assumptione
+B.M. Virginis." It is found in the fifth volume of Jerome's works,
+p. 82. Edit. Jo. Martian.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote112" name=
+"footnote112"></a><b>Footnote 112:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag112">(return)</a>
+<p>Baronius shows great anxiety (Cologne, 1609, vol. i. p. 408) to
+detract from the value of this author's testimony, whoever he was;
+sharply criticising him because he asserts, that the faithful in
+his time still expressed doubts as to the matter of fact of Mary's
+assumption. By assigning, however, to the letter a still later date
+than the works of Sophronius, Baronius adds strength to the
+arguments for the comparatively recent origin of the tradition of
+her assumption. See Fabricius (Hamburgh, 1804), vol. ix. p.
+160.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"Many of our people doubt whether Mary was taken up together
+with her body, or went away, leaving the body. But how, or at what
+time, or by what persons her most holy body was taken hence, or
+whither removed, or whether it rose again, is not known; although
+some will maintain that she is already revived, and is clothed with
+a blessed immortality with Christ in heavenly places, which very
+many affirm also of the blessed <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page306" id="page306"></a>{306}</span> John, the Evangelist, his
+servant, to whom being a virgin, the virgin was intrusted by
+Christ, because in his sepulchre, as it is reported, nothing is
+found but manna, which also is seen to flow forth. Nevertheless
+which of these opinions should be thought the more true we doubt.
+Yet it is better to commit all to God, to whom nothing is
+impossible, than to wish to define rashly<a id="footnotetag113"
+name="footnotetag113"></a><a href="#footnote113"><sup>113</sup></a>
+by our own authority any thing, which we do not approve of....
+Because nothing is impossible with God, we do not deny that
+something of the kind was done with regard to the blessed Virgin
+Mary; although for caution's sake (salva fide) preserving our
+faith, we ought rather with pious desire to think, than
+inconsiderately to define, what without danger may remain unknown."
+This letter, at the earliest, was not written until the beginning
+of the fifth century.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote113" name=
+"footnote113"></a><b>Footnote 113:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag113">(return)</a>
+<p>These last words, stamping the author's own opinion, "Which we
+do not approve of," are left out in the quotation of Coccius.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Subsequent writers were not wanting to fill up what this letter
+declares to have been at its own date unknown, as to the manner and
+time of Mary's assumption, and the persons employed in effecting
+it. The first authority appealed to in defence of the tradition
+relating to the assumption of the Virgin<a id="footnotetag114"
+name="footnotetag114"></a><a href=
+"#footnote114"><sup>114</sup></a>, is usually cited as a well-known
+work written by Euthymius, who was contemporary with Juvenal,
+Archbishop of Jerusalem. And the testimony simply quoted as his,
+offers to us the following account of the miraculous
+transaction<a id="footnotetag115" name=
+"footnotetag115"></a><a href="#footnote115"><sup>115</sup></a>:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote114" name=
+"footnote114"></a><b>Footnote 114:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag114">(return)</a>
+<p>Coccius heads the extract merely with these words: "Euthumius
+Eremita Histori&aelig; Ecclesiastic&aelig;, lib. iii. c. 40;"
+assigning the date A.D. 549.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote115" name=
+"footnote115"></a><b>Footnote 115:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag115">(return)</a>
+<p>This version by Coccius differs in some points from the
+original. Jo. Dam. vol. ii. p. 879.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"It has been above said, that the holy Pulcheria <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page307" id="page307"></a>{307}</span> built
+many churches to Christ at Constantinople. Of these, however, there
+is one which was built in Blachern&aelig;, in the beginning of
+Marcian I's <i>reign</i> of divine memory. These, therefore,
+namely, Marcian and Pulcheria, when they had built a venerable
+temple to the greatly to be celebrated and most holy mother of God
+and ever Virgin Mary, and had decked it with all ornaments, sought
+her most holy body, which had conceived God. And having sent for
+Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, and the bishops of Palestine, who
+were living in the royal city on account of the synod then held at
+Chalcedon, they say to them, 'We hear that there is in Jerusalem
+the first and famous Church of Mary, mother of God and ever Virgin,
+in the garden called Gethsemane, where her body which bore the Life
+was deposited in a coffin. We wish, therefore, her relics to be
+brought here for the protection of this royal city. But Juvenal
+answered, 'In the holy and divinely inspired Scripture, indeed,
+nothing is recorded of the departure of holy Mary, mother of God.
+But from an ancient and most true tradition we have received, that
+at the time of her glorious falling asleep, all the holy Apostles
+who were going through the world for the salvation of the nations,
+in a moment of time borne aloft, came together at Jerusalem. And
+when they were near her, they had a vision of angels, and divine
+melody of the highest powers was heard: and thus with divine and
+more than heavenly glory, she delivered her holy soul into the
+hands of God in an unspeakable manner. But that which had conceived
+God being borne with angelic and apostolic psalmody, with funeral
+rites, was deposited in a coffin in Gethsemane. In this place the
+chorus and singing of the angels continued for three whole days.
+But <span class="pagenum"><a name="page308" id=
+"page308"></a>{308}</span> after three days, on the angelic music
+ceasing, since one of the Apostles had been absent, and came after
+the third day, and wished to adore the body which had conceived
+God, the Apostles, who were present, opened the coffin; but the
+body, pure and every way to be praised, they could not at all find.
+And when they found only those things in which it had been laid out
+and placed there, and were filled with an ineffable fragrancy
+proceeding from those things, they shut the coffin. Being astounded
+at the miraculous mystery, they could form no other thought, but
+that He, who in his own person had vouchsafed to be clothed with
+flesh, and to be made man of the most holy Virgin, and to be born
+in the flesh, God the Word, and Lord of Glory, and who after birth
+had preserved her virginity immaculate, had seen it good after she
+had departed from among the living, to honour her uncontaminated
+and unpolluted body by a translation before the common and
+universal resurrection."</p>
+<p>Such is the passage offered to us in its insulated form, as an
+extract from Euthymius. To be enabled, however, to estimate its
+worth, the inquirer must submit to the labour of considerable
+research. He will not have pursued his investigation far, before he
+will find, that a thick cloud of uncertainty and doubt hangs over
+this page of ecclesiastical history. Not that the evidence alleged
+in support of the reputed miracle can leave us in doubt as to the
+credibility of the tradition; for that tradition can scarcely be
+now countenanced by the most zealous and uncompromising maintainers
+of the assumption of the Virgin. What I would say is, that the
+question as to the genuineness and authenticity of the works by
+which the tradition is said to have been preserved, is far more
+difficult and complicated, than <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page309" id="page309"></a>{309}</span> those writers must have
+believed, who appeal to such testimony without any doubt or
+qualification. The result of my own inquiries I submit to your
+candid acceptance.</p>
+<p>The earliest author in whose reputed writings I have found the
+tradition, is John Damascenus, a monk of Jerusalem, who flourished
+somewhat before the middle of the eighth century. The passage is
+found in the second of three homilies on the "Sleep of the Virgin,"
+a term generally used by the Greeks as an equivalent for the Latin
+word "Assumptio." The original publication of these homilies in
+Greek and Latin is comparatively of a late date. Lambecius, whose
+work is dated 1665, says he was not aware that any one had so
+published them before his time<a id="footnotetag116" name=
+"footnotetag116"></a><a href="#footnote116"><sup>116</sup></a>. But
+not to raise the question of their genuineness, the preacher's
+introduction of this passage into his homily is preceded by a very
+remarkable section, affording a striking example of the manner in
+which Christian orators used to indulge in addresses and appeals
+not only to the spirits of departed men, but even to things which
+never had life. The speaker here in his sermon addresses the tomb
+of Mary, as though it had ears to hear, and an understanding to
+comprehend; and then represents the tomb as having a tongue to
+answer, and as calling forth from the preacher and his congregation
+an address of admiration and reverence. Such apostrophes as these
+cannot be too steadily borne in mind, or too carefully weighed,
+when any argument is sought to be drawn from similar salutations
+offered by ancient Christian orators to saint, or angel, or the
+Virgin.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote116" name=
+"footnote116"></a><b>Footnote 116:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag116">(return)</a>
+<p>Vol. viii. p. 281. Le Quien, who published them in 1712, refers
+to earlier homilies on the Dormitio Virginis. Jo. Damas. Paris,
+1712. vol. ii. p. 857.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page310" id=
+"page310"></a>{310}</span>
+<p>The following are among the expressions in which the preacher,
+in the passage under consideration, addresses the Virgin's tomb:
+"Thou, O Tomb, of holy things most holy (for I will address thee as
+a living being), where is the much desired and much beloved body of
+the mother of God?" [Vol. ii. p. 875.] The answer of the tomb
+begins thus, "Why seek ye her in a tomb, who has been taken up on
+high to the heavenly tabernacles?" In reply to this, the preacher
+first deliberating with his hearers what answer he should make,
+thus addresses the tomb: "Thy grace indeed is never-failing and
+eternal," &amp;c. [P. 881.] By the maintainers of the invocation of
+saints, many a passage far less unequivocal and less cogent than
+this has been adduced to show, that saints and martyrs were invoked
+by primitive worshippers.</p>
+<p>We find John Damascenus thus introducing the passage of
+Euthymius, "Ye see, beloved fathers and brethren, what answer the
+all-glorious tomb makes to us; and that these things are so, in the
+EUTHYMIAC HISTORY, the third book and fortieth chapter, is thus
+written word for word." [P. 877.]</p>
+<p>Lambecius maintains, that the history here quoted by John
+Damascenus was not an ecclesiastical history, written by Euthymius,
+who died in A.D. 472, but a biographical history concerning
+Euthymius himself, written by an ecclesiastic, whom he supposes to
+be Cyril, the monk, who died in A.D. 531. This opinion of Lambecius
+is combated by Cotelerius; the discussion only adding to the
+denseness of the cloud which involves the whole tradition. But
+whether the work quoted had Euthymius for its author or its
+subject, the work itself is lost; and an epitome only of such a
+work has come down to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page311" id=
+"page311"></a>{311}</span> our time. In that abridgment the passage
+quoted by Damascenus is not found.</p>
+<p>The editor of John Damascenus, Le Quien, in his annotations on
+this portion of his work, offers to us some very interesting
+remarks, which bear immediately on the agitated question as to the
+first observance of the feast of the Assumption, as well as on the
+tradition itself. Le Quien infers, from the words of Modestus,
+patriarch of Jerusalem, that scarcely any preachers before him had
+addressed their congregations on the departure of the Virgin out of
+this life; he thinks, moreover, that the Feast of the Assumption
+was at the commencement of the seventh century only recently
+instituted. Though all later writers affirm that the Virgin was
+buried in the valley of Jehoshaphat, in the garden of Gethsemane,
+the same editor says, that this could not have been known to
+Jerome, who passed a great part of his life in Bethlehem, and yet
+observes a total silence on the subject; though in his "Epitaph on
+Paula," [Jerome, Paris, 1706. Vol. iv. p. 670-688, ep. 86.] he
+enumerates all the places in Palestine consecrated by any
+remarkable event. Neither, he adds, could it have been known to
+Epiphanius, who, though he lived long in Palestine, yet declares
+that nothing was known as to the death or burial of the Virgin.
+[Vol. ii, p. 858.]</p>
+<p>Again, in his remarks upon the writings falsely attributed to
+Melito, the same editor says, that since this Pseudo-Melito speaks
+many jejune things of the Virgin Mary, (such for example as at the
+approach of death her exceeding fear of being exposed to the wiles
+of Satan,) he concludes, from that circumstance, that the work was
+written before the Council of Ephesus; alleging this very
+remarkable reason, that "after that <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page312" id="page312"></a>{312}</span> time there BEGAN TO BE
+ENTERTAINED, as was right, not only in the East, but also in the
+West, a far better estimate of the parent of God." [P. 880.]</p>
+<p>Many of the remarks of this editor would appear to savour of
+prejudice had they come from the pen of one who denied the reality
+of the assumption, or oppugned the honour and worship now paid by
+members of the Church of Rome to the Virgin. Nor could the
+suspicion of such prejudice be otherwise than increased by the
+insinuation which the same editor throws out against the honesty of
+Archbishop Juvenal, and on the possibility of his having invented
+the whole story, and so for sinister purposes deceived Marcian and
+Pulcheria; just as he fabricated the writings which he forged for
+the purpose of securing the primacy of Palestine; a crime laid to
+the charge of Juvenal by Leo the Great, in his letter to Maximus,
+Bishop of Antioch. [P. 879. See Leo. vol. i. p. 1215. Epist.
+cxix.]</p>
+<p>It is moreover much to be regretted that in making the extract
+from John Damascenus those who employ it as evidence of primitive
+belief, have not presented it to their readers whole and entire. In
+the present case the system of quoting garbled extracts is
+particularly to be lamented, because the paragraphs omitted in the
+quotation carry in themselves clear proof that Juvenal's answer, as
+it now appears in John Damascenus, could not have been made by
+Juvenal to Marcian and Pulcheria. For in it is quoted from
+Dionysius the Areopagite by name, a passage still found in the
+works ascribed to him; whereas by the judgment of the most learned
+Roman Catholic writers, those spurious works did not make their
+appearance in Christendom till the beginning of the sixth century,
+fifty years after the Council of Chalcedon, to assist at which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page313" id=
+"page313"></a>{313}</span> Juvenal is said to have been present in
+Constantinople when the emperor and empress held the alleged
+conversation with him.</p>
+<p>The remainder of the passage from the history of Euthymius,
+rehearsed in this oration of John Damascenus, is as follows: "There
+were present with the Apostles at that time both the most honoured
+Timothy the Apostle, and first bishop of the Ephesians, and
+Dionysius the Areopagite, himself, as the great Dionysius testifies
+in the laboured words concerning the blessed Hierotheus, himself
+also then being present, to the above-named apostle Timothy, saying
+thus, Since with the inspired hierarchs themselves, when we also as
+thou knowest, and yourself, and many of our holy brethren had come
+together to the sight of the body which gave the principle of life;
+and there was present too James the brother of the Lord ([Greek:
+adelphotheos]), and Peter the chief and the most revered head of
+the apostles ([Greek: theologon]); then it seemed right, after the
+spectacle, that all the hierarchs (as each was able) should sing of
+the boundless goodness of the divine power. After the apostles, as
+you know, he surpassed all the other sacred persons, wholly carried
+away, and altogether in an ecstasy, and feeling an entire sympathy
+with what was sung; and by all by whom he was heard, and seen, and
+known (and he<a id="footnotetag117" name=
+"footnotetag117"></a><a href="#footnote117"><sup>117</sup></a> knew
+it not), he was considered to be an inspired and divine
+hymnologist. And why should I speak to you about the things there
+divinely said, for unless I have even forgotten myself, I know that
+I have often heard from you some portions also of those inspired
+canticles? And the royal personages having heard this, requested of
+Juvenal the archbishop, that the holy coffin, with the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page314" id="page314"></a>{314}</span> clothes
+of the glorious and all-holy Mary, mother of God, sealed up, might
+be sent to them. And this, when sent, they deposited in the
+venerable temple of the Mother of God, built in Blachernae; and
+these things were so."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote117" name=
+"footnote117"></a><b>Footnote 117:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag117">(return)</a>
+<p>This seems confused in the original ([Greek: kai eginosketo, kai
+ouk eginoske]). The whole passage is involved in great
+obscurity.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is a fact no less lamentable than remarkable, that out of the
+lessons appointed by the Church of Rome for the feast of the
+Assumption, to be read to believers assembled in God's house of
+prayer, three of those lessons are selected and taken entirely from
+this very oration of John Damascenus<a id="footnotetag118" name=
+"footnotetag118"></a><a href="#footnote118"><sup>118</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote118" name=
+"footnote118"></a><b>Footnote 118:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag118">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The Fourth Lesson begins "Hodie sacra et animata arca."</p>
+<p>The Fifth " " "Hodie virgo immaculata."</p>
+<p>The Sixth " " "Eva qu&aelig; serpentis," &amp;c.&mdash;&AElig;.
+603.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>These contain the passages to which we have before referred as
+fixing the belief of the Church of Rome to be in the CORPOREAL
+assumption of Mary. "Quomodo corruptio invaderet CORPUS ILLUD in
+quo vita suscepta est? [Greek: pos diaphthora tou zoodochon
+katatolmaeseie somatos.]"</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This, then, is the account nearest to the time of the supposed
+event; and yet can any thing be more vague, and by way of
+testimony, more worthless? A writer near the middle of the sixth
+century refers to a conversation, said to have taken place in the
+middle of the fifth century; in this reported conversation at
+Constantinople, the Bishop of Jerusalem is represented to have
+informed the Emperor and Empress of an ancient tradition, which was
+believed, concerning a miraculous event, said to have taken place
+nearly four hundred years before, that the body was taken out of a
+coffin without the knowledge of those who had deposited it there:
+Whilst the primitive and inspired account, recording most minutely
+the journeys and proceedings of some of those very persons, and the
+letters of others, makes no mention at all of any transaction of
+the kind; and of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page315" id=
+"page315"></a>{315}</span> all the intermediate historians and
+ecclesiastical writers not one gives the slightest intimation that
+any rumour of it had reached them<a id="footnotetag119" name=
+"footnotetag119"></a><a href="#footnote119"><sup>119</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote119" name=
+"footnote119"></a><b>Footnote 119:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag119">(return)</a>
+<p>Baronius appears not to have referred to this history of
+Euthymius, but he refers to Nicephorus, and also to a work ascribed
+to Melito, c. 4, 5. Nicephorus, Paris, 1630. vol. i. p. 168. lib.
+ii. c. 21. Baronius also refers to lib. 15. c. 14. This Nicephorus
+was Patriarch of Constantinople. He lived during the reign of our
+Edward the First, or Edward the Second, and cannot, therefore, be
+cited in any sense of the word as an ancient author writing on the
+events of the primitive ages; though the manner in which his
+testimony is appealed to would imply, that he was a man to whose
+authority on early ecclesiastical affairs we were now expected to
+defer.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Another authority to which the writers on the assumption of the
+Virgin appeal, is that of Nicephorus Callistus, who, at the end of
+the thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century,
+dedicated his work to Andronicus Pal&aelig;ologus. The account
+given by Nicephorus is this:</p>
+<p>In the fifth year of Claudius, the Virgin at the age of
+fifty-nine, was made acquainted with her approaching death. Christ
+himself then descended from heaven with a countless multitude of
+angels, to take up the soul of his mother; He summoned his
+disciples by thunder and storm from all parts of the world. The
+Virgin then bade Peter first, and afterwards the rest of the
+Apostles, to come with burning torches<a id="footnotetag120" name=
+"footnotetag120"></a><a href="#footnote120"><sup>120</sup></a>. The
+Apostles surrounded her bed, and "an outpouring of miracles flowed
+forth." The blind beheld the sun, the deaf heard, the lame walked,
+and every disease fled away. The Apostles and others sang, as the
+coffin was borne from Sion to Gethsemane, angels preceding,
+surrounding, and following it. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page316" id="page316"></a>{316}</span> A wonderful thing then took
+place. The Jews were indignant and enraged, and one more
+desperately bold than the rest rushed forward, intending to throw
+down the holy corpse to the ground. Vengeance was not tardy; for
+his hands were cut off from his arms<a id="footnotetag121" name=
+"footnotetag121"></a><a href="#footnote121"><sup>121</sup></a>. The
+procession stopped; and at the command of Peter, on the man
+shedding tears of penitence, his hands were joined on again and
+restored whole. At Gethsemane she was put into a tomb, but her Son
+transferred her to the divine habitation.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote120" name=
+"footnote120"></a><b>Footnote 120:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag120">(return)</a>
+<p>This author here quotes the forged work ascribed to Dionysius
+the Areopagite, to which we have before referred.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote121" name=
+"footnote121"></a><b>Footnote 121:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag121">(return)</a>
+<p>This tradition seems to have been much referred to at a time
+just preceding our Reformation. In a volume called "The Hours of
+the most blessed Mary, according to the legitimate rite of the
+Church of Salisbury," printed in Paris in 1526, from which we have
+made many extracts in the second part of this work, the
+frontispiece gives an exact representation of the story at the
+moment of the Jew's hands being cut off. They are severed at the
+wrist, and are lying on the coffin, on which his arms also are
+resting. In the sky the Virgin appears between the Father and the
+Son, the Holy Dove being seen above her. The same print occurs also
+in another part of the volume.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Nicephorus then refers to Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, as
+the authority on which the tradition was received, that the
+Apostles opened the coffin to enable St. Thomas (the one stated to
+have been absent) to embrace the body; and then he proceeds to
+describe the personal appearance of the Virgin. [Vol. i. p.
+171.]</p>
+<p>I am unwilling to trespass upon the patience of my readers by
+any comment upon such evidence as this. Is it within the verge of
+credibility that had such an event as Mary's assumption taken place
+under the extraordinary circumstances which now invest the
+tradition, or under any circumstances whatever, there would have
+been a total silence respecting it in the Holy Scriptures?
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page317" id=
+"page317"></a>{317}</span> That the writers of the first four
+centuries should never have referred to such a fact? That the first
+writer who alludes to it, should have lived in the middle of the
+fifth century, or later; and that he should have declared in a
+letter to his contemporaries that the subject was one on which many
+doubted; and that he himself would not deny it, not because it
+rested upon probable evidence, but because nothing was impossible
+with God; and that nothing was known as to the time, the manner, or
+the persons concerned, even had the assumption taken place? Can we
+place any confidence in the relation of a writer in the middle of
+the sixth century, as to a tradition of what an archbishop of
+Jerusalem attending the council of Chalcedon, had told the
+sovereigns at Constantinople of a tradition, as to what was said to
+have happened nearly four hundred years before, whilst in the
+"Acts" of that Council, not the faintest trace is found of any
+allusion to the supposed fact or the alleged tradition, though the
+transactions of that Council in many of its most minute
+circumstances are recorded, and though the discussions of that
+Council brought the name and circumstances of the Virgin Mary
+continually before the minds of all who attended it?</p>
+<p>This, however, is a point of too great importance to be
+dismissed summarily; and seems to require us to examine, however
+briefly, into the circumstances of that Council.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page318" id=
+"page318"></a>{318}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap3-4" id="chap3-4">CHAPTER IV.</a>&mdash;COUNCILS
+OF CONSTANTINOPLE, EPHESUS, AND THE GENERAL COUNCIL OF
+CHALCEDON</h3>
+<p>The legend on which the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin
+Mary is founded professes to trace the tradition to Juvenal,
+Archbishop of Jerusalem, when he was sojourning in Constantinople
+for the purpose of attending the General Council of Chalcedon. To
+the Emperor and Empress, who presided at that council, Juvenal is
+said to have communicated the tradition, as received in Palestine,
+of the miraculous taking up of Mary's body into heaven. This
+circumstance seems, as we have already intimated, of itself, to
+require us to examine the records of that Council, with the view of
+ascertaining whether any traces may be found confirmatory of the
+tradition, or otherwise; and since that Council cannot be regarded
+as an insulated assembly, but as a continuation rather or
+resumption of the preceding minor Councils of Constantinople and
+Ephesus, we must briefly refer to the occasion and nature generally
+of that succession of Christian synods. I am not aware that in the
+previous Councils any thing had transpired <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page319" id="page319"></a>{319}</span> which
+could be brought as evidence on the subject of our inquiry. The
+questions which had disturbed the peace of Christendom, and which
+were agitated in these Councils, inseparable from a repeated
+mention of the Virgin Mary's name, afforded an opportunity at every
+turn for an expression of the sentiments of those who composed the
+Councils, and of all connected with them, including the Bishop of
+Rome himself, towards her. It would be altogether foreign from the
+purpose of this address to enter in any way at large upon the
+character and history of those or the preceding Councils, yet a few
+words seem necessary, to enable us to judge of the nature and
+weight of the evidence borne by them on the question immediately
+before us.</p>
+<p>The source of all the disputes which then rent the Church of HIM
+who had bequeathed peace as his last and best gift to his
+followers, was the anxiety to define and explain the nature of the
+great Christian mystery, the Incarnation of the Son of God; a point
+on which it were well for all Christians to follow only so far as
+the Holy Scriptures lead them by the hand. All parties appealed to
+the Nicene Council; though there seems to have been, to say the
+least, much misunderstanding and unnecessary violence and party
+spirit on all sides. The celebrated Eutyches of Constantinople was
+charged with having espoused heterodox doctrine, by maintaining
+that in Christ was only one nature, the incarnate Word. On this
+charge he was accused before a Council held at Constantinople in
+A.D. 448. His doctrine was considered to involve a denial of the
+human nature of the Son of God. The Council condemned him of
+heresy, deposed, and excommunicated him. From this proceeding
+Eutyches appealed to a General Council. A council (the authority of
+which, however, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page320" id=
+"page320"></a>{320}</span> has been solemnly, but with what
+adequate reason we need not stop to examine, repudiated), was
+convened at Ephesus in the following year, by the Emperor
+Theodosius. The proceedings of this assembly were accompanied by
+lamentable unfairness and violence. Eutyches was acquitted, and
+restored by this council<a id="footnotetag122" name=
+"footnotetag122"></a><a href="#footnote122"><sup>122</sup></a>; and
+his accusers were condemned and persecuted; Flavianus, Archbishop
+of Constantinople, who had summoned the preceding council, being
+even scourged and exiled. In his distress that patriarch sought the
+good offices of Leo, Bishop of Rome, who espoused his cause, but
+who failed nevertheless of inducing Theodosius to convene a General
+Council. His successor Marcian, however, consented; and in the year
+451 the Council of Chalcedon was convened, first meeting at Nice,
+and by adjournment being removed to Chalcedon. In this council all
+the proceedings as well of the Council of Constantinople as of
+Ephesus, were rehearsed at length; and from a close examination of
+the proceedings of those three councils, only one inference seems
+deducible, namely, that the invocation and worship of saints and of
+the Virgin Mary had not then obtained that place in the Christian
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page321" id=
+"page321"></a>{321}</span> Church, which the Church of Rome now
+assigns to it; a place, however, which the Church of England, among
+other branches of the Catholic Church, maintains that it has
+usurped, and cannot, without a sacrifice of the only sound
+principle of religious worship, be suffered to retain.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote122" name=
+"footnote122"></a><b>Footnote 122:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag122">(return)</a>
+<p>The sentiments of Eutyches, even as they are recorded by the
+party who charged him with heresy, seem to imply so much of
+soundness in his principles, and of moderation in his maintenance
+of those principles, that one must feel sorrow on finding such a
+man maintaining error at any time. The following is among the
+records of transactions rehearsed at Chalcedon: "He, Eutyches,
+professed that he followed the expositions of the holy and blessed
+Fathers who formed the Councils of Nic&aelig;a and Ephesus, and was
+ready to subscribe to them. But if any where it might chance, as he
+said, that our fathers were deceived and led astray, that as for
+himself he neither accepted nor accused those things, but he only
+on such points investigated the divine Scriptures as more to be
+depended upon [Greek: os bebaioteras]."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The grand question then agitated with too much asperity, and too
+little charity, was, whether by the incarnation our blessed Saviour
+became possessed of two natures, the divine and human. Subordinate
+to this, and necessary for its decision, was involved the question,
+What part of his nature, if any, Christ derived from the Virgin
+Mary? Again and again does this question bring the name, the
+office, the circumstances, and the nature of that holy and blessed
+mother of our Lord before these Councils. The name of Mary is
+continually in the mouth of the accusers, the accused, the judges,
+and the witnesses; and had Christian pastors then entertained the
+same feelings of devotion towards her; had they professed the same
+belief as to her assumption into heaven, and her influence and
+authority in directing the destinies of man, and in protecting the
+Church on earth; had they habitually appealed to her with the same
+prayers for her intercession and good offices, and placed the same
+confidence in her as we find now exhibited in the authorized
+services of the Roman Ritual, it is impossible to conceive that no
+signs, no intimation of such views and feelings, would, either
+directly or incidentally, have shown themselves, somewhere or
+other, among the manifold and protracted proceedings of these
+Councils. I have searched diligently, but I can find no expression
+as to her nature and office, or as to our feelings and conduct
+towards Mary, in which, as a <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page322" id="page322"></a>{322}</span> Catholic of the Anglican
+Church, I should not heartily acquiesce. I can find no sentiment
+implying invocation, or religious worship of any kind, or in any
+degree; I find no allusion to her Assumption.</p>
+<p>Pope Leo, who is frequently in these documents [Vol. v. p.
+1418.] called Archbishop of Rome, in a letter to Julianus, Bishop
+of Cos, speaks of Christ as born of "A Virgin," "The blessed
+Virgin," "The pure, undefiled Virgin;" and in a letter to the
+empress Pulcheria, he calls Mary simply "The Virgin Mary." In his
+celebrated letter to Flavianus, not one iota of which (according to
+the decree of the Roman council under Pope Gelasius) was to be
+questioned by any man on pain of incurring an anathema, Pope Leo
+says that Christ was conceived by the Holy Ghost in the womb of the
+Virgin Mary his mother, who brought him forth with the same virgin
+purity as she had conceived him. Flavianus, Archbishop of
+Constantinople, in his Declaration of faith to the Emperor
+Theodosius, affirms, that Christ was born "of Mary, the
+Virgin&mdash;of the same substance with the Father according to his
+Godhead&mdash;of the same substance with his mother according to
+his manhood." [Vol. vi. p. 539.] He speaks of her afterwards as
+"The holy Virgin."</p>
+<p>There is, indeed, one word used in a quotation from Cyril of
+Alexandria, and adopted in these transactions, which requires a few
+words of especial observation. The word is <i>theotocos</i><a id=
+"footnotetag123" name="footnotetag123"></a><a href=
+"#footnote123"><sup>123</sup></a>, which the Latins were accustomed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page323" id=
+"page323"></a>{323}</span> to transfer into their works,
+substituting only Roman instead of Greek characters, but which
+afterwards the authors of the Church of Rome translated by Deipara,
+and in more recent ages by Dei Mater, Dei Genetrix, Creatoris
+Genetrix, &amp;c. employing those terms not in explanation of the
+twofold nature of Christ's person, as was the case in these
+Councils, but in exaltation of Mary, his Virgin mother. This word
+was adopted by Christians in much earlier times than the Council of
+Chalcedon; but it was employed only to express more strongly the
+Catholic belief in the union of the divine and human nature in Him
+who was Son both of God and man; and by no means for the purpose of
+raising Mary into an object of religious adoration. The sense in
+which it was used was explained in the seventh Act of the Council
+of Constantinople, (repeated at Chalcedon) as given by Cyril of
+Alexandria. "According to this sense of an unconfused union, we
+confess the holy Virgin to be theotocos, because that God the Word
+was made flesh, and became man, and from that very conception
+united with himself the temple received from her."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote123" name=
+"footnote123"></a><b>Footnote 123:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag123">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: Theotokos.] To those who would depend upon this word
+<i>theotocos</i> as a proof of the exalted honour in which the
+early Christians held the Virgin, and not as indicative of an
+anxiety to preserve whole and entire the doctrine of the union of
+perfect God and perfect man in Christ, deriving his manhood through
+her, I would suggest the necessity of weighing well that argument
+with this fact before them; that to the Apostle James, called in
+Scripture the Lord's brother, was assigned the name of
+Adelphotheos, or God's brother. This name was given to James, not
+to exalt him above his fellow-apostles, but to declare the faith of
+those who gave it him in the union of the divine and human nature
+of Christ.&mdash;See Joan. Damascenus, Hom. ii. c. 18. In Dormit.
+Virg. vol. ii. p. 881. Le Quien, Paris, 1712. The Latin translation
+renders it Domini frater.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Nothing in our present inquiry turns upon the real <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page324" id="page324"></a>{324}</span> meaning
+of that word <i>theotocos</i>. Some who have been among the
+brightest ornaments of the Anglican Church have adopted the
+translation "mother of God," whilst many others among us believe
+that the original sense would be more correctly conveyed by the
+expression "mother of Him who was God."</p>
+<p>I am induced here to lay side by side, with the second Article
+of our Anglican Church, the Confession of Faith from Cyril, first
+recited at Constantinople, then repeated at Ephesus, and afterwards
+again rehearsed at Chalcedon; in its last clause the expression
+occurs which gave rise to these remarks.</p>
+<table summary="Articles">
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><i>Ancient Confession.</i></p>
+<p>We confess that our Lord Jesus, the Christ, the only begotten
+Son of God, perfect God and perfect man, from a reasonable soul and
+body, begotten from everlasting of the Father according to his
+Godhead, and in these last days, He the same for us and for our
+salvation [was born] of Mary, the Virgin, according to his
+manhood&mdash;of the same substance with the Father according to
+his Godhead, of the same substance with us according to his
+manhood. For of two natures there became an union. Wherefore we
+confess one Christ, one Lord. According to this sense of the
+unconfused union, we confess the holy Virgin to be theotocos,
+because that God the Word was made flesh, and became man, and from
+that very conception united with himself the temple received from
+her.</p>
+<p>[Vol. vi. p. 736.]</p>
+</td>
+<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td>
+<p><i>Second Article of Anglican Church.</i></p>
+<p>The Son, which is the Word of the Father, begotten from
+everlasting of the Father, the very and eternal God, and of one
+substance with the Father, took man's nature in the womb of the
+blessed Virgin, of her substance: so that two whole and perfect
+natures, that is to say, the Godhead and Manhood, were joined
+together in one Person, never to be divided, whereof is one Christ,
+very God, and very man; who truly suffered, was crucified, dead and
+buried, to reconcile his Father to us, and to be a sacrifice, not
+only for original guilt, but also for actual sins of men.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page325" id=
+"page325"></a>{325}</span>
+<p>But there are other points in the course of these important
+proceedings to which I would solicit your especial attention, with
+the view of comparing the sentiments of the Bishop of Rome at that
+day, and also the expressions employed by other Chief Pastors of
+Christ's flock, with the language of the appointed authorized
+services of the Roman Church now, and the sentiments of her
+reigning Pontiff, and of his accredited ministers.</p>
+<p>The circumstances of the Church Catholic, as represented in
+Leo's letter in the fifth century, and the circumstances of the
+Church of Rome, as lamented by the present Pope in 1832<a id=
+"footnotetag124" name="footnotetag124"></a><a href=
+"#footnote124"><sup>124</sup></a>, are in many respects very
+similar. The end desired by Leo and Flavianus, his brother pastor
+and contemporary, Bishop of Constantinople, and by Gregory, now
+Bishop of Rome, is one and the same, namely, the suppression of
+heresy, the prevalence of the truth, and the unity of the Christian
+Church. But how widely and how strikingly different are the
+foundations on which they respectively build their hopes for the
+attainment of that end!</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote124" name=
+"footnote124"></a><b>Footnote 124:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag124">(return)</a>
+<p>"The encyclical letter of our most holy Father, Pope Gregory, by
+divine providence, the sixteenth of that name, to all patriarchs,
+primates, archbishops, and bishops."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The present Roman Pontiff's hopes, and desires, and exhortations
+are thus expressed<a id="footnotetag125" name=
+"footnotetag125"></a><a href=
+"#footnote125"><sup>125</sup></a>:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote125" name=
+"footnote125"></a><b>Footnote 125:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag125">(return)</a>
+<p>This is the translation circulated in the Roman Catholic Annual,
+p. 15, called, The Laity's Directory for the year 1833; on the
+title page of which is this notice: "The Directory for the Church
+Service, printed by Messrs. Keating and Brown, is the only one
+which is published with the authority of the Vicars Apostolic in
+England.&mdash;London, Nov. 12, 1829." Signed "James, Bishop of
+Usula, Vic. Ap. Lond."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"That all may have a successful and happy issue, let us raise
+our eyes to the most blessed Virgin Mary, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page326" id="page326"></a>{326}</span> WHO ALONE
+DESTROYS HERESIES, who is our GREATEST HOPE, yea, the ENTIRE GROUND
+OF OUR HOPE<a id="footnotetag126" name=
+"footnotetag126"></a><a href="#footnote126"><sup>126</sup></a>. May
+she exert her patronage to draw down an efficacious blessing on our
+desires, our plans, and proceedings in the present straitened
+condition of the Lord's flock. We will also implore, in humble
+prayer, from Peter, the prince of the Apostles, and from his
+fellow-Apostle Paul, that you may all stand as a wall to prevent
+any other foundation than what hath been laid; and supported by
+this cheering hope, we have confidence that the author and finisher
+of faith, Jesus Christ, will at last console us all in the
+tribulations which have found us exceedingly."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote126" name=
+"footnote126"></a><b>Footnote 126:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag126">(return)</a>
+<p>On this word there is a note of reference to S. Bern. Serm. de
+Nat. B.M.V. 7.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"To you, venerable brethren, and the flocks committed to your
+care, we most lovingly impart, as auspicious of celestial help, the
+Apostolic Benediction. Given at Rome from St. Mary Major's, August
+15th, the Festival of the Assumption of the same blessed Virgin
+Mary, the year of our Lord 1832, of our Pontificate the
+Second."</p>
+<p>How deplorable a change, how melancholy a degeneracy is here
+evinced from the faith, and hopes, and sentiments of Christian
+bishops in days of old! In the expressed hopes of Leo and
+Flavianus, you will seek in vain for any reference or allusion "to
+the blessed Virgin Mary, as the destroyer of heresies, the greatest
+hope, the entire ground of a Christian's hope;" you will in vain
+seek for any exhortation for the faithful "to raise their eyes to
+her in order to obtain a merciful and happy issue." Equally vain
+would be your search for any "imploring in humble prayer," of Peter
+and Paul, or any even distant allusion to help from them.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page327" id=
+"page327"></a>{327}</span> To God and God alone are the faithful
+exhorted to pray; on God and God alone do those Christians express
+that their hopes rely; God alone they regard as the destroyer of
+heresy, the restorer of peace, and the protector of the Church's
+unity. "Their greatest hope, yea, the entire ground of their hope,"
+the Being to be "implored in humble prayer," is not Mary, nor
+Peter, nor Paul, but God alone, the Creator, the Redeemer, the
+Sanctifier of Mary, and of Peter, and of Paul.</p>
+<p>Thus Flavian writing to Leo says, "Wherefore (in consequence of
+those errors, and heresies, and distractions, which he had
+deplored) we must be sober and watch unto prayer, and draw nigh to
+God." [Vol. v. 1330.] And again, "Thus will the heresy which has
+arisen, and the consequent commotion, be easily destroyed by your
+holy letters with the assistance of God." [Vol. v. 1355.] Thus Leo
+in his turn writing to Julian, Bishop of Cos, utters this truly
+Christian sentiment. "May the mercy of God, as we trust, grant that
+without the loss of any soul, against the darts of the devil the
+sound parts may be entirely preserved, and the wounded parts may be
+healed. May God preserve you safe and sound, most honoured
+brother!" [Vol. v. 1423.] Thus the same Bishop of Rome writing to
+Flavian, expresses his hopes in these words: "Confidently trusting
+that the help of God will be present, so that one who has been
+misled, condemning the vanity of his own thoughts, may be saved.
+May God preserve you in health and strength, most beloved brother!"
+[Vol. v. 1390.]</p>
+<p>I will detain you by only one more reference to these most
+interesting documents. The whole Council of Chalcedon, at the
+conclusion of all, and when the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page328" id="page328"></a>{328}</span> triumph was considered to
+have been secured over Eutyches, and their gratitude was expressed
+that the heresies had been destroyed&mdash;instead of referring to
+Mary as the "sole destroyer of heresies," shout, as if with the
+voice of one man, from every side, "It is God alone who hath done
+this!" [Vol. vii. p. 174.] Neither antecedently did their chief
+pastors exhort them to raise their eyes to Mary, and promise to
+"implore" the blessing they needed, "in humble prayer from Peter
+and Paul." Neither "in the straitened condition of the Lord's
+flock" did they invoke any other than God. And when truth
+prevailed, and the victory was won, whilst they were lavish of
+their grateful thanks to the emperor and his queen, who were
+present and had succoured them; of help from the invisible world
+they make no mention, save only of the Lord's; they had implored
+neither angel, nor saints, nor Virgin to be their protector and
+patron; no angel, nor saint, nor virgin, shared their
+praises;&mdash;God alone was exalted in that day.</p>
+<p>And, let not the answer, ever at hand when reference is thus
+made to the prayers or professions of individuals, whether popes or
+canonized saints, seduce any now from a pursuit of the very truth.
+These, it is said, "are the prayers and professions of individuals,
+it is unfair then to make the Church responsible for them; we
+appeal from them to the Church." But in this case the words of the
+Sovereign Pontiff are in good faith the words of the Church of
+Rome; not because I at all would identify the words of a Pope with
+the Church, but because the prayers of the Church of Rome in her
+authorized solemn services and acts of worship justify <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page329" id="page329"></a>{329}</span> Pope
+Gregory in every sentiment he utters, and every expression he
+employs. Does Gregory bid the faithful lift up their eyes to Mary
+the sole destroyer of heresies? The Roman ritual in the Lesser
+Office of the holy Virgin thus addresses her, "Rejoice, O Mary
+Virgin; thou alone hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world:"
+And again: "Under thy protection we take refuge, holy parent of
+God; despise not thou our prayers in our necessities, but from all
+dangers ever deliver us, O glorious and blessed Virgin." Does
+Gregory assure the faithful that he will implore in humble prayer
+of Peter and Paul? in doing so he is only treading in the very
+footsteps of the Roman Church itself. In an address, which we have
+already quoted (see p. 262), Peter is thus invoked. "Now O good
+shepherd, merciful Peter, accept the prayers of us who supplicate,
+and loose the bands of our sins, by the power committed to thee, by
+which thou shuttest heaven against all by a word, and openest
+it."</p>
+<p>These things are now; but from the beginning it was not so.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page330" id=
+"page330"></a>{330}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap3-5" id="chap3-5">CHAPTER V.</a></h3>
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-1" id="sect3-5-1">SECTION I.</a>&mdash;PRESENT
+WORSHIP OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN IN THE AUTHORIZED AND ENJOINED
+SERVICES OF THE CHURCH OF ROME.</h4>
+<p>When from examining the evidence of antiquity we turn to the
+present enjoined services of the Church of Rome, it is impossible
+not to be struck by the fact repeatedly forced upon our notice,
+that whereas the invocation of the Virgin seems to have been
+introduced at a period much later than those addresses to the
+martyrs which have already invited our attention, her worship now
+assumes so much higher a place, and claims so large a share in the
+public worship of the Roman Catholic portions of Christendom above
+martyrs, saints, and angels. The offices of the Virgin present
+instances of all those various and progressive stages of divine
+worship, which we have already exemplified in the case of the
+martyrs, from the first primitive and Christian practice of making
+the anniversary of the Saint a day either of especial praise and
+prayer to God for the mercies of redemption generally, or of
+returning thanks to God for the graces manifested in his holy
+servants now in peace, with prayers for light and strength to
+enable the worshippers to follow them, as they followed
+Christ&mdash;down to the last and worst stage, the consummation
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page331" id=
+"page331"></a>{331}</span> of all, namely, prayer directly to
+saints and angels for protection, succour, and spiritual benefits
+at their hands.</p>
+<p>I. Of the first class is the following collect, retained almost
+word for word in our Anglican service.</p>
+<p><i>On the day of the Purification.</i></p>
+<p>"Almighty and everlasting God, we humbly beseech thy majesty,
+that as thy only begotten Son was this day presented in the temple
+in substance of our flesh, so Thou wouldest cause us to be
+presented unto Thee with purified minds. Through the same."</p>
+<p>(Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, majestatem tuam supplices exoramus,
+ut sicut unigenitus Filius tuus hodierna die cum nostr&aelig;
+carnis substantia est pr&aelig;sentatus, ita nos facias purificatis
+tibi mentibus pr&aelig;sentari. Per eundem Dominum.&mdash;H.
+536.)</p>
+<p>Such a prayer is founded on the facts of revelation, and is
+primitive, catholic, apostolic, and evangelical.</p>
+<p>II. Of the second progressive stage towards the adoration of the
+saints, the offices of the Virgin supply us with various instances;
+the case, namely, of the Christian orator being led by the flow of
+his eloquence to apostrophize the spirit of the Saint, and address
+him as though he were present, witnessing the celebration of his
+day, hearing the panegyrics uttered for his honour, and partaking
+with the congregation in their religious acts of worship.</p>
+<p>"O holy and spotless virginhood; with what praises to extol thee
+I know not: because Him, whom the heavens could not contain, thou
+didst bear in thy bosom. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page332"
+id="page332"></a>{332}</span> Blessed art thou among women, and
+blessed is the fruit of thy womb. Thou art blessed, O Virgin Mary,
+who didst carry the Lord, the Creator of the world. Thou didst give
+birth to Him who made thee, and remainest a virgin for ever. [Beata
+es Virgo Maria, qu&aelig; Dominum portasti Creatorem mundi:
+genuisti qui te fecit, et in &aelig;ternum permanes
+virgo.&mdash;Vern. clxii.] Hail, holy parent, who didst in
+child-birth bring forth the King who ruleth heaven and earth for
+ever and ever. Amen." [Salve sacra parens enixa puerpera regem, qui
+coelum terramque regit in s&aelig;cula s&aelig;culorum.
+Amen.&mdash;Introit. at the mass on the Nativity of the
+Virgin.]</p>
+<p>In apostrophes like these, the members of the Anglican Church
+see nothing in itself harmful, so long as they are kept within due
+bounds. Many of the passages cited from the ancient writers in
+proof of their having espoused the doctrine, and exemplified in
+themselves the practice of invoking saints, are nothing more than
+these glowing addresses. They have been responded to by one of the
+brightest ornaments, and sweetest minstrels of the Anglican Church,
+whose apostrophe at the same time by its own words would guard us
+against the abuses and excesses in which in the Roman Catholic
+Church this practice, followed without restraint and indulged in
+with less and less of caution and soberness, unhappily ended;
+abuses against which also we cannot ourselves now be too constantly
+and carefully on our guard.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Ave Maria! Blessed maid,</p>
+<p>Lily of Eden's fragrant shade,</p>
+<p class="i4">Who can express the love,</p>
+<p>That nurtured thee so pure and sweet;</p>
+<p>Making thy heart a shelter meet</p>
+<p class="i4">For Jesus' holy Dove?</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page333" id=
+"page333"></a>{333}</span>
+<p>Ave Maria! mother blest,</p>
+<p>To whom, caressing and caress'd,</p>
+<p class="i4">Clings the Eternal Child!</p>
+<p>Favour'd beyond archangel's dream,</p>
+<p>When first on thee with tenderest gleam</p>
+<p class="i4">The newborn Saviour smiled.</p>
+<p>Ave Maria! thou whose name,</p>
+<p>ALL BUT ADORING love may claim,</p>
+<p class="i4">Yet may we reach thy shrine;</p>
+<p>For HE, thy Son and Saviour, vows,</p>
+<p>To crown all lowly lofty brows</p>
+<p class="i4">With love and joy like thine.</p>
+<p>Bless'd is the womb that bare Him,&mdash;bless'd</p>
+<p>The bosom where his lips were press'd;</p>
+<p class="i4">But rather bless'd are they</p>
+<p>Who hear his word and keep it well,</p>
+<p>The living homes where Christ shall dwell,</p>
+<p class="i4">And never pass away."</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>J. Keble's Christian Year. "The Annunciation."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Would that no branch of the Church Catholic had ever passed the
+boundary line drawn here so exquisitely by this Anglican Catholic,
+from whose lips or pen no syllable could ever fall in disparagement
+of the holy Virgin, as blessed among women, and the holy mother of
+our Lord. To bring about the re-union of Christians would in that
+case have been a far more hopeful task than it is now.</p>
+<p>III. In the third stage, a prayer was offered to God, that He
+would permit the intercessions of the saints to help us; or the
+prayer contained the expression of a wish,&mdash;a desire not
+addressed either to God or to the saint, merely words expressive of
+the hope of the individual. The following are some of the many
+instances now contained in the Roman Breviary:</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page334" id=
+"page334"></a>{334}</span>
+<p>"May the Virgin of virgins herself intercede for us to the Lord.
+Amen." [Ipsa Virgo virginum intercedat pro nobis ad Dominum.
+Amen.&mdash;Vern. cxlviii.]</p>
+<p>In the Post-communion, on the day of the Assumption, this prayer
+is offered:&mdash;"Partakers of the heavenly table, we implore thy
+clemency, O Lord our God, that we who celebrate the Assumption of
+the mother of God, may, by her intercession, be freed from all
+impending evils. Through," &amp;c. [Mens&aelig; coelestis
+participes effecti imploramus clementiam tuam, Domine Deus noster,
+ut qui Assumptionem Dei Genetricis colimus, a cunctis malis
+imminentibus ejus intercessione liberemur. Per.&mdash;Miss.
+Rom.]</p>
+<p>"We beseech Thee, O Lord, let the glorious intercession of the
+blessed and glorious ever Virgin Mary protect us and bring us to
+life eternal." [Beat&aelig; et glorios&aelig; semper Virginia
+Mari&aelig;, qu&aelig;sumus, Domine, intercessio gloriosa nos
+protegat, et ad vitam producat &aelig;ternam.&mdash;Vern. clv.]</p>
+<p>"Pardon, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the offences of thy servants,
+that we, who cannot please Thee of our own act, may be saved by the
+intercession of the mother of thy Son, our Lord, who liveth with
+Thee." [Famulorum tuorum qu&aelig;sumus, Domine, delictis ignosce,
+ut qui tibi placere de nostris actibus non valemus, Genetricis
+Filii tui, Domini nostri, intercessione salvemur, qui tecum
+vivit.&mdash;Vern. clxix.]</p>
+<p>On the vigil of the Epiphany, this prayer is offered in the
+Post-communion at the mass,&mdash;"Let this communion, O Lord,
+purge us from guilt, and by the intercession of the blessed Virgin,
+mother of God, let it make us partakers of the heavenly cure.
+Through the same." [H&aelig;c nos communio, Domine, purget a
+crimine, et intercedente beata Virgine Dei genetrice coelestis
+remedii faciat esse consortes. Per eundem.&mdash;Miss. Rom.]</p>
+<p>"Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord God, that we thy <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page335" id="page335"></a>{335}</span> servants
+may enjoy perpetual health of body and mind, and be freed from
+present sorrow, and enjoy eternal gladness, by the glorious
+intercession of the blessed Mary, ever Virgin. Through." [Concede
+nos famulos tuos, qu&aelig;sumus, Domine Deus, perpetua mentis et
+corporis sanitate gaudere, et gloriosa beat&aelig; Mari&aelig;
+semper Virginis intercessione a pr&aelig;senti liberari tristitia,
+et &aelig;terna perfrui l&aelig;titia. Per Dominum.&mdash;Vern.
+cxlvi.]</p>
+<p>On the second Sunday after Easter, we find a further and more
+sad departure from the simplicity of Christian worship, in which
+the Church of Rome declares that the offerings made to God at the
+Lord's Supper were made for the honour of the Virgin.&mdash;"Having
+received, O Lord, the helps of our salvation, grant, we beseech
+Thee, that by the patronage of Mary, ever Virgin, we may be every
+where protected; in veneration of whom we make these offerings to
+thy Majesty." [Sumptis, Domine, salutis nostr&aelig; subsidiis, da,
+qu&aelig;sumus, beat&aelig; Mari&aelig; semper Virginis patrociniis
+ubique protegi, <i>in cujus veneratione</i> h&aelig;c tu&aelig;
+obtulimus Majestati.&mdash;Post Commun. Mis. Rom.]</p>
+<p>On the octave of Easter, at the celebration of mass, in the
+Secret, the intercession of the Virgin is made to appear as
+essential a cause of our peace and blessedness as the propitiation
+of Christ; or rather, the two are represented as joint concurrent
+causes; as though the office of the Saviour was confined to
+propitiation, exclusive altogether of intercession, whilst the
+office of intercession was assigned to the Virgin.&mdash;"By thy
+propitiation, O Lord, and by the intercession of the blessed Mary,
+ever Virgin, may this offering be profitable to us for perpetual
+and present prosperity and peace." [Tua, Domine, propitiatione et
+beat&aelig; Maris&aelig; semper Virginis intercessione ad perpetuam
+atque prsesentem h&aelig;c oblatio nobis profecerit prosperitatem
+et pacem.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page336" id=
+"page336"></a>{336}</span>
+<p>IV. A fourth station in this lamentable progress was evidenced
+when Christians at the tombs of martyrs implored, yet still in
+prayer to God, that He would, for the sake of the martyrs, and by
+their merits and good offices, grant to the petitioner some benefit
+temporal or spiritual. Of that practice, we have an example in this
+prayer: "O God, who didst deign to choose the blessed Virgin's womb
+in which to dwell, vouchsafe, we beseech thee, to make us, defended
+by her protection, to take pleasure in her commemoration." [Deus
+qui virginalem aulam beat&aelig; Mari&aelig; in qua habitares
+eligerere dignatus es, da, qu&aelig;sumus, ut sua nos defensione
+munitos jucundos facias su&aelig; interesse
+commemorationi.&mdash;&AElig;st. clvi.]</p>
+<p>"By the Virgin mother, may the Lord grant us health and peace.
+Amen." [Per Virginem Matrem concedat nobis Dominus salutem et
+pacem. Amen.&mdash;Vern. cxliii.]</p>
+<p>"By the prayers and merits of the blessed Mary, ever Virgin, and
+of all saints, may the Lord bring us to the kingdom of heaven."
+[Precibus et meritis beat&aelig; Mari&aelig; Virginis et omnium
+sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad regna coelorum.&mdash;Vern.
+cxlvii.]</p>
+<p>"May the Virgin Mary bless us, together with a pious offspring."
+[Nos cum prole pia benedicat Virgo Maria.&mdash;Vern. cxlvii.]</p>
+<p>V. The fifth grade involves a still more melancholy departure
+from Christian truth and primitive simplicity, when the prayer is
+no longer addressed to God, but is offered to the Virgin, imploring
+her to intercede with God for the supplicants, yet still asking
+nothing but her prayers.</p>
+<p>"Blessed mother, Virgin undefiled, glorious Queen of the world,
+intercede for us with the Lord." [Beata Mater, et intacta Virgo,
+gloriosa regina mundi, intercede pro nobis ad Dominum.&mdash;Aut.
+cxliv.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page337" id=
+"page337"></a>{337}</span>
+<p>"Blessed mother of God, Mary, perpetual Virgin, the temple of
+the Lord, the holy place of the holy Spirit, thou alone without
+example hast pleased our Lord Jesus Christ: Pray for the people,
+mediate for the clergy, intercede for the female sex who are under
+a vow." [Beata Dei Genitrix, Maria Virgo perpetua, templum Domini,
+sacrarium Spiritus Sancti, sola sine exemplo placuisti Domino
+nostro Jesu Christo; ora pro populo, interveni pro clero, intercede
+pro devoto femineo sexu.&mdash;Vern. clxiii.]</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Holy Mary, pray for us!</p>
+<p>Holy mother of God, pray for us!</p>
+<p>Holy Virgin of virgins, pray for us!"</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>In the form of prayer called Litani&aelig; Lauretan&aelig;,
+between the most solemn addresses to the ever blessed Trinity, and
+to the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world, are
+inserted more than forty addresses to the Virgin, invoking her
+under as many varieties of title. She is appealed to as&mdash;The
+Mirror of Justice, The Cause of our Joy, The mystical Rose, The
+Tower of David, The Tower of Ivory, The House of Gold, The Arc of
+the Covenant, The Gate of Heaven, The Refuge of Sinners, The Queen
+of Angels, the Queen of all Saints. [Vern. ccxxxix.]</p>
+<p>In examining the case of the invocation of saints, we placed
+under this head, as the safer course, a kind of invocation which
+seemed to vacillate between this appeal to them merely for
+intercession, and the last consummation of all, direct prayer to
+them for blessings. We exemplified it by the hymn to St. Stephen.
+The following seems very much of the same character, addressed to
+the Virgin:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Hail, O Queen, Mother of mercy, our life, sweetness, and hope,
+Hail! To thee we cry, banished sons <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page338" id="page338"></a>{338}</span> of Eve. To thee we sigh,
+groaning and weeping in this valley of tears. Come then, our
+Advocate, turn those compassionate eyes of thine on us, and after
+this exile show to us Jesus, the blessed fruit of thy womb. O
+merciful! O pious! O sweet Virgin Mary! [Salve, Regina, Mater
+Misericordi&aelig;, vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra, salve. Ad te
+clamamus exules filii Ev&aelig;. Ad te suspiramus gementes et
+flentes in hac lachrymarum valle. Eja ergo Advocata nostra, illos
+tuos misericordes oculos ad nos converte, et Jesum benedictum
+fructum ventris tui nobis post hoc exilium ostende. O clemens! O
+pia! O dulcis Virgo Maria!]</p>
+<p>"Pray for us, O holy Mother of God, that we may be made worthy
+of the promises of Christ." [Ora pro nobis, Sancta Dei Genetrix, ut
+digni efficiamur promissionibus Christi.&mdash;&AElig;st. 151.]</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>VI. Unhappily, in the appointed religious services of the Roman
+ritual, we have too many examples of prayer for benefits spiritual
+and temporal, addressed directly to the Virgin. It is in vain to
+say that all that is meant is to ask her intercession; the people
+will not, cannot, do not, regard it in that light. It is affirmed
+that when the Church of Rome guides and directs her sons and
+daughters to pray for specific benefits at the hands of the Virgin
+mother, without any mention of her prayers, without specifying that
+her petitions are all that they ask; yet they are taught only to
+ask for her intercession, and are not encouraged to look for the
+blessings as her gift and at her hands. But, can this be right and
+safe? In an act of all human acts the most solemn and holy, can
+recourse be had to such refinements without great danger?</p>
+<p>Among many others of a similar kind this invocation frequently
+recurs, "Deem me worthy to praise thee, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page339" id="page339"></a>{339}</span> O sacred
+Virgin; give to me strength against thy enemies." [Dignare me
+laudare te, Virgo sacrata. Da mihi virtutem contra hostes
+tuos.&mdash;&AElig;st. clvi.]</p>
+<p>The following seems to be among the most favourite addresses to
+the Virgin:&mdash;"Hail, Star of the Sea, kind Mother of God, and
+ever Virgin! Happy Gate of Heaven, taking that 'Hail!' from the
+mouth of Gabriel, establish us in peace,&mdash;changing the name of
+Eve. For the guilty, loose their bonds; bring forth light for the
+blind; drive away our evils; demand for us all good things. SHOW
+THAT THOU ART A MOTHER. Let Him who endured for us to be thy Son,
+through thee receive our prayers. O excellent Virgin, meek among
+all, us, FREED FROM FAULT, MAKE MEEK AND CHASTE; make our life
+pure; prepare a safe journey; that, beholding Jesus, we may always
+rejoice. Praise be to God the Father, glory to Christ most high,
+and to the Holy Spirit; one honour to the three. Amen."</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>[Ave Man's Stella,</p>
+<p>Dei Mater alma,</p>
+<p>Atque semper Virgo!</p>
+<p>Felix coeli porta,</p>
+<p>Sumens illud Ave</p>
+<p>Gabrielis ore,</p>
+<p>Funda nos in pace,</p>
+<p>Mutans Ev&aelig; nomen.</p>
+<p>Solve vincla reis,</p>
+<p>Profer lumen c&aelig;cis,</p>
+<p>Mala nostra pelle,</p>
+<p>Bona cuncta posce.</p>
+<p>MONSTRA TE ESSE MATREM;</p>
+<p>Sumat per te preces,</p>
+<p>Qui pro nobis natus</p>
+<p>Tulit esse tuus.</p>
+<p>Virgo singularis,</p>
+<p>Inter omnes mitis,</p>
+<p>Nos culpa solutos,</p>
+<p>Mites fac et castos,</p>
+<p>Vitam pr&aelig;sta puram,</p>
+<p>Iter para tutum,</p>
+<p>Ut videntes Jesum</p>
+<p>Semper coll&aelig;temur.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Sit laus Deo Patri, summo Christo decus,</p>
+<p>Spiritui Sancto, tribus honor unus. Amen.&mdash;&AElig;st.
+597.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>In the body of this hymn, there is undoubtedly reference to an
+application to be made to the Son, &amp;c.; but can it be fitting
+that such language as is here suggested to the Virgin, for her to
+use, should be addressed by a <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page340" id="page340"></a>{340}</span> mortal to God? can such a
+call upon her to show her power and influence over the eternal Son
+of the eternal Father be fitting&mdash;"Show that thou art a
+mother?" I confess that against what is here implied, my
+understanding and my heart entirely revolt.<a id="footnotetag127"
+name="footnotetag127"></a><a href=
+"#footnote127"><sup>127</sup></a></p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote127" name=
+"footnote127"></a><b>Footnote 127:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag127">(return)</a>
+<p>At the present day some versions, contrary to the whole drift
+and plain sense and meaning of the passage, have translated it, as
+though the prayer was, that Mary would, by her maternal good
+offices in our behalf, prove to us that she was our mother. An
+instance of what I mean occurs in a work called "Nouveau Recueil de
+Cantiques," p. 353.</p>
+<p>"Monstra te esse Matrem: Faites voir que vous &ecirc;tes
+v&eacute;ritablement notre m&egrave;re." In an English manual,
+first printed in 1688, and then called "The Prince of Wales's
+Manual," the lines are thus rendered&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Shew us a Mother's care,</p>
+<p>To Him convey our prayer,</p>
+<p>Who for our sake put on</p>
+<p>The title of thy Son.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>I rejoice to see an indication of a feeling of impropriety in
+the sentiment in its plain, obvious meaning; still the change is
+inadmissible. She is addressed above, in the second line, as the
+mother of God; Jesus is immediately mentioned, in the very next
+line, and through the entire stanza, as her Son; and the prayer is,
+that through her that Being who endured to be her Son would hear
+the prayers of the worshippers.</p>
+<p>Since I first prepared this note for the press, I have found a
+proof, that the obvious grammatical and logical meaning, "show
+thyself to be His mother," is the sense in which it was received
+and interpreted before the Reformation. In a work dedicated to the
+"Youth of England studious of good morals," and entitled "Expositio
+Sequentiarum," the only interpretation given to this passage is
+thus expressed: "Show thyself to be a MOTHER, namely BY APPEASING
+THY SON, and let thy Son take our prayers through thee, who
+(namely, the Son born of the Virgin Mary,) for us miserable sinners
+endured to be thy Son." "Monstra te esse MATREM (sc.) placando
+TILIUM TUUM, et filius tuus sumat precem, id est, deprecationes
+nostras per te qui (sc.) filius natus ex Virgine Maria pro nobis
+(sc.) miseris peccatoribus tulit, id est, sustinuit esse tuus
+filius." It must be observed, that this work was expressly written
+for the purpose of explaining these parts of the ritual according
+to the use of Sarum. It was printed by the famous W. de Worde, at
+the sign of the Sun in Fleet-street, 1508. The passage occurs in p.
+33. b. This is by no means the only book of the kind. I have before
+me one printed at Basil, in 1504, and another at Cologne the same
+year. They are evidently all drawn from some common source, but are
+not reprints all of the same work, for there are in each some
+variations. The Cologne edition tells us, that it was the reprint
+of a familiar commentary long ago (jamdudum) published on the
+hymns. All these join in construing the passage so as to represent
+the prayer to the Virgin to be, that she would show and prove that
+she was mother by appeasing her Son, and causing him to hear our
+prayers. Nor can any other meaning be attached to the translation
+of the words as given by Cardinal Du Perron (Replique &agrave; la
+Rep. du Roy de la G. Bretagne. Paris, 1620, p. 970). "Et pourtant
+quand l'Eglise dit &agrave; la saincte Vierge, 'Defends nous de
+l'ennemy, et nous re&ccedil;oy &agrave; l'heure delamort,' elle
+n'entend pas prier la Vierge qu'elle nous re&ccedil;oive par sa
+propre virtu, mais par impetration de la grace de son Fils, comme
+l'Eglise le temoigne en ces mots: 'Monstre que tu es m&egrave;re,
+re&ccedil;oive par toy nos prieres celuy, qui n&eacute; pour nous a
+eu agreeable d'&ecirc;tre tien!'" This novel interpretation I have
+not found in any one book of former days.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page341" id=
+"page341"></a>{341}</span>
+<p>Another prayer runs thus: "Under thy protection we take refuge,
+Holy Mother of God. Despise not our supplications in our
+necessities; but from all dangers ever deliver us, O glorious and
+Blessed Virgin." [Sub tuum pr&aelig;sidium confugimus, sancta Dei
+Genetrix; nostras deprecationes ne despicias in necessitatibus, sed
+a periculis cunctis libera nos semper, Virgo gloriosa et
+benedicta.&mdash;&AElig;st. cxlvi.]</p>
+<p>Let us suppose the object of these addresses to be changed; and
+instead of the Virgin let us substitute the name of the
+ever-blessed God and Father of us all. The very words here
+addressed to the Virgin are offered to Him, and spoken of Him in
+some of the most affecting prayers and praises recorded in the
+Bible<a id="footnotetag128" name="footnotetag128"></a><a href=
+"#footnote128"><sup>128</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote128" name=
+"footnote128"></a><b>Footnote 128:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag128">(return)</a>
+<p>The identity of the prayers offered to the Virgin with those
+offered in the Book of inspiration, or in the Roman Ritual to the
+Almighty, becomes very striking, if we lay side by side the
+authorized language of the Roman Liturgy, and the only translation
+of the Scriptures authorized by the Roman Church.</p>
+<table summary="Translation">
+<tr>
+<td><i>Roman Ritual in addressing the Virgin</i></td>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td><i>Roman Ritual, or Translation of the Bible, in addressing the
+Almighty</i>.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Sub tuum pr&aelig;sidium confugimus.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Dominus, firmamentum meum et refugium meum. Ad te
+confugi.&mdash;Ps. xvii. 1; cxlii. 11.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Nostras deprecationes ne despicias in necessitatibus.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Ne despexeris deprecationem meam.&mdash;Ps. liv. 1.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Sed a periculis cunctis libera nos.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Libera, Domine, animam servi tui ab omnibus periculis inferni.
+Hiem. ccvi.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Libera nos a malo. Orat. Dom.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+<td>A periculo mortis libera nos, Domine.&mdash;Hiem. cciv.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Tu nos ab hoste protege.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Eripe me de inimicis meis, Domine.&mdash;Ps. cxlii. 11.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Et hora mortis SUSPICE.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td><i>Suscipe</i>, Domine, servum tuum.&mdash;Hiem.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page342" id=
+"page342"></a>{342}</span>
+<p>But another hymn in the office of the Virgin, addressed in part
+to the blessed Saviour himself, and partly to the Virgin Mary, is
+still more revolting to all my feelings with regard to religious
+worship. The Redeemer is only asked to remember his mortal birth;
+no blessing is here supplicated for at his hands; his protection is
+not sought; no deliverance of our souls at the hour of death is
+implored from Him; these blessings, and these heavenly benefits,
+and these divine mercies, are sought for exclusively at the hands
+of the Virgin alone. Can such a mingled prayer, can such a contrast
+in prayer, be the genuine fruit of that Gospel which bids us ask
+for all we need in prayer to God in the name and for the sake of
+his blessed Son?</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Author of our salvation, remember that once, by <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page343" id="page343"></a>{343}</span> being
+born of a spotless virgin, thou didst take the form of our body!
+Mary, mother of grace, mother of mercy, do thou protect us from the
+enemy, and receive us at the hour of death. Glory to thee, O Lord,
+who wast born of a Virgin, with the Father and the Holy Spirit,
+through eternal ages. Amen<a id="footnotetag129" name=
+"footnotetag129"></a><a href=
+"#footnote129"><sup>129</sup></a>."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote129" name=
+"footnote129"></a><b>Footnote 129:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag129">(return)</a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Memento, Salutis Auctor, Tu nos ab hoste protege, Quod nostri
+quondam corporis, Et hora mortis suscipe. Ex illibata Virgine,
+Gloria tibi, Domine, Nascendo formam sumpseris. Qui natus es de
+Virgine, Maria mater grati&aelig;, Cum Patre et Sancto Spiritu,
+Mater misericordi&aelig;, In sempiterna s&aelig;cula. Amen.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the new version, (referred to in page 260 of the present
+work,) this hymn stands thus:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Memento, rerum Conctitor, Maria mater grati&aelig;, Nostri quod
+olim corporis, Dulcis parens clementi&aelig;, Sacrata ab alvo
+Virginis, Tu nos ab hoste protege, Nascendo forrnam sumpseris. In
+mortis hora suscipe, &amp;c.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&AElig;st. clv.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Could the beloved John, to whose kind and tender care our
+blessed Lord gave his mother of especial trust, have offered to her
+such a prayer as this? To God alone surely would he have prayed for
+deliverance from all evil and mischief. To God alone would he have
+prayed:&mdash;"In the hour of death, good Lord, deliver us, and all
+for Jesus Christ's sake, our only Saviour and Mediator."</p>
+<p>To one other example of the practice of the Church of Rome I
+must refer. The rubric in our Book of Common Prayer directs that
+"at the end of every Psalm throughout the year, shall be repeated,
+Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost: As
+it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without
+end. Amen." In the Roman Breviary also we find this rubric: "This
+verse, <i>Gloria</i>, is always said in the end of all psalms,
+EXCEPT IT BE OTHERWISE <span class="pagenum"><a name="page344" id=
+"page344"></a>{344}</span> NOTED." [&AElig;st. 3.] Such
+notifications occur at the end of various psalms. On the Feast of
+the Assumption [&AElig;st. 595.], fourteen psalms are appointed to
+be used. At the close of every one of these psalms, without however
+any note that the Gloria is not to be said, there is appended an
+anthem to the Virgin. In some cases, so intimately is the anthem
+interwoven with the closing words of the psalm, as that under other
+circumstances it would induce us to infer that the Gloria was
+intended to be left out, especially as in the Parvum Officium of
+the Virgin [&AElig;st. clv.], though to the various psalms anthems
+in the same manner have been annexed, yet the words "Gloria Patri
+et Filio" are inserted in each case between the psalm and the
+anthem. Be this as it may, the annexation of the anthem has a
+lamentable tendency to withdraw the thoughts of the worshippers
+from the truths contained in the inspired psalm, and to fix them
+upon Mary and her Assumption; changing the Church's address from
+the Eternal Being, alone invoked by the Psalmist, to one, who
+though a virgin blessed among women, is a creature of God's hand.
+Thus, at the conclusion of the 8th psalm; "O Lord, our Lord, how
+excellent is thy name in all the world," we find immediately
+annexed these two anthems, "The holy mother of God is exalted above
+the choirs of angels to the heavenly realms. The gates of paradise
+are opened to us by thee, [by thee, O Virgin [Qu&aelig; gloriosa]]
+who glorious triumphest with the angels." Thus again, an anthem is
+attached to the last verse of the 95th (in the Hebrew and English
+versions the 96th). "He shall judge the earth in equity, and the
+people with his truth. Rejoice, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page345" id="page345"></a>{345}</span> O Virgin Mary; thou alone
+hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world. Deem me worthy to
+praise thee, hallowed Virgin: Give me strength against thy
+enemies." To the 96th (97th), the latter clause of that address is
+repeated, with the addition of the following: "After the birth thou
+didst remain a virgin inviolate. Mother of God, intercede for
+us."</p>
+<p>An instance of the anthem being so intimately interwoven with
+the psalm, as to render the insertion of the "Gloria," between the
+two, to say the least, forced and unnatural, occurs at the close of
+the 86th (87th) psalm. The vulgate translation of the last verse,
+differing entirely from the English, is this: "As the habitation of
+all who rejoice is in thee." This sentence of the Psalmist is thus
+taken up in the Roman Ritual: "As the habitation of all us who
+rejoice is in THEE, Holy Mother of God."</p>
+<p>The object proposed by the Church from of old in concluding each
+psalm by an ascription of glory to the eternal Trinity, was to lead
+the worshipper to apply the sentiments of the psalm to the work of
+our salvation accomplished by the three Persons of the Godhead. The
+analogous end of these anthems in the present service of the Church
+of Rome is to fix the thoughts of the worshipper upon Mary. This
+practice unhappily sanctions the excesses into which Bonaventura
+and others have run in their departures from the purity and
+integrity of primitive worship.</p>
+<p>Cardinal du Perron informs us, that at the altar in the office
+of the mass, prayer is not made directly to any saint, but only
+obliquely, the address being always made to God. But if prayers are
+offered in other parts of the service directly to them, it is
+difficult to see what is gained by that announcement. Surely it is
+trifling <span class="pagenum"><a name="page346" id=
+"page346"></a>{346}</span> to make such immaterial distinctions. If
+as a priest I could address the following prayer to the Virgin in
+preparing for offering mass, why should I not offer a prayer to the
+same being during its celebration?</p>
+<p>"O mother of pity and mercy, blessed Virgin Mary, I a miserable
+and unworthy sinner, flee to thee with my whole heart and
+affection, and I pray thy most sweet pity, that as thou didst stand
+by thy most sweet Son hanging upon the cross, so thou wouldest
+vouchsafe mercifully to stand by me a miserable priest, and by all
+priests who here and in all the holy Church offer Him this day,
+that, aided by thy grace, we may be enabled to offer a worthy and
+acceptable victim in the sight of the most high and undivided
+Trinity. Amen." [O Mater pietatis et misericordi&aelig;, beatissima
+Virgo Maria, ego miser et indignus peccator ad te confugio toto
+corde et affectu. Et precor dulcissimam pietatem tuam, ut sicut
+dulcissimo Filio tuo in cruce pendenti astitisti, ita et mihi
+misero sacerdoti et sacerdotibus omnibus hic et in tota sancta
+ecclesia ipsum hodie offerentibus, clementer assistere digneris, ut
+tua gratia adjuti dignam et acceptabilem hostiam in conspectu
+summ&aelig; et individu&aelig; Trinitatis offerre valeamus.
+Amen.&mdash;Rom. Brev. Hus. Hiem. p. ccxxxiii.]</p>
+<p>This is called, in the Roman Breviary, "A PRAYER to the blessed
+Virgin before the celebration of the mass," and is immediately
+followed by another prayer directed to be offered to any saint,
+male or female, whose feast is on that day celebrated. "O Holy N.
+behold I, a miserable sinner, DERIVING CONFIDENCE FROM THY MERITS,
+now offer the most holy sacrament of the body and blood of our Lord
+Jesus Christ, FOR THY HONOUR AND GLORY. I humbly and devotedly pray
+thee that thou wouldest deign to intercede for me to-day, that I
+may be enabled to offer so great a sacrifice <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page347" id="page347"></a>{347}</span> worthily
+and acceptably, and to praise Him eternally with thee and with all
+his elect, and that I may live with Him for ever." [O sancte N.
+ecce ego miser peccator de tuis mentis confisus, offero nunc
+sacratissimura sacramentum corporis et sanguinis Domini nostri Jesu
+Christ! PRO TUO HONORE ET GLORIA; precor te humiliter et devote ut
+pro me hodie intercedere digneris, ut tantum sacrificium digne et
+acceptabiliter offerre valeam, ut Eum tecum et cum omnibus electis
+ejus &aelig;ternaliter laudare et cum eo semper regnare
+valeam.&mdash;Hiem. ccxxxiii.]</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Such, Christian brethren, is the result of our inquiries into
+the real practice of the Church of Rome with regard to the worship
+of the Virgin Mary at the present day, in every part of the world
+where allegiance to that Church is acknowledged. Can we wonder that
+individuals, high in honour with that Church, have carried out the
+same worship to far greater lengths? I have ever present to my mind
+the principle of fixing upon the Church of Rome herself that only
+which is to be found in her canons, acknowledged decrees, and
+formularies. And unhappily of that which directly contravenes the
+Gospel-rule and primitive practice, far more than enough is found
+in her authorized rituals to compel all who hold to the Gospel and
+the integrity of primitive times, to withdraw their assent and
+consent from her worship. But with this principle before us, surely
+common justice and common prudence require that we should see for
+ourselves the practical workings of the system. "By their fruits ye
+shall know them," is a principle no less sanctioned by the Gospel
+than suggested by common sense and experience And, indeed, the
+shocking lengths to which priests, bishops, cardinals, and
+canonized persons have gone in this particular of the worship of
+the Virgin, might well <span class="pagenum"><a name="page348" id=
+"page348"></a>{348}</span> cause every upright and enlightened
+Roman Catholic to look anxiously to the foundation; to determine
+honestly, though with tender caution and pious care, for himself,
+whether the corruption be not in the well-head, whether the stream
+do not flow impregnated with the poison from the very fountain
+itself; whether the prayers authorized and directed by the Church
+of Rome to be offered to the Virgin be not in themselves at
+variance with the first principles of the Gospel&mdash;Faith in one
+God, the giver of every good, and in one Mediator and Intercessor
+between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, whose blood cleanseth
+from all sin: in a word, to see whether all the aberrations of her
+children in this department of religious duty have not their
+prototype in the laws and ordinances, the rules and injunctions,
+the example and practice of their mother herself.</p>
+<p>Indeed I am compelled here to say, that, however revolting to us
+as believers in Jesus, and as worshippers of the one true God, are
+those extravagant excesses into which the votaries of the Virgin
+Mary have run, I have found few of their most unequivocal
+ascriptions of divine worship to her, for a justification of which
+they cannot with reason appeal to the authorized ritual of the
+Church of Rome.</p>
+<p>In leaving this point of our inquiry, I would suggest two
+considerations: 1st, If it was intended that the invocation of the
+Virgin should be exclusively confined to requests, praying her to
+pray and intercede by prayer for the petitioners, why should
+language be addressed to her which in its plain, obvious,
+grammatical, and common sense interpretation conveys the form of
+direct prayers to her for benefits believed to be at her disposal?
+And, 2ndly, If the Church had <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page349" id="page349"></a>{349}</span> intended that her members,
+when they suppliantly invoked the Virgin Mary, and had recourse to
+her aid, should have offered to her direct and immediate prayers
+that she would grant temporal and spiritual benefits, to be
+dispensed at her own will, and by her own authority and power, in
+that case, what words could the Church have put into the mouth of
+the petitioners which would more explicitly and unequivocally have
+conveyed that idea?</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-2" id="sect3-5-2">SECTION
+II.</a>&mdash;WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN, CONTINUED.</h4>
+<p>I have no intention of dwelling at any length on the
+extraordinary excesses to which the adoration of the Virgin Mary
+has been carried in the Church of Rome, I do not mean by obscure
+and illiterate or fanatical individuals, but by her celebrated
+prelates, doctors, and saints. My researches have brought to my
+knowledge such a mass of error and corruption in the worship of
+Christians as I never before had any conception of; and rather than
+bring it all forward, and exhibit it to others, I would turn my own
+eyes from it altogether. Still many reasons render it absolutely
+necessary that we should not pass over the subject entirely in
+silence. Few in England, I believe, are aware of the real facts of
+the case; and it well becomes us to guard ourselves and others
+against such melancholy results as would appear to be inseparable
+from the invocation and worship of the Virgin. If indeed we could
+be justified in regarding such palpable instances of her worship in
+its most objectionable form as the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page350" id="page350"></a>{350}</span> marks of former and less
+enlightened times, most gladly would I draw a veil over them, and
+hide them from our sight for ever. But when I find the solemn
+addresses of the present chief authorities in the Church, nay, the
+epistles of the present sovereign Pontiff himself, cherishing,
+countenancing, and encouraging the selfsame evil departures from
+primitive truth and worship, it becomes a matter not of choice, but
+of necessity, to give examples at least of the deplorable excesses
+into which the highest and most honoured in that communion have
+been betrayed. On the present Pope's encyclical letter [A.D. 1840]
+we have already observed; and in this place I propose to examine
+only one more of those many excesses meeting us on every side,
+which characterize the public worship of the Virgin. The instance
+to which I refer seems to take a sort of middle station between the
+authorized enjoined services of the Church of Rome, and the
+devotions of individuals and family worship. It partakes on the one
+hand far too much of a public character to be considered in the
+light of private religious exercises; and on the other it wants
+that authority which would rank it among the appointed services of
+the Church. The devotional parts of the services are found neither
+in the Missals nor the Breviaries, and the adoption and celebration
+of the service seems to be left to the option and care of
+individuals. But the service is performed in the Churches,&mdash;a
+Priest presides,&mdash;the Host is presented to the adorations of
+the people,&mdash;and a sermon is preached by an appointed
+minister. The service to which I am referring is performed every
+evening through the entire month of May, and is celebrated
+expressly in honour of the Virgin Mary.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page351" id=
+"page351"></a>{351}</span>
+<p>The month of May is dedicated to her, and is called Mary's
+month. Temporary altars are raised to her honour, surrounded by
+flowers and adorned with garlands and drapery; her image usually
+standing before the altar. Societies are formed chiefly for the
+celebration of the Virgin's praises, and in some Churches the
+effect, both to the eye and to the ear, corresponds with the
+preparation. One thing only is wanting&mdash;the proper object of
+worship. I have now before me a book of hymns published professedly
+for the religious fraternities in Paris, and used in the Churches
+there. [Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques &agrave; l'usage des
+confr&eacute;ries des Paroisses de Paris. Paris, 1839.] Many of
+these hymns are addressed to the Virgin alone; some without any
+reference to the Son of God and Man, the only Saviour, and without
+any allusion to the God of Christians; indeed, an address to a
+heathen Goddess more entirely destitute of Christianity can
+scarcely be conceived. I copy one hymn entire.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Around the altars of Mary</p>
+<p>Let us, her children, press;</p>
+<p>To that mother so endeared</p>
+<p>Let us address the sweetest prayers.</p>
+<p>Let a lively and holy mirth</p>
+<p>Animate us in this holy day:</p>
+<p>There exists no sadness</p>
+<p>For a heart full of her love.</p>
+<p>Let us adorn this sanctuary with flowers;</p>
+<p>Let us deck her revered altar;</p>
+<p>Let us redouble our efforts to please her.</p>
+<p>Be this month consecrated to her;</p>
+<p>Let the perfume of these crowns</p>
+<p>Form a delicious incense,</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page352" id=
+"page352"></a>{352}</span>
+<p>Which ascending even to her throne</p>
+<p>May carry to her both our hearts and our prayers.</p>
+<p>Let the holy name of Mary</p>
+<p>Be for us a name of salvation!</p>
+<p>Let our softened soul</p>
+<p>Ever pay to her a sweet tribute of love.</p>
+<p>Let us join the choirs of angels</p>
+<p>The more to celebrate her beauty;</p>
+<p>And may our songs of praise</p>
+<p>Resound in eternity.</p>
+<p>O holy Virgin! O our mother!</p>
+<p>Watch over us from fhe height of heaven;</p>
+<p>And when from this sojourning of misery,</p>
+<p>We present our prayers to you;</p>
+<p>O sweet, O divine Mary!</p>
+<p>Lend an ear to our sighs,</p>
+<p>And after this life</p>
+<p>Make us to taste of immortal pleasures."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>[Autour des autels de Marie</p>
+<p class="i2">Nous ses enfants, empressons-nous;</p>
+<p>A cette M&egrave;re si ch&eacute;rie,</p>
+<p class="i2">Adressons les voeux les plus doux.</p>
+<p>Qu'une vive et sainte all&eacute;gresse</p>
+<p class="i2">Nous anime dans ce saint jour;</p>
+<p>Il n'existe point de tristesse</p>
+<p class="i2">Pour un coeur plein de son amour.</p>
+<p>Ornons des fleurs ce sanctuaire,</p>
+<p class="i2">Parons son autel r&eacute;v&eacute;r&eacute;,</p>
+<p>Redoublons d'efforts pour lui plaire.</p>
+<p class="i2">Que ce mois lui soi, consacr&eacute;;</p>
+<p>Que le parfume de ces couronnes</p>
+<p class="i2">Forme un encens d&eacute;licieux,</p>
+<p>Qui s'&eacute;levant jusqu'&agrave; son tr&ocirc;ne,</p>
+<p class="i2">Lui porte et nos coeurs et nos voeux.</p>
+<p>Que le nom sacr&eacute; de Marie</p>
+<p class="i2">Soit pour nous un nom de salut;</p>
+<p>Que toujours notre &acirc;me attendrie,</p>
+<p class="i2">D'amour lui paie un doux tribut.</p>
+<p>Unissons-nous aux choeurs des anges,</p>
+<p class="i2">Pour mieux c&eacute;l&eacute;brer sa
+beaut&eacute;.</p>
+<p>Et puissent nos chants de louanges</p>
+<p class="i2">Retentir dans l'&eacute;ternit&eacute;.</p>
+<p>O Vierge sainte! &ocirc; notre M&egrave;re!</p>
+<p class="i2">Veillez sur nous du haut des cieux;</p>
+<p>Et de ce s&eacute;jour de mis&egrave;re,</p>
+<p class="i2">Quand nous vous pr&eacute;sentons nos voeux,</p>
+<p>O douce, &ocirc; divine Marie!</p>
+<p class="i2">Pr&ecirc;tez l'oreille &agrave; nos
+soupirs;&mdash;</p>
+<p>Et faites qu'apr&egrave;s cette vie,</p>
+<p class="i2">Nous go&ucirc;tions d'immortels plaisirs.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&mdash;"Cantiques &agrave; l'usage des Confr&eacute;ries."
+Paris, 1839, p. 175.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>In the course of the present work I have already suggested the
+propriety of trying the real import, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page353" id="page353"></a>{353}</span> the true intent, and
+meaning and force of an address to a Saint, by substituting the
+holiest name ever uttered on earth, for the name of the Saint to
+whom such address is offered; and if the same words, without any
+change, form a prayer fit to be offered by us sinners to the
+Saviour of the world, then to ask ourselves, Can this be right? I
+would earnestly recommend the application of the same test here;
+and in many other of the prayers now offered (for many such there
+are now offered) by Roman Catholics to the Virgin. Suppose, instead
+of offering these songs of praise and prayer, and self-devotion to
+Mary in the month of May, we were to offer them, on the day of his
+nativity, to our blessed Lord, would they not form an act of faith
+in Him as our Saviour and our God?</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Around the altar of Jesus,</p>
+<p>Let us, his children, press;</p>
+<p>To that Saviour so endeared</p>
+<p>Let us address the sweetest prayers.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page354" id=
+"page354"></a>{354}</span>
+<p>Let a lively and holy mirth</p>
+<p>Animate us in this holy day:</p>
+<p>There exists no sadness</p>
+<p>For a heart full of his love.</p>
+<p>Let the holy name of Jesus</p>
+<p>Be for us a name of salvation!</p>
+<p>Let our softened soul</p>
+<p>Ever pay to HIM a sweet tribute of love.</p>
+<p>O holy Jesus! O our Saviour!</p>
+<p>Watch over us from the height of heaven;</p>
+<p>And when from this sojourning of misery,</p>
+<p>We present our prayers to Thee;</p>
+<p>O sweet, O divine Redeemer,</p>
+<p>Lend an ear to our sighs; and after this life,</p>
+<p>Make Thou us to taste of immortal pleasures."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-3" id="sect3-5-3">SECTION
+III.&mdash;BONAVENTURA.</a></h4>
+<p>I will now briefly call your attention to the devotional works
+of the celebrated Bonaventura. He is no ordinary man; and the
+circumstances under which his works were commended to the world are
+indeed remarkable. I know not how a Church can give the impress of
+its own name and approval in a more full or unequivocal manner to
+the works of any human being, than the Church of Rome has stamped
+her authority on the works of this her saint.</p>
+<p>In the "Acta Sanctorum", [Antwerp, 1723, July 14, p. 811-823.]
+it is stated, that this celebrated man was born in 1221, and died
+in 1274. He passed through all degrees of ecclesiastical dignities,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page355" id=
+"page355"></a>{355}</span> short only of the pontifical throne
+itself. He was of the order of St. Francis, and refused the
+archbishopric of York, when it was offered to him by Pope Clement
+the Fourth, in 1265; whose successor, Gregory the Tenth, elevated
+him to the dignity of cardinal bishop. His biographer expresses his
+astonishment, that such a man's memory should have been so long
+buried with his body; but adds, that the tardiness of his honours
+was compensated by their splendour.</p>
+<p>More than two centuries after his death, his claims to
+canonization were urged upon Sixtus the Fourth; and that Pope
+raised him to the dignity of saint; the diploma of his canonization
+bearing date 18 kalends of May, 1482, the eleventh year of that
+pope's reign.</p>
+<p>Before a saint is canonized by the Pope, it is usually required,
+that miracles wrought by him, or upon him, or at his tomb, be
+proved to the satisfaction of the Roman court<a id="footnotetag130"
+name="footnotetag130"></a><a href=
+"#footnote130"><sup>130</sup></a>. We need not dwell on the nature
+of an inquiry into a matter-of-fact, alleged to have been done by
+an individual two hundred years before; and whose memory is said to
+have lain buried with his corpse. Among the miracles specified, it
+is recorded, that on one occasion, when he was filled with solemn
+awe and fear at the celebration of the Lord's Supper, God, by an
+angel, took a particle of the consecrated host from the hands of
+the priest, and gently placed it in the holy man's mouth. But, with
+these transactions, I am not anxious to interfere, except so far as
+to ascertain the degree of authority with which any pious Roman
+Catholic must be induced to invest Bonaventura as a teacher and
+instructor in the doctrines of Christianity, authorized and
+appointed by his Church. The case stands thus:&mdash;Pope Sixtus
+IV. states in his <span class="pagenum"><a name="page356" id=
+"page356"></a>{356}</span> diploma, that the proctor of the order
+of Minors, proved by a dissertation on the passage of St. John,
+"There are three that bear record in heaven," that the blessed
+Trinity had borne testimony to the fact of Bonaventura being a
+saint in heaven: the Father proving it by the attested miracles;
+the Son, in the WISDOM OF HIS DOCTRINE; the Holy Spirit, by the
+goodness of his life. The pontiff then adds, in his own words, "He
+so wrote on divine subjects, THAT THE HOLY SPIRIT SEEMS TO HAVE
+SPOKEN IN HIM." [Page 831. "Ea de divinis rebus scripsit, ut in eo
+Spiritus Sanctus locutus videatur."] A testimony referred to by
+Pope Sixtus the Fifth.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote130" name=
+"footnote130"></a><b>Footnote 130:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag130">(return)</a>
+<p>See the canonization of St. Bonaventura in the Acta
+Sanctorum.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This latter pontiff was crowned May 1, 1585, more than a century
+after the canonization of Bonaventura, and more than three
+centuries after his death. By his order, the works of Bonaventura
+were "most carefully emendated." The decretal letters, A.D. 1588,
+pronounced him to be an acknowledged doctor of Holy Church,
+directing his authority to be cited and employed in all places of
+education, and in all ecclesiastical discussions and studies. The
+same act offers plenary indulgence to all who assist at the mass on
+his feast, in certain specified places, with other minor immunities
+on the conditions annexed. [Page 837.]</p>
+<p>In these documents Bonaventura<a id="footnotetag131" name=
+"footnotetag131"></a><a href="#footnote131"><sup>131</sup></a> is
+called the Seraphic Doctor; and I repeat my doubt, whether it is
+possible for any human authority to give a more full, entire, and
+unreserved sanction to the works of any human being than the Church
+of Rome has given to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page357" id=
+"page357"></a>{357}</span> the writings of Bonaventura. And what do
+those works present to us, on the subject of the Invocation and
+worship of the Virgin Mary?</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote131" name=
+"footnote131"></a><b>Footnote 131:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag131">(return)</a>
+<p>The edition of his works which I have used was published at
+Mentz in 1609; and the passages referred to are in vol. vi. between
+pp. 400 and 500.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Taking every one of the one hundred and fifty psalms<a id=
+"footnotetag132" name="footnotetag132"></a><a href=
+"#footnote132"><sup>132</sup></a>, Bonaventura so changes the
+commencement of each, as to address them not as the inspired
+Psalmist did, to the Lord Jehovah, the One only Lord God Almighty,
+but to the Virgin Mary; inserting much of his own composition, and
+then adding the Gloria Patri to each. It is very painful to refer
+to these prostitutions of any part of the Holy Book of revealed
+truth; but we must not be deterred from looking this evil in the
+face. A few examples, however, will suffice.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote132" name=
+"footnote132"></a><b>Footnote 132:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag132">(return)</a>
+<p>It is curious to find the Cardinal Du Perron, in his answer to
+our King James, declaring that he had never seen nor met with this
+Psalter in his life, and he was sure it was never written by
+Bonaventura; alleging that it was not mentioned by Trithemius or
+Gesner. The Vatican editors, however, have set that question at
+rest. They assure us that they have thrown into the appendix all
+the works about the genuineness of which there was any doubt, and
+that Bonaventura wrote many works not mentioned by Trithemius,
+which they have published from the Vatican press. Of this Psalter
+there is no doubt. See Cardinal Du Perron, Replique &agrave; la
+Rep. du Roi de Grand Bretagne. Paris, 1620, p. 974.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the 30th psalm. "In thee, O Lord, have I trusted; let me not
+be confounded for ever," &amp;c., the Psalter of the Virgin
+substitutes these words: [In te, Domina, speravi; non confundar in
+&aelig;ternum, &amp;c. &amp;c. In manus tuas, Domina, commendo
+spiritum meum, totam vitam meam, et diem ultimum meum.&mdash;P.
+480.]</p>
+<p>"In thee, O Lady, have I trusted; let me not be confounded for
+ever: in thy grace take me.</p>
+<p>"Thou art my fortitude and my refuge; my consolation and my
+protection.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page358" id=
+"page358"></a>{358}</span>
+<p>"To thee, O Lady, have I cried, while my heart was in heaviness;
+and thou didst hear me from the top of the eternal hills.</p>
+<p>"Bring thou me out of the snare which they have hid for me; for
+thou art my succour.</p>
+<p>"Into thy hands, O Lady, I commend my spirit, my whole life, and
+my last day.&mdash;Gloria Patri," &amp;c.</p>
+<p>In the 31st psalm we read, "Blessed are they whose hearts love
+thee, O Virgin Mary; their sins shall be mercifully blotted out BY
+THEE...." [Beati quorum corda te diligunt, Virgo Maria; peccata
+ipsorum A TE misericorditer diluentur.&mdash;P. 481.]</p>
+<p>In the 35th, v. 2. "Incline thou the countenance of God upon us;
+COMPEL HIM to have mercy upon sinners. O Lady, thy mercy is in the
+heaven, and thy grace is spread over the whole earth." [Inclina
+vultum Dei super nos. COGE illum peccatoribus misereri; Domina, in
+coelo misericordia tua, et gratia diffusa est super terram.]</p>
+<p>In the 67th, instead of, "Let God arise, and let his enemies be
+scattered," the Psalter of the Virgin has,</p>
+<p>"Let Mary arise, and let her enemies be scattered." [Exurgat
+Maria, et dissipentur inimici ejus.&mdash;P. 483.]</p>
+<p>In the opening of the 93rd psalm there is a most extraordinary,
+rather, as it sounds to me, a most impious and blasphemous
+comparison of the Supreme God with the Virgin Mary, in reference to
+the very Attribute, which shines first, last, and brightest in
+HIM,&mdash;His eternal mercy. Nay, it draws the contrast in favour
+of the Virgin, and against God. Most glad should I be, to find that
+I had misunderstood this passage; and that it admits of another
+acceptation<a id="footnotetag133" name=
+"footnotetag133"></a><a href="#footnote133"><sup>133</sup></a>. But
+I fear its real meaning is beyond controversy.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote133" name=
+"footnote133"></a><b>Footnote 133:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag133">(return)</a>
+<p>A similar idea indeed pervades some addresses to the Virgin of
+the present day, representing the great and only potentate as her
+heavenly husband, in himself full of rage, but softened into
+tenderness towards her votaries by her influence. See a hymn, in
+the Paris collection already referred to, p. 353, &amp;c. of this
+work (Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques, p. 183).</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Daignez, Marie, en ce jour (Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day)</p>
+<p class="i2">Ecouter nos soupirs, (To hear our sighs,)</p>
+<p class="i2">Et seconder nos d&eacute;sirs. (And to second our
+desires.)</p>
+<p>Daignez, Marie, en ce jour (Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day)</p>
+<p>Recevoir notre encens, notre amour. (To receive our incense, our
+love.)</p>
+<p>Du c&eacute;leste &eacute;poux (Calm the rage)</p>
+<p>Calmez le courroux, (Of thy heavenly husband,)</p>
+<p>Qu'il se montre doux (Let HIM show himself kind)</p>
+<p>A tous qui sont &agrave; vous. (To all those who are thine.)</p>
+<p>Du c&eacute;leste &eacute;poux (Of thy heavenly husband)</p>
+<p>Calmez le courroux, (Calm the rage,)</p>
+<p>Que son coeur s'attendrisse sur nous. (Let his heart be softened
+towards us.)</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page359" id=
+"page359"></a>{359}</span>
+<p>"The Lord is a God of vengeance; but thou, O Mother of Mercy,
+bendest to be merciful." [Deus ultionum Dominus; sed tu, Mater
+Misericordi&aelig;, ad miserandum inflectis.&mdash;P. 485.]</p>
+<p>The well known and dearly valued penitentiary psalm (129th) "De
+profundis," is thus addressed to Mary:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Out of the depths have I called to thee, O Lady:</p>
+<p>"O Lady, hear my voice. Let thine ears be attent to the voice of
+thy praise and glorifying: deliver me from the hand of my enemies:
+confound their imaginations and attempts against me. Rescue me in
+the evil day; and, in the day of death, forget not my soul. Carry
+me into the haven of safety: let my name be enrolled among the
+just." [De profundis clamavi ad te, Domina: Domina, exaudi vocem
+meam. Fiant aures tu&aelig; intendentes in vocem laudis et
+glorificationis tu&aelig;. Libera me de manu adversariorum meorum:
+confunde ingenia et conatus eorum contra me. Erue me in die mala:
+et in die mortis ne obliviscaris anim&aelig; me&aelig;. Deduc me ad
+portum salutis: inter justos scribatur nomen meum.&mdash;P.
+489.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page360" id=
+"page360"></a>{360}</span>
+<p>But, as the penitential psalms are thus turned, from Him to whom
+the Psalmist addressed them, so his hymns of praise to Jehovah, are
+made to flow through the same channel to the Virgin. And all nature
+in the sea, on the earth, in the heavens, and heaven of heavens, is
+called upon to praise and glorify Mary. Thus, in the 148th psalm,
+we read,&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Praise our Lady of heaven, glorify her in the highest. Praise
+her, all ye men and cattle, ye birds of the heaven, and fishes of
+the sea. Praise her, sun and moon; ye stars and circles of the
+planets. Praise her, cherubim and seraphim, thrones and dominions,
+and powers. Praise her, all ye legions of angels. Praise her, all
+ye orders of spirits above." [Laudate Dominam nostram de coelis:
+glorificate eam in excelsis. Laudate eam omnes homines et jumenta:
+volucres coeli et pisces maris. Laudate eam sol et luna:
+stell&aelig;, et circuli planetarum. Laudate eam cherubim et
+seraphim: throni et dominationes, et potestates. Laudate eam omnes
+legiones angelorum. Laudate eam omnes ordines spirituum
+supernorum.&mdash;P. 491.]</p>
+<p>The last sentence of the psalms is thus rendered,&mdash;"Let
+every spirit [<i>or</i> every thing that hath breath] praise our
+Lady."</p>
+<p>To this Psalter are added many hymns changed in the same manner.
+One, entitled, "A Canticle, like that of Habakkuk iii." presents to
+us an address to the Virgin Mary, of the very words which our
+blessed Saviour most solemnly addressed to his heavenly Father.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>O Lord, I have heard thy O Lady, I have heard thy report,
+speech, and was afraid, &amp;c. &amp;c. and was astonished; I
+considered thy works, O Lady, and I was afraid at thy work. In the
+midst of the years thou hast revived it.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page361" id=
+"page361"></a>{361}</span>
+<p class="i10">I will confess to thee, O Lady, because thou hast
+hid these things from the wise, and hast revealed them to
+babes.</p>
+<p class="i10">Thy glory hath covered the heavens, and the earth is
+full of thy mercy.</p>
+<p class="i10">Thou, O Virgin, wentest forth for the salvation of
+thy people, for salvation with thy Christ [thy anointed].</p>
+<p class="i10">O thou Blessed, our salvation rests in thy hands.
+Remember our poverty, O thou pious One.</p>
+<p class="i10">WHOM THOU WILLEST, HE SHALL BE SAVED; AND HE FROM
+WHOM THOU TURNEST AWAY THY COUNTENANCE, GOETH INTO DESTRUCTION.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>[Domina, audivi auditionem tuam, et obstupui: consideravi opera
+tua, et expavi, Domina, opus tuum: circa medium annorum vivificasti
+illud.</p>
+<p>Confitebor tibi, Domina: quia abscondisti h&aelig;c a
+sapientibus: et revelasti ea parvulis. Operuit coelos gloria tua,
+et misericordia tua plena est terra.</p>
+<p>Egressa es, Virgo, in salutem populi tui: in salutem cum Christo
+tuo. O Benedicta, in manibus tuis est reposita nostra salus;
+recordare, pia, paupertatis nostr&aelig;.</p>
+<p>Quem vis, ipse salvus erit, et a quo avertis vultum tuum, vadit
+in interitum.&mdash;G.P., &amp;c.]</p>
+<p>The song of the Three Children is altered in the same manner. In
+it as well as in the Canticle of Zacharias, these prayers are
+introduced;</p>
+<p>"O Mother of Mercy, have mercy upon us miserable sinners; who
+neglect to repent of our past sins, and commit every day many to be
+repented of." [Miserere, misericordi&aelig; Mater, nobis miseris
+peccatoribus, qui retroacta peccata poenitere negligimus, ac multa
+quotidie poenitenda committimus.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page362" id=
+"page362"></a>{362}</span>
+<p>The Te Deum is thus lamentably perverted:</p>
+<p>"We praise thee, Mother of God; we acknowledge thee, Mary the
+Virgin. [Te Matrem Dei laudamus; Te Mariam Virginem
+profitemur.]</p>
+<p>"All the earth doth worship thee, spouse of the eternal
+Father.</p>
+<p>"To thee all Angels and Archangels, Thrones and Principalities,
+faithfully do service....</p>
+<p>"To thee the whole angelic creation with incessant voice
+proclaim,</p>
+<p>"Holy! Holy! Holy! Mary, parent, mother of God, and
+virgin!...</p>
+<p>"... Thou with thy Son sittest at the right hand of the
+Father....</p>
+<p>"O Lady, SAVE THY PEOPLE, that we may partake of the inheritance
+of thy Son.</p>
+<p>"And rule us and guard us for ever....</p>
+<p>"Day by day we salute thee, O pious One; and we desire to praise
+thee in mind and voice even for ever.</p>
+<p>"Vouchsafe, O sweet Mary, now and for ever, to keep us without
+sin.</p>
+<p>"Have mercy upon us, O pious One; have mercy upon us.</p>
+<p>"Let thy great mercy be with us, because we put our trust in
+thee, O Virgin Mary.</p>
+<p>"In thee, sweet Mary, do we hope, defend thou us eternally.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page363" id=
+"page363"></a>{363}</span>
+<p>"Praise becomes thee, empire becomes thee; to thee be virtue and
+glory for ever and ever. Amen."</p>
+<p>[SALVUM FAC POPULUM tuum, Domina, ut simus participes
+h&aelig;reditatis Filii tui,</p>
+<p>Et rege nos et custodi nos in &aelig;ternum.</p>
+<p>Dignare, Dulcis Maria, mine et semper nos sine delicto
+conservare. Miserere, Pia, nobis! miserere nobis! Fiat misericordia
+tua magna nobiscum, quia in te, Virgo Maria, confidimus. In te,
+Dulcis Maria, speramus, nos defendas in &aelig;ternum. Te decet
+laus, te decet imperium, tibi virtus et gloria in s&aelig;cula
+s&aelig;culorum, Amen.]</p>
+<p>Can this by any the most subtle refinement be understood to be a
+mere request to her to pray for us?</p>
+<p>The Athanasian Creed is employed in the same manner; and it is
+very remarkable that the Assumption itself of the Virgin into
+heaven is there specified as one of the points to be believed on
+pain of losing all hopes of salvation.</p>
+<p>"Whosoever will be saved, before all things it is necessary that
+he hold firm the faith concerning the Virgin Mary: which except a
+man keep whole and undefiled, without doubt he shall perish
+everlastingly.... [Quicunque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est
+ut teneat de Maria firmam fidem.]</p>
+<p>"Whom at length He took up (assumpsit) unto heaven, and she
+sitteth at the right hand of her Son, not ceasing to pray to her
+Son for us. [Quam demum ipse in coelum assumpsit, et sedit ad
+dexteram Filii, non cessans pro nobis Filium exorare.]</p>
+<p>"This is the faith concerning Mary the Virgin, which except
+every one believe faithfully and firmly he cannot be saved."
+[H&aelig;c est fides de Maria Virgine: quam nisi quisque fideliter
+firmiterque crediderit, salvus esse non poterit.]</p>
+<p>In the Litany addressed to her, these sentences are found.</p>
+<p>"Holy Mary, whom all things praise and venerate, pray for
+us,&mdash;be propitious,&mdash;spare us, O Lady.</p>
+<p>"From all evil deliver us, O Lady.</p>
+<p>"In the devastating hour of death, deliver us, O Lady.</p>
+<p>"From the horrible torments of hell, deliver us, O Lady.</p>
+<p>"We sinners do beseech thee to hear us.</p>
+<p>"That thou wouldest vouchsafe to give eternal rest <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page364" id="page364"></a>{364}</span> to all
+the faithful departed, we beseech thee to hear us. &amp;c.
+&amp;c."</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>[Sancta Maria, quam omnia laudant</p>
+<p>Et venerantur, ora pro nobis.</p>
+<p>Propitia esto. Parce nobis, Domina.</p>
+<p>Ab omni malo libera nos, Domina.</p>
+<p>In hora mortis devastante libera nos, Domina.</p>
+<p>Ab inferni horribili cruciamine libera nos, Domina.</p>
+<p>Peccatores te rogamus, audi nos.</p>
+<p>Ut cunctis fidelibus defunctis requiem</p>
+<p>&AElig;ternam donare digneris, te rogamus, audi nos.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>I will add to this catalogue of prayers and praises to the
+Virgin, only the translation of one prayer more from the same
+canonized Saint; it contains a passage often referred to, but the
+existence of which has been denied. It stands, however, in his
+works, vol. vi. page 466.</p>
+<p>"Therefore, O Empress, and our most benign Lady, by THY RIGHT OF
+MOTHER COMMAND thy most beloved Son [JURE MATRIS IMPERA tuo
+dilectissimo Filio], our Lord, Jesus Christ, that He vouchsafe to
+raise our minds from the love of earthly things to heavenly
+desires, who liveth and reigneth."</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Now let any man of common understanding and straightforward
+principles say, whether any, the most ingenious refinement can
+interpret all this to mean merely that Bonaventura invoked the
+Virgin Mary to pray for him, or for his fellow-creatures. It looks
+as though he were resolved on set purpose to exalt her to an
+equality with the Almighty, when we find him not once, not
+casually, not in the fervent rapture of momentary excitement, but
+deliberately, through one hundred and fifty Psalms, applying to
+Mary the very words dictated by the Holy Spirit to the Psalmist,
+and consecrated <span class="pagenum"><a name="page365" id=
+"page365"></a>{365}</span> to the worship of the one supreme God;
+and then selecting the most solemn expressions by which the
+Christian Church approaches the Lord of heaven and earth, our
+Father, our Saviour, our Sanctifier: employing too the very words
+of her most solemn form of belief in the ever-blessed Trinity, and
+substituting Mary's name for the God of Christians. On the words,
+"By thy right of mother command thy Son," beyond the assertion of
+the fact that there they are to this day, I wish to add nothing,
+because the very denial of their existence often repeated shows,
+that many Roman Catholics themselves regard them as
+objectionable.</p>
+<p>But, if such a man as Bonaventura, one of the most learned and
+celebrated men of his age, could be tempted by the views cherished
+by the Church of Rome, to indulge in such language, what can be
+fairly expected of the large mass of persons who find that language
+published to the world with the highest sanction which their
+religion can give, as the work of a man whom the Almighty declared
+when on earth, by miracles, to be a chosen vessel, and to be under
+the guidance of the Holy Spirit; and of whom they are taught by the
+infallible testimony<a id="footnotetag134" name=
+"footnotetag134"></a><a href="#footnote134"><sup>134</sup></a> of
+his canonization, that he is now reigning with Christ in heaven,
+and is himself the lawful and appointed object of religious
+invocation. I profess to you that I see no way by which Christians
+can hold and encourage this doctrine of the Invocation of Saints,
+without at the same time countenancing and cherishing what, were I
+to join in such invocation, would stain my soul with the guilt of
+idolatry. If the doctrine were confessedly Scriptural, come what
+would come, our duty would be to maintain it at all hazards,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page366" id=
+"page366"></a>{366}</span> and to brave every danger rather than
+from fear of consequences to renounce what we believe to have come
+from God; securing the doctrine at all events, and then putting
+forth our very best to guard against its perversion and abuse. But
+surely, it well becomes our brethren of the Church of Rome, to
+examine with most rigid and unsparing scrutiny into the very
+foundation of such a doctrine as this; a doctrine which in its
+mildest and most guarded form is considered by a very large number
+of their fellow Christians, as a dishonouring of God and of his
+Son, our Saviour; and which in its excess, an excess witnessed in
+the books of learned and sainted authors, and in the every day
+practice of worshippers, seems to be in no wise distinguishable
+from the practices of acknowledged polytheism, and pagan worship.
+If that foundation, after honest and persevering examination,
+approves itself as based sure and deep on the word of God, and the
+faith and practice of the apostles and the Church founded by them
+from the first, I have not another word to say, beyond a fervent
+prayer that the God in whom we trust would pour the bright beams of
+his Gospel abundantly into the hearts of all who receive that
+Gospel as the word of life. But were they my dying words to my
+dearest friend who had espoused that doctrine, I would say to him,
+Look well yourself to the foundation, because I am, after long
+examination, convinced, beyond a shadow of doubt that the doctrine
+and practice of the Invocation of Saints and Angels is as contrary
+to the doctrine and practice of the primitive Church, as it is in
+direct opposition to the express words of Scripture, and totally
+abhorrent from the spirit which pervades the whole of the Old, and
+the whole of the New Testament of God's eternal truth.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote134" name=
+"footnote134"></a><b>Footnote 134:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag134">(return)</a>
+<p>Bellarmin, in his Church Triumphant, maintains that in the act
+of Canonization, the Church is infallible. Vol. ii. p. 871.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page367" id=
+"page367"></a>{367}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-4" id="sect3-5-4">SECTION IV.</a>&mdash;BIEL,
+DAMIANUS, BERNARDINUS DE BUSTIS, BERNARDINUS SENENSIS, &amp;c.</h4>
+<p>Unhappily these excesses in the worship of the Virgin Mary are
+not confined to Bonaventura, or to his age. We have too many
+examples of the same extravagant exaltation of her as an object of
+adoration and praise in men, whose station and abilities seemed to
+hold them forth to the world as burning and shining lights. Again,
+let me repeat, that in thus soliciting your attention to the
+doctrines and expressed feelings of a few from among the host of
+the Virgin's worshippers, I am far from believing that the
+enlightened Roman Catholics in England now are ready to respond to
+such sentiments. My desire is that all persons should be made aware
+of the excesses into which even celebrated teachers have been
+tempted to run, when they once admitted the least inroad to be made
+upon the integrity of God's worship; and I am anxious also, without
+offence, but with all openness, to caution my countrymen against
+encouraging that revival of the worship of the Virgin in England,
+to promote which the highest authorities in the Church of Rome have
+lately expressed their solicitude, intimating, at the same time,
+their regret that the worship of the Virgin at the present time
+has, in England, degenerated from its exaltation in former ages,
+and that England is now far behind her continental neighbours in
+her worship. Though these excessive departures from Gospel truth
+and the primitive worship of one God by one Mediator may not be the
+doctrines of all who belong to the Church of Rome, yet they are the
+tenets of some of her most <span class="pagenum"><a name="page368"
+id="page368"></a>{368}</span> celebrated doctors, of men who were
+raised to her highest dignities in their lifetime, and solemnly
+enrolled by her among the saints of glory after their death. Their
+words and their actions are appealed to now in support of similar
+tenets and doctrines, though few, in this country at least, are
+found to put them forth in all their magnitude and fulness. But
+even in their mildest and least startling form these doctrines are
+awfully dangerous.</p>
+<p>The fact is, that the direct tendency of the worship of the
+Virgin, as practically illustrated in the Church of Rome, is to
+make GOD himself an object of FEAR, and the VIRGIN an object of
+LOVE; to invest Him, who is the Father of mercy and God of all
+comfort, with awfulness, and majesty, and with the terrors of
+eternal justice, and in direct and striking contrast to array the
+Virgin mother with mercy and benignity, and compassionate
+tenderness. Christians cannot be too constantly and too carefully
+on their guard against doing this wrong to our heavenly Father. His
+own inspired word invites us to regard Him not only as the God of
+love, but as Love itself. "God is love;" [1 John iv. 8.] and so far
+from terrifying us by representations of his tremendous majesty,
+and by declarations that we cannot ourselves draw nigh to God; so
+far from bidding us to approach Him with our suits and
+supplications through mediators whom we should regard as having,
+more than our blessed Redeemer, a fellow-feeling with us, and at
+the same time resistless influence with Him; his own invitation and
+assurance is, "Come unto me, and I will give you rest:" [Matt. xi.
+28.] "No one cometh unto the Father but by me:" [John xiv. 6.] "Him
+that cometh to me I will <span class="pagenum"><a name="page369"
+id="page369"></a>{369}</span> in no wise cast out:" [John vi. 37.]
+"Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain
+mercy, and find grace to help in time of need." [Heb. iv. 16.]</p>
+<p>How entirely opposed to such passages as these, breathing the
+spirit that pervades the whole Bible, are those doctrines which
+represent the Virgin Mary as the Mediatrix by whom we must sue for
+the divine clemency; as the dispenser of all God's mercies and
+graces; as the sharer of God's kingdom, as the fountain of pity, as
+the moderator of God's justice, and the appeaser of his wrath.
+"Show thyself a mother." "Compel thy Son to have pity." "By thy
+right of mother command thy Son." "God is a God of vengeance; but
+thou, Mary, dost incline to mercy;" such expressions convey
+sentiments and associations shocking to our feelings, and from
+which our reason turns away, when we think of God's perfections,
+and the full atonement and omnipotent intercession of his Son
+Christ our Redeemer. But it must not be disguised, that these are
+the very sentiments in which the most celebrated defenders of the
+worship of the Virgin, in the Church of Rome, teach their disciples
+to acquiesce, and in which they must have themselves fully
+acquiesced, if they practised what they taught. It is very painful
+to make such extracts as leave us no alternative in forming our
+opinions on this point; but it is necessary to do so, otherwise we
+may injure the cause of truth by suppressing the reality; a reality
+over which there seems to be a strong disposition, in the present
+day, in part at least, to draw a veil; an expedient which can only
+increase the danger.</p>
+<p>The first author, whose sentiments I would request you to weigh,
+is Gabriel Biel, a schoolman of great celebrity<a id=
+"footnotetag135" name="footnotetag135"></a><a href=
+"#footnote135"><sup>135</sup></a>. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page370" id="page370"></a>{370}</span> In his thirty-second
+lecture, on the Canon of the Mass, he thus expresses himself,
+referring to a sermon of St. Bernard, "The will of God was, that we
+should have all through Mary.... You were afraid to approach the
+Father, frightened by only hearing of Him.... He gave you Jesus for
+a Mediator. What could not such a Son obtain with such a Father? He
+will surely be heard for his own reverence-sake; for the Father
+loveth the Son. But, are you afraid to approach even Him? He is
+your brother and your flesh; tempted through all, that He might
+become merciful. THIS BROTHER MARY GAVE TO YOU. But, perhaps, even
+in Him you fear the divine Majesty, because, although He was made
+man, yet He remained God. You wish to have an advocate even to Him.
+Betake yourself to Mary. For, in Mary is pure humanity, not only
+pure from all contamination, but pure also by the singleness of her
+nature<a id="footnotetag136" name="footnotetag136"></a><a href=
+"#footnote136"><sup>136</sup></a>. Nor should I, with any doubt
+say, she too will be heard for her own reverence-sake. The Son,
+surely, will hear the Mother, and the Father will hear the
+Son."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote135" name=
+"footnote135"></a><b>Footnote 135:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag135">(return)</a>
+<p>Tubingen, 1499. Gabriel Biel, born at Spires about A.D. 1425,
+was in A.D. 1484 appointed the first Professor of Theology in the
+then newly founded University of Tubingen. He afterwards retired to
+a monastery, and died A.D. 1495.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote136" name=
+"footnote136"></a><b>Footnote 136:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag136">(return)</a>
+<p>This is a very favourite argument in the present day, often
+heard in the pulpits on the Continent.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In his 80th lecture, the same author comments on this prayer,
+which is still offered in the service of the Mass:</p>
+<p>"Deliver us, we beseech thee, O Lord, from all evils past,
+present, and future; and by the intercession of the blessed and
+glorious ever-virgin mother of God, Mary, with thy blessed
+apostles, Peter and Paul, and Andrew, and all saints, mercifully
+grant peace in our days, that, aided by the help of thy mercy, we
+may be both ever <span class="pagenum"><a name="page371" id=
+"page371"></a>{371}</span> free from sin, and free from all
+disquietude. Through the same our Lord, &amp;c."</p>
+<p>On this prayer Biel observes, "Again we ask, in this prayer, the
+defence of peace; and since we cannot, nor do we presume to obtain
+this by our own merit, ... therefore, in order to obtain this, we
+have recourse, in the second part of this prayer, to the suffrages
+of all his saints, whom He hath constituted, in the court of his
+kingdom, as our mediators, most acceptable to himself, whose
+prayers his love does not reject. But, of them, we fly, in the
+first place, to the most blessed Virgin, the Queen of Heaven, to
+whom the King of kings, the heavenly Father, has given the half of
+his kingdom; which was signified in Hester, the queen, to whom,
+when she approached to appease king Asuerus, the king said to her,
+Even if thou shalt ask the half of my kingdom, it shall be given
+thee. So the heavenly Father, inasmuch as He has justice and mercy
+as the more valued possessions of his kingdom, RETAINING JUSTICE TO
+HIMSELF, GRANTED MERCY to the Virgin Mother. We, therefore, ask for
+peace, by the intercession of the blessed and glorious Virgin."
+[Cum habeat justitiam et misericordiam tanquam potiora regni sui
+bona, justitia sibi retenta, misericordiam Matri Virgini
+concessit.]</p>
+<p>The very same partition of the kingdom of heaven, is declared to
+have been made between God himself and the Virgin by one who was
+dignified by the name of the "venerable and most Christian Doctor,"
+John Gerson<a id="footnotetag137" name=
+"footnotetag137"></a><a href="#footnote137"><sup>137</sup></a>, who
+died in 1429; excepting that, instead of justice and mercy, Gerson
+mentions power and mercy as the two parts of which God's kingdom
+consists, and that, whilst power remained with the Lord, the part
+of mercy ceded "to the mother of Christ, and the reigning
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page372" id=
+"page372"></a>{372}</span> spouse; hence, by the whole Church, she
+is saluted as Queen of Mercy."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote137" name=
+"footnote137"></a><b>Footnote 137:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag137">(return)</a>
+<p>Paris, 1606. Tract iv. Super "Magnificat," part iii. p. 754. See
+Fabricius, vol. iii. p. 49. Patav. 1754.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I would next refer to a writer who lived four centuries before
+Biel, but whose works received the papal sanction so late as the
+commencement of the seventeenth century, Petrus Damianus, Cardinal
+and Bishop. His works were published at the command of Pope Clement
+VIII., who died A.D. 1604, and were dedicated to his successor,
+Paul V., who gave the copyright for fifteen years to the Editor,
+Constantine Cajetan, A.D. 1606. I will quote only one passage from
+this author. It is found in his sermon on the nativity of the
+Virgin, whom he thus addresses: "Nothing is impossible with thee,
+with whom it is possible to restore those in despair to the hope of
+blessedness. For how could that authority, which derived its flesh
+from thy flesh, oppose thy power? For thou approachest before that
+golden altar of human reconciliation not only asking, but
+commanding; a mistress, not a handmaid." [Accedis enim ante illud
+aureum human&aelig; reconciliationis altare, non solum rogans, sed
+imperans; Domina, non ancilla. Paris, 1743. vol. ii. p. 107. Serm.
+44.]</p>
+<p>I must now solicit your attention to the sentiments of two
+writers, whose partial identity of name has naturally led, in some
+instances, to the one being mistaken for the other, Bernardinus de
+Bustis, and Bernardinus Senensis. Bernardinus de Bustis,
+[Fabricius, vol. i. 215.] in the country of Milan, was the
+celebrated author of the "Office of the Immaculate Conception of
+the Blessed Virgin," which was confirmed by the bull of Sixtus the
+Fourth, and has since been celebrated on the 8th of December.</p>
+<p>He composed different works in honour of the Virgin,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page373" id=
+"page373"></a>{373}</span> to one of which he gave the title
+"Mariale." In this work, with a great variety of sentiments of a
+similar tendency, he thus expresses himself:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Of so great authority in the heavenly palace is that empress,
+that, omitting all other intermediate saints, we may appeal to her
+from every grievance.... With confidence, then, let every one
+appeal to her, whether he be aggrieved by the devil, or by any
+tyrant, or by his own body, or by divine justice;" [Cologne, 1607.
+Part iii. Serm. ii. p. 176.] and then, having specified and
+illustrated the three other sources of grievance, he thus proceeds:
+"In the fourth place, he may APPEAL TO HER, if any one feels
+himself AGGRIEVED BY THE JUSTICE OF GOD [Licet ad ipsam appellare,
+si quis a Dei justitia se gravari sentit.] ... That empress,
+therefore, Hester, was a figure of this empress of the heavens,
+with whom God divided his kingdom. For, whereas God has justice and
+mercy, He retained justice to himself to be exercised in this
+world, and granted mercy to his mother; and thus, if any one feels
+himself to be aggrieved in the court of God's justice, let him
+appeal to the court of mercy of his mother." [Ideo si quis sentit
+se gravari in foro justiti&aelig; Dei, appellet ad forum
+misericordi&aelig; matris ejus.]</p>
+<p>For one moment, let us calmly weigh the import of these
+words:&mdash;Is it any thing short of robbing the Eternal Father of
+the brightest jewel in his crown, and sharing his glory with
+another? Is it not encouraging us to turn our eyes from the God of
+mercy as a stern and ruthless judge, and habitually to fix them
+upon Mary as the dispenser of all we want for the comfort and
+happiness of our souls?</p>
+<p>In another place, this same author thus exalts Mary:</p>
+<p>"Since the Virgin Mary is mother of God, and God is her Son; and
+every son is naturally inferior to his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page374" id="page374"></a>{374}</span> mother,
+and subject to her; and the mother is preferred above, and is
+superior to her son, it follows that the blessed Virgin is herself
+superior to God, and God himself is her subject, by reason of the
+humanity derived from her;" [Part ix. Serm. ii. p. 605.] and again.
+"O the unspeakable dignity of Mary, who was worthy to command the
+Commander of all." [Part xii. Serm, ii. p. 816.]</p>
+<p>I will detain you by only one more quotation from this famed
+Doctor. It appears to rob God of his justice and power, as well as
+of his mercy; and to turn our eyes to Mary for the enjoyment of all
+we can desire, and for safety from all we can dread. Would that
+Bernardine stood alone in the propagation of such doctrines. "We
+may say, that the blessed Virgin is chancellor in the court of
+heaven. For we see, that in the chancery of our lord the pope,
+three kinds of letters are granted: some are of simple justice,
+others are of pure grace, and the third mixed, containing justice
+and grace.... The third chancellor is he to whom it appertains to
+give letters of pure grace and mercy. And this office hath the
+blessed Virgin; and therefore she is called the mother of grace and
+mercy: but those letters of mercy she gives only in the present
+life. For, to some souls, as they are departing, she gives letters
+of pure grace; to others, of simple justice; and to others, mixed,
+namely, of justice and grace. For some were very much devoted to
+her, and to them she gives letters of pure grace, by which she
+COMMANDS, that glory be given to them without any pain of
+purgatory: others were miserable sinners, and not devoted to her,
+and to them she gives letters of simple justice, by which she
+COMMANDS that condign vengeance be done upon them; others were
+lukewarm and remiss in devotion, and to them she gives letters of
+justice and grace, by which <span class="pagenum"><a name="page375"
+id="page375"></a>{375}</span> she COMMANDS that grace be given to
+them, and yet, on account of their negligence and sloth, some pain
+of purgatory be also inflicted on them." [Part xii. Serm. ii. On
+the twenty-second excellence, p. 825.]</p>
+<p>The only remaining author, to whom I will at present refer you,
+is a canonized saint, Bernardinus Senensis. A full account of his
+life, his miracles, and his enrolment among the saints in heaven,
+is found in the Acta Sanctorum, vol. v. under the 20th of May, the
+day especially dedicated to his honour. Eugenius IV. died before
+the canonization of Bernardine could be completed: the next pope,
+Nicholas V. on Whitsunday 1450, in full conclave, enrolled him
+among the saints, to the joy, we are told, of all Italy. In 1461,
+Pius the Second said that Bernardine was taken for a saint even in
+his lifetime; and, in 1472, Sixtus IV. issued a bull, in which he
+extols the saint, and authorizes the translation of his body into a
+new church, dedicated, as others had been, to his honour.</p>
+<p>This Bernardine is equally explicit with others, in maintaining,
+that all the blessings which Christians can receive on earth are
+dispensed by Mary; that her princedom equals the princedom of the
+Eternal Father; that all are her servants and subjects, who are the
+subjects and servants of the Most High; that all who adore the Son
+of God should adore his virgin-mother, and that the Virgin has
+repaid the Almighty for all that He has done for the human race.
+Some of these doctrines were to me quite startling; I was not
+prepared for them; but I have been assured they find an echo in the
+pulpits in many parts of the continent. Very few quotations will
+suffice. [Opera, per John de la Haye. Paris, 1636. Five volumes
+bound in two.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page376" id=
+"page376"></a>{376}</span>
+<p>"As many creatures do service to the glorious Mary, as do
+service to the Trinity.... For he who is the Son of God, and of the
+blessed Virgin, wishing (so to speak) to make, in a manner, the
+princedom of his mother equal to the princedom of his father, he
+who was God, served his mother on earth. Moreover, this is true,
+all things, even the Virgin, are servants of the divine empire; and
+again, this is true, all things, even God, are servants of the
+empire of the Virgin." [Vol. iv. Serm. v. c. vi. p. 118.]</p>
+<p>"Therefore, all the angelic spirits are the ministers and
+servants of this glorious Virgin." [Serm. iii. c. iii. p. 104.]</p>
+<p>"To comprise all in a brief sentence, I do not doubt that God
+made all the liberations and pardons in the Old Testament on
+account of the reverence and love of this blessed maid, by which
+God preordained from eternity, that she should be, by
+predestination, honoured above all his works. On account of the
+immense love of the Virgin, as well Christ himself, as the whole
+most blessed Trinity, frequently grants pardon to the most wicked
+sinners." [Serm. v. c. ii. p. 116.]</p>
+<p>"By the law of succession, and the right of inheritance, the
+primacy and kingdom of the whole universe is due to the blessed
+Virgin. Nay, when her only Son died on the cross, since He had no
+one on earth to succeed Him of right, his mother, by the laws of
+all, succeeded, and by this acquired the principality of all.
+[Serm. v. c. vii. p. 118.] ... But, of the monarchy of the
+universe, Christ never made any testamentary bequest, because that
+could never be done without prejudice to his mother. Moreover, HE
+KNEW THAT A MOTHER CAN ANNUL THE <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page377" id="page377"></a>{377}</span> WILL OF HER SON, IF IT BE
+MADE TO THE PREJUDICE OF HERSELF." [Insuper noverat quod potest
+mater irritare Filii testamentum si in sui pr&aelig;judicium sit
+confectum.&mdash;P. 118.]</p>
+<p>"The Virgin Mother<a id="footnotetag138" name=
+"footnotetag138"></a><a href="#footnote138"><sup>138</sup></a>,
+from the time she conceived God, obtained a certain jurisdiction
+and authority in every temporal procession of the Holy Spirit, so
+that no creature could obtain any grace of virtue from God except
+according to the dispensation of his Virgin mother<a id=
+"footnotetag139" name="footnotetag139"></a><a href=
+"#footnote139"><sup>139</sup></a>. As through the neck the vital
+breathings descend from the head into the body, so the vital graces
+are transfused from the head Christ into his mystical body, through
+the Virgin. I fear not to say, that this Virgin has a certain
+jurisdiction over the flowing of all graces. And, because she is
+the mother of such a Son of God, who produces the Holy Spirit;
+THEREFORE, ALL THE GIFTS, VIRTUES, AND GRACES OF THE HOLY SPIRIT
+ARE ADMINISTERED BY THE HANDS OF HERSELF, TO WHOM SHE WILL, WHEN
+SHE WILL, HOW SHE WILL, AND IN WHAT QUANTITY SHE WILL." [Serm. v.
+p. 119.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote138" name=
+"footnote138"></a><b>Footnote 138:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag138">(return)</a>
+<p>Serm. v. c. viii. and Serm. vi. c. ii. p. 120 and 122. There is
+an omission (probably by an error of the press) in the first
+passage, which the second enables us to supply.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote139" name=
+"footnote139"></a><b>Footnote 139:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag139">(return)</a>
+<p>This writer is constantly referring to St. Bernard's doctrine,
+"No grace comes from heaven upon the earth, but what passes through
+the hands of Mary."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"She is the queen of mercy, the temple of God, the habitation of
+the Holy Spirit, always sitting at the right hand of Christ in
+eternal glory. Therefore she is to be venerated, to be saluted, and
+to be adored with the adoration of hyperdulia. And therefore she
+sits at the right hand of the King, that as often as you adore
+Christ the king you may adore also the mother of Christ." [Serm.
+vi. p. 121.]</p>
+<p>"The blessed Virgin Mary alone has done more for <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page378" id="page378"></a>{378}</span> God; or
+as much (so to speak) as God hath done for the whole human race.
+For I verily believe that God will grant me indulgence if I now
+speak for the Virgin. Let us gather together into one what things
+God hath done for man, and let us consider what satisfaction the
+Virgin Mary hath rendered to the Lord." Bernardine here enumerates
+many particulars, placing one against the other, which for many
+reasons I cannot induce myself to transfer into these pages, and
+then he sums up the whole thus: "Therefore, setting each individual
+thing one against another, namely, what things God had done for
+man, and what things the blessed Virgin has done for God, you will
+see that Mary has done more for God, than God has for man; so that
+thus, on account of the blessed Virgin, (whom, nevertheless, He
+himself made,) God is in a certain manner under greater obligations
+to us than we are to Him." [Serm. vi. p. 120.]</p>
+<p>The whole treatise he finishes with this address to the
+Virgin:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Truly by mere babbling are we uttering these thy praises and
+excellences; but we suppliantly pray thy immense sweetness. Do
+thou, by thy benignity, supply our insufficiencies, that we may
+worthily praise thee through the endless ages of ages. Amen."</p>
+<p>In closing these brief extracts I would observe, that by almost
+every writer in support of the worship of the Virgin, an appeal is
+made to St. Bernard<a id="footnotetag140" name=
+"footnotetag140"></a><a href="#footnote140"><sup>140</sup></a> as
+their chief authority. Especially is the following passage quoted
+by many, either whole or in part, at almost every turn of their
+argument:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote140" name=
+"footnote140"></a><b>Footnote 140:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag140">(return)</a>
+<p>The present Pope, in the same manner, refers to him in his
+Encyclical Letter.&mdash;A.D. 1840.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"If thou art disturbed by the heinousness of thy crimes, and
+confounded by the foulness of thy conscience, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page379" id="page379"></a>{379}</span> if
+terrified by the horror of judgment thou begin to be swallowed up
+in the gulf of despair, think of Mary, invoke Mary; let her not
+depart from thy heart, let her not depart from thy mouth. For
+whilst thinking of her, thou dost not err; imploring her, thou dost
+not despair; following her, thou dost not lose thy way; whilst she
+holds thee, thou dost not fall; whilst she protects thee, thou dost
+not fear; whilst she is thy leader, thou art not wearied; whilst
+she is favourable, thou reachest thy end<a id="footnotetag141"
+name="footnotetag141"></a><a href=
+"#footnote141"><sup>141</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote141" name=
+"footnote141"></a><b>Footnote 141:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag141">(return)</a>
+<p>See Bern. Sen. vol. iv. p. 124. The passage is found in Bernard,
+Paris, 1640. p. 25.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>If the Virgin Mary is thus regarded as the source and well-head
+of all safety and blessing, we cannot wonder, that glory and praise
+are ascribed in the selfsame terms to her as to the Almighty.
+Cardinal Bellarmin closes the several portions of his writings with
+"Praise to God and the blessed Virgin Mary<a id="footnotetag142"
+name="footnotetag142"></a><a href=
+"#footnote142"><sup>142</sup></a>." It is painful to reflect, that
+either the highest glory, due to that God who will not share his
+glory with another, is here ascribed to one of the creatures of his
+hand (however highly favoured and full of grace), or else that to
+the most high God is ascribed an inferior glory and praise, such as
+it is lawful for us to address to an exalted fellow-creature.
+Surely the only ascription fitting the lips and the heart of those
+who have been enlightened by the bright beams of Gospel truth, is
+Glory to God alone through Christ his Son.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote142" name=
+"footnote142"></a><b>Footnote 142:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag142">(return)</a>
+<p>Such ascriptions are very common. Joannes de Carthagena, a most
+voluminous writer of homilies, adopts this as the close of his
+sections: "Praise and glory to the Triune God, to the Humanity of
+Christ, to the Blessed Virgin Mary his mother, and to St. Joseph
+her dearest spouse."&mdash;Catholic Homilies on the Sacred Secrets
+of the Mother of God, and Joseph, p. 921. Paris, 1615.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page380" id=
+"page380"></a>{380}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-5" id="sect3-5-5">SECTION V.&mdash;MODERN
+WORKS OF DEVOTION AMONG ROMAN CATHOLICS.</a></h4>
+<p>It may perhaps be surmised, that the authors referred to in the
+last section lived many years ago, and that the sentiments of the
+faithful members of the Church of Rome have undergone material
+changes on these points. Assurances are given on every side, that
+the invocation of the saints and of the Virgin is nothing more than
+a request, that they would intercede with God, and implore his
+mercy for the suppliants. But whatever implicit reliance we may
+place on the good faith with which these declarations are made, we
+can discover no new key by which to interpret the forms of prayer
+and praise satisfactorily. Confessedly there are no changes in the
+authorized services. We discover no traces of change in the worship
+of private devotion. The Breviary and Missal contain the same
+offices of the Virgin Mary as in former days. The same sentiments
+are expressed towards her in public; the same forms of
+devotion<a id="footnotetag143" name="footnotetag143"></a><a href=
+"#footnote143"><sup>143</sup></a>, both in prayer and praise, are
+prepared for the use of individuals in their daily exercises.
+Whatever meaning is to be attached to the expressions employed, the
+prevailing expressions themselves remain the same as we found them
+to have been in past ages.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote143" name=
+"footnote143"></a><b>Footnote 143:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag143">(return)</a>
+<p>Works of this character abound in every place, where Catholic
+books may be purchased.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Since I made these extracts from the learned and celebrated
+doctors and canonized saints of former ages, my attention has been
+invited to the language now <span class="pagenum"><a name="page381"
+id="page381"></a>{381}</span> used in forms of devotion, the spirit
+of which implies similar views of the power and love of the Virgin
+Mary, as the fountain of mercies to mankind, and the dispenser of
+every heavenly blessing.</p>
+<p>At the head of these modern works, I was led to read over again
+the encyclical letter of the present sovereign pontiff, from the
+closing sentences of which I have already made extracts. And
+referring his words to a test which we have more than once applied
+in a similar case&mdash;that of changing the name of the person,
+and substituting the name of God, or his blessed Son, I cannot see
+how the spirit of his sentiments falls in the least below the
+highest degree of religious worship. His words, in the third
+paragraph of his letter, as they appear in the Laity's Directory
+for 1833, are these:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"But having at length taken possession of our see in the Lateran
+Basilic according to the custom and institution of our
+predecessors, we turn to you without delay, venerable brethren, and
+in testimony of our feelings towards you, we select for the date of
+our letter this most joyful day on which we celebrate the solemn
+festival of the most blessed Virgin's triumphant assumption into
+heaven, that she who has been through every great calamity our
+patroness and protectress, may WATCH OVER US WRITING TO YOU, AND
+LEAD OUR MIND BY HER HEAVENLY INFLUENCE to those counsels which may
+prove most salutary to Christ's flock."</p>
+<p>Let us substitute for the name of Mary, the holiest of all, The
+Eternal Spirit of Jehovah Himself; and will not these words be a
+proper vehicle of the sentiments of a Christian pastor? Let us fix
+upon Christmas-day, or Easter, or Holy Thursday, and what word
+expressive <span class="pagenum"><a name="page382" id=
+"page382"></a>{382}</span> of gratitude for past mercies to the
+supreme Giver of all good things, or of hope and trust in the
+guidance of the Spirit of counsel, and wisdom, and
+strength&mdash;of the most High God, who alone can order the wills
+and ways of men&mdash;might not a bishop of Christ's flock take
+from this declaration of the Sovereign Pontiff, and use in its
+first and natural sense, when speaking of the Lord Jehovah Himself?
+"We select for the date of our letter this most joyful day on which
+we celebrate the solemn festival of the most blessed Redeemer's
+nativity, (or glorious resurrection, or ascension,) that He who has
+been through every great calamity our patron and protector, may
+watch over us writing to you, and lead our mind by his heavenly
+influence to those counsels which may prove most salutary to
+Christ's flock."</p>
+<p>In these sentiments of the present Pope there is no allusion (as
+there is in the other clause) to Mary's prayers and intercessions.
+Looking to and weighing the words employed, and as far as words can
+be relied upon as interpreters of the thoughts, looking to the
+spirit of his profession, only one inference can be fairly drawn.
+However direct and immediate the prayers of the suppliants may be
+to the Virgin for her protection and defence from all dangers,
+spiritual and bodily, and for the guidance of the inmost thoughts
+in the right way, (blessings which we of the Anglican Catholic
+Church, following the footsteps of the primitive flock of Christ,
+have always looked for at the hand of God Almighty only, to be
+granted by Him for the sake of his blessed Son,) such petitioners
+to Mary would be sanctioned to the utmost by the principles and
+example of the present Roman Pontiff.</p>
+<p>We have already, when examining the records of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page383" id="page383"></a>{383}</span> the
+Council of Chalcedon, compared the closing words of this encyclical
+letter with the more holy and primitive aspirations of the Bishops
+of Rome and Constantinople in those earlier days; and the
+comparison is striking between the sentiments now expressed in the
+opening parts of the same letter, and the spirit of the collects
+which were adopted for the use of the faithful, before the
+invocation of saints and of the Virgin had gained its present
+strong hold in the Church of Rome. For example, a collect at
+Vespers teaches us to pray to God as the source from whom all holy
+desires and all good counsels proceed [Hiem. 149.]; and on the
+fifth Sunday after Easter this prayer is offered: "O God, from whom
+all good things do come, grant, we pray Thee, that by thy
+inspiration we may think those things that be good; and by thy
+guidance may perform the same;" whilst on the fifth Sunday after
+the Epiphany, in a collect, the spirit of which is strongly
+contrasted with the sentiments in both parts of this encyclical
+letter, God is thus addressed: "We beseech thee, O Lord, with thy
+continual pity, guard thy family, that, leaning on the sole hope of
+heavenly grace, it may ever be defended by thy protection." [Ut
+qu&aelig; in <i>sola</i> spe grati&aelig; coelestis innititur, tua
+semper protectione muniatur.&mdash;Hiem, 364. "Let us raise our
+eyes to the Blessed Virgin, who is our greatest hope, yea, the
+entire ground of our hope."]</p>
+<p>Similar materials are abundant. A whole volume, indeed, might
+readily be composed consisting solely of rules and instructions,
+confessions and forms of prayer, appertaining to the Virgin and the
+Saints, published by authority at the present day, both in our
+country and on the Continent, for the use of our Roman Catholic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page384" id=
+"page384"></a>{384}</span> brethren; but to which the word of God,
+and the doctrine and practice of the primitive Church, are in our
+estimation as much opposed as to the prayers of Bonaventura, or to
+the doctrine of either of the Bernardins. It would, however, be
+unprofitable to dwell on this subject at any great length. I will,
+therefore, only briefly refer to two publications of this sort, to
+which my own attention has been accidentally drawn: "The Imitation
+of the Blessed Virgin,"<a id="footnotetag144" name=
+"footnotetag144"></a><a href="#footnote144"><sup>144</sup></a> and
+"The Little Testament of the Holy Virgin."<a id="footnotetag145"
+name="footnotetag145"></a><a href=
+"#footnote145"><sup>145</sup></a></p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote144" name=
+"footnote144"></a><b>Footnote 144:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag144">(return)</a>
+<p>"The Imitation of the Blessed Virgin, composed on the plan of
+the Imitation of Christ. London, 1816. Approved by T.R. Asselini,
+Doctor of Sorbonne, last Bishop of Boulogne. From the French."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote145" name=
+"footnote145"></a><b>Footnote 145:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag145">(return)</a>
+<p>"The Little Testament of the Holy Virgin, translated from the
+French, and revised by a Catholic Priest. Third Edition. Dublin,
+1836."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The first professes to be "composed on the plan of the
+'Imitation of Christ.'" This is, in itself, highly objectionable;
+its tendency is to exalt Mary, by association, to the same place in
+our hearts and minds, which Thomas &agrave; Kempis had laboured, in
+his "Imitation of Christ," to secure for the Saviour; and it
+reminds us of the proceedings of Bonaventura, who wrote psalms to
+the honour of the Virgin after the manner which David used in his
+hymns to the Lord of Glory. In this work we read the following
+prayer to the Virgin, which seems to be stained with the error, the
+existence of which elsewhere we have already noticed, of
+contrasting the justice and the stern dealings even of the Saviour,
+with the mercy, and loving-kindness, and fellow-feeling of Mary;
+making God an object of fear, Mary an object of love.</p>
+<p>"Mother of my Redeemer, O Mary, in the last moments <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page385" id="page385"></a>{385}</span> of my
+life, I implore thy assistance with more earnestness than ever. I
+find myself, as it were, placed between heaven and hell. Alas! what
+will become of me, if thou do not exert, in my behalf, thy powerful
+influence with Jesus?... I die with SUBMISSION since JESUS has
+ORDAINED it; but notwithstanding the natural horror which I have of
+death, I die with PLEASURE, because I die under THY protection."
+[Chap. xiii. p. 344.]</p>
+<p>In the fourteenth chapter the following passage occurs: "It is
+giving to the blessed Virgin a testimony of love particularly dear
+and precious to her, to make her holy spouse Joseph the first
+object of our devotion, next to that which consecrates us to her
+service.... The name of Joseph is invoked with singular devotion by
+all the true faithful. They frequently join it with the sacred
+names of Jesus and Mary. Whilst Jesus and Mary lived at Nazareth,
+if we had wished to obtain some favour from them, could we have
+employed a more powerful protector than St. Joseph? Will he now
+have less power and credit? GO THEREFORE TO JOSEPH, (Gen. xli. 55.)
+that he may intercede for you. Whatever favour you ask, God will
+grant it you at his request.... Go to Joseph in all your
+necessities; but especially to obtain the grace of a happy death.
+The general opinion that he died in the arms of Jesus and Mary has
+inspired the faithful with great confidence, that, through his
+intercession, they will have an end as happy and consoling as his.
+In effect, it has been remarked, that it is particularly at the
+hour of death that those who have been during their life careful to
+honour this great saint, reap the fruit of their devotion." [P.
+347.]</p>
+<p>In this passage the unworthy idea, itself formed on a groundless
+tradition, is introduced of paying reverence <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page386" id="page386"></a>{386}</span> to one
+saint, in order to gratify and conciliate another. Joseph must be
+especially honoured in order to do what is most acceptable to Mary.
+Surely this tends to withdraw the mind from that habitual reference
+of all our actions immediately to God, which the primitive teachers
+were so anxious to cultivate in all Christians.</p>
+<p>In the "Little Testament of the Holy Virgin," the following (p.
+46) is called, "A Prayer to the blessed Virgin." Can any words
+place more on an entire level with each other, the eternal Son of
+God and the Virgin? "Jesus and Mary?!"</p>
+<p>"O Mary! what would be our poverty and misery if the Father of
+Mercies had not drawn you from his treasury to give you to earth!
+Oh! my Life and Consolation, I trust and confide in your holy name.
+My heart wishes to love you; my mouth to praise you; my mind to
+contemplate you; my soul sighs to be yours. Receive me, defend me,
+preserve me; I cannot perish in your hands. Let the demons tremble
+when I pronounce your holy name, since you have ruined their
+empire; but we shall say with Saint Anselm, that he does not know
+God, who has not an idea sufficiently high of your greatness and
+glory. We shall esteem it the greatest honour to be of the number
+of your servants. Let your glory, blessed Mother, be equal to the
+extent of your name; reign, after God, over all that is beneath
+God; but, above all, reign in my heart; you will be my consolation
+in suffering, my strength in weakness, my counsel in doubt. At the
+name of Mary my hope shall be enlightened, my love inflamed. Oh!
+that I could deeply engrave the dear name on every heart, suggest
+it to every tongue, and make all celebrate it with me. Mary! sacred
+name, under which no one <span class="pagenum"><a name="page387"
+id="page387"></a>{387}</span> should despair. Mary! sacred name,
+often assaulted, but always victorious. Mary! it shall be my life,
+my strength, my comfort! Every day shall I envoke IT AND THE DIVINE
+NAME OF JESUS. The Son will awake the recollection of the mother,
+and the mother that of the Son. JESUS AND MARY! this is what my
+heart shall say at the last hour, if my tongue cannot; I shall hear
+them on my death bed,&mdash;they shall be wafted on my expiring
+breath, and I with them, to see THEM, know THEM, bless and love
+THEM for eternity. Amen."</p>
+<p>There may, perhaps, be a reasonable ground for our hoping that
+these are not the sentiments entertained by the enlightened Roman
+Catholics of our country and age. Any one has a full right to say,
+"These are productions of individuals for which we and the Church
+to which we belong are not responsible, any more than the Church of
+England is responsible for all doctrines and sentiments expressed
+by writers in her communion! Even the sentiments above referred to
+of the present reigning pope, you have no right to allege as the
+doctrines of the Church!" But I would again venture to suggest to
+every one, who would thus speak, the duty of ascertaining for
+himself, whether the sentiments of those who at present fill the
+highest places, and which fully justify these devotional exercises
+and prayers to the Virgin and the Saints, be not themselves fully
+justified by the authorized ritual of the Roman Church. On this
+point are supplied, even in this volume, materials sufficiently
+diversified and abundant in quantity to enable any one to form a
+correct judgment.</p>
+<p>By two brief extracts I will now bring this branch of our
+inquiry to a close. The first is from the concluding paragraphs of
+a discourse lately delivered and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page388" id="page388"></a>{388}</span> published. In principle,
+the sentiments here professed apparently admit not only of being
+identified with those of the authorized services of the Church of
+Rome, but also, though not so naked and revolting in appearance as
+the doctrines of Bonaventura, Biel, and the two Bernardins, yet in
+reality they equally depart from the simplicity of the Gospel, and
+are equally at direct variance with that, its first and its last
+principle, ONE GOD AND ONE MEDIATOR BETWEEN GOD AND MEN, THE MAN
+CHRIST JESUS.</p>
+<p>"Remember that this day you have put yourselves and your
+families under the protection of the ever-blessed Mother of God,
+and Her chaste Spouse, St. Joseph; of those who were chosen of God
+to protect the infancy of Jesus from the danger by a persecuting
+world. ENTREAT THEM TO PROTECT YOU AND YOURS FROM THE PERILS of a
+seducing and ensnaring world; to plead your interests in heaven,
+and secure by their intercession your everlasting crown. Loudly
+proclaim the praises of your heavenly Queen, but at the same time
+turn Her power to your everlasting advantage by your earnest
+supplications to HER." (See Appendix.)</p>
+<p>The other extract, which sanctions to the full whatever
+offerings of praise and ascriptions of glory we have found
+individuals making to the Virgin and to Saints, is from an
+announcement in, I believe, the last English edition of the Roman
+Breviary published, in its present form, under the sanction of the
+Pope himself.</p>
+<p>"To those who devoutly recite the following prayer after the
+office, Pope Leo the Tenth hath granted pardon (indulsit) for the
+defects and faults in celebrating it, contracted by human
+frailty.</p>
+<p>"To the most holy and undivided Trinity; to the manhood
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page389" id=
+"page389"></a>{389}</span> of our crucified Lord Jesus Christ; to
+the fruitful spotlessness of the most blessed and most glorious and
+ever-Virgin Mary; and to the entire body of all the Saints, be
+eternal praise, honour, virtue, and glory, from every creature, and
+to us remission of all sins, through endless ages of ages. Amen."
+[Norwich, 1830. &AElig;st.]</p>
+<p>On the indulgence for pardon given by Pope Leo the Tenth, more
+than 300 years ago, for such defects and faults in celebrating a
+religious service as may be contracted by human frailty; and on the
+fact of the notification of that indulgence being retained, and set
+forth so prominently in the service books at the present day, I
+will say nothing. Whatever associations may be raised in our minds
+by these circumstances, the subject does not fall within our
+present field of inquiry. But to join the Holy Trinity with the
+Virgin Mother, and all the Saints in one and the same ascription of
+ETERNAL PRAISE, HONOUR, and GLORY, is as utterly subversive of the
+integrity of primitive Christian Worship, as it is repugnant to the
+plainest sense of holy Scripture, and derogatory to the dignity of
+that Supreme Being, who declares Himself to be a jealous God.</p>
+<p>It has, indeed, been maintained that such ascriptions of glory
+and praise jointly to God and his Saints, is sanctioned by the
+language of our blessed Saviour Himself when He speaks of his
+having given his glory to his disciples [John xvii. 22.], and of
+his second advent, when He shall come in his own glory, and in his
+Father's, and of the holy angels. [Luke ix. 26.] But between the
+two cases there is no analogy whatever; the inference is utterly
+fallacious. We know that the Lord of Hosts is the King of glory,
+and that his eternal Son shared the glory of his Father before the
+foundations <span class="pagenum"><a name="page390" id=
+"page390"></a>{390}</span> of the world were laid. We know, too,
+that the Almighty has been pleased to create beings of various
+degrees and orders, differing from each other in kind or in
+excellence according to his supreme will. Among those creatures of
+his hand are the angels whom we reverence and love, as his faithful
+servants and his ministers to us for good. But when we speak and
+think of religious adoration; of giving thanks; and ascribing
+eternal glory and honour, we have only one object in our
+minds,&mdash;the supreme Sovereign Lord of all.</p>
+<p>With regard to the gracious words of our Saviour in his prayer
+to the Father, on the eve of his death, St. Peter's acts and words
+supply us with a plain and conclusive comment. He was himself one
+of those to whom Christ had declared that He had given the glory
+which his Father had given to Him; and yet when Cornelius fell down
+at his feet to worship him, he took him up, saying, "Stand up; I
+myself also am a man." [Acts x. 26.] The Saviour was pleased to
+impart his glory to his Apostles, dividing to them his heavenly
+gifts severally as He willed. We praise Him for those graces which
+shone so brightly in them, and we pray to Him to enable us by his
+grace to follow them, as they followed his blessed steps. We
+reverence their memory, but we give God alone the praise.</p>
+<p>As to the other instance, the words of our Lord (assuring us
+that the angels should accompany Him at his second advent in their
+glory, the glory which He assigned to them in the order of
+creation,) no more authorize us to ascribe praise and glory by a
+religious act to them, when we praise the God of angels and men,
+than would <span class="pagenum"><a name="page391" id=
+"page391"></a>{391}</span> the assurance of an inspired apostle,
+that "there is one glory of the sun, another glory of the moon, and
+another glory of the stars," sanction us in joining those
+luminaries in the same ascription of glory with their Almighty
+Creator and ours. Just as reasonably would a pagan justify his
+worship of the sun, the moon, and the stars, by this passage of
+Scripture, as our Roman Catholic brethren would justify themselves
+by the former passage in their ascription of praise and glory to
+the holy angels, and saints, and the blessed Virgin. We honour the
+holy angels, we praise God for the glory which He has imparted to
+them, and for the share which He has been pleased to assign to them
+in executing his decrees of mercy in the heavenly work of our
+salvation; and we pray to HIM to grant that they may by his
+appointment succour and defend us on earth, through Jesus Christ
+our Lord. But we address no invocation to them; we ascribe no glory
+to them as an act of religious worship. By offering thanks and
+praise to God He declares that we honour HIM; by offering thanks
+and praise, and by ascribing glory and honour to angel, saint, or
+virgin, we make them gods.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page392" id=
+"page392"></a>{392}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="conclusion" id="conclusion">CONCLUSION.</a></h3>
+<p>We have now, my fellow Christians, arrived at the conclusion of
+the task which I proposed to undertake. I have laid before you, to
+the utmost of my abilities and means, the result of my inquiry into
+the evidence of holy Scripture and primitive antiquity, on the
+invocation of saints and angels, and the blessed Virgin Mary. In
+this inquiry, excepting so far as was necessary to elucidate the
+origin and history of the Roman Catholic tenet of the Assumption of
+the Virgin, we have limited our researches to the writers who lived
+before the Nicene Council. That Council has always been considered
+a cardinal point,&mdash;a sort of climacteric in the history of the
+early Church. It was the first Council to which all the bishops of
+Christendom were summoned; and the influence of its decrees is felt
+beneficially in the Catholic Church to this very day. In fixing
+upon this Council as our present boundary line, I was influenced by
+a conviction, that the large body of Christians, whether of the
+Roman, the Anglican, or any other branch of the Church Catholic,
+would consent to this as an indisputable axiom,&mdash;that what the
+Church Catholic did not believe or practise up to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page393" id="page393"></a>{393}</span> that date
+of her existence upon earth, cannot be regarded as either Catholic
+or primitive, or apostolical. Ending with St. Athanasius, (who,
+though he was present at that Council, yet brings his testimony
+down through almost another half century, his death not having
+taken place till A.D. 873, on the verge of his eightieth year,) we
+have examined the remains of Christian antiquity, reckoning forward
+to that Council from the times of the Apostles. We have searched
+diligently into the writings, the sentiments, and the conduct of
+those first disciples of our Lord. We have contemplated the words
+of our blessed Saviour himself, and the inspired narrative of his
+life and teaching. With the same object in view we have studied the
+prophets of the Old Testament, and the works of Moses; and we have
+endeavoured, at the fountainhead, to ascertain what is the mind and
+will of God, as revealed to the world from the day when He made
+man, on the question of our invoking the angels and saints to
+intercede with Him in our behalf, or to assist and succour us on
+the earth. And the result is this:&mdash;From first to last, the
+voice of God Himself, and the voices of the inspired messengers of
+heaven, whether under the patriarchal, the Mosaic, or the Christian
+dispensations, the voices too of those maintainers of our common
+faith in Christ, who prayed, and taught, in the Church, before the
+corruptions of a degenerate world had mingled themselves with the
+purity of Christian worship, combine all, in publishing, throughout
+the earth, one and the self-same principle, "Pray only to God; draw
+nigh to Him alone; invoke no other; seek no other in the world of
+spirits, neither angel, nor beatified saint; seek Him, and He will
+favourably, with mercy, hear your prayers." To this one
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page394" id=
+"page394"></a>{394}</span> principle, when the Gospel announced the
+whole counsel of God in the salvation of man, our Lord himself, his
+Apostles, and his Church, unite in adding another principle of
+eternal obligation,&mdash;There is one Mediator between God and
+men, the man Christ Jesus; whatsoever the faithful shall ask the
+Father in the name of that Mediator, He will grant it to them: He
+is ever living to make intercession for those who believe in Him:
+Invoke we no other intercessor, apply we neither to saint nor
+angel, plead we the merits of no other. Let us lift up our hearts
+to God Almighty himself, and make our requests known to Him in the
+name, and through the mediation of Christ, and He will fulfil our
+desires and petitions as may be most expedient for us; He will
+grant to us, in this world, a knowledge of his truth, and in the
+world to come life everlasting!</p>
+<p>Watching the tide of evidence through its whole progress, we
+find it to flow all in this one direction. Here and there indeed
+attempts have been made to raise some mounds and barriers of human
+structure, in order to arrest its progress, and turn it from its
+straight course, but in vain; unchecked by any such endeavours, it
+rolls on in one full, steady, strong, and resistless current. Until
+we have long passed the Nicene Council, we find no one writer of
+the Christian Church, whose remains tell us, that he either himself
+invoked saints and angels, and the Virgin Mary, or was at all aware
+of any such practice prevailing in Christendom. Suppose, for one
+moment, that our doctrine is right; and then we find the whole
+tenour of the Old and New Testaments, and the ancient writers, in
+their plain meaning, agreeably to the interpretation of the most
+learned and unbiassed critics, fully coinciding in every respect
+with our view of God being the sole object of invocation,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page395" id=
+"page395"></a>{395}</span> and of the exclusive character of
+Christ's intercession, mediation, and advocacy. Suppose, for
+another moment, the Roman Catholic theory to be correct, then the
+whole general tenour and drift of Scripture must be evaded; the
+clearest statements and announcements must be explained away by
+subtle distinctions, gratuitous definitions, and casuistical
+refinements, altogether foreign from the broad and simple truths of
+Revelation; then, too, in ascertaining the sentiments of an author,
+not his general and pervading principles, evidenced throughout his
+writings, must be appealed to; but casual and insulated expressions
+must be contracted or expanded as may best seem to counteract the
+impression made by the testimony of those principles. We may safely
+ask, Is there such evidence, that the primitive Church offered
+invocations to saints and angels, and the Virgin, as would satisfy
+us in the case of any secular dispute with regard to ancient usage?
+On the contrary, is not the evidence clear to a moral
+demonstration, that the offering of such addresses is an innovation
+of later days, unknown to the primitive Christians till after the
+middle of the fourth century, and never pronounced to be an article
+of faith, until the Council of Trent, more than a thousand years
+after its first appearance in Christendom, so decreed it.</p>
+<p>The tendency, indeed, of some Roman Catholic writings,
+especially of late years, is to draw off our minds on these points
+from the written word of God, and the testimony of the earliest
+Church, and to dwell upon the possibility, the reasonableness of
+the doctrines of the Church of Rome in this respect, their
+accordance with our natural feelings, and their charitableness. But
+in points of such vast moment, in things concerning the soul's
+salvation, we can depend with satisfaction and <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page396" id="page396"></a>{396}</span> without
+misgiving, only on the sure word of promise; nothing short of God's
+own pledge of his own eternal truth can assure us, that all is
+safe. Such substitution of what may appear to us reasonable, and
+agreeable to our natural sentiments, and desirable if true, in
+place of the assurances of God's revealed Will, may correspond with
+the arguments of a heathen philosopher unacquainted with the truth
+as it is in Jesus, but cannot satisfy disciples of Him who brought
+life and immortality to light by his Gospel. Such questions as
+these, "Is there any thing unreasonable in this? Would not this be
+a welcome tenet, if true?" well became the lips of Socrates in his
+defence before his judges, but are in the strict sense of the word
+preposterous in a Christian. With the Christian the first question
+is, What is the truth? What is revealed? What has God promised?
+What has He taught man to hope for? What has He commanded man to
+do? By his own words, by the words and by the example of his
+inspired messengers, by the doctrine and practice of his Church,
+the witness and interpreter of the truth, how has He directed us to
+sue for his mercy and all its blessings? On what foundation, sure
+and certain, can we build our hopes that "He will favourably with
+mercy hear our prayers?" For in this matter, a matter of spiritual
+life and death, we can anchor our hope on no other rock than his
+sure word of promise.</p>
+<p>That sure word of promise, if I am a faithful believer, I have;
+but it is exclusive of any invocation by me of saint, or angel, or
+virgin. The pledge of heaven is most solemnly and repeatedly given;
+God, who cannot lie, has, in language so plain, that he may run who
+readeth it, assured me that if I come to HIMSELF by HIS SON, my
+prayer shall not be cast out, my suit shall <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page397" id="page397"></a>{397}</span> not be
+denied, I shall not be sent empty away. In every variety of form
+which language can assume, this assurance is ratified and
+confirmed. His own revealed will directs me to pray for my
+fellow-creatures, and to expect a beneficial effect from the
+prayers of the faithful upon earth in my behalf. To pray for them,
+therefore, and to seek their prayers, and to wait patiently for an
+answer to both, are acts of faith and of duty. And were it also
+appointed by God's will to be an act of faith and duty in a
+Christian to seek the prayers, and aid, and assistance, of saints
+and angels by supplicatingly invoking them, surely the same word of
+truth would have revealed that also. Whereas the reverse shows
+itself under every diversified state of things, from the opening of
+the sacred book to its very last page. The subtle distinction of
+religious worship into latria, dulia, and hyperdulia, the refined
+classification of prayer under the two heads of direct, absolute,
+final, sovereign, on the one hand, and of oblique, relative,
+transitory, subaltern, on the other, swell indeed many elaborate
+works of casuistry, but are not discoverable in the remains of
+primitive Christians, nor in the writings of God's word have they
+any place. I cannot find in the inspired Apostles any reference to
+the necessity, the duty, the lawfulness, the expediency of our
+seeking by prayer the good offices of the holy dead, or of the
+angels of light. In their successors the earliest inspired teachers
+and pastors of Christ's fold, I seek in vain for any precept, or
+example, or suggestion, or incidental allusion looking that way.
+Why then should a Christian wish to add to that which God has been
+pleased to appoint and to reveal? Why should I attempt to enter
+heaven through any other gate than <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page398" id="page398"></a>{398}</span> that gate which the Lord of
+heaven has opened for me? or why should I seek to reach that gate
+by any other way than the way which He has made for me; which He
+has Himself plainly prescribed to me; in which He has promised that
+his word shall be a lantern unto my feet; and along which those
+saints and servants of his, who received the truth from his own
+lips, and sealed it by their blood, have gone before?</p>
+<p>Whenever a maintainer of the doctrine and practice of invoking
+the Saints asks me, as we have lately been asked in these words,
+"May I not reasonably hope that their prayers will be more
+efficacious than my own and those of my friends? And, under this
+persuasion, I say to them, as I just now said to you, holy Mary,
+holy Peter, holy Paul, pray for me. What is there in reason or
+revelation to forbid me to do so?" To this and similar questions
+and suggestions, I answer at once, God has solemnly covenanted to
+grant the petitions of those who ask HIM for his mercy, in the name
+and for the sake of his Son; and in his holy word has, both by
+precept and example, taught us in this life to pray for each other,
+and to ask each other's prayers [James v. 16; I Tim. ii. 1.]; but
+that He will favourably answer the prayers which we supplicate
+angels to offer, or which we offer to Himself through the merits
+and by the intercession of departed mortals, is no where in the
+covenant. Moreover, when God invites me and commands me to approach
+Him myself, in the name of his Son, and trusting to his merits, it
+is not Christian humility, rather it savours of presumption, and
+intruding into those things which we have not seen [Coloss. ii.
+18.], to seek to prevail with Him by <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page399" id="page399"></a>{399}</span> pleading other merits, and
+petitioning creatures, however glorious, to interest themselves
+with Him in our behalf, angels and saints, of whose power even to
+hear us we have no evidence. When Jesus Himself, who knows both the
+deep counsels of the Eternal Spirit, and man's wants and weaknesses
+and unworthiness, and who loveth his own to the end, pledges his
+never-failing word, that whatsoever we ask the Father in his name,
+He will give it us, can it be less than an unworthy distrust of his
+truth and faithfulness to ask the Father for the merits and by the
+intercession of another? and as though in fear lest God should fail
+of his promise, or be unmindful of us Himself, to invoke angels and
+the good departed to make our wants known unto HIM, and prevail
+with HIM to relieve us?</p>
+<p>Surely it were wiser and safer to adhere religiously to that one
+way which cannot fail, than to adopt for ourselves methods and
+systems, for the success of which we have no guarantee; which may
+be unacceptable in his sight; and the tendency of which may be to
+bring down a curse and not a blessing.</p>
+<p>May the great Shepherd and Bishop of souls pour down upon his
+Church the abundance of his mercy, preserving those in the truth
+who now possess it, restoring it to those by whom it has been lost,
+and imparting it to all who are yet in darkness. And, whilst we
+speak the truth in love, and endeavour to keep the unity of the
+spirit in the bond of peace, may HE, for his own glory, and for the
+safety and comfort of his people, shed this truth abroad in our
+hearts, and enlighten us to receive it in all its fulness and
+integrity, and in the very sense in which the Holy Spirit, when He
+guided <span class="pagenum"><a name="page400" id=
+"page400"></a>{400}</span> the pen of St. Paul, willed the Church
+to interpret it, "There is one God and one Mediator between God and
+men, the man Christ Jesus."</p>
+<hr />
+<p>O everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the
+services of Angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant,
+that as thy holy Angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by thy
+appointment they may succour and defend us on earth, through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. Amen.</p>
+<p>O Almighty God, who hast built thy Church upon the foundation of
+the Apostles and Prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the head
+corner-stone; Grant us so to be joined together in unity of spirit
+by their doctrine, that we may be made an holy temple, acceptable
+unto Thee, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.</p>
+<p>O Almighty God, who hast knit together thine elect in one
+communion and fellowship, in the mystical body of thy Son Christ
+our Lord; Grant us grace, so to follow thy blessed Saints in all
+virtuous and godly living, that we may come to those unspeakable
+joys, which Thou hast prepared for them that unfeignedly love Thee;
+through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page401" id=
+"page401"></a>{401}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>APPENDIX.</h2>
+<hr />
+<p>Note.&mdash;Pages 107 and 110.</p>
+<p>The following is the original of the passages discussed in the
+text. Justin Martyr, Apol. I. p. 47. &sect; vi. Benedictine Edition
+by P. Maran. Paris, A.D. 1742.</p>
+<p>[Greek: Enthende kai atheoi keklaemetha; kai homologoumen ton
+toiouton nomizomenon theon atheoi einai, all' ouchi tou
+alaethestatou, kai patros dikaiosunaes kai sophrosunaes, kai ton
+allon areton, anepimiktou te kakias Theou; all' ekeinon te, kai ton
+par' autou huion elthonta kai didaxanta haemas tauta, kai ton ton
+allon hepomenon kai exomoioumenon agathon angelon straton, pneuma
+te to prophaetikon sebometha, kai proskunoumen, logoi kai
+alaetheiai timontes, kai panti boulomenoi mathein, hos
+edidachthaemen, aphthonos paradidontes.]</p>
+<p>Ibid. page 50, 51. sect. xiii.&mdash;[Greek: 'Atheoi men oun hos
+ouk esmen, ton daemiourgon toude tou pantos sebomenoi, ... ton
+didaskalon te touton genomenon haemin, kai eis touto genaethenta
+Iaesoun Christon ton staurothenta epi Pontiou Pilatou, tou
+genomenou en Ioudaiai epi chronois Tiberiou Kaisaros epitropou,
+huion autou tou ontos Theou mathontes, kai en deuterai chorai
+echontes, pneuma te prophaetikon en tritaei taxei, hoti meta logou
+timomen, apodeixomen....]</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 134.</p>
+<p>In the text it has been observed, that "Coccius in his elaborate
+work quotes the two following passages as Origen's, without
+expressing <span class="pagenum"><a name="page402" id=
+"page402"></a>{402}</span> any hesitation or doubt respecting their
+genuineness; in which he is followed by writers of the present
+day."</p>
+<p>The modern works, to which reference is here made, are chiefly
+the Lectures delivered by Dr. Wiseman, in the Roman Catholic Chapel
+in Moorfields in the year 1836, and the compilation of Messrs.
+Berington and Kirk [Berington and Kirk. London, 1830, p. 403.],
+from which Dr. Wiseman in his preface to his Lectures (p. ix.)
+informs us, that in general he had drawn his quotations of the
+Fathers. In citing the testimony of Origen in support of the
+invocation of saints, it is evident that Dr. Wiseman has drawn from
+that source; for whereas the two confessedly spurious passages,
+from the Lament, and from the Book on Job, are in that compilation
+quoted in the same page, Dr. Wiseman cites only the passage from
+the Lament, as from a work on the Lamentations, but gives his
+reference to the Book on Job. His words are these:&mdash;"Again he
+(Origen) thus writes on the Lamentations: 'I will fall down on my
+knees, and not presuming, on account of my crimes, to present my
+prayer to God, I will invoke all the saints to my assistance. O ye
+saints of heaven, I beseech you with a sorrow full of sighs and
+tears; fall at the feet of the Lord of mercies for me, a miserable
+sinner,'&mdash;Lib. ii. De Job." [Lectures on the Principal
+Doctrines and Practices of the Catholic Church, by Nicholas
+Wiseman, D.D. London, 1836. Vol. i. preface, p. ix. and vol. ii. p.
+107.]</p>
+<p>When we find such passages as these, which have been so long ago
+and so repeatedly pronounced to be utterly spurious, yet cited in
+evidence at the present time, and represented as conveying the
+genuine testimony of Origen, we shall be pardoned for repeating the
+sentiments expressed so many years ago by the learned Bishop of
+Avranches with regard to the very work here cited, "It is wonderful
+that, WITHOUT ANY MARK OF THEIR BEING FORGERIES, they should be
+sometimes cited in evidence by some theologians."</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 151.</p>
+<p>The whole passage cited as Origen's comment on the words of
+Ezekiel, "The heavens are opened," is in the Latin version as
+follows. The Greek original, if it ever existed, is lost. The
+portion between brackets is the part suspected of being an
+interpolation.</p>
+<p>6. <i>Et aperti sunt coeli</i>. Clausi erant coeli, et ad
+adventum Christi aperti sunt, ut reseratis illis veniret super eum
+Spiritus Sanctus in specie columb&aelig;. Neque enirn poterat ad
+nos commeare nisi primum <span class="pagenum"><a name="page403"
+id="page403"></a>{403}</span> ad su&aelig; natur&aelig; consortem
+descendisset. <i>Ascendit Jesus in altum, captivam duxit
+captivitatem, accepit dona in hominibus. Qui descendit, ipse est
+qui ascendit super omnes coelos ut impleret omnia. Et ipse dedit
+alios apostolos, alios prophetas, alios evangelistas, alios
+pastores et magistros in perfectionem sanctorum</i>.</p>
+<p>[7. <i>Aperti sunt coeli</i>. Non sufficit unum coelum aperiri:
+aperiuntur plurimi, ut descendant non ab uno, sed ab omnibus coelis
+angeli ad eos qui salvandi sunt. Angeli qui ascendebant et
+descendebant super Filium hominis, et accesserunt as eum, et
+ministrabant ei. Descenderunt autem angeli, quia prior descenderat
+Christus, metuentes descendere priusquam Dominus virtutum omnium
+rerumque pr&aelig;ciperet. Quando autem viderunt principem
+militi&aelig; coelestis in terrestribus locis commorari, tunc per
+apertam viam ingressi sunt sequentes Dominum suum, et parentes
+voluntati ejus qui distribuit eos custodes credentium nomini suo.
+Tu heri sub d&aelig;monio eras, hodie sub angelo. <i>Nolite</i>,
+inquit Dominus, <i>contemnere unum de minimis istis</i> qui sunt in
+ecclesia. <i>Amen enim dico vobis, quia angeli eorum per omnia
+vident faciem Patris qui est in coelis</i>. Obsequuntur saluti
+tu&aelig; angeli, concessi sunt ad ministerium Filii Dei, et
+dicuntinter se: si ille descendit, et descendit in corpus; si
+mortali indutus est carne, et sustinuit crucem, et pro hominibus
+mortuus est, quit nos quiescimus? quid parcimus nobis? Eja omnes
+angeli descendamus e coelo. Ideo et multitudo militi&aelig;
+coelestis erat laudantium et glorificantium Deum, quando natus est
+Christus. Omnia angelis plena sunt: veni, angeli, suscipe sermone
+conversum ab errore pristino, a doctrina d&aelig;moniorum, ab
+iniquitate in altum loquente: et suscipiens eum quasi medicus bonus
+confove atque institue, parvulus est, hodie nascitur senex
+repuerascens: et suscipe tribuens ei baptismum secund&aelig;
+regenerationis, et advoca tibi alios socios ministerii tui, ut
+concti pariter eos qui aliquando decepti sunt, erudiatis ad fidem.
+<i>Gaudium enim est majus in coelis super unum peccatorem
+poenitentiam agentem, quam supra nonaginta novem justos quibus non
+opus est poenitentia</i>. Exultat omnis creatura, coll&aelig;tatur
+et applaudit his qui salvandi sunt. Nam <i>expectatio
+creatur&aelig; revelationem filiorum Dei expectat</i>. Et licet
+nolint ii qui scripturas apostolicas interpolaverunt istiusmodi
+sermones inesse libris eorum quibus possit Creator Christus
+approbari, expectat tamen omnis creatura filios Dei, quando
+liberentur a delicto, quando auferentur de Zabuli manu, quando
+regenerentur a Christo. Verum jam tempus est, ut de pr&aelig;senti
+loco aliqua tangamus. Vidit Propheta non visionem, sed visiones
+Dei. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page404" id=
+"page404"></a>{404}</span> Quare non vidat unam, sed plurimas
+visiones? Audi Dominum pollicentem atque dicentem: <i>Ego visiones
+multiplicavi</i>. 8. <i>Quinta mensis</i>. Hic annus quinta
+captivitatis regis Joachim. Trigesimo anno &aelig;tatis Ezekielis,
+et quinto captivitatis Joachim, Propheta mittiur ad Jud&aelig;os.
+Non despexit clementissimus pater, nec longo tempore incommonitum
+populum dereliquit. Quintus est annus. Quantum temporis
+intercessit? Quinque anni interfluxerunt ex quo captivi
+serviunt.]</p>
+<p>Statim descendit Spiritus Sanctus,&mdash;aperuit coelos, ut hi
+qui captivitatis jugo premebantur, viderent ea qu&aelig; videbantur
+a Propheta. Dicente quippe eo, <i>Et aperti sunt coeli</i>, quodam
+modo et ipsi intuebantur oculis cordis qu&aelig; ille etiam oculis
+carnis aspexerat.&mdash;Vol. iii. p. 358.</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 165.</p>
+<p>In a note on the Epistle of St. Cyprian to his brother,
+reference was made to the Appendix for a closer comparison of
+Cyprian's original letter with the modern translation of the
+passage under consideration. By placing the two versions in
+parallel columns side by side, we shall immediately see, that the
+mode of citing the testimony of St. Cyprian adopted in Dr.
+Wiseman's Lectures, from the compilation of Messrs. Berington and
+Kirk, is rather to substitute his own comment and inference, than
+to allow the witness to speak for himself in his own words. The
+whole paragraph, as it appears in Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, is
+this:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"St. Cyprian in the same century: 'Let us be mindful of one
+another in our prayers; with one mind and with one heart, in this
+world and in the next, let us always pray with mutual charity
+relieving our sufferings and afflictions. And may the charity of
+him, who, by the divine favour, shall first depart hence, still
+persevere before the Lord; may his prayer, for our brethren and
+sisters, not cease.' Therefore, after having departed this life,
+the same offices of charity are to continue, by praying for those
+who remain on earth." [Lect. xiii. vol. ii. p. 107, and Berington
+and Kirk, p. 430.]</p>
+<p><i>St. Cyprian's words</i>. <i>Epist.</i> lvii. <i>p.</i>
+96.</p>
+<p><i>Translation adopted by Dr. Wiseman from Berington and
+Kirk.</i></p>
+<table summary="Translations">
+<tr>
+<td>1. Memories nostri invicem simus,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1. Let us be mindful of one another IN OUR PRAYERS;</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>2. Concordes atque unanimes,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>2. With one mind and with one heart,</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>3. Utrobique.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>3. In this world and in the next,</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>4. PRO NOBIS semper oremus,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>4. Let us always pray,</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>5. Pressuras et angustias mutua caritate relevemus,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>5. With mutual charity RELIEVING our sufferings and
+afflictions.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>6. Et si quis istinc nostrum prior divin&aelig; dignationis
+celeritate pr&aelig;cesserit, perseveret apud Dominum NOSTRA
+DILECTIO,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>6. And may the CHARITY OF HIM, who, by the divine favour, shall
+first depart hence, still persevere before the Lord;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>7. Pro fratribus et sororibus nostris apud misericordiam patris
+non cesset oratio.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>7. May HIS prayer, for our brethren and sisters, not
+cease.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>In this translation, by inserting the words, <i>in our
+prayers</i>, which are not in the original in the first clause; by
+rendering the adverb <i>utrobique</i>, IN THIS WORLD AND IN THE
+NEXT, in the third clause; by omitting the words <i>pro nobis, for
+each other</i>, which are in the original, in the fourth clause; by
+changing in the fifth the verb <i>relevemus, let us relieve</i>,
+implying another branch of their mutual kindness, into the
+participle <i>relieving</i>, which may imply, that the relief
+alluded to was also to be conveyed by the medium of their prayers;
+by substituting <i>the charity of him</i>, in place of <i>nostra
+dilectio, our charity</i>, in the sixth; and by inserting the word
+<i>his</i>, which is not in the original, before <i>prayer</i>,
+where the grammar of the sentence requires <i>our</i>, in the
+seventh clause;&mdash;by these means the translator makes Cyprian
+express a sentiment far removed from what the words of Cyprian, in
+their plain and natural sense, convey. It must, however, be borne
+in mind, as we have shown in our examination of the passage, that
+the sentiment of Cyprian, even as it is thus unduly extracted from
+his words, would not in the remotest degree countenance the
+invocation of saints. It would do no more than imply his belief,
+that the faithful departed may take an interest in the welfare of
+their surviving friends on earth, and promote that welfare by their
+prayers; a point which, in the preface, is mentioned as one of
+those topics, the discussion of which would be avoided in this
+inquiry, as quite distinct from the invocation of saints.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page406" id=
+"page406"></a>{406}</span>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 176.</p>
+<p>An extract from Eusebius, unnoticed in the text of this work,
+has recently been cited as conveying his testimony in favour of the
+invocation of saints. I have judged it better to defer the
+consideration of it to the appendix. It has been cited in these
+terms: "In the fourth century Eusebius of C&aelig;sarea thus
+writes: 'May we be found worthy by the prayers and intercessions of
+all the saints.'" [Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, vol. ii. p. 107. Lect.
+xiii. Berington and Kirk, p. 431.] To form a just estimate of this
+alleged testimony, it is requisite that we have before us not only
+that incomplete clause, but the whole passage purporting to
+contain, in these words, the closing sentences of a commentary on
+Isaiah: [Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1707. Dr. Wiseman's reference
+is "Com. in Isai. Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1706."]</p>
+<p>"'And they shall be for a spectacle to all flesh.' To what
+flesh? Altogether to that which shall be somewhere punished? Nay,
+to that which shall of the heavenly vision be deemed worthy,
+concerning which it was said before, All flesh shall come to
+worship before me, of which may we also be deemed worthy by the
+prayers and intercessions of all the saints. Amen."</p>
+<p>In examining this passage I am willing for the present that all
+its clauses should be accepted as the genuine words of Eusebius,
+and accepted too in the meaning attached to them by those who have
+cited them. And to what do they amount? If these are indeed his
+expressions, Eusebius believed that the saints departed can forward
+our spiritual welfare by their prayers and ministering offices; and
+he uttered his desire that we might thus be benefited. Now whether
+we agree with him or not in that belief; whether we consider the
+faithful departed as able to take an interest in our welfare and to
+promote it, or regard such an opinion as without foundation in the
+word of God and in primitive doctrine; the belief implied and the
+wish expressed here by Eusebius, are widely indeed removed from the
+act of suppliantly invoking the saints departed, and resorting to
+them with entreaties for their prayers and intercessions in our
+behalf. These two things, although often confounded, are far from
+being equivalent; and by all who would investigate with fairness
+the subject of our inquiry, they must be carefully kept distinct.
+The invocation of saints being the single point in question, our
+business is to ascertain, not what opinions Eusebius may have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page407" id=
+"page407"></a>{407}</span> entertained as to the condition, and
+power, and offices of the saints departed, but whether he invoked
+them; whether he had recourse to them with supplications for their
+prayers, or aid and succour. And keeping this closely in view, even
+if we admit this passage to be genuine, and interpret it as those
+who have cited it wish it to be interpreted, we find in it no
+authority for the invocation of saints. A Christian would be no
+more countenanced by this language of Eusebius in suppliantly
+invoking departed saints, than he would in praying to the angels
+for their help and mediation be countenanced by the terms of the
+prayer in regard to them, addressed by the Anglican Church to God,
+"O everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services
+of angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant, that as
+thy holy angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by THY
+appointment they may succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. Amen." Whoever petitions them, makes them
+Gods&mdash;Deos qui rogat ille facit.</p>
+<p>But whilst, for the sake of the argument, I have admitted this
+passage to be genuine, and correctly translated, and have shown
+that whether genuine or not, and even if it be thus correctly
+translated, it affects not in the least the issue of our inquiry, I
+do not feel at liberty to withhold the acknowledgment of my
+persuasion that in this concession I grant too much. For, in the
+first place, I am assured, that if the passage came from the pen of
+Eusebius, no one is justified in confining the desire and wish
+contained in it to the intercessions and prayers of the saints in
+heaven; and, secondly, I see reasons for inferring that the last
+clause was framed and attached to this work, not by Eusebius
+himself, but by some editor or scribe.</p>
+<p>In support of my first persuasion, I would observe that the very
+language of the writer of these comments on Isaiah and the Psalms
+precludes us from regarding the Saints departed as exclusively
+constituting those "holy ones" by whose intercessions and prayers
+he expresses his desire that our spiritual welfare may be promoted.
+In this very comment on Isaiah (ch. vi. 2. p. 376), when he is
+speaking of the heavenly inhabitants, and illustrates his views by
+God's dealings towards the children of men in this world, he
+employs this expression: "For as among men the Saints of God
+partake of more excellent graces." On the 67th (68th) Ps. v. 34,
+having interpreted the words, "his strength is in the clouds," as
+referring to the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page408" id=
+"page408"></a>{408}</span> prophets and teachers of divine wisdom,
+under the guidance of the Spirit, pouring heavenly truths upon the
+souls of men as the clouds drop rain on fertile lands, he proceeds
+thus to comment on the expression, "God is wonderful among his
+Saints." [Vol. i. p. 364. The English translation refers the word
+"holy" to places, not persons.] "These Saints are different from
+those before called Apostles and prophets. And who can they be,
+except those who out of all nations are deemed worthy of purity and
+holiness, among whom God is wonderful, giving to them power and
+strength?" Thus in perfect accordance with the language of this
+writer, the Saints, from whose prayers and intercessions he desires
+to derive spiritual benefits, may be the Saints of God on
+earth&mdash;in the same state with those saints still living in the
+flesh, whose prayers St. Paul desired to be offered up for himself,
+that by them a door of utterance to speak the mystery of Christ
+might be opened unto him [Coloss. i. 2; iv. 2, 3.]&mdash;and with
+those saints to whom the same Apostle wrote at Philippi: "To all
+the saints in Christ Jesus:" and to whom he sent the greetings of
+the saints who then surrounded him: "ALL the SAINTS salute you."
+[Phil i. 1; iv. 22.]</p>
+<p>But before the closing words of this paragraph, whatever be its
+meaning, be acknowledged as the genuine and undoubted production of
+Eusebius, I would suggest the careful weighing of some
+considerations, which appear to me to involve serious
+difficulties.</p>
+<p>1. First, through all the voluminous works of Eusebius, I have
+found in no single passage any allusion to the prayers of saints
+departed, or to their ministering offices in our behalf, though
+numberless openings show themselves for the natural introduction of
+such a subject.</p>
+<p>2. Secondly, among all the various works and treatises of
+Eusebius, I have not found one which is closed by any termination
+of the kind; on the contrary, they all end with remarkable
+suddenness and abruptness, precisely as this comment would end,
+were the sentence under consideration removed. Each, indeed, of the
+books of his Ecclesiastical History, is followed by a notice of the
+close of the book, in some cases too that notice involving a
+religious sentiment: for example, at the close of the 10th book we
+read: "With the help of God, the end of the tenth book." But that
+these are appendages made by an editor or scribe is evident in
+itself, and moreover <span class="pagenum"><a name="page409" id=
+"page409"></a>{409}</span> in many instances is shown by such
+sentences as these, "And this we have found in a certain copy in
+the 8th volume:" "This is in some copies, as if omitted from the
+8th book." I find no one instance of Eusebius bringing a chapter or
+a treatise to its close by any religious sentiment, or any
+termination of the nature here contemplated.</p>
+<p>It is also difficult to conceive that any author, having the
+flow and connexion of the whole passage present to his mind, would
+himself have appended this ejaculation as we now find it. We know
+that editors and scribes often attached a sentiment of their own to
+the closing words of an author. And it seems far more probable,
+that a scribe not having the full drift of the argument mainly
+before him, but catching the expression, "heavenly vision,"
+appended such an ejaculation. That the writer himself should
+introduce such a sentence by the connecting link of a relative
+pronoun feminine, which must of necessity be referred, not as the
+grammatical construction would suggest to the feminine noun
+preceding it,&mdash;not to any word expressed or understood in the
+intervening clause preceding it,&mdash;not to the last word in the
+sentence even before that intervening clause, nor yet to the
+principal and leading subject immediately under discussion and
+thrice repeated,&mdash;but to a noun incidentally introduced,
+seems, to say the least, strange and unnatural. "And they shall be
+for a spectacle to all flesh. To what flesh? Altogether to that
+which shall be somewhere punished? Nay, to that which shall of the
+heavenly vision be deemed worthy, concerning WHICH it was said
+before, All FLESH shall come to worship before me, of which may we
+also be deemed worthy by the prayers and intercessions of all the
+saints. Amen." But the classical reader will appreciate these
+remarks more satisfactorily by examining them with reference to the
+passage in the original language.</p>
+<p>[Greek: Kai esontai eis orasin pasaei sarki. poiai de sarki; ae
+pantos pou taei kolasthaesomenaei; taes de epouraniou theas
+kataxiothaesomenaei peri HAES anotero elegeto aexei pasa sarx tou
+proskunaesai enopion mou, HAES kai haemeis axiotheiaemen euchais
+kai presbeiais panton ton hagion, amaen.]</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 181.</p>
+<p>ATHANASIUS.</p>
+<p>In the text I observed that some Roman Catholic writers of the
+present day had cited the homily there shown to be utterly
+spurious, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page410" id=
+"page410"></a>{410}</span> as the genuine work of St. Athanasius,
+and as recording his testimony in defence of the invocation of
+Saints. The passage there referred to Dr. Wiseman thus introduces,
+and comments upon.</p>
+<p>"St. Athanasius, the most zealous and strenuous supporter that
+the Church ever possessed of the divinity of Jesus Christ, and
+consequently of his infinite superiority over all the saints, thus
+enthusiastically addresses his ever-blessed Mother: 'Hear now, O
+daughter of David; incline thine ear to our prayers. We raise our
+cry to thee. Remember us, O most holy Virgin, and for the feeble
+eulogiums we give thee, grant us great gifts from the treasures of
+thy graces, thou who art full of grace. Hail, Mary, full of grace,
+the Lord is with thee. Queen and mother of God, intercede for us.'
+Mark well," continues Dr. Wiseman, "these words; 'grant us great
+gifts, from the treasures of thy graces;' as if he hoped directly
+to receive them from her. Do Catholics use stronger words than
+these? Or did St. Athanasius think or speak with us, or with
+Protestants?"</p>
+<p>In answer to these questions I reply with sure and certain
+confidence, first, that the genuine words of St. Athanasius himself
+prove him to have spoken and thought with the Anglican Church, and
+not with the Roman Church on the invocation of saints and angels,
+and the blessed Virgin Mary; and secondly, that whatever words
+Roman Catholics use, whether stronger or not than these, these
+words on which the above questions are put, never came forth from
+the pen of St. Athanasius. Their spuriousness is not a question of
+doubt or difficulty. It has been shown in the text that the whole
+homily has been for ages utterly repudiated, as a work falsely
+attributed to St. Athanasius. It is indeed very disheartening to
+those, whose object is the discovery and the establishment of the
+truth, to find works cited in evidence as the genuine productions
+of primitive Christian teachers, which have been so long ago, and
+so repeatedly, and that not by members of another communion, but by
+the most learned men of the Church of Rome, adjudged to be
+spurious. I do not mean that I think it not fully competent for a
+writer of the present day to call in question, and overrule and set
+aside the decisions of former editors, as to the genuine or the
+spurious character of any work. On the contrary I am persuaded that
+a field is open in that department of theology, which would richly
+repay all the time and labour and expense, which persons well
+qualified for the task could bestow upon its culture. What I lament
+is this, that after a work has been deliberately condemned as
+unquestionably <span class="pagenum"><a name="page411" id=
+"page411"></a>{411}</span> spurious, by competent and accredited
+judges for two centuries and a half at the least, that very work
+should be now cited as genuine and conclusive evidence, without any
+the most distant allusion to the judgment which had condemned it,
+or even to any suspicion of its being a forgery. In this instance,
+also, Dr. Wiseman has implicitly followed the compilation of
+Messrs. Berington and Kirk. This is evident, because the extract,
+as it stands word for word the same in his Lectures and their
+compilation, is not found as one passage in the spurious homily,
+but is made up of sentences selected from different clauses, and
+put together so as to make one paragraph. It is worthy of notice,
+that in quoting their authority, both Dr. Wiseman, and those whom
+he follows, refer us to the very volume in which the Benedictine
+editors declare that there was no learned man, who did not
+pronounce the work to be spurious; and in which also they quote at
+length the letter of Baronius which had proved it to be a forgery.
+[Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, vol. ii. p. 108, from Berington and Kirk,
+p. 430, 431.]</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 231. (Decree of the Council of Trent.) [Canones
+et Decreta Sacros. OEcumen. et Genera. Concilii Tridentini, &amp;c.
+Rom. fol. A.D. 1564.]</p>
+<p>Mandat sancta Synodus omnibus Episcopis, et ceteris docendi
+munus curamque sustinentibus, ut juxta Catholic&aelig;, et
+Apostolic&aelig; Ecclesi&aelig; usum, a prim&aelig;vis
+Christian&aelig; religionis temporibus receptum, sanctorumque
+Patrum consensionem, et sacrorum Conciliorum decreta, inprimis de
+Sanctorum intercessione, invocatione, Reliquiarum honore, et
+legitimo imaginum usu, fideles diligenter instruant, docentes eos,
+Sanctos, una cum Christo regnantes, orationes suas pro hominibus
+Deo offerre; bonum atque utile esse suppliciter eos invocare; et ob
+beneficia impetranda a Deo per Filium ejus Jesum Christum, Dominum
+nostrum, qui solus noster Redemptor et Salvator est, ad eorum
+orationes, opem, auxiliumque confugere: illos vero, qui negant
+sanctos &aelig;tern&acirc; felicitate in coelo fruentes, invocandos
+esse; aut qui asserunt, vel illos pro hominibus non orare, vel
+eorum, ut pro nobis etiam singulis orent, invocationem esse
+idololatriam, vel pugnare cum verbo Dei, adversarique honori unius
+Mediatoris Dei et hominum, Jesu Christi, vel stultum esse, in coelo
+regnantibus voce, vel mente supplicare, impie sentire. Sanctorum
+quoque Martyrum, et aliorum cum Christo viventium Sancta corpora,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page412" id=
+"page412"></a>{412}</span> qu&aelig; viva membra fuerunt Christi,
+et templum Spiritus Sancti, ab ipso ad &aelig;ternam vitam
+suscitanda et glorificanda, a fidelibus veneranda esse; per
+qu&aelig; multa beneficia a Deo hominibus pr&aelig;stantur: ita ut
+affirmantes, Sanctorum Reliquiis venerationem, atque honorem non
+deberi; vel eas, aliaque sacra monumenta a fidelibus inutiliter
+honorari; atque eorum opis impetrand&aelig; causa sanctorum
+memorias frustra frequentari; omnino damnandos esse, prout
+jampridem eos damnavit, et nunc etiam damnat Ecclesia. [De
+Invocatione, Veneratione, et Reliquiis Sanctorum, et Sacris
+Imaginibus, p. 202.]</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Pages 369 and 390.</p>
+<p>In a prefatory epistle, addressed to the "Chaplains, Wardens,
+and Brethren of the Holy Catholic Gild," in Huddersfield, Dr.
+Wiseman (p. 4) expresses himself thus: "Yesterday I laid the badge
+of your association at the feet of the sovereign pontiff, and it
+was most condescendingly and graciously received. But this is not
+all. As I had foretold, I found His Holiness fully informed of your
+establishment and public manifestation; and I had the satisfaction
+of hearing him express his WISH THAT SIMILAR INSTITUTIONS SHOULD
+REVIVE ALL OVER THE COUNTRY."</p>
+<p>Towards the close of the sermon, to which this preface is
+prefixed, and which was preached at St. Patrick's Chapel,
+Huddersfield, Sept. 26th, 1839, and was printed at York in the
+present year [A.D. 1840], the preacher draws the comparison,
+referred to in page 370 of this work, between England and the
+continent, and between England as it is, and England as it once
+was, and as, in his view, it ought to be again. After describing
+the scenes which you may witness in Roman Catholic countries,
+"where you might see the poor and the afflicted crowding round some
+altar, where their pious confidence or experience of past favours
+leads them to hope that their prayers will best be heard through
+the intercession of our dear Lady," he thus proceeds: "Oh that the
+time had come, when a similar expression of our devout feelings
+towards her should publicly be made, and all should unite to show
+her that honour, that reverence, and love which she deserves from
+all Christians, and which has so long been denied her amongst us.
+There was a time when England was second to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page413" id="page413"></a>{413}</span> no other
+country upon earth in the discharge of this holy duty; and it will
+be only PART OF THE RESTORATION OF OUR GOOD AND GLORIOUS DAYS OF
+OLD to revive to the utmost this part of ancient piety. Therefore
+do I feel sincere joy at witnessing the establishment of this
+excellent brotherhood, and its public manifestation in this town
+this day, both as a means of encouraging devotion and virtue, and
+as a return to one of the venerable institutions of our
+forefathers. Enter then fully into its spirit."</p>
+<p>["A Sermon delivered at St. Patrick's, Huddersfield, Sept. 26th,
+1839, on occasion of the Holy Catholic Gild there established, by
+the Rev. N. Wiseman, D.D., Professor in the University of Rome.
+York, 1840," p. 22, 23. The first quotation made in p. 390, is from
+this Sermon.]</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14072 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14072 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14072)
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+Project Gutenberg's Primitive Christian Worship, by James Endell Tyler
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Primitive Christian Worship
+ Or, The Evidence Of Holy Scripture And The Church, Against The
+ Invocation Of Saints And Angels, And The Blessed Virgin Mary.
+
+
+Author: James Endell Tyler
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2004 [EBook #14072]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRIMITIVE CHRISTIAN WORSHIP ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David King, The Million Book Project and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+PRIMITIVE CHRISTIAN WORSHIP
+
+OR,
+
+THE EVIDENCE
+
+OF
+
+HOLY SCRIPTURE AND THE CHURCH,
+
+AGAINST THE
+
+INVOCATION OF SAINTS AND ANGELS, AND THE
+BLESSED VIRGIN MARY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BY
+
+J. ENDELL TYLER, B.D.
+
+RECTOR OF ST. GILES-IN-THE-FIELDS,
+AND CANON RESIDENTIARY OF ST. PAUL'S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Speaking the truth in love.--EPH. iv. 15
+
+Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.--1 THESS. v. 21.
+
+SECOND EDITION
+
+LONDON
+
+Printed for the
+
+SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE;
+SOLD AT THE DEPOSITORY,
+GREAT QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS,
+NO. 4, ROYAL EXCHANGE;
+AND BY ALL BOOKSELLERS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+1847.
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+THE ONE
+
+HOLY, CATHOLIC, AND APOSTOLIC
+
+CHURCH,
+
+AS A TRIBUTE OF VENERATION AND LOVE,
+
+THIS WORK IS DEDICATED,
+
+BY HER DEVOTED SERVANT AND SON.
+
+Nov. 25, 1840.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PREFACE.
+
+Members of the Church of Rome, and members of the Church of England,
+have too long entertained towards each other feelings of hostility.
+Instead of being drawn together as brethren by the cords of that one
+faith which all Catholics hold dear, their sentiments of sympathy and
+affection have been absorbed by the abhorrence with which each body has
+regarded the characteristic tenets of its adversary; whilst the terms
+"heretic" on the one side, and "idolater" on the opposite, have rendered
+any attempt to bring about a free and friendly discussion of each
+other's views almost hopeless.
+
+Every Christian must wish that such animosities, always ill-becoming the
+servants and children of the God of love, should cease for ever. Truth
+indeed must never be sacrificed to secure peace; nor must we be tempted
+by the seductiveness of a liberality, falsely so called, to soften down
+and make light of those differences which keep the Churches of England
+and Rome asunder. But surely the points at issue may be examined without
+exasperation and rancour; and the results of inquiries carried on with a
+singleness of mind, in search only for the truth, may be offered on the
+one side without insult or offence, and should be received and examined
+without contempt and scorn on the other.
+
+The writer of this address is not one in whom early associations would
+foster sentiments of evil will against members of the Church of Rome; or
+encourage any feeling, incompatible with regard and kindness, towards
+the conscientious defenders of her creed. From his boyhood he has lived
+on terms of friendly intercourse and intimacy with individuals among her
+laity and of her priesthood. In his theological pursuits, he has often
+studied her ritual, consulted her commentators, and perused the homilies
+of her divines; and, withal, he has mourned over her errors and
+misdoings, as he would have sighed over the faults of a friend, who,
+with many good qualities still to endear him, had unhappily swerved from
+the straight path of rectitude and integrity.
+
+In preparing these pages, the author is not conscious of having been
+influenced by any motive in the least degree inconsistent with
+sentiments of charity and respect; at all events, he would hope that no
+single expression may have escaped from his pen tending to hurt
+unnecessarily the feelings of any sincere Christian. He has been
+prompted by a hope that he may perhaps induce some individuals to
+investigate with candour, and freedom, and with a genuine desire of
+arriving at the truth, the subjects here discussed; and that whilst
+some, even of those who may have hitherto acquiesced in erroneous
+doctrines and practices, may be convinced of their departure from
+Christian verity; others, if tempted to desert the straight path of
+primitive worship, may be somewhat strengthened and armed by the views
+presented to them here, against the captivating allurements of religious
+error.
+
+Whether the present work may, by the Divine favour, be made in some
+degree instrumental in forwarding these results, or in effecting any
+good, the author presumes not to anticipate; but he will hope for the
+best. He believes that the honest pursuit of the truth, undertaken with
+an humble zeal for God's glory, and in dependence on his guidance and
+light, is often made successful beyond our own sanguine expectations.
+
+With these views the following pages are offered, as the result of an
+inquiry into the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of Saints and
+Angels, and of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
+
+To prevent misconception as to the nature of this work, the author would
+observe, that since the single subject here proposed to be investigated
+is, "The Invocation of Saints and Angels and the Blessed Virgin Mary,"
+he has scrupulously avoided the discussion of many important and
+interesting questions usually considered to be connected with it. He has
+not, for example, discussed the practice of praying for the dead; he has
+investigated no theory relating to the soul's intermediate state between
+our dissolution and the final judgment; he has canvassed no opinion as
+to any power in the saints and the faithful departed to succour either
+by their prayers or by any other offices, those who are still on earth,
+and on their way to God. From these and such like topics he has
+abstained, not because he thinks lightly of their importance, nor
+because his own mind is perplexed by doubts concerning them; but because
+the introduction of such points would tend to distract the thoughts from
+the exclusive contemplation of the one distinct question to be
+investigated.
+
+He is also induced to apprise the reader, that in his work, as he
+originally prepared it, a far wider field, even on the single subject of
+the present inquiry, was contemplated than this volume now embraces. His
+intention was to present an historical survey of the doctrine and
+practice of the invocation of Saints and Angels, and the Virgin, tracing
+it from the first intimation of any thing of the kind through its
+various progressive stages, till it had reached its widest prevalence in
+Christendom. When, however, he had arranged and filled up the results of
+the inquiries which he made into the sentiments and habits of those
+later writers of the Church, whose works he considered it necessary to
+examine with this specific object in view, he found that the bulk of the
+work would be swollen far beyond the limits which he had prescribed to
+himself; he felt also that the protracted investigation would materially
+interfere with the solution of that one independent question which he
+trusts now is kept unmixed with any other. He has, consequently, in the
+present address limited the range of his researches on the nature of
+Primitive Christian Worship, to the writers of the Church Catholic who
+lived before the Nicene Council, or were members of it.
+
+In one department, however, he has been under the necessity of making,
+to a certain extent, an exception to this rule. Having found no allusion
+to the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin, on which much of the
+religious worship now paid to her seems to be founded, in any work
+written before the middle of the fifth century, he has been induced, in
+his examination of the grounds on which that doctrine professes to be
+built, to cite authors who flourished subsequently to the Nicene
+Council.
+
+The author would also mention, that although in substance he has
+prepared this work for the examination of all Christians equally, and
+trusts that it will be found not less interesting or profitable to the
+members of his own Church than to any other, yet he has throughout
+adopted the form of an address to his Roman Catholic countrymen. Such a
+mode of conveying his sentiments he considered to be less controversial,
+while the facts and the arguments would remain the same. His object is
+not to condemn, but to convince: not to hold up to obloquy those who are
+in error, but, as far as he may be allowed, to diminish an evil where it
+already exists, and to check its further prevalence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+PART I.--CHAPTER I.
+
+Introduction--The duty of examining the grounds of our Faith--Principles
+of conducting that examination--Errors to be avoided--Proposed plan of
+the present work.
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+§ 1. Evidence of Holy Scripture, how to be ascertained
+ 2. Direct Evidence of the Old Testament
+ 3. Evidence of the Old Testament, continued
+ 4. ------ New Testament
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+§ 1. Evidence of Primitive Writers
+ 2. ------ Apostolic Fathers
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+§ 1. Evidence of Justin Martyr
+ See also Appendix
+ 2. Evidence of Irenæus
+ 3. ------ Clement of Alexandria
+ 4. ------ Tertullian
+ ------ Methodius
+ 5. ------ Origen
+ See also Appendix
+ 6. Supplementary Section on Origen
+ See also Appendix
+ 7. Evidence of St. Cyprian
+ See also Appendix
+ 8. Evidence of Lactantius
+ 9. ------ Eusebius
+ See also Appendix
+ 10. Apostolical Canons and Constitutions
+ 11. Evidence of St. Athanasius
+ See also Appendix
+
+PART II.--CHAPTER I.
+
+State of Worship at the time of the Reformation
+§ 1. "Hours of the Virgin"
+ 2. Service of Thomas Becket
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Council of Trent
+ See also Appendix
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Present Service in the Church of Rome
+
+PART III.
+
+WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN MARY.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+§ 1. Introductory Remarks
+ 2. Evidence of Holy Scripture
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Evidence of Primitive Writers
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Assumption of the Virgin Mary
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Councils of Constantinople, Ephesus, and Chalcedon
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+§ 1. Present authorized Worship of the Virgin
+ 2. Worship of the Virgin, continued
+ 3. Bonaventura
+ 4. Biel, Damianus, Bernardinus de Bustis, Bernardinus Senensis,&c.
+ See also Appendix
+5. Modern Works of Devotion
+ See also Appendix
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+ * * * * * {1}
+
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE DUTY OF PRIVATE JUDGMENT.
+
+
+Fellow Christians,
+
+Whilst I invite you to accompany me in a free and full investigation of
+one of those tenets and practices which keep asunder the Roman and the
+Anglican Church, I am conscious in how thankless an undertaking I have
+engaged, and how unwelcome to some is the task in which I call upon you
+to join. Many among the celebrated doctors of the Roman Church have
+taught their disciples to acquiesce in a view of their religious
+obligation widely different from the laborious and delicate office of
+ascertaining for themselves the soundness of the principles in which
+they have been brought up. It has been with many accredited teachers a
+favourite maxim, that individuals will most acceptably fulfil their duty
+by abstaining {2} from active and personal inquiries into the
+foundations of their faith; and by giving an implicit credence to
+whatever the Roman Church pronounces to be the truth[1]. Should this
+book fall into the hands of any who have adopted that maxim for the rule
+of their own conduct as believers, its pages will of course afford them
+no help; nor can they take any interest in our pursuit, or its results.
+Whilst, however, I am aware, that until the previous question (involving
+the grounds on which the Church of Rome builds her claim to be the sole,
+exclusive, and infallible teacher of Christians in all the doctrines of
+religion,) shall have been solved, many members of her body would throw
+aside, as preposterous, any treatise which professed to review the
+soundness of her instructions; I have been at the same time assured,
+that with many of her communion the case is far otherwise; and that
+instead of their being averse to all investigation, a calm, candid, and
+friendly, but still a free and unreserved inquiry into the disputed
+articles of their creed, is an object of their sincere desire. On this
+ground I trust some preliminary reflections upon the duty of proving all
+things, with a view of holding the more fast {3} and sure what is good,
+may be considered as neither superfluous nor out of place.
+
+ [Footnote 1: It is sometimes curious to observe the language in
+ which the teachers and doctors themselves profess their entire,
+ unlimited, and implicit submission of all their doctrines, even
+ in the most minute particulars, to the judgment and will of the
+ authorities of Rome. Instances are of very frequent occurrence.
+ Thus Joannes de Carthagena, a very voluminous writer of
+ homilies, closes different parts of his work in these words,
+ "These and all mine I willingly subject to the judgment of the
+ Catholic Roman Church, ready, if there be written any thing in
+ any way in the very least point contrary to her doctrine, to
+ correct, amend, erase, and utterly abolish it." Hom. Cath. De
+ Sacris Arcanis Deiparæ et Josephi. Paris, 1615. page 921.]
+
+But just as it would belong to another and a separate province to
+examine, at such length as its importance demands, the claims of the
+Church of Rome to be acknowledged as that universal interpreter of the
+word and will of God, from whose decisions there is no appeal; so would
+it evidently be incompatible with the nature of the present address, to
+dwell in any way corresponding with the magnitude and delicacy of the
+subject, on the duty, the responsibility, and the privilege of private
+judgment; on the dangers to which an unchastened exercise of it may
+expose both an individual, and the cause of Christian truth; or on the
+rules which sound wisdom and the analogy of faith may prescribe to us in
+the government of ourselves with respect to it. My remarks, therefore,
+on this subject will be as few and brief as I believe to be consistent
+with an acknowledgment of the principles upon which this work has been
+conducted.
+
+The foundation, then, on which, to be safe and beneficial, the duty of
+private judgment, as we maintain, must be built, is very far indeed
+removed from that common and mischievous notion of it which would
+encourage us to draw immediate and crude deductions from Holy Scripture,
+subject only to the control and the colouring of our own minds,
+responsible for nothing further than our own consciousness of an honest
+intention. Whilst we claim a release from that degrading yoke which
+neither are we nor were our fathers able to bear, we deprecate for
+ourselves and for our fellow-believers that licentiousness which in
+doctrine and practice tempts a man to follow merely what is right in his
+own eyes, uninfluenced by the example, the precepts, {4} and the
+authority of others, and owning no submissive allegiance to those laws
+which the wise and good have established for the benefit of the whole
+body. The freedom which we ask for ourselves, and desire to see imparted
+to all, is a rational liberty, tending to the good, not operating to the
+bane of its possessors; ministering to the general welfare, not to
+disorder and confusion. In the enjoyment of this liberty, or rather in
+the discharge of the duties and trusts which this liberty brings with
+it, we feel ourselves under an obligation to examine the foundations of
+our faith, to the very best of our abilities, according to our
+opportunities, and with the most faithful use of all the means afforded
+to us by its divine Author and finisher. Among those means, whilst we
+regard the Holy Scriptures as paramount and supreme, we appeal to the
+witness and mind of the Church as secondary and subsidiary; a witness
+not at all competing with Scripture, never to be balanced against it;
+but competing with our own less able and less pure apprehension of
+Scripture. In ascertaining the testimony of this witness, we examine the
+sentiments and practice of the ancient teachers of the Church; not as
+infallible guides, not as uniformly holding all of them the same
+opinions, but as most valuable helps in our examination of the evidence
+of the Church, who is, after all, our appointed instructor in the truths
+of the Gospel,--fallible in her individual members and branches, yet the
+sure witness and keeper of Holy Writ, and our safest guide on earth to
+the mind and will of God. When we have once satisfied ourselves that a
+doctrine is founded on Scripture, we receive it with implicit faith, and
+maintain it as a sacred deposit, entrusted to our keeping, to be
+delivered down whole and entire without our adding {5} thereto what to
+us may seem needful, or taking away what we may think superfluous.
+
+The state of the Christian thus employed, in acting for himself in a
+work peculiarly his own, is very far removed from the condition of one
+who labours in bondage, without any sense of liberty and responsibility,
+unconscious of the dignity of a free and accountable agent, and
+surrendering himself wholly to the control of a task-master. Equally is
+it distant from the conduct of one who indignantly casting off all
+regard for authority, and all deference to the opinions of others,
+boldly and proudly sets up his own will and pleasure as the only
+standard to which he will submit. For the model which we would adopt, as
+members of the Church, in our pursuit of Christian truth, we find a
+parallel and analogous case in a well-principled and well-disciplined
+son, with his way of life before him, exercising a large and liberal
+discretion in the choice of his pursuits; not fettered by peremptory
+paternal mandates, but ever voluntarily referring to those principles of
+moral obligation and of practical wisdom with which his mind has been
+imbued; shaping his course with modest diffidence in himself, and
+habitual deference to others older and wiser than himself, yet acting
+with the firmness and intrepidity of conscious rectitude of principle,
+and integrity of purpose; and under a constant sense of his
+responsibility, as well for his principles as for his conduct.
+
+Against the cogency of these maxims various objections have been urged
+from time to time. We have been told, that the exercise of private
+judgment in matters of religion, tends to foster errors of every
+diversity of character, and leads to heresy, scepticism, and infidelity:
+it is represented as rending the Church of Christ, and totally {6}
+subverting Christian unity, and snapping asunder at once the bond of
+peace. So also it has been often maintained, that the same cause robs
+individual Christians of that freedom from all disquietude and
+perplexity and anxious responsibility, that peace of mind, satisfaction,
+and content, which those personally enjoy, who surrender themselves
+implicitly to a guide, whom they believe to be unerring and infallible.
+
+For a moment let us pause to ascertain the soundness of such objections.
+And here anticipating, for argument's sake, the worst result, let us
+suppose that the exercise of individual inquiry and judgment (such as
+the best teachers in the Anglican Church are wont to inculcate) may lead
+in some cases even to professed infidelity; is it right and wise and
+justifiable to be driven by an abuse of God's gifts to denounce the
+legitimate and faithful employment of them? What human faculty--which
+among the most precious of the Almighty's blessings is not liable to
+perversion? What unquestionable moral duty can be found, which has not
+been transformed by man's waywardness into an instrument of evil? Nay,
+what doctrine of our holy faith has not the wickedness or the folly of
+unworthy men employed as a cloke for unrighteousness, and a vehicle for
+blasphemy? But by a consciousness of this liability in all things human,
+must we be tempted to suppress the truth? to disparage those moral
+duties? or to discountenance the cultivation of those gifts and
+faculties? Rather would not sound philosophy and Christian wisdom
+jointly enforce the necessity of improving the gifts zealously, of
+discharging the moral obligation to the full, and of maintaining the
+doctrine in all its integrity; but guarding withal, to the utmost of our
+power and watchfulness, against the abuses to which {7} any of these
+things may be exposed? And we may trust in humble but assured
+confidence, that as it is the duty of a rational being, alive to his own
+responsibility, to inquire and judge for himself in things concerning
+the soul, with the most faithful exercise of his abilities and means; so
+the wise and merciful Ruler of our destinies will provide us with a sure
+way of escaping from all evils incident to the discharge of that duty,
+if, in reliance on his blessing, we honestly seek the truth, and
+perseveringly adhere to that way in which He will be our guide.
+
+It is a question very generally and very reasonably entertained among
+us, whether the implicit submission and unreserved surrender of
+ourselves to any human authority in matters of faith, (though whilst it
+lasts, it of course affords an effectual check to open scepticism,) does
+not ultimately and in very deed prove a far more prolific source of
+disguised infidelity. Doubts repressed as they arise, but not solved,
+silenced but not satisfied, gradually accumulate in spite of all
+external precaution; and at length (like streams pent back by some
+temporary barrier) break forth at once to an utter discarding of all
+authority, and an irrecoverable rejection of the Christian faith. From
+unlimited acquiescence in a guide whom our associations have invested
+with infallibility, the step is very short, and frequently taken, to
+entire apostasy and the renunciation of all belief.
+
+The state of undisturbed tranquillity and repose in one, who has
+divested himself of all responsibility in matters of religious belief
+and practice, enjoying an entire immunity from the anxious and painful
+labour of trying for himself the purity and soundness of his faith, is
+often painted in strong contrast with the {8} lamentable condition of
+those who are driven about by every wind of novelty. The condition of
+such a man may doubtless be far more enviable than theirs, who have no
+settled fixed principles, and who wander from creed to creed, and from
+sect to sect, just as their fickle and roving minds suggest some
+transitory preference. But the believer must not be driven by the evils
+of one extreme to take refuge in the opposite. The whirlpool may be the
+more perilous, but the Christian mariner must avoid the rock also, or he
+will equally make shipwreck of his faith. He must with all his skill,
+and all his might, keep to the middle course, shunning that presumptuous
+confidence which scorns all authority, and boldly constitutes itself
+sole judge and legislator; but equally rescuing his mind from the
+thraldom which prostrates his reason, and paralyzes all the faculties of
+his judgment in a matter of indefeasible and awful responsibility.
+
+Here, too, it is questioned, and not without cause, whether the
+satisfaction and comfort so often represented in warm and fascinating
+colours, be really a spiritual blessing; or whether it be not a
+deception and fallacy, frequently ending in lamentable perplexity and
+confusion; like guarantees in secular concerns, which as long as they
+maintain unsuspected credit afford a most pleasing and happy security to
+any one who depends upon them; but which, when adverse fortune puts
+their responsibility to the test, may prove utterly worthless, and be
+traced only by losses and disappointments. Such a blind reliance on
+authority may doubtless be more easy and more free from care, than it is
+to gird up the loins of our mind, and engage in toilsome spiritual
+labour. But with a view to our own ultimate safety, wisdom bids us look
+to our foundations in time, and assure ourselves {9} of them;
+admonishing us that if they are unsound, the spiritual edifice reared
+upon them, however pleasing to the eye, or abounding in present
+enjoyments, will at length fall, and bury our hopes in its ruin.
+
+On these and similar principles, we maintain that it well becomes
+Christians, when the soundness of their faith, and the rectitude of
+their acts of worship, are called in question, "to prove all things, and
+hold fast that which is good." Thus, when the unbeliever charges us with
+credulity in receiving as a divine revelation what he scornfully
+rejects, it behoves us all (every one to the extent of his means and
+opportunities) to possess ourselves of the accumulated evidences of our
+holy faith, so that we may be able to give to our own minds, and to
+those who ask it of us, a reason for our hope. The result can assuredly
+be only the comfort of a still more unshaken conviction. Thus, too, when
+the misbeliever charges us with an undue and an unauthorized ascription
+of the Divine attributes to our Redeemer and to our Sanctifier, which he
+would confine to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, exclusively of the
+Eternal Son and the Blessed Spirit, it well becomes every Catholic
+Christian to assure himself of the evidence borne by the Scriptures to
+the divinity of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, together with the
+inseparable doctrines of redemption by the blood of Christ, and
+sanctification by the Spirit of grace; appealing also in this
+investigation to the tradition of the Church, and the testimony of her
+individual members from the earliest times, as under God his surest and
+best guides. In both these cases, I can say for myself that I have acted
+upon my own principles, and to the very utmost of my faculties have
+scrutinized the foundations {10} of my faith, and from each of those
+inquiries and researches I have risen with a satisfaction increased far
+beyond my first anticipations. What I had taken up in my youth on
+authority, I have been long assured of by a moral demonstration, which
+nothing can shake; and I cling to it with an affection, which, guarded
+by God's good providence, nothing in this world can dissolve or weaken.
+
+It is to engage in a similar investigation that I now most earnestly but
+affectionately invite the members of the Church of Rome, in order to
+ascertain for themselves the ground of their faith and practice in a
+matter of vast moment, and which, with other points, involves the
+principle of separation between the Roman and Anglican branches of the
+universal Church. Were the subjects of minor importance, or what the
+ancient writers were wont to call "things indifferent," reason and
+charity would prescribe that we should bear with each other, allowing a
+free and large discretion in any body of Christians, and not severing
+ourselves from them because we deemed our views preferable to theirs. In
+such a case we might well walk in the house of God as friends, without
+any interruption of the harmony which should exist between those who
+worship the true God with one heart and one mind, ever striving to keep
+the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. But when the points at
+issue are of so vast moment; when two persons agreeing in the general
+principles of belief in the Gospel and its chief characteristic
+doctrines, yet find it impossible to join conscientiously in the same
+prayer, or the same acts of faith and worship, then the necessity is
+imperative on all who would not be parties to the utter breaking up of
+Christian unity, nor assist in propagating error, to make sure of their
+{11} foundations; and satisfy themselves by an honest inquiry and
+upright judgment, that the fault does not rest with them.
+
+Such appear to me both the doctrine and the practice of the INVOCATION
+OF SAINTS. I have endeavoured to conjecture in what light this doctrine
+and this practice would have presented itself to my mind, after a full
+and free inquiry into the nature and history and circumstances of the
+case, had I been brought up in communion with the Church of Rome; the
+question to be solved being, "Could I continue in her communion?" And
+the result of my inquiry is, that I must have either discarded that
+doctrine at once and for ever, or have joined with my lips and my knees
+in a worship which my reason condemned, and from which my heart shrunk.
+I must have either left the communion of Rome, or have continued to
+offer prayers to angels, and the spirits of departed mortals. Unless I
+had resolved at once to shut my eyes upon my own personal
+responsibility, and to surrender myself, mind and reason, soul and body,
+to the sovereign and undisputed control of others, never presuming to
+inquire into the foundation of what the Church of Rome taught; I must
+have sought some purer portion of the Catholic Church, in which her
+members addressed the One Supreme Being exclusively, without
+contemplating any other in the act of religious invocation. The
+distinction invented in comparatively late years, of the three kinds of
+worship; one for God, the second for the Virgin Mary, the third for
+Angels and Saints;--the distinction, too, between praying to a saint to
+give us good things, and praying to that saint to procure them for us at
+God's hand, (or, as the distinction {12} is sometimes made, into prayer
+direct, absolute, final, sovereign, confined to the Supreme Being on the
+one hand; and prayer oblique, relative, transitory, subordinate, offered
+to saints on the other,) would have appeared to me the ingenious and
+finely-drawn inventions of an advocate, not such a sound process of
+Christian simplicity as the mind could rest upon, with an undoubting
+persuasion that all was right.
+
+This, however, involves the very point at issue; and I now invite you,
+my Christian Brethren, to join with me, step by step, in a review of
+those several positions which have left on my mind the indelible
+conviction that I could never have passed my life in communion with that
+Church whose articles of fellowship maintained the duty of invoking
+saints and angels; and whose public offices were inseparably interwoven
+with addresses in prayer to other beings, than the Holy and undivided
+Trinity, the one only God.
+
+In pursuing this inquiry I have thought the most convenient and
+satisfactory division of our work would be--
+
+First, to ascertain what inference an unprejudiced study of the revealed
+will of God would lead us to make; both in the times of the elder
+covenant, when "holy men of old spake as they were moved by the Holy
+Ghost," and in that "fulness of time" when God spoke to us by his Son.
+
+Secondly, to examine into the belief and practice of the Primitive
+Church, beginning with the inspired Apostles of our Lord.
+
+Thirdly, to compare the results of those inquiries with the tenets and
+practice of the Church of Rome, with reference to three periods; the
+first immediately {13} preceding the Reformation; the second comprising
+the Reformation, and the proceedings of the Council of Trent; the third
+embracing the belief and practice of the present day.
+
+In this investigation, I purpose to reserve the worship of the Virgin
+Mary, called by Roman Catholic writers "Hyperdulia," and for various
+reasons the most important and interesting portion of the whole inquiry,
+for separate and distinct examination; except only so far as our review
+of any of the primitive writers may occasion some incidental departure
+from that rule.
+
+May God guide us to his truth! {14}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+SECTION I.--THE EVIDENCE OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.
+
+
+Here, Christian Brethren, bear with me if I briefly, but freely, recall
+to our thoughts on this first entrance upon a review of the inspired
+volume, the principles, and tone of mind, the temper and feelings, in a
+word, the frame both of the understanding and of the heart, with which
+we should study the sacred pages, on whatever subject we would try all
+things, and hold fast what should prove itself to be most in accordance
+with the will of God. Whether we would regard the two great parts into
+which the Holy Scriptures are divided, as the Old and the New Covenants;
+or whether we would prefer to call them the Old and the New Testaments,
+it matters not. Although different ideas and associations are suggested
+by those different names, yet, under either view, the same honest and
+good heart, the same patience of investigation, the same upright and
+unprejudiced judgment, the same exercise of our mental faculties, and
+the same enlightened conscience, must be brought to the investigation.
+In the one case we must endeavour to ascertain for ourselves the true
+intent and {15} meaning of the inspired word of God, on the very same
+principles with those on which we would interpret a covenant between
+ourselves, and a person who had made it in full and unreserved reliance
+on our integrity, and on our high sense of equity, justice, and honour.
+In the other case we must bring the selfsame principles and feelings to
+bear on our inquiry, as we should apply in the interpretation of the
+last will and testament of a kind father, who with implicit confidence
+in our uprightness and straightforward dealing and affectionate anxiety
+to fulfil his intentions to the very utmost, had assigned to us the
+sacred duty of executor or trustee.
+
+Under the former supposition, our sincere solicitude would be to
+ascertain the true intent and meaning of the contracting parties, not to
+seek out plausible excuses for departing from it; not to cull out and
+exaggerate beyond their simple and natural bearing, such expressions in
+the deed of agreement, as might seem to justify us in adopting the view
+of the contract most agreeable to our present wishes and most favourable
+to our own interests. Rather it would be our fixed and hearty
+resolution, at whatever cost of time, or labour, or pecuniary sacrifice,
+or personal discomfort, to apply to the instrument our unbiassed powers
+of upright and honest interpretation.
+
+Or adopting the latter analogy, we should sincerely strive to ascertain
+the chief and leading objects of our parent's will; what were his
+intentions generally; what ruling principles seemed to pervade his views
+in framing the testament; and in all cases of obscurity and doubt, in
+every thing approaching an appearance of inconsistency, we should refer
+to that paramount principle as our test and guide. We should not for a
+moment {16} suffer ourselves to be tempted to seek for ambiguous
+expressions, which ingenuity might interpret so as to countenance our
+departure from the general drift of our parent's will, in cases where it
+was at variance with our own inclination, and where we could have wished
+that he had made another disposition of his property, or given to us a
+different direction, or trusted us with larger discretion. Moreover, in
+any points of difficulty, we should apply for assistance, in solving our
+doubts, to such persons as were most likely to have the power of judging
+correctly, and whose judgment would be least biassed by partiality and
+prejudice;--not to those whose credit was staked on the maintenance of
+those principles which best accorded with our own inclination.
+Especially if in either case some strong feeling should have been raised
+and spread abroad on any point, we should seek the judgment and counsel
+of those who had been familiar with the testator's intentions, or with
+the views of the covenanting party, before such points had become matter
+of discussion.
+
+Now only let us act upon these principles in the interpretation of THAT
+COVENANT in which the Almighty has vouchsafed to make Himself one of the
+contracting parties, and man, the creature of his hand, is the other:
+only let us act on these principles in the interpretation of THAT
+TESTAMENT of which the Saviour of the world is the Testator; and with
+God's blessing on our labours (a blessing never denied to sincere prayer
+and faithful exertions) we need not fear the result. Any other principle
+of interpretation will only confirm us in our prejudices, and involve us
+more inextricably in error. {17}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--DIRECT EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
+
+
+The first step in our proposed inquiry is to ascertain what evidence on
+the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of Saints and Angels can be
+fairly drawn from the revealed word of God in the Old Testament.
+
+Now, let us suppose that a person of a cultivated and enlightened mind,
+and of a sound and clear judgment, but hitherto a stranger to
+revelation, were required to study the ancient Scriptures with the
+single view of ascertaining what one object more than any other,
+subordinate to the great end of preparing the world for the advent of
+Messiah, seemed to be proposed by the wisdom of the Almighty in
+imparting to mankind that revelation; could he fix upon any other point
+as the one paramount and pervading principle with so much reason, as
+upon this, the preservation in the world of a practical belief in the
+perfect unity of God, and the fencing of his worship against the
+admixture of any other, of whatever character or form; The announcement
+that the Creator and Governor of the universe is the sole Giver of every
+temporal and spiritual blessing; the one only Being to whom, his
+rational creatures on earth should pay any religious service whatever;
+the one only Being to whom mortals must seek by prayer and invocation
+for the supply of any of their wants? Through the entire volume the
+inquirer would find that the unity of God is announced in every variety
+of expression; and that the exclusive worship {18} of HIM alone is
+insisted upon and guarded with the utmost jealousy by assurances, by
+threats, and by promises, as the God who heareth prayer, alone to be
+called upon, alone to be invoked, alone to be adored. So to speak, he
+would find that recourse was had to every expedient for the express
+purpose of protecting God's people from the fatal error of embracing in
+their worship any other being or name whatever; not reserving supreme
+adoration for the Supreme Being, and admitting a sort of secondary
+honour and inferior mode of invocation to his exalted saints and
+servants; but banishing at once and for ever the most distant
+approximation towards religious honour--the veriest shadow of spiritual
+invocation to any other Being than Jehovah HIMSELF ALONE.
+
+In process of time, the heathen began to deify those mortals who had
+conferred signal benefits on the human race, or had distinguished
+themselves by their power and skill above their fellow-countrymen. Male
+and female divinities were multiplying on every side. Together with
+Jupiter, the fabled father of gods and men, worshipped under different
+names among the various tribes, were associated those "gods many and
+lords many," which ignorance and superstition, or policy and craft, had
+invented; and which shared some a greater, some a less portion of
+popular veneration and religious worship. To the people of God, the
+worshippers of Jehovah, it was again and again most solemnly and awfully
+denounced, that no such thing should be. "Thou shalt worship the Lord
+thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve," is a mandate repeated in every
+variety of language, and under every diversity of circumstance. In some
+passages, indeed, together with the most clear assurances, {19} that
+mankind need apply to no other dispenser of good, and can want no other
+as Saviour, advocate, or intercessor, that same truth is announced with
+such superabundance of repetition, that in the productions of any human
+writer the style would be chargeable with tautology. In the Bible, this
+repetition only the more forces upon the mind, and fixes there, that
+same principle as an eternal verity never to be questioned; never to be
+dispensed with; never to be diluted or qualified; never to be invaded by
+any service, worship, prayer, invocation, or adoration of any other
+being whatever. Let us take, for example, the forty-fifth chapter of
+Isaiah, in which the principle is most strongly and clearly illustrated.
+"I am the LORD, and there is none else: there is no God beside me; I
+girded thee, though thou hast not known me; that they may know from the
+rising of the sun and from the west, that there is none beside me: I am
+the Lord, and there is none else. They shall be ashamed, and also
+confounded, all of them; they shall go to confusion together, that are
+makers of idols. But Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an
+everlasting salvation: ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world
+without end: I am the Lord, and there is none else. I said not unto the
+seed of Jacob, Seek ye me in vain. They have no knowledge that set up
+the wood of their graven image, and pray unto a god that cannot save.
+There is no god beside me; a just God and a Saviour; there is none
+beside me. Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth; for
+I am God, and there is none else."
+
+But it is needless to multiply these passages; and members of the Church
+of Rome will say, that they themselves acknowledge, as fully as members
+of the Anglican Church can do, that there is but one supreme {20} God
+and Lord, to whom alone they intend to offer the worship due to God; and
+that the appeals which they offer by way of invocation to saints and
+angels for their services and intercession, do not militate against this
+principle. But here let us ask ourselves these few questions:--
+
+First, if it had been intended by the Almighty to forbid any religious
+application, such as is now professedly the invocation of saints and
+angels, to any other being than Himself alone, what words could have
+been employed more stringently prohibitory?
+
+Secondly, had such an address to saints and angels, as the Church of
+Rome now confessedly makes, been contemplated by our heavenly Lawgiver
+as an exception to the general rule, would not some saving clause, some
+expressions indicative of such an intended exception, have been
+discovered in some page or other of his revealed will?
+
+Thirdly, if such an appeal to the angels of heaven, or to the spirits of
+the just in heaven, had been sanctioned under the elder covenant, would
+not some example, some solitary instance, have been recorded of a
+faithful servant of Jehovah offering such a prayer with the Divine
+approbation?
+
+Lastly, when such strong and repeated declarations and injunctions
+interspersed through the entire volume of the Old Testament,
+unequivocally show the will of God to be, that no other object of
+religious worship should have place in the heart or on the tongue of his
+own true sons and daughters, can it become a faithful child of our
+Heavenly Father to be seeking for excuses and palliations, and to invent
+distinctions between one kind of worship and another?
+
+God Himself includes all in one universal prohibitory {21} mandate,
+"Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve." So
+far from according with those general rules for the interpretation of
+the revealed will of God, which we have already stated, and from which,
+in the abstract, probably few would dissent, an anxiety to force the
+word of God into at least an acquiescence in the invocation of saints
+and angels, indicates a disposition to comply with his injunctions,
+wherever they seem to clash with our own view, only so far as we cannot
+avoid compliance; and to seek how we may with any show of propriety
+evade the spirit of those commands. Instead of that full, free, and
+unstinted submission of our own inclinations and propensities to the
+Almighty's will wherever we can discover it, which those entertain whom
+the Lord seeketh to worship Him; to look for exceptions and to act upon
+them, bears upon it the stamp of a reserved and grudging service. After
+so many positive warnings, enactments, and denunciations, against
+seeking by prayer the aid of any other being whatever, surely a positive
+command would have been absolutely necessary to justify a mortal man in
+preferring any prayer to any being, saint, angel, or archangel, save
+only the Supreme Deity alone. Instead of any such command or even
+permission appearing, not one single word occurs, from the first
+syllable in the Book of Genesis to the last of the prophet Malachi,
+which could even by implication be brought to countenance the practice
+of approaching any created being in prayer.
+
+But let us now look to the examples on this subject afforded in the Old
+Testament. Many, very many a prayer is recorded of holy men, of inspired
+men, of men, to whose holiness and integrity and acceptance {22} the
+Holy Spirit bears witness; yet among these prayers there is not found
+one invocation addressed to saint or angel. I will not here anticipate
+the observations which it will be necessary to make in consequence of
+the extraordinary argument which has been devised, to account for the
+absence of invocations to saints before the resurrection of Christ,
+namely, that before that event the saints were not admitted into heaven.
+Although pressed forward with such unhesitating confidence in its
+validity, that argument is so singular in its nature, and so important
+in its consequences, and withal so utterly groundless, as to call for a
+separate examination, on which we will shortly enter: meanwhile, we are
+now inquiring into the matter of fact.
+
+The whole Book of Psalms is a manual of devotion, consisting
+alternately, or rather intermixedly, of prayers and praises, composed
+some by Moses, some by other inspired Israelites of less note, but the
+greater part by David himself; and what is the force and tendency of
+their example? Words are spoken in collaudation of "Moses and Aaron
+among the saints of the Lord," and of "Samuel among such as called upon
+his name;" and mention is made with becoming reverence of the holy
+angels; but not one word ever falls from the pen of the Psalmist,
+addressed, by way of invocation, to saint or angel. In the Roman Ritual
+supplication is made to Abel and Abraham as well as to Michael and all
+angels. If it is now lawful, if it is now the duty of the worshippers of
+the true God to seek his aid through the mediation of those holy men,
+can we avoid asking, Why the inspired patriarchs did not appeal to Abel
+for his mediation? Why did not the inspired David invoke the father of
+the faithful to intercede for him with God? If the departed spirits {23}
+of faithful men may be safely addressed in prayer; if those who in their
+lifetime have, to their fellow-mortals, (who can judge only from outward
+actions, and cannot penetrate the heart,) appeared accepted servants and
+honoured saints of our Creator, may now be invoked by an act of
+religious supplication either to grant us aid, or to intercede with God
+for aid in our behalf, why did not men whom God declared to be partakers
+of his Spirit of truth, offer the same supplication to those departed
+spirits, who, before and after their decease, had this testimony from
+Omniscience itself, that they pleased God? Why is no intimation given in
+the later books of the Old Testament that such supplications were
+offered to Moses, or Aaron, or Abraham, or Noah? When wrath was gone out
+from the presence of the Lord, and the plague was begun among the
+people, Aaron took a censer in his hand, and stood between the living
+and the dead, and the plague was stayed. If the soul of Aaron was
+therefore to be regarded as a spirit influential with God, one whose
+intercession could avail, one who ought to be approached in prayer, were
+it only for his intercession, could a stronger motive be conceived for
+suggesting that invocation, than David must have felt, when the
+pestilence was destroying its thousands around him, and all his glory
+and strength, and his very life too, were threatened by its resistless
+ravages? But no! neither Abel, nor Abraham, nor Moses, nor Aaron, must
+be petitioned to intercede with God, and to pray that God would stay his
+hand. To God and God alone, for his own mercy's sake, must his afflicted
+servant turn in supplication. We find among his prayers no "Holy
+Abraham, pray for us,"--"Holy Abel, pray for us." His own Psalm of
+thanksgiving describes full well the object and the nature of his {24}
+prayer: "When the waves of death compassed me, the floods of ungodly men
+made me afraid, the sorrows of hell compassed me about, the snares of
+death prevented me; in my distress I called upon the Lord, and cried to
+my God; and He did hear my voice out of his temple, and my cry did enter
+into his ears." [2 Sam. (2 Kings Vulg.) xxii. 5. or Ps. xviii.] Abraham,
+when on earth, prayed God to spare the offending-people; but he invoked
+neither Noah, nor Abel, nor any of the faithful departed, to join their
+intercessions with his own. Isaac prayed to God for his son Jacob, but
+he did not ask the mediation of his father Abraham in his behalf; and
+when Jacob in his turn supplicated an especial blessing upon his
+grandsons Ephraim and Manasseh, though he called with gratitude to his
+mind, and expressed with his tongue, the devotedness both of Abraham and
+of Isaac to the Almighty, yet we do not find him appealing to them, or
+invoking their intercession with Jehovah.
+
+When the conscience-struck Israelites felt that they had exposed
+themselves to the wrath of Almighty God, whose sovereign power, put
+forth at the prayer of Samuel, they then witnessed, distrusting the
+efficacy of their own supplication, and confiding in the intercession of
+that man of God, they implored him to intercede for them; and Samuel
+emphatically responded to their appeal, with an assurance of his
+earnestly undertaking to plead their cause with heaven: "And all the
+people said unto Samuel, Pray for thy servants unto the Lord thy God,
+that we die not. And Samuel said unto the people, Fear not.... The Lord
+will not forsake his people, for his great name's {25} sake....
+Moreover, God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing to
+pray for you." [1 Sam. (1 Kings Vulg.) xii. 19.] Samuel is one whom the
+Holy Spirit numbers among those "who called upon God's name;" and when
+Samuel died, all Israel gathered together to lament and to bury
+him,--but we read of no petition being offered to him to carry on the
+same intercessory office, when he was once removed from them. As long as
+he was entabernacled in the flesh and sojourned on earth with his
+brethren, they besought him to pray for them, to intercede with their
+God and his God for blessings at his hand, (just as among ourselves one
+Christian asks another to pray for him,) but when Samuel's body had been
+buried in peace, and his soul had returned to God who gave it, the Bible
+never records any further application to him; we no where read, "Holy
+Samuel, pray for us."
+
+Again, what announcement could God Himself make more expressive of his
+acceptance of the persons of any, than He actually and repeatedly made
+to Moses with regard to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob? How could He more
+clearly intimate that if the spirits of the faithful departed could
+exercise intercessory or mediatorial influence with Him, those three
+holy patriarchs would possess such power above all others who had ever
+lived on the earth? "I am the God of your fathers; the God of Abraham,
+the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob: and Moses hid his face, for he was
+afraid to look upon God." "Thus shalt thou say unto the children of
+Israel, The God of thy fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac,
+the God of Jacob, hath sent me unto you. This is my name for ever, and
+this is my memorial throughout all generations." [Exod. iii. 6. 15.] Did
+Moses in his alarm and dread, when he was afraid {26} to look upon God,
+call upon those holy and accepted servants to aid him in his perplexity,
+and intercede for him and his people with the awful Eternal Being on
+whose majesty he dared not to look? Did he teach his people to invoke
+Abraham? That was far from him. When Moses, that saint of the Lord, was
+himself called hence and was buried, (though no mortal man was allowed
+to know the place of his sepulture,) did the surviving faithful pray to
+him for his help and intercession with God? He had wrought so many and
+great miracles as never had been before witnessed on earth; whilst in
+the tabernacle of the flesh he had talked with God as a man talketh with
+his friend; and yet the sacred page records no invocation ever breathed
+to his departed spirit. The same is the result of our inquiry
+throughout.
+
+I will specify only one more example--Hezekiah, who "trusted in the Lord
+God of Israel, and clave to the Lord, and departed not from following
+him, but kept his commandments," when he and his people were in great
+peril, addressed his prayer only to God. He offered no invocation to
+holy David to intercede with the Almighty for his own Jerusalem; he made
+his supplication directly and exclusively to Jehovah; and, yet, the very
+answer made to that prayer would surely have seemed to justify Hezekiah
+in seeking holy David's mediation, if prayer for the intercession of any
+departed mortal could ever have been sanctioned by Heaven: "Thus saith
+the Lord, the God of David thy father; I have heard thy prayer, I have
+seen thy tears; _I_ will heal thee. I will save this city for mine own
+sake, and for my servant David's sake." [2 Kings (Vulg. 4 Kings) xix.
+15. and xx. 6.] Of what saint in the calendar was ever such a thing as
+this spoken? {27}
+
+I have already intimated my intention of referring, with somewhat more
+than a cursory remark, to the position assumed, and the argument built
+upon it by writers in communion with Rome, for the purpose of nullifying
+or escaping from the evidence borne by the examples of the Old Testament
+against the invocation of saints. The writers to whom I refer, with
+Bellarmin at their head, openly confess that the pages of the Old
+Testament afford no instance of invocation being offered to the spirits
+of departed mortals; and the reason which they allege is this, No one
+can be invoked who is not admitted to the presence of God in heaven; but
+before Christ went down to hell[2] and released the spirits from prison,
+no mortal was admitted into heaven; consequently, before the
+resurrection of Christ the spirit of no mortal was invoked. The
+following are the words of Bellarmin at the close of the preface to his
+"Church Triumphant:"--"The spirits of the patriarchs and prophets before
+the coming of Christ were for this reason not worshipped and invoked, as
+we now worship and invoke the Apostles and martyrs, because they were
+yet shut up and detained in prisons below[3]." Again, he says, "Because
+before {28} the coming of Christ the saints who died did not enter
+heaven and saw not God, nor could ordinarily know the prayers of
+suppliants, therefore, it was not customary in the Old Testament to say,
+'Holy Abraham, pray for me,' &c.; but the men of that time prayed to God
+only, and alleged the merits of the saints who had already departed,
+that their own prayers might be aided by them."
+
+ [Footnote 2: The word Hell, signifying, in Saxon, a
+ hidden-place, altogether corresponding in its etymology with
+ "hades," is now used for the place of torment called by the
+ Hebrews "Gehennah;" and we must perhaps regret that the same
+ Saxon word is employed to signify also the unseen region of
+ departed spirits. This circumstance has been the source of much
+ difficulty and confusion.]
+
+ [Footnote 3: "Nam idcirco ante Christi adventum non ita
+ colebantur neque invocabantur spiritus patriarcharum atque
+ prophetarum, quemadmodum nunc Apostolos et martyres colimus et
+ invocamus, quod illi adhuc infernis carceribus clausi
+ detinebantur."--Ingolstadii, 1601. vol. ii. p. 833. "The last
+ edition, enlarged and corrected by the Author."]
+
+Now let us inquire into this statement thus broadly made, and ascertain
+for ourselves whether the point assumed and the argument built upon it
+can stand the test of examination. Is this argument such as ought to
+satisfy the mind of one, who would humbly but honestly follow the
+apostolic rule, "Prove all things: hold fast that which is good?" Is
+this such an exposition as that the reason of a cultivated mind, and the
+faith of an enlightened Christian, can acquiesce in it? Let it be
+examined neither with prejudice in its favour, nor with any undue
+suspicion of its soundness, but with candour and impartiality
+throughout.
+
+It is not necessary to dwell at any length on the inconsistencies and
+perplexities involved in this assumed abstract theory with regard to the
+souls of the faithful who died before the resurrection of Christ, and
+which require to be cleared away before its advocates can reasonably
+expect to obtain for it any general acceptance among thinking men. I do
+not wish to contravene the theory, far less to substitute another in its
+stead. On the contrary, I am fully content, in company with some of the
+most valuable among Roman Catholic writers, following the example of
+Augustin [Aug. De Pecc. Orig. c. 23. tom. vii. p. 338.--Quoted by De
+Sacy. 2 Kings (Vulg. 4 Kings) ii.], to leave the subject where Scripture
+has left it. To the arguments {29} alleged, I would wish to reply
+independently of any opinion, as a matter of Christian belief, with
+regard to the place, the condition, and the circumstances of the souls
+of the patriarchs and prophets before our blessed Lord's resurrection.
+It may, nevertheless, materially facilitate an inquiry into the
+soundness of the reasons alleged for the total absence of invocation to
+those souls, if we briefly contemplate some of the difficulties which
+surround this novel theory. At all events, such a process will incline
+us to abstain from bold assumptions on a point upon which the Almighty
+has been pleased to throw so little light in his Holy Word, or at least
+avoid all severity of condemnation towards those who may differ from our
+views.
+
+It is very easy to assert, that all the souls of the faithful departed
+were kept in the prison-house of Hades, and to allege in its behalf an
+obscure passage of St. Peter, to which many of the most learned and
+unprejudiced Christian teachers assign a meaning totally unconnected
+with the subject of departed spirits. But surely the case of Enoch's
+translation from this life to heaven, making, as it has been beautifully
+expressed, but one step from earth to glory, which St. Paul, in his
+Epistle to the Hebrews, cites with a most important comment of his own,
+requires to be well and patiently weighed. He was taken from the earth
+by an immediate act of Providence, that he should not see death; and
+before his translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God.
+Surely the case of Elijah too, when we would ascertain the soundness of
+this theory, must not be dismissed summarily from our thoughts, of whom
+the book of eternal truth declares, that Jehovah took him {30} in a
+whirlwind into heaven; his ascent being made visible to mortal eyes, as
+was afterwards the ascension of the blessed Saviour Himself. Indeed the
+accounts of Elijah's translation, and of our Lord's ascension, whether
+in the Septuagint and Greek Testament, the Vulgate, or our own
+authorized version, present a similarity of expression very striking and
+remarkable.
+
+On this subject we are strongly reminded, first, with what care and
+candour and patience the language of Holy Scripture should be weighed,
+which so positively declares, that Moses and Elijah, both in glory,
+appeared visibly to the Apostles at the transfiguration of our blessed
+Saviour, and conversed with Him on the holy mount: "And behold there
+talked with Him two men, who were Moses and Elias, who appeared in glory
+(in majesty, as the Vulgate renders the word), and spake of his decease
+which He should accomplish at Jerusalem;" [Luke ix. 30.]--and, secondly,
+how unwise it is to dogmatize on such subjects beyond the plain
+declaration of the sacred narrative. Moreover, how very unsatisfactory
+is the theory which we are examining as to the state of the souls of the
+faithful who died before Christ, even the words of Jerome himself prove,
+who, commenting on the transfiguration of the blessed Jesus, is
+unhappily led to represent the Almighty as having summoned Elijah to
+descend from heaven, and Moses to ascend from Hades, to meet our Lord in
+the Mount[4].
+
+ [Footnote 4: "Elia inde descendente quo conscenderat, et Moyse
+ ab inferis resurgente."--Hieron. in Matt. xvii. 1. Paris, 1706.
+ vol. iv. p. 77.]
+
+Strange and startling as is this sentiment of Jerome, it is, you will
+observe, utterly irreconcileable with the theory, that the reason why
+the ancient Church did not {31} pray to the saints departed, was because
+they were not yet in heaven.
+
+On this point, among Roman Catholic writers themselves, there prevails a
+very great diversity of opinion, arising probably from the difficulty
+which they have experienced in their endeavours to make all facts and
+doctrines square with the present tenets and practices of their
+Church[5]. Thus, whilst some maintain that Elijah was translated to the
+terrestrial paradise in which Adam had been placed, not enjoying the
+immediate divine presence; others cite the passage as justifying the
+belief that the saints departed pray for us[6]. But not only are
+different authors at variance with each other on very many points here;
+the same writer in his zeal is betrayed into great and palpable
+inconsistency. Bellarmin, anxious to enlist the account given by our
+Lord of the rich man and Lazarus, to countenance the invocation of
+saints by the example of the rich man appealing to Abraham, maintains
+that section of Holy Writ to be not a parable, but a true history of a
+matter of fact which took place between two real individuals; and of his
+assertion he adduces this proof, that "the Church worships that Lazarus
+as verily a holy man[7];" and yet he denies that any of the holy men
+were in heaven before the {32} death of Christ. Either Abraham was in
+heaven in the presence of God, or not; if he was in heaven, why did not
+his descendants invoke his aid? if he was not in heaven, the whole
+argument drawn from the rich man's supplication falls to the ground.
+
+ [Footnote 5: See De Sacy on 4 Kings i. 1. See also Estius, 1629.
+ p. 168. Pope Gregory's Exposition; Rome, 1553. p. 99. Stephen's
+ Bible in loc. 1557, &c. The Vulgate ed. Antwerp, 1624, cites a
+ note, "Thy prayers are stronger than chariots and horsemen."]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Gaspar Sanctius, Antwerp, 1624. p. 1360, considers
+ the fable not improbable, that Elijah, living in the terrestrial
+ paradise, wrote there the letters to Joram (mentioned 2 Chron.
+ xxi. 12), and sent them by angels.]
+
+ [Footnote 7: Colit Lazarum ilium ut vere sanctum
+ hominem.--Bellarm. De Ecd. Triumph, p. 864.]
+
+Another very extraordinary inconsistency, arising from the same
+solicitude, forces itself upon our notice, when the same author urges a
+passage in Leviticus [Levit. xix. 13.] to prove, that the saints are now
+admitted at once into the enjoyment of the presence of God in heaven,
+without waiting for the day of final judgment. [Bell vol. ii. p. 865.]
+"God (such are his words) commanded it to be written, 'The work of the
+hireling shall not remain with thee till the morning;' therefore, unless
+God would appear inconsistent with Himself, He will not keep back the
+reward of his saints to the end of the world." How strange, that in the
+same treatise [Ibid. p. 833.] this author should expressly maintain,
+that the reward of Abel and Abraham, and the holy prophet and lawgiver
+Moses, the very man who was commanded to write that law in Leviticus,
+was kept back,--the last for a longer period than a thousand years; the
+first well nigh four thousand years.
+
+I mention these particulars merely to point out how very unsatisfactory
+and unsound is the attempted solution of the difficulties which surround
+on every side the theory of those who maintain, that the reason why we
+have no instance of the righteous departed being invoked in the times of
+the elder covenant is, that they were not as yet admitted into heaven,
+but were kept in prison till the resurrection of Christ. I would also
+observe, even at the risk {33} of repetition, that I am here not
+maintaining any opinion as to the appointed abiding-place, the
+condition, and circumstances, the powers of consciousness, volition or
+enjoyment of the departed, before Christ's resurrection; on the
+contrary, I am rather urging the consideration of the great and serious
+caution requisite before we espouse, as an article of faith, any opinion
+which rests on so questionable a foundation, and which involves such
+interminable difficulties.
+
+But while we need not dwell longer on this immediate point, yet there
+are two considerations which appear to be altogether decisive as to the
+evidence borne against the Invocation of Saints by the writers of the
+Old Testament. If the spirits of the saints departed were not invoked
+before the resurrection of Christ, purely because they were not then
+admitted into heaven; the first consideration I would suggest is this:
+Why did the faithful and inspired servants of Jehovah not invoke the
+angels and archangels who were in heaven? The second is this: Why did
+not the inspired Apostles and faithful disciples of our Lord invoke the
+spirits of those saints after his resurrection; that is (according to
+the theory before us), after those saints had been taken by Christ with
+him into his Father's presence? I wish not to anticipate here our
+inquiry into the testimony borne by the writers of the New Testament as
+to the doctrine and practice of the Roman Church in this particular; and
+I will only add, that whatever be the cause of the absence from the Old
+Testament of all worship and invocation of Abel and Abraham, whom the
+Roman Church now invokes, the alleged reason that it was because they
+were not in heaven till after Christ's resurrection, is utterly set
+aside by the conduct of the Apostles and disciples of our Lord recorded
+in the New {34} Testament, for more than half a century after his return
+to his Father's glory.
+
+This, however, seems to be the proper place for entertaining the first
+consideration, Why did not the holy men of old, under the elder
+covenant, invoke angels and archangels, as the Roman Church now does?
+Writers, indeed, who have declared themselves the defenders of that
+doctrine and practice, refer us to passages, which they cite, as
+affording examples of the worship of angels; and we will not knowingly
+allow any one of those sections of Holy Writ to remain unexamined. We
+must first endeavour to ascertain the testimony borne by the books of
+the Old Testament: and that presents to us such a body of evidence as
+greatly increases our surprise at the perseverance with which the
+invocation of angels has been maintained by any community of men
+acknowledging the inspiration of the sacred volume.
+
+The inspired writers of the Old Testament, and those to whom through
+their mouth and pen the Divine word was addressed, were as fully as
+ourselves acquainted with the existence of angelic beings. They were
+aware of the station of those angels in the court of heaven, of their
+power as God's ambassadors, and agents for good. Either their own eyes
+had seen the mighty operations of God by the hands of those celestial
+messengers; or their ears had heard their fathers tell what HE had done
+by their instrumentality in times of old. Why then did not God's chosen
+people offer to the angels the same worship and invocation which the
+Church of Rome now addresses to them in common with the patriarchs and
+prophets of the elder covenant, and with saints and martyrs under the
+new? In the condition of the holy angels no one ever suggests that {35}
+any change, affecting the argument, has taken place since the time when
+man was created and made. And as the angels of heaven were in themselves
+the same, equally in the presence of God, and equally able to succour
+men through that long space of four thousand years, which intervened
+between Adam's creation and the birth of HIM who was Son of Adam and Son
+of God, so was man in the same dependent state, needing the guidance and
+protection of a power above his own. Nay, surely, if there was in man
+any difference affecting the argument, it would all add weight to the
+reason against the invocation of angels by Christians. The Israelites of
+old had no clear knowledge, as we have, of one great Mediator, who is
+ever making intercession for us; and yet they sought not the mediation
+and intercession and good offices of those superhuman beings, of whose
+existence and power, and employment in works of blessing to man, they
+had no doubt[8]. This is a point of great importance to our argument,
+and I will refer to a few passages in support of it.
+
+ [Footnote 8: A small section indeed of their countrymen in our
+ Saviour's time denied the reality of a future state, and the
+ existence of angels and spirits; but the sect was of then recent
+ origin, and the overwhelming majority believed as their fathers
+ had believed.]
+
+When David, who had, as we know [1 Chron. xxi. 16.], visible
+demonstration afforded him of the existence and ministration of the
+angels, called upon them to unite with his own soul, and with all the
+works of creation through all places of God's dominion, in praising
+their merciful, glorious, and powerful Creator, he thus conveys to us
+the exalted ideas with which he had been filled of their nature, their
+excellence, and their ministration. "The Lord hath prepared his throne
+in the heavens, and his {36} kingdom ruleth over all: Bless the Lord, ye
+his angels that excel in strength, that do his commandments, hearkening
+unto the voice of his word. Bless ye the Lord, all ye his hosts, ye
+ministers of his that do his pleasure." [Ps. ciii. 19-21.] David knew
+moreover that one of the offices, in the execution of which the angels
+do God's pleasure, is that of succouring and defending us on earth. For
+example, in one of the psalms used by the Church of Rome at complin, and
+with the rest repeated in the Church of England, and prophetic of the
+Redeemer, David, to whom this psalm is probably to be ascribed, declares
+of the man who had made the Most High his refuge and strength, "There
+shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy
+dwelling; for he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in
+all thy ways; they shall bear thee up in their hands lest thou dash thy
+foot against a stone." [Ps. xci. 10-12.] And again, with exquisitely
+beautiful imagery, he represents those same blessed servants of heaven
+as an army, as a host of God's spiritual soldiers keeping watch and ward
+over the poorest of the children of men, who would take refuge in his
+mercy: "The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him,
+and delivereth them[9]." And yet David, the prophet of the Lord, never
+addresses to these beings, high and glorious though they are, one single
+invocation: he neither asks them to assist him, nor to pray for him, nor
+to pray with him in his behalf.
+
+ [Footnote 9: Ps. xxxiv. 7. (Vulg. xxxiii. 8.) "Immittet angelus
+ Domini in circuitu timentium eum, et eripiet eos." In the
+ Vulgate the beauty of the figure is lost; which, however, Roman
+ Catholic writers restore in their comments. Basil makes a
+ beautiful use of the metaphor. See De Sacy in loc.] {37}
+
+Isaiah was admitted by the Holy Spirit to witness in the fulness of its
+glory the court and the throne of heaven; and he heard the voices of the
+seraphim proclaiming their Maker's praise; he experienced also
+personally the effect of their ministration, when one of them said, "Lo,
+this hath touched thy lips, and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy
+sin purged." [Isaiah vi. 7.] Still, though Isaiah must have regarded
+this angel as his benefactor under God, yet neither to this seraph, nor
+to any of the host of heaven, does he offer one prayer for their good
+offices, even by their intercession. He ever ascribes all to God alone;
+and never joins any other name with His either in supplication or in
+praise. Let us also take the case of Daniel. He acknowledges not only
+that the Lord's omnipotent hand had rescued him from the jaws of the
+lions, but that the deliverance was brought about by the ministration of
+an angel. "My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut the lions' mouths,
+that they have not hurt me." [Dan. vi. 22.] Yet when we look through
+Daniel's prayers, we find no allusion to any of the highest angels. He
+had seen Gabriel before his prayer; he had heard the voice and felt the
+hand of that heavenly messenger who was commissioned to reveal to him
+what should be done in the latter end; and immediately after the
+offering of his prayer, the same Gabriel announces himself as one who
+was come forth to give the prophet skill and understanding. And yet
+neither towards Gabriel, nor any other of the angels of God, does one
+word of invocation fall from the lips of Daniel. In the supplications of
+that holy, intrepid, and blessed servant and child of God, we search in
+vain for any thing approaching in spirit to the invocation, "Sancte
+Gabriel, ora pro nobis." {38}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT (continued)
+
+
+We must now briefly refer to those passages, by which Roman Catholic
+writers have endeavoured to maintain that religious adoration was paid
+to angels by the faithful sons of God. The two principal instances cited
+are, first, the case of Abraham bowing down before three men, whom he
+recognizes as messengers from heaven; and, secondly, the words of Jacob
+when he gave his benediction to his grandsons.
+
+With regard to the first instance, how very far the prostration of
+Abraham was in itself from implying an act of religious worship, being
+as it was the ordinary mode of paying respect to a fellow mortal, is
+evident from the very words of Scripture. The Hebrew word, which we
+translate by "bowed himself," and which the Vulgate unhappily renders
+"adoravit" ("adored"), is, letter for letter, the same in the case of
+Abraham saluting his three heavenly visitors, and in the case of Jacob
+saluting his brother Esau. The parallelism of the two passages is very
+striking.
+
+GEN. xviii. 2. GEN. xxxiii. 1 and 3.
+
+And he [Abraham] lift up his And Jacob lifted up his eyes,
+eyes, and lo! three men stood and looked, and behold! Esau
+by him; and when he saw them, came ... And he passed over, and
+he ran to meet them from the _bowed himself to the ground_ seven
+tent door; and _bowed himself_ times until he came near to his
+_toward the ground_. brother. {39}
+
+By rendering the Hebrew word[10], which means to "bow or bend oneself,"
+by the word "adoravit," which is literally "to pray to," the Latin
+Vulgate has laid the foundation for much unsound and misleading
+criticism. But suppose the word had meant, what it does not mean, an act
+of solemn religious worship; and let it be granted (as I am not only
+ready to grant, but prepared to maintain) that Abraham paid religious
+adoration at that time, what inference can fairly and honestly be drawn
+from that circumstance in favour of the invocation of angels? The
+ancient writers of the Christian Church, and those whom the Church of
+Rome habitually holds in great respect, are full and clear in
+maintaining that the person whom Abraham then addressed, was no created
+being, neither angel nor seraph; but the Angel of the Covenant; the
+Word, the eternal Son of God, Himself God[11]. Before the visible and
+miraculous presence of the God of heaven, who for his own glory and in
+carrying on the work of man's salvation, sometimes deigned so to reveal
+Himself, the patriarchs of old bowed themselves to the earth. Can this,
+with any shadow of {40} reason, be employed to sanction the invocation
+of Michael and all the myriads of angels who fill the court of heaven?
+
+ [Footnote 10: Not only is the Hebrew word precisely the same,
+ letter for letter, and point for point, [Hebrew: shahah], but
+ the Septuagint in each case employs the same, [Greek:
+ prosekunaesen]; and the Vulgate in each case renders it by the
+ same word, "adoravit." The Roman Catholic commentator De Sacy
+ renders it in each case, "se prosternavit," which corresponds
+ exactly with our English version. The Douay Bible in each case
+ renders it "adored."]
+
+ [Footnote 11: Many early Christian writers may be cited to the
+ same purpose: it is enough, however, to refer to Justin Martyr
+ and to Athanasius; who are very full and elaborate in
+ maintaining, that the angel here mentioned was no created being,
+ but was the Angel of the Covenant, God, in the fulness of time
+ manifested in the flesh. The passage from Athanasius will be
+ quoted at some length, when we come to examine that father's
+ testimony. For Justin Martyr, see Dial. cum Tryph. ch. 56, &c.
+ p. 150, &c. (Paris, 1742.)]
+
+The only other instance to which it will be necessary to call your
+attention, occurs in the forty-eighth chapter of Genesis. The passage,
+however, is so palpably and on the very face of it inapplicable, that
+its examination needs not detain us long. "And he [Jacob] blessed
+Joseph, and said, God, before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac did
+walk, the God who fed me all my life long unto this day, the ANGEL which
+redeemed me from all evil, bless the lads." [Gen. xlviii. 15.] Here the
+patriarch speaks of God as the Angel, and the Angel as God: being the
+Angel or Messenger of the Covenant--God manifested to man. He speaks not
+of Michael or Gabriel, or archangel or seraph, or any created being; but
+of the Lord Himself, who appeared to him, agreeably to the revelation of
+God Himself recorded in a previous chapter, and thus communicated by the
+patriarch to Rachel and Leah: "And the ANGEL of God spake unto me in a
+dream, saying, Jacob; and I said, Here am I. And he said ... _I_ am the
+GOD of Bethel, where thou anointedst the pillar, and vowedst a vow unto
+me." [Gen. xxxi. 11.] The Angel whose blessing he desired for the lads
+was the God[12], to whom he had vowed a vow in Bethel, the Lord Himself.
+
+ [Footnote 12: It may not be superfluous to add, that this is the
+ interpretation of the passage adopted by primitive writers,
+ Among others see Eusebius Demonstr. Evan. lib. v. ch. 10: who
+ declares that the Angel spoken of by Jacob was God the Son.]
+
+Independently, however, of this conclusive consideration, if the latter
+member of this sentence had merely expressed a wish, that an angel might
+be employed as {41} an instrument of good in behalf of Ephraim and
+Manasseh, I could readily offer such a prayer for a blessing on my own
+children. My prayer would be addressed to the angel neither immediately
+nor transitively, but exclusively to God alone, supplicating Him
+graciously to employ the service of those ministering spirits for our
+good. Such a prayer every Catholic in communion with the Church of
+England is taught and directed to offer. Such a prayer is primitive and
+scriptural; and such is offered in the Church on the anniversary of
+Saint Michael and all angels:
+
+"O Everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services of
+angels and men in a wonderful order, mercifully grant that as Thy holy
+angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by Thy appointment they may
+succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."
+
+Such is the prayer of the Church Catholic, whether of the Roman or the
+Anglican branch; it is in spirit and in truth a Christian prayer, fit
+for faithful mortals to offer on earth to the Lord of men and of angels
+in heaven. Would that the Church of Rome, preserving, as she has
+preserved, this prayer in all its original purity, had never been
+successfully tempted to mingle in the same service, supplications, which
+rob the one only God of his exclusive honour and glory, as the God "who
+heareth prayer;" and to rob Christ of his exclusive honour and glory, as
+our only Mediator and Advocate!
+
+Here, though unwilling, by departing from the order of our argument, to
+anticipate our examination in its place of the Roman ritual, I cannot
+refrain from contrasting this prayer, the genuine offspring of Christian
+faith, with some forms of invocation contained in {42} the Roman service
+on St. Michael's day, in which I could not join, and the adoption of
+which I deeply lament. The first is appointed to be said at the part of
+the Mass called "The Secret:" "We offer to Thee, O Lord, the sacrifice
+of praise, humbly beseeching Thee, That by the intervention of the
+prayers of the angels for us, Thou, being appeased, mayest both accept
+the same, and make them profitable for our salvation. Through ..." The
+second is offered at the Post Communion: "Supported [propped up,
+suffulti] by the intercession of Thy blessed archangel Michael, we
+humbly beseech Thee, O Lord, that what with honour we follow[13], we may
+obtain also in mind. Through ..."
+
+ [Footnote 13: I do not understand the exact meaning of these
+ words, which however contain no portion of that sentiment, the
+ presence of which in this prayer I deplore. The original is
+ this: "Beati archangeli tui Michaelis intercessione suffulti,
+ supplices te Domine deprecamur, ut quod honore prosequimur,
+ contingamus et in mente. Per ..." Probably the general sense is,
+ that what we reverently seek we may actually realize.]
+
+Still, though here the Christian seems to be taught to rest on a broken
+reed, to support and prop himself up by a staff which must bend and
+break; yet I acknowledge that so much violence is not done to my
+Christian principles, nor do my feelings, as a believer in God and his
+ever-blessed Son, meet with so severe a shock by either of these
+prayers, as by the invocation addressed to the archangel himself in the
+"Gradual" on that same day:
+
+"O holy Michael, O archangel, defend us in battle, that we perish not in
+the dreadful judgment."
+
+Christians of the Church of Rome! for one moment meditate, I beseech
+you, on this prayer. It is not addressed to God; in it there is no
+mention made of {43} Christ: having called upon the angels, and on your
+own soul in the words of the psalmist, to praise the Lord, you address
+your supplication to Michael himself; not even invoking him for his
+intercession, but imploring of him his protection. If it be said, that
+his intercession is all that is meant, with most unfeigned sincerity I
+request you to judge for yourselves, whether any prayer from poor sinful
+man, putting his whole trust in the Lord and imploring his help, could
+be addressed to our God and Saviour more immediate and direct than this?
+In the place of the name of his servant Michael, substitute the highest
+and the holiest name ever uttered in heaven or on earth, and can words
+form a prayer more direct to God? "O Lord God Almighty, O Lord Jesus our
+only Saviour, defend us in battle, that we perish not in the dreadful
+judgment. Hallelujah!"--Can this be right? Were the archangel allowed
+now, by his Lord and ours, to make his voice heard upon earth by
+Christians offering to him this prayer, would he utter any other words,
+than the angel, his fellow-servant and ours, once addressed to Saint
+John, when he fell down to worship before him, "See thou do it not; for
+I am thy fellow-servant: worship God."
+
+Such then is the evidence borne by the writers of the Old Testament. No
+prayer to angel or beatified spirit occurs from its first to its last
+page. The theory which would have us account for the absence of all
+prayer to the saints before the advent of Messiah, by reason of their
+not having been then admitted into their everlasting habitations, and
+the immediate presence of God proves to be utterly groundless. The holy
+angels were confessedly in heaven [Matt. xviii. 10.], beholding the face
+of {44} God; but no invocation was ever addressed to them, by patriarch,
+or prophet, or people, as mediators or intercessors. God, and God alone,
+the one eternal Jehovah, is proclaimed by Himself throughout, and is
+acknowledged throughout to be the only object of any kind of spiritual
+worship; the only Being who heareth prayer, to whom alone therefore all
+mankind should approach with the words and with the spirit of
+invocation. It has been argued by some writers, that in the times of the
+Old Testament, prayer was not offered to God through a mediator at all;
+and that as the one Mediator was not then revealed in his person and his
+offices, the subsidiary intercessors could not of course act; and
+therefore could not be invoked by man. The answer to this remark is
+conclusive. That Mediator has been revealed in his person and his
+offices; and has been expressly declared to be the one Mediator between
+God and man: we therefore seek God's covenanted mercies through Him.
+Those subsidiary intercessors have never been revealed; and therefore we
+do not seek their aid. To assure us that it was the mind and will of our
+Heavenly Father that we should approach Him by secondary and subsidiary
+mediators and intercessors, the same clear and unquestionable revelation
+of their persons and their offices as mediators would have been
+required, as He has vouchsafed of the mediation of his Son. Had God
+willed that the faithful should approach Him by the intercessions of the
+saints and martyrs, is it conceivable that He would not have given some
+intimation of his will in this respect? If believers in the Gospel were
+to have unnumbered mediators of intercession in heaven, as well as the
+one Mediator of redemption, would not the {45} Gospel itself have
+announced it? Could such declarations as these have remained on record
+without any qualifying or limiting expression, "He[14] is able also to
+save to the uttermost them who come unto God by Him, seeing He ever
+liveth to make intercession for them." "There is one God, and one
+Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." But this involves
+the question to which the next section must be devoted. All I would
+anticipate here is, that if the irresistible argument from the Old
+Testament is sought to be evaded on the ground that no mediator at all
+was then revealed, we must require a distinct revelation of the
+existence and offices of other mediators and intercessors, before we can
+be justified in applying to them for their intervention in our behalf.
+And the question now is. Are they so revealed?
+
+ [Footnote 14: Heb. vii. 25. I Tim. ii. 5.--Unde et salvare in
+ perpetuum potest accedentes per semetipsum ad Deum, semper
+ vivens ad interpellandum pro nobis.--_Vulg._]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.--EVIDENCE OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+
+
+Though such is the evidence borne against the invocation of saints and
+angels by the Old Testament, yet it has been said that we are living
+neither under the patriarchal, nor the Mosaic dispensation, but under
+the Gospel, to whom therefore as Christians neither the precepts nor the
+examples of those ancient times are applicable: {46} the injunctions
+consequently given of old to preserve the chosen people from idolatry
+and paganism, cannot be held to prohibit Christians from seeking the aid
+of those departed saints who are now reigning with Christ. But, surely,
+those precepts, and denunciations, and commands, are still most strictly
+applicable, as conveying to us a knowledge of the will of our Heavenly
+Father, that his sons and daughters on earth should associate no name,
+however exalted among the principalities and powers in heavenly places,
+with his own holy name in prayer, and spiritual invocation. I am
+throughout this address supposing myself to be speaking to those whose
+heart's desire is to fulfil the will of God in all things; not those who
+are contented to depart from the spirit of that will, whenever they can
+devise plausible arguments to countenance such departure.
+
+The cases both of precept and example through the Old Testament
+affording so stringent and so universal a rule against the association
+of any name with the name of the Almighty in our prayers; before we can
+conclude that Christians have a liberty denied to believers under the
+former dispensations, we must surely produce a declaration to that
+effect, clear, unequivocal, and precisely in point. Nothing short of an
+enactment, rescinding in terms the former prohibitory law, and
+positively sanctioning supplications and prayers to saints and angels,
+seems capable of satisfying any Christian bent on discovering the will
+of God, and resolved to worship Him agreeably to the spirit of that will
+as it has been revealed. But let us read the New Testament from its
+first to its very last word, and we shall find, that the doctrines, the
+precepts, and the examples, the pervading reigning spirit of the entire
+{47} volume, combine in addressing us with voices loud and clear. Pray
+to God Almighty solely in the name and for the sake of his dear and only
+Son Jesus Christ our Lord, and offer no prayer, no supplication, no
+intreaty, to any other being or power, saint or angel, though it be only
+to ask for their intercession with the great God. But this involves the
+whole question, and must be sifted thoroughly. Let us then review the
+entire volume with close and minute scrutiny, and ask ourselves, Is
+there a single passage, interpreted to the best of our skill, with the
+aid of those on whose integrity and learning we can rely, which directly
+and unequivocally sanctions any religious invocation of whatever kind to
+any being except God alone? And then let us calmly and deliberately
+resolve this point: In a matter of so vital importance, of so immense
+interest, and of so sacred a character as the worship of the Supreme
+Being, who declares Himself to be a jealous God, ought we to suffer any
+refinements of casuistry to entice us from the broad, clear light of
+revelation? If it were God's good pleasure to make exceptions to his
+rule--a rule so repeatedly, and so positively enacted and
+enforced--surely the analogy of his gracious dealings with mankind would
+have taught us to look for an announcement of the exceptions in terms
+equally forcible and explicit. Instead, however, of this, we find no
+single act, no single word, nothing which even by implication can be
+forced to sanction any prayer or religious invocation, of whatever kind,
+to any other being save to God alone.
+
+Let us first look to the language and conduct of our blessed Lord, whose
+prayers to his Father are upon record for our instruction and comfort,
+and whose precepts and example form the best rule of a Christian's {48}
+life. So far from repealing the ancient law, he repeats in his own
+person its solemn announcement, "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one
+Lord." [Mark xii. 29.] While the same heavenly Teacher commands us with
+authority, "When thou prayest, pray to thy Father which is in secret,
+and thy Father, who seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly." [Matt.
+vi. 6.] No allusion in any word of His do we find to any prayer from a
+mortal on this earth to an angel or saint in heaven. And yet occasions
+were multiplied on which a reference to the invocation of angels would
+have been natural, and apparently called for. He again and again places
+beyond all doubt the reality of their good services towards mankind, but
+it is as God's servants, and at God's bidding; not in answer to any
+supplication or invoking of ours. The parable of the rich man and
+Lazarus has been cited [Bellarmin, p. 895.] to bear contrary evidence;
+but, in the first place, that parable does not offer a case in point; in
+the second place, were it in point, it might be fairly and strongly
+urged against the practice of invoking the spirit of any departed
+mortal, even the father of the faithful himself. For what are the
+circumstances of the parabolic representation? A lost spirit in the
+regions of torment prays to Abraham in the regions of the blessed, and
+the spirit of the departed patriarch professes himself to have no power
+to grant the request of the departed and condemned spirit. [Luke xvi.
+19.] The practice indeed of our Roman Catholic brethren would have been
+exemplified, had our blessed Lord represented the rich man's five
+brethren still on earth as pious men, and as supplicating Abraham in
+heaven to pray for themselves, or to mitigate {49} their lost brother's
+punishment and his woes. But then it would have afforded Christians
+little encouragement to follow their example, when they found Abraham
+declaring himself unable to aid them in attaining the object of their
+prayer, or in any way to assist them at all. Without one single
+exception, we find our blessed Lord's example, precepts, and doctrines
+to be decidedly against the practice of invoking saint or angel; whilst
+not one solitary act or word of His can be cited to countenance or
+palliate it.
+
+Next it follows, that we inquire into the conduct and the writings of
+Christ's Apostles and immediate followers, to whom He graciously
+promised that the Holy Spirit should guide them into all truth. In the
+Acts of the Apostles, various instances of prayer attract our notice,
+but not one ejaculation is found there to any other being save God
+alone. Neither angel nor saint is invoked. The Apostles prayed for
+guidance in the government of Christ's infant Church, but it was, "Thou,
+Lord, who knowest the hearts of all men." [Acts i. 24.] They prayed for
+their own acceptance, but it was "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." [Acts
+vii. 59.] They prayed for each other, as in behalf of St. Peter when in
+prison; but we are expressly told, that the prayer which was made
+without ceasing by the Church for him was addressed to GOD. [Acts xii.
+5.]
+
+To deliver St. Peter from his chains, an angel was sent on an especial
+mission from heaven; but though St. Peter saw him, and heard his voice,
+and followed him, and knew of a surety that the Almighty had employed
+the ministration of an angel to liberate him from his bonds, yet we do
+not hear thereafter of {50} Peter having himself prayed to an angel to
+secure his good offices, and his intercession with God, nor has he once
+indirectly intimated to others that such supplications would be of
+avail, or were even allowable. He exhorts his fellow-Christians to pray,
+"Watch unto prayer," but it is because "The eyes of the LORD are over
+the righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers." [1 Pet. iv. 7;
+iii. 12.] He Himself prays for them, but it is, that the God of all
+grace might make them perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle them. He
+suggests no invocation of saint or angel to intercede with God for them.
+He bids them cast all their care upon GOD, on the assurance that God
+Himself careth for them.
+
+Precisely the same result issues from a contemplation of the acts and
+exhortation of St. Paul. He too experienced in his own person the
+comfort of an angel's ministration, bidding him cast off all fear when
+in the extreme of imminent peril. [Acts xxvii. 23, 24.] Many a prayer of
+that holy Apostle is upon record; many an earnest exhortation to prayer
+was made by him; we find many a declaration relative to his own habits
+of prayer. But with him God and God alone is the object of prayer
+throughout: by him no saint or angel or archangel is alluded to, as one
+whose intercession might be sought by himself or by us. He could speak
+in glowing language of patriarchs, prophets, and angels, but unto none
+of these would he turn. "Be careful for nothing, but in every thing by
+prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made
+known unto God." [Phil. iv. 6.] And let any one receive, in the plain
+meaning of his words, his prohibitory monition [Col. ii. 18.], and say,
+could St. Paul have {51} uttered these words without any qualifying
+expression, had he worshipped angels by invocation, even asking them
+only to aid him by their prayers. "Let no one beguile you of your reward
+in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels; not holding the
+Head," which Head he had in the first chapter (v. 18) declared to be the
+dear Son of God, "in whom we have redemption through his blood, even the
+forgiveness of our sins."
+
+The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews could bring before our minds
+with most fervent uplifting eloquence Abel and Abraham and David,--that
+goodly fellowship of the prophets, that holy army of martyrs; he could
+speak as though he were an eye-witness of what he describes, of the
+general assembly and church of the first-born, whose names are written
+in heaven. And, surely, had the thought of seeking the support or
+intercession of saint or angel by invocation addressed to them, been
+familiar to him; had the thought even occurred to his mind with
+approbation, he would not have allowed such an occasion to pass by,
+without even alluding to any benefit that might arise from our invoking
+such friends of God. So far from that allusion, the utmost which he says
+at the close of his eulogy is this, "These all, having obtained a good
+report through faith, received not the promise; God having provided some
+better thing for us, that they without us should not be made perfect."
+[Heb. xi. 39, 40.]
+
+The beloved Apostle who could look forward in full assurance of faith to
+the day of Christ's second coming, and knew that "when He shall appear
+we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is," has left us this
+record of his sentiments concerning prayer: {52} "This is the confidence
+that we have in HIM, that, if we ask any thing according to his will, he
+heareth us; and if we know that he hear us, whatsoever we ask, we know
+that we have the petitions that we desired of him." [1 John v. 14, 15.]
+St. John alludes to no intercessor, to no advocate, save only that
+"Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, who is also the
+propitiation for our sins." [1 John ii. 1.] St. John never suggests to
+us the advocacy or intercession of saint or angel; with him God in
+Christ is all in all.
+
+I will only refer to one more example, that of St. James: the instance
+is equally to the point, and is strongly illustrative of the truth. This
+Apostle is anxious to impress on his fellow-Christians a due sense of
+the efficacy of our intercessions: "The effectual fervent prayer of a
+righteous man availeth much." [James v. 16.] He instances its power with
+God by the case of Elijah, a man so holy, that the Almighty suffered him
+not to pass through the regions of death and the grave, but translated
+him at once from this life to glory: "Elias was a man subject to like
+passions as we are, and he prayed that it might not rain; and it rained
+not on the earth by the space of three years and six months; and he
+prayed again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth brought forth her
+fruit." [James v. 17, 18.] And yet St. James is very far from suggesting
+the lawfulness or efficacy of any invocation to the hallowed spirit of
+this man, to whose prayer the elements and natural powers of the sky and
+the earth had been made obedient. He exhorts all men to pray, but it
+must be to God alone, and directly to God, without applying for the
+intervention of any mediators or intercessors from among angels or men.
+{53} "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth
+liberally to all men, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him; but
+let him ask in faith, nothing wavering." [James i. 5, 6.] Like the
+writer to the Hebrews, he would have us come ourselves "boldly" and
+directly "to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find
+grace to help in time of need."
+
+Surely, these Apostles, chosen vessels for conveying the truths of
+salvation throughout the world, knew well how the Almighty could best be
+approached by his children on earth; and had the invocation of saint or
+angel found a place in their creed, they would not have kept so
+important a truth from us.
+
+Before leaving this part of our inquiry, I would propose the patient and
+unprejudiced weighing of the import of two passages in the New
+Testament, often quoted on this subject; one in the Acts of the
+Apostles, the other in the Apocalypse.
+
+The holy Apostles Barnabas and Paul, by the performance of a striking
+miracle, had excited feelings of religious reverence and devotion among
+the people of Lystra, who prepared to offer sacrifice to them as two of
+their fabled deities. [Acts xiv. 11-18.] The indignant zeal with which
+these two holy men rushed forward to prevent such an act of impiety,
+however admirable and affecting, does not constitute the chief point for
+which reference is here made to this incident. They were men, still
+clothed with the tabernacle of the flesh, and the weakness of human
+nature; and the priests and people were ready to offer to them the
+wonted victims, the abomination of the heathen. Now, I am fully aware of
+the wide difference, in many {54} particulars, between such an act and
+the act of a Christian praying to their spirits after their departure
+hence, and supplicating them to intercede with the true God in his
+behalf: and on this difference Roman Catholic writers have maintained
+the total inapplicability of this incident to the present state of
+things. But, surely, if any such prayer to departed saints had been
+familiar to their minds, instead of repelling the religious address of
+the inhabitants of Lystra at once and for ever, they would have altered
+the tone of their remonstrance, and not have suppressed the truth when a
+good opportunity offered itself for imparting it. And, supposing that it
+was part of their commission to announce and explain the invocation of
+saints at all, on what occasion could an explanation of the just and
+proper invocation of angels and saints departed have been more
+appropriate in the Apostles, than when they were denouncing the
+unjustifiable offering of sacrifice to themselves while living? But
+whether the more appropriate place for such an announcement were at
+Lystra, in Corinth, at Athens, or at Rome, it matters not; nor whether
+it would have been more advantageously communicated by their oral
+teaching, or in their epistles. Doubtless, had the Apostles, by their
+example or teaching, sanctioned the invocation of saints and angels, in
+the course of fifty years or more after our blessed Saviour's
+resurrection, it would infallibly have appeared in some page or other of
+the New Testament. Instead of this the whole tenor of the Holy Volume
+breathes in perfect accordance with the spirit of the apostolical
+remonstrance at Lystra, to the fullest and utmost extent of its meaning,
+"We preach unto you that ye should turn from these vanities to serve the
+living God." {55}
+
+Of the other instance, it well becomes every Catholic Christian to
+ponder on the weight and cogency. John, the beloved disciple of our
+Lord, when admitted to view with his own eyes and hear with his mortal
+ears the things of heaven, rapt in amazement and awe, fell down to
+worship before the feet of the angel who showed him these things. [Rev.
+xxii. 8, 9.] If the adoration of angels were ever justifiable, surely it
+was then; and what a testimony to the end of the world would have been
+put upon record, had the adoration of an angel by the blessed John at
+such a moment, when he had the mysteries and the glories of heaven
+before him, been received and sanctioned. But what is the fact? "Then
+saith he to me, See thou do it not. I am thy fellow-servant, and of thy
+brethren the prophets, and of them who keep the sayings of this book.
+Worship God." I cannot understand the criticism by which the
+conclusiveness of this direct renouncement of all religious adoration
+and worship is attempted to be set aside. To my mind these words,
+uttered without any qualification at such a time, by such a being, to
+such a man, are conclusive beyond gainsaying. The interpretation put
+upon this transaction, and the words in which it is recorded, and the
+inference drawn from them by a series of the best divines, with St.
+Athanasius at their head, presents so entirely the plain common-sense
+view of the case to our minds, that all the subtilty of casuists, and
+all the ingenuity of modern refinements, will never be able to
+substitute any other in its stead. "The angel (such are the words of
+that ancient defender of the true faith), in the Apocalypse, forbids
+John, when desiring to worship him, saying, 'See thou {56} do it not; I
+am thy fellow-servant, and of thy brethren the prophets, and of them who
+keep the sayings of this book. Worship God.' Therefore, to be the object
+of worship belongs to God only; and this even the angels themselves
+know: though they surpass others in glory, but they are all creatures,
+and are not among objects of worship, but among those who worship the
+sovereign Lord." [Athan. Orat. 2. Cont. Ar. vol. i. p. 491.] To say that
+St. John was too fully illuminated by the Holy Spirit to do, especially
+a second time, what was wrong; and thence to infer that what he did was
+right, is as untenable as to maintain, that St. Peter could not,
+especially thrice, have done wrong in denying our Lord. He did wrong, or
+the angel would not have chided and warned him. And to say that the
+angel here forbade John personally to worship him, because he was a
+fellow-servant and one of the prophets; and thus that the prohibition
+only tended to exalt the prophetic character, not to condemn the worship
+of angels, is proved to be also a groundless assumption, from the
+angel's own words, who reckons himself as a fellow-servant with not St.
+John only, but all those also who keep the words of the book of
+God,--thus equally forbidding every faithful Christian to worship their
+fellow-servants the angels. They are almost the last words in the volume
+of inspired truth, and to me, together with those last words, they seem
+with "the voice of a great multitude, and of many waters, and of mighty
+thunderings," from the very throne itself of the Most High, to proclaim
+to every inhabiter of the earth, Fall down before no created being;
+adore no created being; pray to, invoke, call upon no created being,
+whether saint or angel: worship {57} and adore God only; pray to God
+only. Trust to his mercy; seek no other mediator or intercessor than his
+own only and blessed Son. "He who testifieth these things saith, Surely,
+I come quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus. The grace of our Lord
+Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen." [Rev. xxii. 20, 21.]
+
+Thus the New Testament, so far from mitigating the stringency of the
+former law, so far from countenancing any departure from the obligation
+of that code which limits religious worship to God alone, so far from
+suggesting to us invocation to sainted men, and to angels as
+intercessors with the eternal Giver of all good, reiterates the
+injunction, and declares, that invocation in order to be Christian must
+be addressed to God alone; and that there is one and only one Mediator
+between God and men, the man Jesus Christ, who is at the right hand of
+his Father, a merciful High Priest sympathizing with us in our
+infirmities, ever making intercession for us, able to save to the
+uttermost those who come unto God through Him.
+
+The present seems to be a convenient place for observing, that however
+the distinction is strongly insisted upon, or rather implicitly
+acquiesced in by many, which would admit of a worship or service called
+dulia (the Greek [Greek: douleia]) to saints and angels, and would limit
+the worship or service called latria ([Greek: latreia]) to the supreme
+God only, yet that such distinction has no ground whatever to rest upon
+beyond the will and the imagination of those who draw it. The two words
+are used in the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament, and in the
+original Greek of the {58} New promiscuously, without any such
+distinction whatever. The word which this distinction would limit to the
+supreme worship of the Most High, is used to express the bodily service
+paid by the vanquished to their conquerors, as well as the religious
+service paid by idolaters to their fabled deities, and by the true
+worshippers to the Most High. The word which this distinction would
+reserve for the secondary worship paid to saints and angels, is employed
+to express not only the service paid by man to man, but also the service
+and worship paid to God alone, even when mentioned in contradistinction
+to other worship. It will be necessary to establish this by one or two
+instances; and first as to "latria." One single chapter in the Book of
+Deuteronomy supplies us with instances of the word used in the three
+senses, of service to men, service to idols, and service to God, xxviii.
+36. 47, 48: "Because thou servedst [Greek: elatreusas] not the Lord thy
+God with joyfulness and gladness of heart; Therefore thou shalt serve
+[Greek: latreuseis] thine enemies which the Lord shall send against thee
+in hunger and in thirst and nakedness." "The Lord shall bring thee unto
+a nation which neither thou nor thy fathers have known; and there shalt
+thou serve [Greek: latreuseis] other gods, wood and stone." Next as to
+the word "dulia." The First Book of Samuel (called also the First of
+Kings) alone supplies us with instances of this word being used in each
+of the same three senses of service from man to man, from man to idols,
+and from man to his Maker and God. 1 Sam. xvii. 9. "Ye shall be our
+servants and serve [Greek: douleusite haemin] us." xii. 24. "Only fear
+the Lord, and serve [Greek: douleusate] him in truth with all your
+heart." xxvi. 19. {59} "They have driven me out from the inheritance of
+the Lord, saying, Go, serve[15] other gods."
+
+ [Footnote 15: [Greek: douleue]. In this case also the Vulgate
+ translates all the three passages alike by the same verb,
+ "servire."]
+
+It is worthy of remark, that the same word "dulia[16]" is employed, when
+the Lord by his prophet speaks of the most solemn acts of religious
+worship; not in general obedience only, but in the offerings and
+oblations of their holy things. Ezek. xx. 40. "In mine holy mountain, in
+the mountain of the height of Israel, saith the Lord God, there shall
+all the house of Israel, all of them in the land, serve me [Greek:
+douleusousi. Vulg: serviet.]; there will I accept them, and there will I
+require your offerings, and the first-fruits of your oblations, with all
+your holy things." St. Matthew also uses the same word when he records
+the saying of our blessed Lord, "Ye cannot serve God and mammon." [Matt.
+vi. 24.; Greek: douleuein. Vulg: servire.]
+
+ [Footnote 16: It is also remarkable that in all these cases,
+ whether the Septuagint employs the word "dulia," or "latria,"
+ the word in the Hebrew is precisely the same, [Hebrew: avad].
+ That in the fifth century the words were synonymous is evident
+ from Theodoret. I. 319. See Edit. Halle.--Index.]
+
+I will only detain you by one more example, drawn from two passages,
+which seems the more striking because each of the two words "dulia" and
+"latria" is used to imply the true worship of God in a person, who was
+changed from a state of alienation to a state of holiness. The first is
+in St. Paul's 1st Epistle to the Thessalonians, i. 9. "How ye turned to
+God from idols, to serve [Greek: douleuein theo zonti] the living and
+true God." The second is in Heb. ix. 14. "How much more shall the blood
+of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself {60} without
+spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve[17] the
+living God."
+
+ [Footnote 17: [Greek: latoeuein theo zonti.] In each of these
+ two cases the Vulgate uses "servire."]
+
+The word "hyperdulia," now used to signify the worship proper to the
+Virgin Mary, as being a worship of a more exalted character than the
+worship offered to saints and angels, archangels, and cherubim and
+seraphim, will not require a similar examination. The word was invented
+in later times, and has been used chiefly to signify the worship of the
+Virgin, and is of course found neither in the Scriptures, nor in any
+ancient classical or ecclesiastical author. {61}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SECTION I.--THE EVIDENCE OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.
+
+
+Before we enter upon the next branch of our proposed inquiry, allow me
+to premise that I am induced to examine into the evidence of Christian
+antiquity not by any misgiving, lest the testimony of Scripture might
+appear defective or doubtful; far less by any unworthy notion that God's
+word needs the additional support of the suffrages of man[18]. On the
+contrary, the voice of God in his revealed word is clear, certain, and
+indisputable, commanding the invocation of Himself alone in acts of
+religious worship, and condemning any such departure from that
+singleness of adoration, as they are {62} seduced into, who invoke
+saints and angels. And it is a fixed principle in our creed, that where
+God's written word is clear and certain, human evidence cannot be
+weighed against it in the balance of the sanctuary. When the Lord hath
+spoken, well does it become the whole earth to be silent before him;
+when the eternal Judge Himself hath decided, the witness of man bears on
+its very face the stamp of incompetency and presumption.
+
+ [Footnote 18: While some authors seem to go far towards the
+ substitution of the fathers for the written word of God, others
+ in their abhorrence of that excess have run into the opposite,
+ fancying, as it would seem, that they exalt the Divine oracles
+ just in the same proportion as they disparage the uninspired
+ writers of the Church. The great body of the Church of England
+ adhere to a middle course, and adopt that golden mean, which
+ ascribes to the written Word its paramount authority, from which
+ is no appeal, and yet honours Catholic tradition as the handmaid
+ of the truth.]
+
+For myself I can say (what I have good hope these pages will of
+themselves evince) that no one can value the testimony of Christian
+tradition within its own legitimate sphere more sincerely, or more
+highly, than the individual who is now soliciting your attention to the
+conclusions which he has himself drawn from it. When Scripture is
+silent, or where its meaning is doubtful, Catholic tradition is to me a
+guide, which I feel myself bound to follow with watchful care and
+submissive reverence.
+
+Now let it be for the present supposed, that instead of the oracles of
+God having spoken, as we believe them to have spoken, with a voice
+clear, strong, and uniform against the doctrine and practice of the
+invocation of saints and angels, their voices had been weak, doubtful,
+and vague; in other words, suppose in this case the question had been
+left by the Holy Scriptures an open question, then what evidence would
+have been deducible from the writings of the primitive Church? What
+testimony do the first years and the first ages after the canon of
+Scripture was closed, bear upon this point? And here I would repeat the
+principle of inquiry, proposed above for our adoption in the more
+important and solemn examination of the Holy Volume itself.--We ought to
+endeavour to ascertain what may {63} fairly and honestly be regarded as
+the real bearing of each author's remains, and not suffer the general
+tone and spirit of a writer to be counterbalanced by single expressions,
+which may be so interpreted as to convey an opposite meaning. Rather we
+should endeavour to reconcile with that general spirit and pervading
+tendency of a writer's sentiments any casual expressions which may admit
+of two acceptations. We adopt this principle in our researches into the
+remains of classical antiquity; we adopt the same principle in
+estimating the testimony of a living witness. In the latter case,
+indeed, the ingenuity of the adverse advocate is often exercised in
+magnifying the discrepancies between some minor facts or incidental
+expressions with the broad and leading assertions of the witness, with a
+view to invalidate his testimony altogether, or at least to weaken the
+impression made by it. But then a wise and upright judge, assured of the
+truth of the evidence in the main, and of the integrity of the
+individual, will not suffer unessential, apparent inconsistencies to
+stifle and bury the body of testimony at large, but will either extract
+from the witness what may account for them, or show them to be
+immaterial. Inviting, therefore, your best thoughts to this branch of
+our subject, I ask you to ascertain, by a full and candid process of
+induction, this important and interesting point,--Whether we of the
+Anglican Church, by religiously abstaining from the presentation, in
+word or in thought, of any thing approaching prayer or supplication,
+entreaty, request, or any invocation whatever, to any other being except
+God alone, do or do not tread in the steps of the first Christians, and
+adhere to the very pattern which they set; and whether members of the
+Church of Rome by addressing angel or saint in any form of invocation
+seeking {64} their aid, either by their intercession or otherwise, have
+not unhappily swerved decidedly and far from those same footsteps, and
+departed widely from that pattern?
+
+In one point of view it might perhaps be preferable to enter at once
+upon our investigation, without previously stating the conclusions to
+which my own inquiries have led; but, on the whole, I think it more fair
+to make that statement, in order, that having the inferences already
+drawn placed before the mind, the inquirer may in each case weigh the
+several items of evidence bearing upon them separately, and more justly
+estimate its whole weight collectively at the last.
+
+After then having examined the passages collected by the most celebrated
+Roman Catholic writers, and after having searched the undisputed
+original works of the primitive writers of the Greek and Latin Churches,
+the conclusion to which I came, and in which every day of further
+inquiry and deliberation confirms me more and more in this:--
+
+In the first place, negatively, that the Christian writers, through the
+first three centuries and more, never refer to the invocation of saints
+and angels as a practice with which they were familiar: that they have
+not recorded or alluded to any forms of invocation of the kind used by
+themselves or by the Church in their days; and that no services of the
+earliest times contain hymns, litanies, or collects to angels, or to the
+spirits of the faithful departed.
+
+In the second place, positively, that the principles which they
+habitually maintain and advocate are irreconcileable with such a
+practice.
+
+In tracing the history of the worship of saints and angels, we proceed
+(gradually, indeed, though by no {65} means at all periods, and through
+every stage, with equal rapidity,) from the earliest custom established
+and practised in the Church,--of addressing prayers to Almighty God
+alone for the sake of the merits of his blessed Son, the only Mediator
+and Intercessor between God and man,--to the lamentable innovation both
+of praying to God for the sake of the merits, and through the mediation
+of departed mortals, and of invoking those mortals themselves as the
+actual dispensers of the spiritual blessings which the suppliant seeks
+from above. It is not only a necessary part of our inquiry for
+ascertaining the very truth of the case; it is also curious and
+painfully interesting, to trace the several steps, one after another,
+beginning with the doctrine maintained by various early writers, both
+Greek and Latin, that the souls of the saints are not yet reigning with
+Christ in heaven, and ending with the anathema of the Council of Trent,
+against all who should maintain that doctrine; beginning with prayer and
+thanksgiving to Almighty God alone, and ending with daily prayers both
+to saints and angels; one deviation from the strict line of religious
+duty, and the pure singleness of Christian worship, successively gliding
+into another, till at length the whole of Christendom, with a few
+remarkable exceptions, was seen to acquiesce in public and private
+devotions, which, if proposed, the whole of Christendom would once with
+unanimity have rejected.
+
+Before I offer to you the result of my inquiries as to the progressive
+stages of degeneracy and innovation in the worship of Almighty God, I
+would premise two considerations:
+
+First, I would observe, that the soundness of my conclusion on the
+general points at issue does not depend at all on the accuracy of the
+arrangement of those stages {66} which I have adopted. Should any one,
+for example, think there is evidence that two or more of those
+progressive steps, which I have regarded as consecutive, were
+simultaneous changes, or that any one which I have ranked as subsequent
+took rather the lead in order of time, such an opinion would not tend in
+the least to invalidate my argument; the substantial and essential point
+at issue being this: Is the invocation of saints and angels, as now
+practised in the Church of Rome, agreeable to the primitive usage of the
+earliest Christians?
+
+Secondly, I would observe, that the places and occasions most favourable
+for witnessing and correctly estimating the changes and gradual
+innovations in the worship of those early times, are the tombs of the
+martyrs, and the Churches in which their remains were deposited; and at
+the periods of the annual celebration of their martyrdom, or in some
+instances at what was called their translation,--the removal, that is,
+of their mortal remains from their former resting-place to a church, for
+the most part dedicated to their memory. On these occasions the most
+extraordinary enthusiasm prevailed; sometimes the ardour of the
+worshippers, as St. Chrysostom [St. Chrys. Paris, 1718. Vol. xii. p.
+330.] tells us, approaching madness. But even at times of less
+excitement, by contemplating, immediately after his death, the acts and
+sufferings of the martyr, and recalling his words, and looks, and
+stedfast bearing, and exhorting each other to picture to themselves his
+holy countenance then fixed on them, his tongue addressing them, his
+sufferings before their eyes, encouraging all to follow his example,
+they began habitually to consider him as actually himself one of the
+faithful assembled round {67} his tomb. Hence they believed that he was
+praying with them as well as for them; that he heard their eulogy on his
+merits, and was pleased with the honours paid to his memory: hence they
+felt sure of his goodwill towards them, and his ability, as when on
+earth, to promote their welfare. Hence they proceeded, by a fatal step,
+first, to implore him to give them bodily relief from some present
+sufferings; then invoking him to plead their cause with God, and to
+intercede for the supply of their spiritual wants, and the ultimate
+salvation of their souls; and, lastly, they prayed to him generally as
+himself the dispenser of temporal and spiritual blessings.
+
+The following then is the order in which the innovations in Christian
+worship seem to have taken place, being chiefly introduced at the annual
+celebrations of the martyrs:--
+
+1st. In the first ages confession and prayer and praise were offered to
+the Supreme Being alone, and that for the sake of his Son our only
+Saviour and Advocate: when mention was made of saint or martyr, it was
+to thank God for the graces bestowed on his departed holy ones when on
+earth, and to pray to God for grace that we might follow their good
+examples, and attain, through Christ, to the same end and crown of our
+earthly struggles. This act of worship was usually accompanied by a
+homily setting forth the Christian excellences of the saint, and
+encouraging the survivors so to follow him, as he followed Christ.
+
+2nd. The second stage seems to have been a prayer to Almighty God, that
+He would suffer the supplications and intercessions[19] of angels and
+saints to prevail {68} with him, and bring down a blessing on their
+fellow-petitioners on earth; the idea having spread among enthusiastic
+worshippers, as I have already observed, that the spirits of the saints
+were suffered to be present around their tombs, and to join with the
+faithful in their addresses to the throne of grace.
+
+ [Footnote 19: The Greek word [Greek: presbeia], "embassy,"
+ employed on such occasions, is still used in some eastern
+ Churches in the same sense.]
+
+3rd. The third stage seems to have owed its origin to orators constantly
+dwelling upon the excellences of the saints in the panegyrics delivered
+over their remains, representing their constancy and Christian virtues
+as superhuman and divine, and as having conferred lasting benefits on
+the Church. By these benefits at first was meant the comfort and
+encouragement of their good example, and the honour procured to the
+religion of the cross by their bearing witness to its truth even unto
+death; but in process of time the habit grew of attaching a sort of
+mysterious efficacy to their merits; hence this third gradation in
+religious worship, namely, prayers to God that "He would hear his
+suppliants, and grant their requests for the sake of his martyred
+servant, and by the efficacy of that martyr's merits."
+
+4th. Hitherto, unauthorized and objectionable as the two last forms of
+prayer are, still the petitions in each case were directed to God alone.
+The next step swerved lamentably from that principle of worship, and the
+petitioners addressed their requests to angels and sainted men in
+heaven; at first, however, confining their petitions to the asking for
+their prayers and intercessions with Almighty God.
+
+5th. The last stage in this progressive degeneracy of Christian worship
+was to petition the saints and angels, directly and immediately
+themselves, at first for the temporal, and afterwards for the spiritual
+benefits which the petitioners desired to obtain from heaven. For it
+{69} is very curious, but not more curious than evident, that the
+worshippers seem for some time to have petitioned their saints for
+temporal and bodily benefits, before they proceeded to ask for spiritual
+blessings at their hands, or by their prayers. (See Basil. Oral. in
+Mamanta Martyrem.)
+
+Of these several gradations and stages we find traces in the records of
+Christian antiquity, after superstition and corruption had spread
+through Christian worship, and leavened the whole. Of all of them we
+have lamentable instances in the present ritual of the Church of Rome,
+as we shall see somewhat at large when we reach that division of our
+inquiry. But from the beginning it was not so. In the earliest ages we
+find only the first of these forms of worship exemplified, and it is the
+only form now retained in the Anglican Ritual; of which, among other
+examples, the following passage in the prayer for Christ's Church
+militant on earth supplies a beautiful specimen: "We bless Thy holy name
+for all Thy servants departed this life in Thy faith and fear;
+beseeching Thee to give us grace so to follow their good examples, that
+with them we may be partakers of Thy heavenly kingdom: Grant this, O
+Father, for Jesus Christ's sake, our only Mediator and Advocate. Amen."
+
+We now proceed to examine the invaluable remains of Christian antiquity,
+not for the purpose of testing the accuracy of the above catalogue of
+gradations _seriatim_ and in order of time; but to satisfy ourselves on
+the question, whether the invocation of saints and angels prevailed from
+the first in the Christian Church; or whether it was an innovation
+introduced after pagan superstition had begun to mingle its poisonous
+corruptions with the pure worship of {70} Almighty God. And here, I
+conceive, few persons will be disposed to doubt, that if the primitive
+believers were taught by the Apostles to address the saints reigning in
+heaven and the holy angels, and the Virgin Mother of our Lord, with
+adoration and prayers, the earliest Christian records must have
+contained clear and indisputable references to the fact, and that
+undesigned allusions to the custom would inevitably be found offering
+themselves to our notice here and there. I do not mean that we should
+expect to meet with full and explicit statements either of the doctrine
+or the practice of the primitive Church in this particular; much less
+such apologies and elaborate defences of the practice as abound to the
+overflow in later times. But, what is more satisfactory in proof of the
+general and established prevalence of any opinions or customs, we should
+surely find expressions incidentally occurring, which implied an
+habitual familiarity with such opinions or customs. In every record, for
+example, of primitive antiquity, from the very earliest of all,
+expressions are constantly meeting us which involve the doctrine of the
+ever-blessed Trinity, the atoning sacrifice of Christ's death, the
+influences of the Holy Spirit; habitual prayer and praise offered to the
+Saviour of the world, as very and eternal God; the holy Sacraments of
+Baptism and the Lord's Supper; with other tenets and practices of the
+Apostolic Church. It is impossible to study the remains of Christian
+antiquity without being assured beyond the reach of doubt, that such
+were the doctrines and practice of the universal Church from the days of
+the Apostles. Is the invocation of saints and angels and the blessed
+Virgin to be made an exception to this rule? Can it stand this test? The
+great anxiety and labour of Roman Catholic {71} writers to press the
+authors of every age to bear witness on their side in this behalf,
+proves that in their judgment no such exception is admissible. It is
+clearly beyond gainsaying, that if the present doctrine of the Church of
+Rome, with respect to the worship of angels and saints, as propounded by
+the Council of Trent; and if her present practice as set forth in her
+authorized liturgies and devotional services, and professed by her
+popes, bishops, clergy, and people, had been the doctrine and practice
+of the primitive Church, we should have found evident and indisputable
+traces of it in the earliest works of primitive antiquity, in the
+earliest liturgies, and in the forms of prayer and exhortations to
+prayer with which those works abound. It by no means follows that if
+some such allusions were partially discoverable, therefore the doctrines
+and practice must forthwith be pronounced to be apostolical; but if no
+such traces can be found, their absence bears witness that neither did
+those doctrines nor that practice exist. If, for example, through the
+remains of the first three centuries we could have discovered no trace
+of the doctrine or practice of holy Baptism and the Eucharist, we must
+have concluded that the doctrine and the practice were the offspring of
+later years. But when we read every where, in those remains,
+exhortations to approach those holy mysteries with a pure heart and
+faith unfeigned; when we find rules prescribed for the more orderly
+administration of the rites; in a word, when we perceive throughout as
+familiar references to these ordinances as could be now made by
+Catholics either of Rome or of England, while this would not of itself
+necessarily prove their divine origin, we should with equal plausibility
+question the existence of Jerusalem or Constantinople, or of David or
+Constantine, as we {72} should doubt the prevalence both of the doctrine
+and practice of the Church in these particulars, even from the Apostles'
+days.
+
+With these principles present to our minds, I now invite you to
+accompany me in a review of the testimonies of primitive Christian
+antiquity with regard to supplications and invocations of saints and
+angels, and of the blessed Virgin Mary.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II--CENTURY I.--THE EVIDENCE OF THE APOSTOLIC FATHERS.
+
+
+It will be necessary for the satisfaction of all parties, that we
+examine, in the first place, those ancient writings which are ascribed
+to an Apostle, or to fellow-labourers of the Apostles; familiarly known
+as the writings of the Apostolic Fathers. They are five in number,
+Barnabas, Clement, Hermas, Ignatius, and Polycarp. Many able writers, as
+well of the Roman as of the Anglican communion, have discussed at large
+the genuineness of these writings; and have come to very different
+results. Some critics are of opposite and extreme opinions, others
+ranging between them with every degree and shade of variation. Some of
+these works have been considered spurious; others have been pronounced
+genuine; though, even these have been thought to be, in many parts,
+interpolated. The question, however, of their genuineness, though deeply
+interesting in itself, will not affect their testimony with {73} regard
+to the subject before us[20]. They were all in existence before the
+Council of Nicæa; and we shall probably not be wrong in assigning to the
+first two a date at the very lowest computation not less remote than the
+middle of the second century; somewhere, it may be, at the furthest,
+about one hundred years after the death of our Lord. (A.D. 130-150.)
+With all their errors and blemishes and interpolations taken at the
+worst, after every reasonable deduction for defects in matter, taste,
+and style, the writings which are ascribed to the Apostolic Fathers are
+too venerable for their antiquity, too often quoted with reverence and
+affection by some who have been the brightest ornaments of the Christian
+Church, and possess too copious a store of genuine evangelical truth,
+sound principle, primitive simplicity, and pious sentiment, to be passed
+over with neglect by any Catholic Christian. The few extracts {74} made
+here will, I am assured, be not unacceptable to any one, who holds dear
+the religion of Christ[21].
+
+ [Footnote 20: I do not think it suitable in this address to
+ enter upon the difficult field of inquiry, whether all or which
+ of these works were the genuine productions of those whose names
+ they bear; and whether the Barnabas, Clement, and Hermas to
+ which three of them are ascribed, were the Barnabas, Clement,
+ and Hermas of whom express mention is made in the pages of Holy
+ Scripture. I have determined, in conducting my argument, to
+ affix to them in each case the lowest proposed antiquity. The
+ edition of Archbishop Wake, (who maintains the highest antiquity
+ for these works, though I have not here adopted his
+ translation,) may be consulted with much profit.
+
+ Did the question before us relate to the genuineness and dates
+ of these works, they could not, with any approach to fairness,
+ be all five placed without distinction under the same category.
+ The evidence for the genuineness of Clement, Ignatius in the
+ shorter copy, and Polycarp, is too valuable to be confounded
+ with that of the others, which are indisputably subject to much
+ greater doubt. But this question has only an incidental bearing
+ on our present inquiry, and will be well spared.]
+
+ [Footnote 21: The edition of the works of these Apostolic
+ Fathers used here is that of Cotelerius as revised by Le Clerc,
+ Antwerp, 1698.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE EPISTLE OF ST. BARNABAS.
+
+In the work entitled The Catholic Epistle of Barnabas, which was written
+probably by a Jew converted to the Christian faith, about the close of
+the first century, or certainly before the middle of the second[22], I
+have searched in vain for any thing like the faintest trace of the
+invocation of saint or angel. The writer gives directions on the subject
+of prayer; he speaks of angels as the ministers of God; he speaks of the
+reward of the righteous at the day of judgment; but he suggests not the
+shadow of a supposition, that he either held the doctrine himself which
+the Church of Rome now holds, or was aware of its existence among
+Christians. In his very beautiful but incomplete summary of Christian
+duty [Sect. 18, 19. p. 50, 51, 52.], which he calls "The Way of Light,"
+we perceive more than one most natural opening for reference to that
+doctrine, had it been familiar to his mind. In the midst indeed of his
+brief precepts of religious and moral obligation, he directs the
+Christian to seek out every day "the persons of the saints," but they
+are our fellow-believers on earth; those saints or holy ones, for
+administering to whose necessities, the Scripture assures us that God
+will not forget our work and labour of love [Heb. vi. 10.]: these the
+author bids the Christians {75} search out daily, for the purposes of
+religious intercourse, and of encouragement by the word.
+
+ [Footnote 22: Archbishop Wake considers this Epistle to have
+ been written by St. Barnabas to the Jews, soon after the
+ destruction of Jerusalem.]
+
+The following interesting extracts shall conclude our reference to this
+work:--
+
+"There are two ways of doctrine and authority, one of light, the other
+of darkness; and the difference between the two ways is great. Over the
+one are appointed angels of God, conductors of the light; over the
+other, angels of Satan: and the one (God) is Lord from everlasting to
+everlasting; the other (Satan) is ruler of the age of iniquity. The way
+of light is this ... Thou shalt love Him that made thee; thou shalt
+glorify Him that redeemed thee from death. Thou shalt be single in
+heart, and rich in spirit. Thou shalt not join thyself to those who are
+walking in the path of death. Thou shalt hate to do what is displeasing
+to God; thou shalt hate all hypocrisy. Thou shalt entertain no evil
+counsel against thy neighbour. Thou shalt not take away thy hand from
+thy son or thy daughter, but shalt teach them the fear of the Lord from
+their youth. Thou shalt communicate with thy neighbour in all things,
+and call not things thine own. Thou shalt not be of a froward tongue,
+for the mouth is the snare of death. To the very utmost of thy power
+keep thy soul chaste. Do not open thine hand to receive, and close it
+against giving. Thou shalt love as the apple of thine eye every one who
+speaketh to thee the word of the Lord. Call to remembrance the day of
+judgment, night and day. Thou shalt search out every day the persons of
+the saints [23]; both meditating by the word, {76} and proceeding to
+exhort them, and anxiously caring to save a soul by the word. Thou shalt
+preserve what thou hast received, neither adding thereto, nor taking
+therefrom. Thou shalt not come with a bad conscience to thy prayer."
+
+ [Footnote 23: There is much obscurity in the phraseology of this
+ passage: [Greek: ekzaetaeseis kath hekastaen haemeran ta prosopa
+ ton hagion kai dia logou skopion kai poreuomenos eis to
+ parakalesai, kai meleton eis sosai psuchaen to logo]. In the
+ corresponding exhortation among the Apostolical Constitutions
+ (book vii. ch. 9), the expression is, "Thou shalt seek the
+ person ([Greek: prosopon]) of the saints, that thou mayest find
+ rest (or find refreshment, or refresh thyself) ([Greek: in
+ epanapanae tois logois auton]) in their words." The author seems
+ evidently to allude to the reciprocal advantage derived by
+ Christians from religious intercourse.]
+
+The closing sentences contain this blessing: "Now God, who is the Lord
+of all the world, give to you wisdom, skill, understanding, knowledge of
+his judgments, with patience. And be ye taught of God; seeking what the
+Lord requires of you, and do it, that ye may be saved in the day of
+judgment.... The Lord of glory and of all grace be with your spirit.
+Amen."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SHEPHERD OF HERMAS.
+
+This work, which derives its title from the circumstance of an angelic
+teacher being represented as a shepherd, is now considered by many to
+have been the production of Hermas, a brother of Pius, Bishop of
+Rome[24] though others are persuaded that the work is of a much earlier
+date[25]. The author speaks of guardian angels and of evil angels, and
+he speaks much of prayer; but not the faintest hint shows itself
+throughout the three books, of which the work consists, that he had {77}
+any idea of prayer being addressed to any created being, whether saint
+or angel. On the evidence of this writer I will not detain you much
+longer than by the translation of a passage as it is found in the Greek
+quotation from Hermas, made by Antiochus (Homil. 85), on a point the
+most nearly, of all that I can find, connected with the immediate
+subject of our inquiry. The Latin is found in the second book, ninth
+mandate. It contains sound spiritual advice, of universal application.
+
+ [Footnote 24: Ecclesiastical writers refer the appointment of
+ Pius, as Bishop of Rome, to the year 153.]
+
+ [Footnote 25: Archbishop Wake thinks it not improbable that this
+ book was written by the same Hermas, of whom mention is made by
+ St. Paul.]
+
+"Let us then remove from us double-heartedness and faint-heartedness,
+and never at all doubt of supplicating any thing from God; saying within
+ourselves, 'How can I, who have been guilty of so many sins against Him,
+ask of the Lord and receive?' But with thine whole heart turn to the
+Lord, and ask of Him without doubting; and thou shalt know his great
+mercy, that He will not forsake thee, but will fulfil the desire of thy
+soul. For God is not as men are, a rememberer of evil, but is Himself
+one who remembers not evil, and is moved with compassion towards his
+creature. Do thou, therefore, cleanse thy heart of doubt, and ask of
+Him, and thou shalt receive thy request. But when thou doubtest, thou
+shalt not receive. For they who doubt towards God are the
+double-hearted, and shall receive nothing whatever of their desires. For
+those who are whole in the faith, ask every thing, trusting in the Lord,
+and they receive because they ask nothing doubting. [See St. James i.
+6.] And if thou shouldest be tardy in receiving, do not doubt in thy
+mind because thou dost not receive soon the request of thy soul. For the
+cause of the tardiness of thy receiving is some trial, or some
+transgression which thou knowest not of. Do thou then {78} not cease to
+offer the request of thy soul, and thou shalt receive it. But if thou
+grow faint in asking, accuse thyself, and not the Giver. For
+double-heartedness is a daughter of the devil, and works much mischief
+towards the servants of God. Do thou, therefore, take to thyself the
+faith that is strong."
+
+In the twelfth section of the ninth Similitude, in the third book, in
+the midst of much to the same import, and of much, too, which is strange
+and altogether unworthy of the pen from which the previous quotation
+proceeded, he thus writes, as the Latin records his words, the Greek of
+this passage having been lost.
+
+"These all are messengers to be reverenced for their dignity. By these,
+therefore, as it were by a wall, the Lord is girded round. But the gate
+is the Son of God, who is the only way to God. For no one shall enter in
+to God except by his Son." [Book iii. Simil. 2.]
+
+On the subject of prayer, I cannot refrain from referring you to a
+beautiful similitude, illustrative of the powerful and beneficial
+effects of the intercession of Christians for each other. The author
+compares a rich man, abounding in deeds of charity, to a vine full of
+fruit supported by an elm. The elm seems not to bear fruit at all; but
+by supporting the vine, which, without that support, would bear no fruit
+to perfection, it may be said to bear fruit itself. So the poor man, who
+has nothing to give in return for the rich man's fruits of charity,
+beyond the support which his prayers and praises ascending to God in his
+behalf will obtain, confers a far more substantial benefit on the rich
+man than the most liberal outpouring of alms from the rich can confer on
+the poor. [Ibid.] Yet the writer, who {79} had formed such strong
+notions of the benefits mutually obtained by the prayers of Christians
+for each other, says not a word about the intercession of saints and
+angels, nor of our invoking them. He will not suffer us to be deterred
+by any consciousness of our own transgressions from approaching God
+Himself, directly and immediately ourselves; but He bids us draw near
+ourselves to the throne and mercy seat of our heavenly Father.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ST. CLEMENT, BISHOP OF ROME.
+
+It is impossible to read the testimony borne by Eusebius, and other most
+ancient writers, to the character and circumstances of Clement, without
+feeling a deep interest in whatever production of his pen may have
+escaped the ravages of time. "Third from the Apostles," says Eusebius,
+"Clement obtained the bishopric of Rome; one who had seen the Apostles
+and conversed with them, and had still the sound of their preaching in
+his ears, and their tradition before his eyes;--and not he alone, for
+many others[26] at that time were still living, who had been taught by
+the Apostles. In the time of this Clement, no small schism having arisen
+among the brethren in Corinth, the Church in Rome sent a most important
+letter to the Corinthians, urging them to return to peace, renewing {80}
+their faith, and [reminding them of] the tradition which had been so
+lately received from the Apostles." [Euseb. Eccl. Hist. v. c. 6.]
+
+ [Footnote 26: See St. Paul to the Philippians, iv. 3. "And I
+ entreat thee also, true yoke-fellow, help those women which
+ laboured with me in the gospel, with Clement also, and with
+ other my fellow-labourers, whose names are in the book of
+ life."]
+
+Of the many works which have been attributed to Clement, it is now
+generally agreed, that one, and only one, can be safely received as
+genuine, whilst some maintain that even that one is not altogether free
+from interpolations, if not itself spurious[27]. But though we must
+believe the other works to have been assigned improperly to Clement; yet
+I have not thought it safe to pass them by unexamined, both because some
+of them are held in high estimation by writers of the Church of Rome,
+and especially because whatever pen first composed them, of their very
+great antiquity there can be entertained no reasonable doubt. Indeed,
+the Apostolical Canons, and the Apostolical Constitutions, both ascribed
+to Clement as their author, acting under the direction of the Apostolic
+Council, stand first among the records of the Councils received by the
+Church of Rome.
+
+ [Footnote 27: Archbishop Wake concludes that this first Epistle
+ was written shortly after the end of Nero's persecution, and
+ before A.D. 70.]
+
+To Clement's first Epistle to the Corinthians, now regarded by many as
+the only genuine work of that primitive writer, the date of which is
+considered by many to be about A.D. 90, Jerome bears this very
+interesting testimony in his book on illustrious men:
+
+"He, Clement, wrote in the person of the Church of Rome, to the Church
+in Corinth, a very useful epistle, which is publicly read in some
+places; in its character agreeing with St. Paul's Epistle to the
+Hebrews, not only in the sense, but even in the words: and indeed the
+resemblance is very striking in each." [Catalogus Scriptorum
+Ecclesiasticorum, Jeron., vol. iv, part ii. p. 107, edit. Benedict.
+Paris, 1706.] {81}
+
+It is impossible to read this Epistle of one of the earliest bishops of
+Christ's flock in the proper frame of mind, without spiritual
+edification. A tone of primitive simplicity pervades it, which is quite
+delightful. His witness to the redemption by the atoning sacrifice of
+Christ's death, and to the life-giving influences of the Spirit of
+grace, is clear, repeated, and direct. His familiar acquaintance with
+the ancient Scriptures is very remarkable; though we might not always
+acquiesce in the critical accuracy of his application. His reference to
+the Epistles written by St. Paul to the same Church at Corinth that he
+was then addressing, affords one of those unobtrusive and undesigned
+collateral evidences to the Holy Scriptures, which are as abundant in
+the primitive writings, as they are invaluable. No one can read this
+Epistle of Clement, without acquiescing in the expression of Jerome,
+that it is "very admirable."
+
+Perhaps in the present work the Epistle of Clement becomes even more
+interesting from the circumstance of his having been a bishop of the
+Church founded by the Apostles themselves in the very place where that
+Church exists, to whose members this inquiry is more especially
+addressed. In his writings I have searched diligently for every
+expression which might throw light upon the opinions and practice either
+of the author or of the Church in whose name he wrote; of the Church
+which he addressed, or of the Catholic Church at large to which he
+refers, on the subject of our inquiry. So far, however, from any word
+occurring, which could be brought to bear in favour of the adoration of
+saints and angels, or of any supplication to them for their succour or
+their prayers, the peculiar turn and character of his Epistle in many
+parts seems to supply {82} more than negative evidence against the
+prevalence of any such belief or practice. Clement speaks of angels; he
+speaks of the holy men of old, who pleased God, and were blessed, and
+were taken to their reward; he speaks of prayer; he urges to prayer; he
+specifies the object of our prayers; he particularizes the subjects of
+our prayers; but there is not the most distant allusion to the saints
+and angels as persons to whom supplications could be addressed. Pray for
+yourselves (such are the sentiments of this holy man); pray for your
+brethren who have fallen from their integrity; pray to God Almighty, for
+the sake of his Son, and your prayer will be heard and granted. Of any
+other intercessor or advocate, angel, saint, or Virgin Mother; of any
+other being to whom the invocations of the faithful should be offered,
+Clement seems to have had no knowledge. Could this have been so, if
+those who received the Gospel from the very fountain-head had been
+accustomed to pray to those holy men who had finished their course on
+earth, and were gone to their reward in heaven? Clement invites us to
+contemplate Enoch, and Abraham, and David, and Elijah, and Job, with
+many of their brethren in faith and holiness; he bids us look to them
+with reverence and gratitude, but it is only to imitate their good
+examples. He tells us to think of St. Paul and St. Peter and their
+brethren in faith and holiness; but it is in order to listen to their
+godly admonitions, and to follow them in all pious obedience to the will
+of our heavenly Father, as they followed Christ. I must content myself
+with a very few brief extracts from this Epistle[28]:
+
+ [Footnote 28: I am induced to mention here that two Epistles,
+ ascribed to St. Clement, written in Arabic, and now appended to
+ Wetstein's Greek Testament (Amsterdam, 1751), are believed by
+ many to be genuine, whilst others say they are spurious. At all
+ events they are productions of the earliest times. The
+ manuscript was procured at Constantinople. I have examined the
+ Latin translation carefully, and in some points submitted my
+ doubts to a very learned Syriac scholar. The general subject is
+ the conduct of those who have professed celibacy, whilst of the
+ invocation of saints no trace whatever is to be found. The
+ passages most closely bearing on the point before us are to the
+ following effect:
+
+ The writer urges Christians to be careful to maintain good
+ works, especially in the cause of charity, visiting the sick and
+ afflicted, praying with them, and praying for them, and
+ persevering always in prayer; asking and seeking of God in joy
+ and watchfulness, without hatred or malice. In the Lord's
+ husbandry, he says, it well becomes us to be good workmen, who
+ are like the Apostles, imitating the Father, the Son, and the
+ Holy Ghost, who are ever anxious for the salvation of men.
+
+ "Therefore (he adds, at the close of the first of these
+ Epistles) let us look to and imitate those faithful ones, that
+ we may behave ourselves as is meet in the Lord. So shall we
+ serve the Lord, and please him, in righteousness and justice
+ without a stain. Finally, farewell in the Lord, and rejoice in
+ the Lord, all ye holy ones. Peace and joy be with you from God
+ the Father, by Jesus Christ our Lord."] {83}
+
+Ch. 21. "Take heed, beloved, lest the many loving-kindnesses of the Lord
+prove our condemnation, if we do not live as is worthy of him, nor do
+with one accord what is good and well-pleasing in his sight.... Let us
+consider how nigh to us he is, and that nothing of our thoughts or
+reasonings is concealed from him. Justice it is that we should not
+become deserters from his will.... Let us venerate the Lord Jesus, whose
+blood was given for us."
+
+Ch. 29. "Let us then approach him in holiness of soul, lifting up holy
+and undefiled hands towards him; loving our merciful and tender Father
+who hath made us a portion of his elect." {84}
+
+Ch. 36. "This is the way, beloved, in which we find Jesus Christ our
+salvation, the chief-priest of our offerings, our protector, and the
+succourer of our weakness. By him let us look stedfastly to the heights
+of heaven; by him let us behold his most high and spotless face: by him
+the eyes of our heart are opened; by him our ignorant and darkened minds
+shoot forth into his marvellous light; by him the Supreme Governor
+willed that we should taste immortal knowledge: who, being the
+brightness of his magnificence, is so much greater than the angels, as
+he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they."
+
+Ch. 49. "He who hath love in Christ, let him keep the commandments of
+Christ. Who can tell of the bond of the love of God? The greatness of
+his goodness who can adequately express?... Love unites us to God.... By
+love the Lord took us; by the love which he had for us Christ our Lord
+gave his blood for us by the will of God, and his flesh for our flesh,
+and his life for our lives."
+
+Ch. 56. "Let us pray for those who are in any transgression, that
+meekness and humility may be granted to them; that they may submit, not
+to us, but to the will of God; for thus to them will the remembrance
+towards God and the saints, with mercies, be fruitful and perfect[29]."
+
+ [Footnote 29: The original is obscure, and has been variously
+ rendered, [Greek: outos gar estai autois egkarpos kai teleia hae
+ pros ton theon kai tous hagious met oiktirmon mneia.] The Editor
+ refers his readers to Rom. xii. 13. "Distributing to the
+ necessity of saints." The received translation is this, "Sic
+ enim erit ipsis fructuosa et perfecta quæ est apud Deum et
+ sanctos cum misericordia recordatio."]
+
+Ch. 58. "The all-seeing God, the Sovereign Ruler {85} of spirits, and
+the Lord of all flesh, who hath chosen the Lord Jesus, and us through
+him, to be a peculiar people; grant to every soul that calleth on his
+glorious and holy name, faith, fear, peace, patience, long-suffering,
+self-control, purity, and temperance, to the good pleasure of his name,
+through our high-priest and protector Jesus Christ; through whom to him
+be glory and majesty, dominion and honour, now and for ever and ever,
+world without end. Amen."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT IGNATIUS.
+
+This martyr to the truth as it is in Jesus sealed that truth with his
+blood about seventy years after the death of our Lord. From Antioch in
+Syria, of which place he was bishop, he was sent to the imperial city,
+Rome; and there he ended his mortal career by a death which he had long
+expected, and which he was prepared to meet not only with resignation to
+the Divine will, but even with joy and gladness. His Epistles are
+written with much of the florid colouring of Asiatic eloquence; but they
+have all the raciness of originality, and they glow with that Christian
+fervour and charity which compels us to love him as a father and a
+friend, a father and friend in Christ. The remains of this apostolic
+father I have carefully studied, with the single view of ascertaining
+whether any vestige, however faint, might be traced in him of the
+invocation of saints and angels; but I can find none. Neither here, nor
+in the case of any of the apostolical fathers, whose remains we are
+examining, have I contented myself with merely ascertaining that they
+bear no direct and palpable evidence; I have always endeavoured to find,
+and then thoroughly to sift, any expressions which might with {86} the
+slightest plea of justification be urged in testimony of primitive
+belief and practice sanctioning the invocation of saints. I find none.
+Brethren of the Church of Rome, search diligently for yourselves; "I
+speak as to wise men: Judge ye what I say."
+
+The remains of Ignatius offer to us many a passage on which a Christian
+pastor would delight to dwell: but my province here is not to recommend
+his works to the notice of Christians; I am only to report the result of
+my inquiries touching the matter in question; and as bearing on that
+question, the following extracts will not be deemed burdensome in this
+place:--
+
+In his Epistle to the Ephesians, exhorting Christians to united prayer,
+he says, "For if the prayer of one or two possesses such strength, how
+much more shall the prayer both of the bishop and of the whole Church?"
+[Page 13. § 5-7.] "For there is one physician of a corporeal and a
+spiritual nature, begotten and not begotten; become God in the flesh,
+true life in death, both from Mary and from God; first liable to
+suffering, and then incapable of suffering." [In the majority of the
+manuscripts the reading is, "in an immortal true life."]
+
+Here we must observe that these Epistles of Ignatius have come down to
+us also in an interpolated form, abounding indeed with substitutions and
+additions, but generally resembling paraphrases of the original text. Of
+the general character of that supposititious work, two passages
+corresponding with our quotations from the genuine productions of
+Ignatius may give a sufficiently accurate idea. The first passage above
+quoted is thus paraphrased: "For if the prayer of one or two possesses
+{87} such strength that Christ stands among them, how much more shall
+the prayer both of the bishop and of the whole Church, ascending with
+one voice to God, induce him to grant all their requests made in Jesus
+Christ?" [Page 47. c. 5.] The paraphrase of the second is more full:
+"Our physician is the only true God, ungenerated and unapproachable; the
+Lord of all things, but the Father and Generator of the only-begotten
+Son. We have also as our physician our Lord God, Jesus Christ, who was
+before the world, the only-begotten Son and the Word, but also
+afterwards man of the Virgin Mary; 'for the Word was made flesh.' He who
+was incorporeal, now in a body; he who could not suffer, now in a body
+capable of suffering; he who was immortal in a mortal body, life in
+corruption--in order that he might free our immortal souls from death
+and corruption, and heal them, diseased with ungodliness and evil
+desires as they were." [Page 48. c. 7.]
+
+It must here be observed, that though these are indisputably not the
+genuine works of Ignatius, but were the productions of a later age, yet
+no trace is to be found in them of the doctrine, or practice, of the
+invocation of saints. In this point of view their testimony is nothing
+more nor less than that of an anonymous paraphrast, who certainly had
+many opportunities of referring to that doctrine and practice; but who
+by his total silence seems to have been as ignorant of them as the
+author himself whose works he is paraphrasing.
+
+To return to his genuine works: In his Epistle to the Magnesians we find
+these expressions: "For as the Lord did nothing without the Father,
+being one with {88} him, neither by himself, nor by his Apostles; so
+neither do ye any thing without the bishop and priests, nor attempt to
+make any thing appear reasonable to yourselves individually. But at one
+place be there one prayer, and one supplication, one mind, one hope in
+love, in blameless rejoicing: Jesus Christ is one; than which nothing is
+better. All, then, throng as to one temple, as to one altar, as to one
+Jesus Christ, who proceeded from one Father, and is in one, and returned
+to one." [Page 19. § 7.] Again he says, "Remember me in your prayers,
+that I may attain to God. I am in need of your united prayer in God, and
+of your love."
+
+In his Epistle to the Trallians, he expresses himself in words to which
+no Anglican Catholic would hesitate to respond: "Ye ought to comfort the
+bishop, to the honour of God, and of Jesus Christ, and of the Apostles."
+[Page 25. § 12.] He speaks in this Epistle with humility and reverence
+of the powers and hosts of heaven; but he makes no allusion to any
+religious worship or invocation of them.
+
+The following extract is from his Epistle to the Philadelphians: "My
+brethren, I am altogether poured forth in love for you; and in exceeding
+joy I make you secure; yet not I, but Jesus Christ, bound in whom I am
+the more afraid, as being already seized[30]; but your prayer to God
+will perfect me, that I may obtain the lot mercifully assigned to me.
+Betaking myself to the Gospel as to the flesh of Jesus, and to the
+Apostles as the presbytery of the Church; let us also love the prophets,
+because they also have proclaimed the Gospel, and hoped in him, and
+waited for him; in whom also {89} trusting, they were saved in the unity
+of Jesus Christ, being holy ones worthy of love and admiration, who have
+received testimony from Jesus Christ, and are numbered together in the
+Gospel of our common hope." [Page 32. § 5.]
+
+ [Footnote 30: This clause is very obscure, and perhaps
+ imperfect.]
+
+I am induced to add the paraphrase on this passage also. "My brethren, I
+am very much poured out in loving you, and with exceeding joy I make you
+secure; not I, but by me, Jesus Christ, in whom bound I am the more
+afraid. For I am yet not perfected, but your prayer to God will perfect
+me; so that I may obtain that to which I was called, flying to the
+Gospel as the flesh of Jesus Christ, and to the Apostles as the
+presbytery of the Church. And the prophets also I love, as persons who
+announce Christ, as partaking of the same spirit with the Apostles. For
+just as the false prophets and false apostles have drawn one and the
+same wicked and deceitful and seducing spirit, so also the prophets and
+the apostles, one and the same holy spirit, good, leading, true, and
+instructing. For one is the God of the Old and the New Testament. One is
+Mediator between God and man, for the production of the creatures endued
+with reason and perception, and for the provision of what is useful, and
+adapted to them: and one is the Comforter who wrought in Moses and the
+prophets and the apostles. All the saints therefore were saved in
+Christ, hoping in him, and waiting for him; and through him they
+obtained salvation, being saints worthy of love and of admiration,
+having obtained a testimony from Jesus Christ in the Gospel of our
+common hope." [Page 81. § 5.]
+
+In his Epistle to the Romans he speaks to them of his own prayer to God,
+and repeatedly implores them {90} to pray for him. "Pray to Christ for
+me, that by these instruments [the teeth of the wild beasts] I may
+become a sacrifice of God. I do not, as Peter and Paul, command you:
+they were Apostles, I am a condemned man. They were free; but I am still
+a servant. Yet if I suffer, I shall become the freedman of Jesus Christ,
+and shall rise again free: and now in my bonds I learn to covet
+nothing." [Page 28. § 4.] Again he says, "Remember the Church in Syria
+in your prayers." [Page 30. § 9.] He prays for his fellow-labourers in
+the Lord: he implores them to approach the throne of grace with
+supplications for mercy on his own soul. Of prayer to saint or angel he
+says nothing. Of any invocation offered to them by himself or his
+fellow-believers, Ignatius appears entirely ignorant.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT POLYCARP.
+
+The only remaining name among those, whom the Church has reverenced as
+apostolical fathers, is the venerable Polycarp. He suffered martyrdom by
+fire, at a very advanced age, in Smyrna, about one hundred and thirty
+years after his Saviour's death. Of Polycarp, the apostolical bishop of
+the Catholic Church of Smyrna, only one Epistle has survived. It is
+addressed to the Philippians. In it he speaks to his brother Christians
+of prayer, constant, incessant prayer; but the prayer of which he speaks
+is supplication addressed only to God [31]. He marks out for our
+imitation the good example of St. Paul and the other Apostles; assuring
+us that they had not run in vain, {91} but were gone to the place
+prepared for them by the Lord, as the reward of their labours. But not
+one word does he utter bearing upon the invocation of saints in prayer;
+he makes no allusion to the Virgin Mary.
+
+ [Footnote 31: [Greek: deaesesin aitoumenoi ton pantepoptaen
+ Theon]. Sect. 7.]
+
+Before we close our examination of the recorded sentiments of the
+apostolical fathers on the immediate subject of our inquiry, we must
+refer, though briefly, to the Epistle generally received as the genuine
+letter from the Church of Smyrna to the neighbouring Churches, narrating
+the martyrdom of Polycarp. It belongs, perhaps, more strictly to this
+place than to the remains of Eusebius, because, together with the
+sentiments of his contemporaries who witnessed his death and dictated
+the letter, it purports to contain the very words of the martyr himself
+in the last prayer which he ever offered upon earth. With some
+variations from the copy generally circulated, this letter is preserved
+in the works of Eusebius. [Euseb. Paris, 1628, dedicated to the
+Archbishop by Franciscus Vigerus.] On the subject of our present
+research the evidence of this letter is not merely negative. So far from
+countenancing any invocation of saint or martyr, it contains a
+remarkable and very interesting passage, the plain common-sense
+rendering of which bears decidedly against all exaltation of mortals
+into objects of religious worship. The letter, however, is too well
+known to need any further preliminary remarks; and we must content
+ourselves with such references and extracts as may appear to bear most
+directly on our subject.
+
+"The Church of God, which is in Smyrna, to the Church in Philomela, and
+to all the branches [Greek: paroikais] {92} of the holy Catholic Church
+dwelling in any place, mercy, peace, and love of God the Father, and our
+Lord Jesus Christ be multiplied." [Book i. Hist. iv. c. xv. p. 163.]
+
+"The Proconsul, in astonishment, caused it to be proclaimed thrice,
+Polycarp has confessed himself to be a Christian. On this they all
+shouted, that the Proconsul should let a lion loose on Polycarp. But the
+games were over, and that could not be done: they then with one accord
+insisted on his being burnt alive."
+
+Polycarp, before his death, offered this prayer, or rather perhaps we
+should call it this thanksgiving, to God for his mercy in thus deeming
+him worthy to suffer death for the truth, "Father of thy beloved and
+blessed Son Jesus Christ, by whom we have received our knowledge
+concerning thee, the God of angels and power, and of the whole creation,
+and of the whole family of the just, who live before thee; I bless thee
+because thou hast deemed me worthy of this day and this hour to receive
+my portion among the number of the martyrs, in the cup of Christ, to the
+resurrection both of soul and body in the incorruption of the Holy
+Ghost; among whom may I be received before thee this day in a rich and
+acceptable sacrifice, even as thou, the true God, who canst not lie,
+foreshowing and fulfilling, hast beforehand prepared. For this, and for
+all I praise thee, I bless thee; I glorify thee, through the eternal
+high-priest Jesus Christ thy beloved Son, through whom to thee, with him
+in the Holy Ghost, be glory both now and for future ages. Amen."
+
+(I cannot help suggesting a comparison between the prayer of this
+primitive martyr bound to the stake, with the prayer of Thomas Becket,
+of Canterbury, as stated in the ancient services for his day, when he
+was murdered in his own cathedral, to which we shall hereafter refer at
+length. The comparison will impress us with the difference between
+religion and superstition, between the purity of primitive Christian
+worship, and the unhappy corruptions of a degenerate age. "To God and
+the Blessed Mary, and Saint Dionysius, and the holy patrons of this
+Church, I commend myself and the Church.") {93}
+
+After his death, the narrative proceeds, "But the envious adversary of
+the just observed the honour put upon the greatness of his testimony,
+[or of his martyrdom [Greek: to megethos autou taes marturias],] and his
+blameless life from the first, and knowing that he was now crowned with
+immortality, and the prize of undoubted victory, resisted, though many
+of us desired to take his body, and have fellowship with his holy flesh.
+Some then suggested to Nicetes, the father of Herod, and brother of
+Dalce, to entreat the governor not to give his body, 'Lest,' said he,
+'leaving the crucified One they should begin to worship this man [Greek:
+sebein];' and this they said at the suggestion and importunity of the
+Jews, who also watched us when we would take the body from the fire.
+This they did, not knowing that we can never either leave Christ, who
+suffered for the salvation of all who will be saved in all the world, or
+worship any other." [The Paris translation adds "ut Deum."] "For him
+being the Son of God we worship [Greek: proskunumen], but the martyrs,
+as disciples and imitators of our Lord, we worthily love[32], because of
+their pre-eminent [Greek: anuperblaeton] good-will towards their {94}
+own king and teacher, with whom may we become partakers and
+fellow-disciples."
+
+ [Footnote 32: [Greek: axios agapomen]. Ruffinus translates it by
+ "diligimus et veneramur," and it is so quoted by Bellarmin.]
+
+"The centurion, seeing the determination of the Jews, placed him in the
+midst, and burnt him as their manner is. And thus we collecting his
+bones, more valuable than precious stones, and more esteemed than gold,
+we deposited them where it was meet. There, as we are able, collecting
+ourselves together in rejoicing and gladness, the Lord will grant to us
+to observe the birth-day of his martyrdom, for the remembrance of those
+who have before undergone the conflict, and for exercise and preparation
+of those who are to come." [Greek: hos dunaton haemin sunagomenois en
+agalliasei kai chara parexei ho Kurios epitelein taen tou martyriou
+autou haemeran genethlion, eis te ton proaethlaekoton mnaemaen, kai ton
+mellonton askaesin te kai hetoimasian.]
+
+In this relic of primitive antiquity, we have the prayer of a holy
+martyr, at his last hour, offered to God alone, through Christ alone.
+Here we find no allusion to any other intercessor; no commending of the
+dying Christian's soul to saint or angel. Here also we find an explicit
+declaration, that Christians offered religious worship to no one but
+Christ, whilst they loved the martyrs, and kept their names in grateful
+remembrance, and honoured even their ashes when the spirit had fled.
+Polycarp pleads no other merits; he seeks no intercession; he prays for
+no aid, save only his Redeemer's. Here too we find, that the place of a
+martyr's burial was the place which the early Christians loved to
+frequent; but then we are expressly told with what intent they met
+there,--not, as in later times, to invoke the departed spirit of the
+martyr, but to call to mind, in grateful remembrance, the sufferings of
+those who had already endured the awful struggle; and by {95} their
+example to encourage and prepare other soldiers of the cross thereafter
+to fight the good fight of faith; assured that they would be more than
+conquerors through Him who loved them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have now examined those works which are regarded by us all, whether
+of the Roman or Anglican Church, as the remains of apostolical
+fathers,--Christians who, at the very lowest calculation, lived close
+upon the Apostles' time, and who, according to the firm conviction of
+many, had all of them conversed with the Apostles, and heard the word of
+truth from their mouths. I do from my heart rejoice with you, that these
+holy men bear direct, clear, and irrefragable testimony to those
+fundamental truths which the Church of Rome and the Church of England
+both hold inviolate--the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, with its
+essential and inseparable concomitants, the atonement by the blood of a
+crucified Redeemer, and the vivifying and sanctifying influences of the
+Holy Spirit.
+
+Supposing for a moment no trace of such fundamental doctrines could be
+discovered in these writings, would not the absence of such vestige have
+been urged by those who differ from us, as a strong argument that the
+doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity was an innovation of a later date;
+and would not such an argument have been urged with reason? How, in
+plain honesty, can we avoid coming to the same conclusion on the subject
+of the invocation of saints? If the doctrine and the practice of praying
+to saints, or to angels, for their succour, or even their intercession,
+had been known {96} and recognised, and approved and acted upon by the
+Apostles, and those who were the very disciples of the Apostles, not
+only deriving the truth from their written works, but having heard it
+from their own living tongue,--in the nature of things would not some
+plain, palpable, intelligible, and unequivocal indications of it have
+appeared in such writings as these; writings in which much is said of
+prayer, of intercessory prayer, of the one object of prayer, of the
+subjects of prayer, of the nature of prayer, the time and place of
+prayer, the spirit in which we are to offer prayer, and the persons for
+whom we ought to pray? Does it accord with common sense, and common
+experience, with what we should expect in other cases, with the analogy
+of history, and the analogy of faith, that we should find a profound and
+total silence on the subject of any prayer or invocation to saints and
+angels, if prayer or invocation of saints and angels had been
+recognised, approved, and practised by the primitive Church?
+
+At the risk of repetition, or surplusage, I would beg to call your
+attention to one point in this argument. I am far from saying that no
+practice is apostolical which cannot be proved from the writings of
+these apostolical fathers: that would be a fallacy of an opposite kind.
+I ground my inference specifically and directly on the fact, that these
+writers are full, and copious, and explicit, and cogent on the nature
+and duty of prayer and supplications, as well for public as for private
+blessings; and of intercessions by one Christian for another, and for
+the whole race of mankind no less than for mercy on himself; and yet
+though openings of every kind palpably offered themselves for a natural
+introduction of the subject, there is in no one single instance any
+reference or allusion to the {97} invocation of saint or angel, as a
+practice either approved or even known.
+
+When indeed I call to mind the general tendency of the natural man to
+multiply to himself the objects of religious worship, and to create, by
+the help of superstition, and the delusive workings of the imagination,
+a variety of unearthly beings whose wrath he must appease, or whose
+favour he may conciliate; when I reflect how great is the temptation in
+unenlightened or fraudulent teachers to accommodate the dictates of
+truth to the prejudices and desires of those whom they instruct, my
+wonder is rather that Christianity was so long preserved pure and
+uncontaminated in this respect, than that corruptions should gradually
+and stealthily have mingled themselves with the simplicity of Gospel
+worship. That tendency is plainly evinced by the history of every nation
+under heaven: Greek and Barbarian, Egyptian and Scythian, would have
+their gods many, and their lords many. From one they would look for one
+good; on another they would depend for a different benefit, in mind,
+body, and estate. Some were of the highest grade, and to be worshipped
+with supreme honours; others were of a lower rank, to whom an inferior
+homage was addressed; whilst a third class held a sort of middle place,
+and were approached with reverence as much above the least, as it fell
+short of the greatest. In the heathen world you will find exact types of
+the dulia, the hyperdulia, and the latria, with which unhappily the
+practical theology of modern Christian Rome is burdened. Indeed, my
+wonder is, that under the Christian dispensation, when the household and
+local gods, the heathen's tutelary deities, and the genii, had been
+dislodged by the light of the Gospel, saints and angels had not at a
+much {98} earlier period been forced by superstition to occupy their
+room.
+
+We shall be led to refer to some passages in the earliest Christian
+writers, especially in Origen, which bear immediately on this point,
+representing in strong but true colours the futility of deeming a
+multitude of inferior divinities necessary for the dispensation of
+benefits throughout the universe, whose good offices we must secure by
+acts of attention and worship. I anticipate the circumstance in this
+place merely to show that the tendency of the human mind, clinging to a
+variety of preternatural protectors and benefactors, was among the
+obstacles with which the first preachers of the Gospel had to struggle.
+In the proper place I shall beg you to observe how hardly possible it
+would have been for those early Christian writers, to whom I have
+referred above, to express themselves in so strong, so sweeping, and so
+unqualified a manner, had the practice of applying by invocation to
+saints and angels then been prevalent among the disciples of the Cross.
+
+We may, I believe, safely conclude, that in these primitive writings,
+which are called the works of the Apostolical Fathers, there is no
+intimation that the present belief and practice of the Church of Rome
+were received, or even known by Christians. The evidence is all the
+other way. Indeed, Bellarmin, though he appeals to these remains for
+other purposes, and boldly asserts that "all the fathers, Greek and
+Latin, with unanimous consent, sanction and teach the adoration of
+saints and angels," yet does not refer to a single passage in any one of
+these remains for establishing this point. He cites a clause from the
+spurious work strangely ascribed to Dionysius the Areopagite, which was
+the forged production, as the learned are all {99} agreed, of some
+centuries later; and he cites a pious sentiment of Ignatius, expressing
+his hope that by martyrdom he might go to Christ, and thence he infers
+that Ignatius believed in the immediate transfer of the soul from this
+life to glory and happiness in heaven, though Ignatius refers there
+distinctly to the resurrection. [Epist. ad Rom. c. iv. See above, p.
+90.] But Bellarmin cites no passage whatever from these remains to
+countenance the doctrine and practice of the adoration of saints and
+angels. {100}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+SECTION I.--THE EVIDENCE OF JUSTIN MARTYR.
+
+
+Justin, who flourished about the year 150, was trained from his early
+youth in all the learning of Greece and of Egypt. He was born in
+Palestine, of heathen parents; and after a patient examination of the
+evidences of Christianity, and a close comparison of them with the
+systems of philosophy with which he had long been familiar, he became a
+disciple of the Cross. In those systems he found nothing solid, or
+satisfactory; nothing on which his mind could rest. In the Gospel he
+gained all that his soul yearned for, as a being destined for immortal
+life, conscious of that destiny, and longing for its accomplishment. His
+understanding was convinced, and his heart was touched; and regardless
+of every worldly consideration, and devoted to the cause of truth, he
+openly embraced Christianity; and before kings and people, Jews and
+Gentiles, he pleaded the religion of the crucified One with unquenchable
+zeal and astonishing power. The evidence of such a man on any doctrine
+{101} connected with our Christian faith must be looked to with great
+interest.
+
+In the volumes which contain Justin's works we find "Books of
+Questions," in which many inquiries, doubts, and objections, as well of
+Jews as of Gentiles, are stated and answered. It is agreed on all sides
+that these are not the genuine productions of Justin, but the work of a
+later hand. Bellarmin appeals to them, acknowledging at the same time
+their less remote origin. The evidence, indeed, appears very strong,
+which would lead us to regard them as the composition of a Syrian
+Christian, and assign to them the date of the fifth century; and as
+offering indications of the opinions of Christians at the time of their
+being put together, they are certainly interesting documents. When
+fairly quoted, the passages alleged in defence of the invocation of
+saints, so far from countenancing the practice, assail irresistibly that
+principle, which, with other writers, Bellarmin himself confesses to be
+the foundation of that doctrine. For these Books of Questions assert
+that the souls of the faithful are not yet in glory with God, but are
+reserved in a separate state, apart from the wicked, awaiting the great
+day of final and universal doom. In answer to Question 60, the author
+distinctly says:--"Before the resurrection the recompense is not made
+for the things done in this life by each individual." [Quæstiones et
+Responsiones ad Orthodoxos, p. 464.]
+
+In reply to the 75th Question, inquiring into the condition of man after
+death, this very remarkable answer is returned:--
+
+"The same relative condition which souls have with the body now, they
+have not after the departure from the body. For here all the
+circumstances of the union {102} are in common to the just and the
+unjust, and no difference is in them in this respect,--as to be born and
+to die, to be in health and to be in sickness, to be rich and to be
+poor, and the other points of this nature. But after the departure from
+the body, forthwith takes place the distinction of the just and the
+unjust: for they are conducted by the angels to places corresponding
+with their deserts: the souls of the just to paradise, where is the
+company and the sight of angels and archangels, and also, by vision, of
+the Saviour Christ, according to what is said, 'Being absent from the
+body, and present with the Lord;' and the souls of the unjust to the
+places in hades, according to what is said of Nebucodonosor king of
+Babylon, 'Hades from beneath hath been embittered, meeting thee.'--And
+in the places corresponding with their deserts they are kept in ward
+unto the day of the resurrection and of retribution." [Page 469.]
+
+I much regret to observe that Bellarmin omits to quote the latter part
+of this passage, stopping short with an "&c." at the words _hades_, or
+_inferorum loca_, although the whole of the writer's testimony in it
+turns upon the very last clause. [Bellarmin, c. iv. p. 851. "Improborum
+autem ad inferorum loca."]
+
+The next question (76) runs thus: "If the retribution of our deeds does
+not take place before the resurrection, what advantage accrued to the
+thief that his soul was introduced into paradise; especially since
+paradise is an object of sense, and the substance of the soul is not an
+object of sense?
+
+"Answer. It was an advantage to the thief entering into paradise to
+learn by fact the benefits of the faith by which he was deemed worthy of
+the assembly of the {103} saints, in which he is kept till the day of
+judgment and restitution; and he has the perception of paradise by that
+which is called intellectual perception, by which souls see both
+themselves and the things under them, and moreover also the angels and
+demons. For a soul doth not perceive or see a soul, nor an angel an
+angel, nor a demon a demon; except that according to the said
+intellectual perception they see both themselves and each other, and
+moreover also all corporeal objects." [Page 470.]
+
+On this same point I must here subjoin a passage from one of Justin's
+own undisputed works. In his Dialogue with Trypho the Jew, sect. 5, he
+says, "Nevertheless I do not say that souls all die; for that were in
+truth a boon to the wicked. But what? That the souls of the pious remain
+somewhere in a better place, and the unjust and wicked in a worse,
+waiting for the time of judgment, when it shall be: thus the one
+appearing worthy of God do not die any more; and the others are punished
+as long as God wills them both to exist and to be punished." [Page 107.]
+
+Not only so; Justin classes among renouncers of the faith those who
+maintain the doctrine which is now acknowledged to be the doctrine of
+the Church of Rome, and to be indispensable as the groundwork of the
+adoration of saints. In his Trypho, sect. 80, he states his sentiment
+thus strongly: "If you should meet with any persons called Christians,
+who confess not this, but dare to blaspheme the God of Abraham, the God
+of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, and say there is no resurrection of the
+dead ([Greek: nekron]), but that their souls, at the very time of their
+death, are taken up into heaven; do not regard them as Christians."
+[Page 178.] {104}
+
+This, according to Bellarmin's own principle, is fatal evidence: if the
+redeemed and the saints departed are not in glory with God already, they
+cannot intercede with him for men. On the subject, however, of worship
+and prayer, Justin Martyr has left us some testimonies as to the
+primitive practice, full of interest in themselves, independently of
+their bearing on the points at issue. At the same time I am not aware of
+a single expression which can be so construed as to imply the doctrine
+or practice among Christians of invoking the souls of the faithful. He
+speaks of public and private prayer; he offers prayer, but the prayer of
+which he speaks, and the prayer which he offers are to God alone; and he
+alludes to no advocate or intercessor in heaven, except only the eternal
+Son of God himself. In his first Apologia (or Defence addressed to the
+Emperor Antoninus Pius) he thus describes the proceedings at the baptism
+of a convert:--
+
+"Now, we will explain to you how we dedicate ourselves to God, being
+made new by Christ.... As many as are persuaded, and believe the things
+which by us are taught and declared to be true, and who promise that
+they can so live, are taught to pray and implore, with fasting,
+forgiveness of God for their former sins, we ourselves joining with them
+in fasting and prayer; and then they are taken by us to a place where
+there is water, and by the same manner of regeneration as we ourselves
+were regenerated, they are regenerated; for they undergo this washing in
+the water in the name of God the Father and Lord of all, and of our
+Saviour Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Ghost." [Apol. i. sect 61, page
+79.]
+
+The following is his description of the Christian {105} Eucharist,
+subsequently to the baptism of a convert: "Afterwards we conduct him to
+those who are called brethren, where they are assembled together to
+offer earnestly our united prayers for ourselves and for the enlightened
+one [the newly baptized convert], and for all others every where, that
+we, having learned the truth, may be thought worthy to be found in our
+deeds good livers, and keepers of the commandments, that we may be saved
+with the everlasting salvation. Having ceased from prayers, we salute
+each other with a kiss; and then bread is brought to him who presides
+over the brethren, and a cup of water and wine; and he taking it, sends
+up prayer and praise to the Father of all, through the name of the Son
+and the Holy Spirit; and offers much thanksgiving for our being thought
+by him worthy of these things. When he has finished the prayers and
+thanksgivings, all the people present respond, saying, 'Amen.' Now, Amen
+in the Hebrew tongue means, 'So be it.' And when the presider has given
+thanks, and all the people have responded, those who are called Deacons
+among us give to every one present to partake of the bread and wine and
+water that has been blessed, and take some away for those who were not
+present." [Sect. 65. p. 82.]
+
+The following is Justin's account of their worship on the Lord's day:
+"In all our oblations we bless the Creator of all things, through his
+Son Jesus Christ, and through the Holy Spirit. And upon the day called
+Sunday, there is an assembly of all who dwell in the several cities or
+in the country, in one place where the records of the apostles, or the
+writings of the prophets are read, as time allows. When the reader has
+ceased, {106} the presider makes a discourse for the edification of the
+people, and to animate them to the practice of such excellent things [or
+the imitation of such excellent persons]. At the conclusion we all rise
+up together and pray; and, as we have said, when we have ceased from
+prayer, the bread and wine and water are brought forward, and the
+presider sends up prayer and thanksgiving alike, to the utmost of his
+power. And the people respond, saying, Amen. And then is made to each
+the distribution and participation of the consecrated elements ([Greek:
+eucharistauthenton]). And of those who have the means and will, each
+according to his disposition gives what he will; and the collected sum
+is deposited with the presider, and he aids the orphans and widows, and
+those who through sickness or other cause are in need, and those in
+bonds, and strangers; and, in a word, he becomes the reliever of all who
+are in want." [Sect. 67. p. 83.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In Justin Martyr I am unable to find even a single vestige of the
+invocation of Saints. With regard to Angels, however, there is a very
+celebrated passage, to which Bellarmin and others appeal, as conclusive
+evidence that the worship of them prevailed among Christians in his
+time, and was professed by Justin himself.
+
+Justin, in his first Apology, having stated that the Christians could
+never be induced to worship the demons, whom the heathen worshipped and
+invoked, proceeds thus[33]: "Whence also we are called Atheists, {107}
+[men without God]; and we confess that with regard to such supposed gods
+we are atheists, but not so with regard to the most true God, the Father
+of justice and temperance, and of the other virtues without any mixture
+of evil. But both HIM and the SON, who came from Him, and taught these
+things to us, and THE HOST OF THE OTHER GOOD ANGELS ACCOMPANYING AND
+MADE LIKE, and THE PROPHETIC SPIRIT, we reverence and worship, honouring
+them in reason and truth; and without grudging, delivering the doctrine
+to every one who is willing to learn as we were taught." [Page 47.]
+Governing the words "the host of the other good angels," as much as the
+words "Him" and "His Son," and "the prophetic Spirit," by the verbs "we
+reverence and worship," Bellarmin and others[34] maintain, that Justin
+bears testimony in this passage to the worship of angels. That this
+cannot be the true interpretation of Justin's words will be
+acknowledged, I think, by every Catholic, whether Anglican or Roman,
+when he contemplates it in all its naked plainness; all will revolt from
+it as impious and contrary to the principles professed by the most
+celebrated and honoured among Roman Catholic writers. This
+interpretation of the passage, when analysed, implies the awful thought,
+that we Christians pay to the host of angels, God's ministers and our
+own fellow-servants, the same reverence, worship, and honour which we
+pay to the supreme Father, and his ever-blessed Son, and the Holy
+Spirit, without any difference or inequality. No principles of
+interpretation can avoid that inference.
+
+ [Footnote 33: The genuineness of this passage has been doubted.
+ But I see no ground for suspicion that it is spurious. It is
+ found in the manuscripts of Justin's works; of which the most
+ ancient perhaps are in the King's Library in Paris. I examined
+ one there of a remote date.]
+
+ [Footnote 34: The Benedictine Editor puts this note in the
+ margin, "Justin teaches that angels following the Son are
+ worshipped by Christians."--Preface, p. xxi.] {108}
+
+"Him the most true Father of righteousness we reverence and worship,
+honouring him in reason and truth."
+
+"The Son who came from him, and taught us these things, we reverence and
+worship, honouring him in reason and truth."
+
+"The army of the other good angels accompanying and assimilated, we
+reverence and worship, honouring them in reason and truth."
+
+"The Prophetic Spirit we reverence and worship, honouring him in reason
+and truth."
+
+Is it possible to conceive that any Christian would thus ascribe the
+same religious worship to a host of God's creatures, which he would
+ascribe to God, as GOD? "We are accused," said Justin, "of being
+atheists, of having no God. How can this be? We do not worship your
+false gods, but we have our own most true God. We are not without a God.
+We have the Father, and the Son, and the Good Angels, and the Holy
+Spirit." If Justin meant that they honoured the good angels, but not as
+GOD, that would be no answer to those who called the Christians
+atheists. The charge was, that "they had no God." The answer is, "We
+have a God;" and then Justin describes the God of Christians. Can the
+army of angels be included in that description? If they are, then they
+are made to share in the adoration, worship, homage, and reverence of
+the one only God Most High; if they are not, then Justin does not answer
+the objectors[35].
+
+ [Footnote 35: And surely if Justin had intended to represent the
+ holy angels as objects of religious worship, he would not so
+ violently have thrust the mention of them among the Persons of
+ the ever-blessed Trinity, assigning to them a place between the
+ second and third Persons of the eternal hypostatic union.] {109}
+
+To evade this charge of impiety, some writers (among others, M. Maran,
+the Benedictine editor of Justin,) have attempted to draw a distinction
+between the two verbs in this passage, alleging that the lower degree of
+reverence expressed by the latter applies to the angels; whilst the
+former verb, implying the higher degree of worship, alone relates to the
+Godhead. But this distinction rests on a false assumption; the two words
+being used equally to convey the idea, of the highest religious
+worship[36].
+
+ [Footnote 36: For example, the first word ([Greek: sebometha]),
+ "we reverence," is used to mean the whole of religious worship,
+ as well with regard to the true God, as with reference to Diana
+ [Acts xviii. 7. 13; xix. 27.]; whilst the second word ([Greek:
+ proskunoumen]), "we worship," is constantly employed in the same
+ sense of divine worship, throughout the Septuagint [Exod. xxxiv.
+ 14. Ps. xciv. (xcv.) 6. I Sam. (1 Kings) xv. 25. 2 Kings (4
+ Kings) xvii. 36. Heb. i. 6.], (with which Justin was most
+ familiar,) and is used in the Epistle to the Hebrews to signify
+ the worship due from the angels themselves to God, "Let all the
+ angels of God worship him." The very same word is also soon
+ after employed by Justin himself (sect. xvi. p. 53) to mean the
+ whole entire worship of the Most High God: "That we ought to
+ worship ([Greek: proskumein]) God alone, Christ thus proves,"
+ &c. Moreover, the word which Justin uses at the close of the
+ sentence, "honouring them" ([Greek: timontes]), is the identical
+ word four times employed by St. John [John v. 23.], in the same
+ verse, to record our Saviour's saying, "That all men might
+ honour the Son, even as they honour the Father; he that
+ honoureth not the Son, honoureth not the Father, who hath sent
+ him."]
+
+But in determining the true meaning of an obscure passage, grammatically
+susceptible of different acceptations, the author himself is often his
+own best interpreter. If he has expressed in another place the same
+leading sentiment, yet without the same obscurity, and free from all
+doubt, the light borrowed from that passage {110} will frequently fix
+the sense of the ambiguous expression, and establish the author's
+consistency. On this acknowledged principle of criticism, I would call
+your attention to a passage in the very same treatise of Justin, a few
+pages further on, in which he again defends the Christians against the
+same charge of being atheists, and on the self-same ground, "that they
+worship the Father who is maker of all; secondly, the Son proceeding
+from Him; and thirdly, the Holy Spirit." In both cases he refers to the
+same attributes of the Son as the teacher of Christian truth, and of the
+Holy Ghost, as the Prophetic Spirit. His language throughout the two
+passages is remarkably similar, and in the expressions on the true
+meaning of which we have already dwelt, it is most strikingly identical;
+but by omitting all allusion to the angels after the Son, his own words
+proving that the introduction of them could have no place there, (for he
+specifies that the third in order was the Holy Spirit,) Justin has left
+us a comment on the passage under consideration conclusive as to the
+object of religious worship in his creed. The whole passage is well
+worth the attention of the reader. The following extracts are the only
+parts necessary for our present purpose:--
+
+"Who of sound mind will not confess that we are not Atheists,
+reverencing as we do the Maker of the Universe.... and Him, who taught
+us these things, and who was born for this purpose, Jesus Christ,
+crucified under Pontius Pilate.... instructed, as we are, that He is the
+Son of the True God, and holding Him in the second place; and the
+Prophetic Spirit in the third order, we with reason honour." [Sect.
+xiii. p. 50.] {111}
+
+The impiety apparently inseparable from Bellarmin's interpretation has
+induced many, even among Roman Catholic writers, to discard that
+acceptation altogether, and to substitute others, which, though
+involving no grammatical inaccuracy, are still not free from
+difficulty.[37] After weighing the passage with all the means in my
+power, and after testing the various interpretations offered by writers,
+whether of the Church of Rome or not, by the sentiments of Justin
+himself, and others of the same early age, I am fully persuaded that the
+following is the only true rendering of Justin's words:
+
+"Honouring in reason and truth, we reverence and worship HIM, the Father
+of Righteousness, and the Son (who proceeded from Him, and instructed in
+these things both ourselves and the host of the other good angels
+following Him and being made like unto Him), and the Prophetic Spirit."
+
+ [Footnote 37: Le Nourry (Apparatus ad Bibliothecam Maximam
+ Veterum Patrum. Paris, 1697. vol. ii. p. 305), himself a
+ Benedictine, rejects Bellarmin's and his brother Benedictine
+ Maran's interpretation, and conceives Justin to mean, that the
+ Son of God not only taught us those truths to which he was
+ referring, with regard to the being and attributes of God, but
+ also taught us that there were hosts of spiritual beings, called
+ Angels; good beings, opposed to the demons of paganism. Bishop
+ Kaye, in his excellent work on Justin Martyr, which the reader
+ will do well to consult (p. 53), tells us he was sometimes
+ inclined to think that Justin referred to the host of good
+ angels who should surround the Son of God when he should come to
+ judge the world. The view adopted by myself here was recommended
+ by Grabe and by Langus, called The Interpreter of Justin; whilst
+ Petavius, a Jesuit, though he does not adopt it, yet
+ acknowledges that the Greek admits of our interpretation. Any
+ one who would pursue the subject further may with advantage
+ consult the preface to the Benedictine edition referred to in
+ this work. Lumper Hist. Part ii. p. 225. Augustæ Vindelicorum,
+ 1784. Petavius, Theologicorum Dogmatum tom. vi. p. 298. lib. xv.
+ c. v. s. 5. Antwerp, 1700.
+
+ The whole passage is thus rendered by Langus (as read in
+ Lumper), "Verum hunc ipsum, et qui ab eo venit, atque ista nos
+ et aliorum obsequentium exæquatorumque ad ejus voluntatem
+ bonorum Angelorum exercitura docuit, Filium, et Spiritum ejus
+ propheticum, colimus et adoramus."]
+
+This interpretation is strongly confirmed by the professed sentiments
+both of Justin and of his contemporaries, {112} with regard to the Son
+of God and the holy angels.
+
+It was a principle generally received among the early Christians, that
+whatever the Almighty did, either by creation or by the communication of
+his will, on earth or in heaven, was done by the Eternal Word. It was
+God the Son, the Logos, who created the angels[38], as well as
+ourselves; it was He who spoke to Moses, to Abraham, and to Lot; and it
+was He who conveyed the Supreme will, and the knowledge of the only true
+God, to the inhabitants of the world of spirits. Agreeably to this
+principle, in the passage under consideration, Justin affirms (not that
+Christians revered and worshipped the angels, but), that God the Son,
+whom Christians worshipped as the eternal Prophet, Angel, and Apostle,
+of the Most High, instructed not only us men on earth, but also the host
+of heavenly angels[39], in these eternal verities, {113} which embrace
+God's nature and the duty of his creatures. [Trypho, § 141. p. 231.]
+
+ [Footnote 38: Thus Tatian (p. 249 in the same edition of
+ Justin), "Before men were prepared, the Word was the Maker of
+ angels."]
+
+ [Footnote 39: "The OTHER good angels." Justin (Apol. i. sect.
+ lxiii. p. 81.) reminds us that Christ, the first-begotten of the
+ Father, Himself God, was also an Angel (or Messenger), and an
+ Apostle; and here Christ, as the Angel of the Covenant and the
+ chief Apostle, is represented as instructing THE OTHER ANGELS in
+ the truths of the economy of grace, just as he instructed his
+ Apostles on earth,--"As my Father hath sent me, even so send I
+ you."]
+
+It is evident that Justin himself considered the host of angels to be
+equally with ourselves in a state of probation, requiring divine
+instruction, and partaking of it. It is also evident that many of his
+contemporaries entertained the same views; among others, Irenæus and
+Origen. [Irenæus, book ii. c. 30. p. 163. Origen, Hom. xxxii. in Joann.
+§ 10. vol. iv. p. 430.] I will not swell this dissertation by quoting
+the passages at length; though the passages referred to in the margin
+will well repay any one's careful examination. But I cannot refrain from
+extracting the words in which each of those writers confirms the view
+here taken of Justin's sentiments.
+
+Irenæus, for example, says distinctly, "The Son ever, anciently and from
+the beginning co-existing with the Father, always reveals the Father
+both to angels and archangels, and powers, and excellencies, and to all
+to whom God wishes to make a revelation[40]." And not less distinctly
+does Origen assert the same thing,--"Our Saviour therefore teaches, and
+the Holy Spirit, {114} who spake in the prophets, teaches not only men,
+but also angels and invisible excellencies."
+
+ [Footnote 40: So far did some of the early Christians include
+ the hosts of angels within the covenant of the Gospel, that
+ Ignatius (Epist. ad Smyrn. § 6. p. 36.) does not hesitate to
+ pronounce that the angels incur the Divine judgment, if they do
+ not receive the doctrine of the atonement: "Let no one be
+ deceived. The things in heaven, and the glory of angels, and the
+ powers visible and invisible, if they do not believe on the
+ blood of Christ--for them is judgment." They seem to have
+ founded their opinion on the declaration of St. Paul (Eph. iii.
+ 10): "That now to the principalities and powers in heavenly
+ places might be made known through the Church the manifold
+ wisdom of God."]
+
+I will only add one more ancient authority, in confirmation of the view
+here taken of Justin's words. The passage is from Athenagoras[41] and
+seems to be the exact counterpart of Justin's paragraph.
+
+ [Footnote 41: Athenagoras presented his defence, in which these
+ words occur, to the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, and his son
+ Commodus, in the year 177.]
+
+"Who would not wonder on hearing us called Atheists? we who call the
+Father God, and the Son God, and the Holy Ghost, showing both their
+power in the unity, and their distinction in order. Nor does our
+theology rest here; but we say, moreover, that there is a multitude of
+angels and ministers whom God, the Maker and Creator of the world, BY
+THE WORD PROCEEDING FROM HIM, distributed and appointed, both about the
+elements, and the heavens, and the world, and the things therein, and
+the good order thereof." [Sect. 10. p. 287. edit. Just. Mart.]
+
+I have already stated my inability to discover a single word in Justin
+Martyr which could be brought to sanction the invocation of saints; but
+his testimony is far from being merely negative. He admonishes us
+strongly against our looking to any other being for help or assistance,
+than to God only. Even when speaking of those who confide in their own
+strength, and fortune, and other sources of good, he says, in perfect
+unison with the pervading principles and associations of his whole mind,
+as far as we can read them in his works, without any modification or any
+exception in favour of saint or angel: "In that Christ {115} said, 'Thou
+art my God, go not far from me,' He at the same time taught, that all
+persons ought to hope in God, who made all things, and seek for safety
+and health from Him alone" [Trypho, § 102, p. 197.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--IRENÆUS.
+
+
+Justin sealed his faith by his blood about the year 165; and next to
+him, in the noble army of martyrs, we must examine the evidence of
+Irenæus, Bishop of Lyons. Of this writer's works a very small proportion
+survives in the original Greek; but that little is such as might well
+make every scholar and divine lament the calamity which theology and
+literature have sustained by the loss of the author's own language. It
+is not perhaps beyond the range of hope that future researches may yet
+recover at least some part of the treasure. Meanwhile we must avail
+ourselves with thankfulness of the nervous though inelegant copy of that
+original, which the Latin translation affords; imperfect and corrupt in
+many parts, as that copy evidently is. This, however, is not the place
+for recommending a study of the remains of Irenæus; and every one at all
+acquainted with the literature of the early Church, knows well how
+valuable a store of ancient Christian learning is preserved even in the
+wreck of his works.
+
+On the subject of the invocation of saints, an appeal {116} has been
+made only to a few passages in Irenæus. With regard, indeed, to one
+section, I would gladly have been spared the duty of commenting upon the
+unjustifiable mode of citing his evidence adopted by Bellarmin. It
+forces upon our notice an example either of such inaccuracy of quotation
+as would shake our confidence in him as an author, or of such
+misrepresentation as must lower him in our estimation as a man of
+integrity.
+
+Bellarmin asserts, building upon it as the very foundation-stone of his
+argument for the invocation of saints, that the souls of the saints are
+removed immediately on their dissolution by death, without waiting for
+the day of judgment, into the presence of God, and the enjoyment of HIM
+in heaven. This point, he says, must first be established; for if they
+are not already in the presence of God, they cannot pray for us, and
+prayer to them would be preposterous. [Bell. lib. i. c. 4. vol. ii. p.
+851.] Among the authorities cited by him to establish this point is the
+evidence of Irenæus (book i. c. 2). [See Benedictine ed, Paris, 1710.
+book i. c. 10. p. 48.] Bellarmin quotes that passage in these words: "To
+the just and righteous, and to those who keep his commandments, and
+persevere in his love, some indeed from the beginning but some from
+repentance, he giving life CONFERS by way of gift incorruption, and
+CLOTHES them with eternal glory." To the quotation he appends this note
+"Mark '_to some_' that is, to those who presently after baptism die, or
+who lay down their life for Christ; or finally to the perfect is given
+immediately life and eternal glory; to others not, except after
+repentance, that is, satisfaction made in another world[42]."
+
+ [Footnote 42: Agreeably to the principles laid down in my
+ preface, I will not here allude to the doctrine of purgatory, on
+ which Bellarmin considers this passage to bear; nor will I say
+ one word on the intermediate state of the soul between death and
+ the resurrection, on which I am now showing that the words of
+ Irenæus cannot at all be made to bear.] {117}
+
+Here I am compelled to confess that I never found a more palpable
+misquotation of an author than this. I will readily grant that Bellarmin
+may have quoted from memory, or have borrowed from some corrupt version
+of the passage; and that he has unintentionally changed the moods of two
+verbs from the subjunctive to the indicative, and inadvertently changed
+the entire construction and the sense of the passage. But then what
+becomes of his authority as a writer citing testimony?
+
+Irenæus in this passage is speaking not of what our Lord does now, but
+what he will do at the last day; he refers only to the second coming of
+Christ to judgment at the final consummation of all things, not using a
+single expression which can be made by fair criticism to have any
+reference whatever to the condition of souls on their separation from
+the body. I have consulted the old editions, some at least published
+before the date of Bellarmin's work; the suggestion offering itself to
+my mind, that perhaps the ancient translation was in error, from which
+he might have quoted. But I cannot find that to have been the case. The
+old Latin version of this passage agreeing very closely with the Greek
+still preserved in Epiphanius, and quoted by Roman Catholic writers as
+authentic, conveys this magnificent though brief summary of the
+Christian faith:
+
+"The Church spread throughout the whole world, even to the ends of the
+earth, received both from the Apostles and their disciples that faith
+which is in one {118} God omnipotent, who made heaven and earth, the
+sea, and all things therein, and in one Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
+for our salvation made flesh, and in the Holy Ghost, who by the prophets
+announced the dispensations (of God[43]), and the Advent, and the being
+born of a Virgin, and the suffering, and the resurrection from the dead,
+and the bodily ascension into heaven of the beloved Jesus Christ our
+Lord, and his coming from heaven in the glory of the Father for the
+consummation of all things, and for raising again all flesh of the human
+race, THAT, in order that ([Greek: ina]), to Christ Jesus our Lord and
+God, and Saviour and King, according to the good pleasure of the
+invisible Father, every knee should bow of things in heaven and in
+earth, and under the earth, and that every tongue should confess to Him,
+and that he should execute just judgment on all: that he should send the
+spirits of wickedness, and the transgressing and rebel angels, and the
+impious and unjust, and wicked and blaspheming men into eternal fire;
+but to the just and righteous, and to those who keep his commandments,
+and persevere in his love,--some indeed from the beginning, and some
+from their repentance,--he granting life, by way of gift, SHOULD CONFER
+incorruption, and SHOULD CLOTHE them with eternal glory." [Hæres. xxxi.
+c. 30.]
+
+ [Footnote 43: The words "of God" are in the Latin, but not in
+ the Greek.]
+
+The words, "some from the beginning," "others from their repentance,"
+can refer only to the two conditions of believers; some of whom have
+grace to keep the commandments, and persevere in the love of God from
+the beginning of their Christian course, whilst others, for a time,
+transgress and wax cold in love, but by repentance, through God's grace,
+are renewed and {119} restored to their former state of obedience and
+love. On both these classes of Christians, according to the faith as
+here summed up by Irenæus, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, when He
+comes in glory for the consummation of all things, and for the
+resurrection of the dead, will confer glory and immortality. No
+ingenuity of criticism can extract from this passage any allusion to the
+intercession of saints, or to their being with God before the end of the
+world[44]. But I am not {120} here condemning Bellarmin's untenable
+criticism: what I lament is the negligence or the disingenuousness with
+which he misquotes the words of Irenæus, and makes him say what he never
+did say. To extract from an author's words, correctly reported, a
+meaning which he did not intend to convey, however reprehensible and
+unworthy a follower of truth, is one act of injustice: to report him,
+whether wilfully or carelessly, as using words which he never did use,
+is far worse.
+
+ [Footnote 44: It will be well to see the words of Bellarmin and
+ those of the translation side by side:
+
+ (Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the other.)
+
+ _Bellarmin_ lib. i. c. iv. p. 851.
+
+ "Quartus Irenæus, lib. i. c. 2. 'Justis, inquit, et æquis, et
+ præcepta ejus servantibus et in dilectione perseverantibus,
+ quibusdam quidem ab initio, quibusdam autem ex poenitentia,
+ vitam donans, incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERT, et claritatem
+ æternam CIRCUMDAT.' Nota '_quibusdam_,' id est, iis qui mox a
+ Baptismo moriuntur, vel qui pro Christo vitam ponunt; vel
+ denique perfectis statim donari vitam et claritatem æternam;
+ aliis non nisi post poenitentiam, id est, satisfactionem in
+ futuro sæculo actam."
+
+ _Latin Translation_.
+
+ "Et de coelis in gloria Patris adventum ejus ad recapitulanda
+ universa et resuscitandam omnem carnem humani generis, UT
+ Christo Jesu Domino nostro et Deo, et Salvatori, et Regi,
+ secundum placitum Patris invisibilis, 'omne genu curvet
+ coelestium, et terrestrium, et infernorum, et omnis lingua
+ confiteatur ei,' et judicium justum in omnibus faciat;
+ spiritalia quidem nequitiæ, et angelos transgresses, atque
+ apostatas factos, et impios et injustos et iniquos, et
+ blasphemos homines in æternum ignem mittat;--Justis autem et
+ æquis et præcepta ejus servantibus et in dilectione ejus
+ perseverantibus, quibusdam quidem ab initio, quibusdam autem ex
+ poenitentia, vitam donans, incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERAT,
+ et claritatem æternam CIRCUMDET."--Irenæi liber i. cap. x. p.
+ 48. Interpretatio Vetus.]
+
+Another expression of Irenæus is appealed to by Bellarmin, and continues
+to be cited at the present day in defence of the invocation of saints;
+the precise bearing of which upon the subject I confess myself unable to
+see, whilst I am very far from understanding the passage from which it
+is an extract. Bellarmin cites the passage not to show that the saints
+in glory pray for us,--that argument he had dismissed before,--but to
+prove that they are to be invoked by us. The insulated passage as quoted
+by him is this: "And as she (Eve) was induced to fly from God, so she
+(Mary) was persuaded to obey God, that of the Virgin Eve the Virgin Mary
+might become the advocate." After the quotation he says, "What can be
+clearer?" [Benedict, lib. v. cap. xix. p. 316.]
+
+In whatever sense we may suppose Irenæus to have employed the word here
+translated "advocata," it is difficult to see how the circumstance of
+Mary becoming the advocate of Eve, who lived so many generations before
+her, can bear upon the question, Is it lawful and right for us, now
+dwelling on the earth, to invoke those saints whom we believe to be in
+heaven? I will not dwell on the argument urged very cogently by some
+critics on this passage, that the word "advocata," found {121} in the
+Latin version of Irenæus, is the translation of the original word, now
+lost [[Greek: paraklaetos]--paraclete], which, by the early writers, was
+used for "comforter and consoler," or "restorer;" because, as I have
+above intimated, whatever may have been the word employed by Irenæus,
+the passage proves nothing as to the lawfulness of our praying to the
+saints. If the angels at God's bidding minister unto the heirs of
+salvation; or further, if they plead our cause with God, that would be
+no reason why we should invoke them and pray to them. This distinction
+between what they may do for us, and what we ought to do with regard to
+them, is an essential distinction, and must not be lost sight of. We
+shall have occasion hereafter to refer to it repeatedly, especially in
+the instances of Origen and Cyprian. I will now do no more than copy in
+a note the entire passage from which the sentence now under
+consideration has been extracted, that the reader may judge whether on
+such a passage, the original of which, in whatever words Irenæus may
+have expressed himself, is utterly lost, any reliance can satisfactorily
+be placed.
+
+("Manifeste itaque in sua propria venientem Dominum et sua propria eum
+bajulantem conditione quæ bajulatur ab ipso, et recapitulationem ejus
+quæ in ligno fuit inobedientiæ per eam quæ in ligno est obedientiam
+facientem, et seductionem illam solutam qua seducta est male illa, quæ
+jam viro destinata erat virgo Eva, per veritatem evangelizata est bene
+ab angelo jam sub viro virgo Maria. Quemadmodum enim illa per angeli
+sermonem seducta est ut effugeret Deum prævaricata verbum ejus, ita et
+hæc per angelicum sermonem evangelizata est ut portaret Deum obediens
+ejus verbo. Et si ea inobedierat Deo, sed hæc suasa est obedire Deo, uti
+virginis Evæ virgo Maria fieret advocata. Et quemadmodum astrictum est
+morti genus humanum per virginem, salvatur per virginem, æqua lance
+disposita virginalis inobedientia per virginalem obedientiam. Adhuc enim
+protoplasti peccatum per correptionem primogeniti emendationem
+accipiens, et serpentis prudentia devicta in columbæ simplicitate,
+vinculis autem illis resolutis, per quæ alligati eramus morti." St.
+Augustin (Paris, 1690. vol. x. p. 500.) refers to the latter part of
+this passage, as implying the doctrine of original sin; but since his
+quotation does not embrace any portion of the clause at present under
+our consideration, no additional light from him is thrown on the meaning
+of Irenæus.) {122}
+
+But passages occur in Irenæus, which seem to leave doubt, that neither
+in faith nor in practice would he countenance in the very lowest degree
+the adoration of saints and angels, or any invocation of them.
+
+For example, in one part of his works we read, "Nor does it [the Church]
+do any thing by invocations of angels, nor by incantations, nor other
+depraved and curious means, but with cleanliness, purity, and openness,
+directing prayers to the Lord who made all things, and calling upon the
+name of Jesus Christ our Lord, it exercises its powers for the benefit,
+and not for the seducing, of mankind." [Benedictine Ed. lib. ii. c. 32.
+§ 5. p. 166.] It has been said that, by angelic invocations, Irenæus
+means the addresses to evil angels and genii, such as the heathen
+superstitiously made. Be it so; though that is a mere assumption, not
+warranted by the passage or its context. But, surely, had Irenæus known
+that Christians prayed to angels, as well as to their Maker and their
+Saviour, he would not have used such an unguarded expression; he would
+have cautioned his readers against so serious, but so natural, a
+misapprehension of his meaning.
+
+With one more reference, we must bring our inquiry into the testimony of
+Irenæus to a close. The passage occurs in the fifth book, chapter 31.
+[Benedict. lib. v. c. 32. § 2. p, 331.] The principal and most
+important, though not the longest, part of {123} the passage is happily
+still found in the original Greek, preserved in the "Parallels" of
+Damascenus. In its plain, natural, and unforced sense, this passage is
+so decidedly conclusive on the question at issue, that various attempts
+have been made to explain away its meaning, so as not to represent
+Irenæus as believing that the souls of departed saints, between their
+death and the day of judgment, exist otherwise than in bliss and glory
+in heaven. But those attempts have been altogether unsuccessful. I
+believe the view here presented to us by the plain and obvious sense of
+the words of Irenæus, is the view at present acquiesced in by a large
+proportion of our fellow-believers. The Anglican Church has made no
+article of faith whatever on the subject. The clause within brackets is
+found both in the Latin and the Greek.
+
+"Since the Lord[45] in the midst of the shadow of death went where the
+souls of the dead were, and then afterwards rose bodily, and after his
+resurrection was taken up, it is evident that of his disciples also, for
+whom the Lord wrought these things, [the souls go into the unseen[46]
+place assigned to them by God, and there remain till the resurrection,
+waiting for the resurrection; afterwards receiving again their bodies
+and rising perfectly [[Greek: holoklaeros], perfecte], that is, bodily,
+even as the Lord also rose again, so will they come into the presence of
+God.] {124} For no disciple is above his master; but every one that is
+perfect shall be as his master. As, therefore, our Master did not
+immediately flee away and depart, but waited for the time of his
+resurrection appointed by his Father (which is evident, even by the case
+of Jonah); after the third day, rising again, he was taken up; so we too
+must wait for the time of our resurrection appointed by God, and
+fore-announced by the prophets; and thus rising again, be taken up, as
+many as the Lord shall have deemed worthy of this."
+
+ [Footnote 45: Bellarmin, rather than allow the testimony of
+ Irenæus to weigh at all against the doctrine which he is
+ defending, seems determined to combat and challenge that father
+ himself. "Non ausus est dicere," "He has not dared to say, that
+ the souls go to the regions below," &c.]
+
+ [Footnote 46: There is no word in the Greek copy corresponding
+ with the Latin "invisibilem."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA--ABOUT THE YEAR 180.
+
+
+Contemporary with Irenæus, and probably less than twenty years his
+junior, was Clement, the celebrated Christian philosopher of Alexandria.
+I am not aware that any Roman Catholic writer has appealed to the
+testimony of Clement in favour of the invocation of saints, nor have I
+found a single passage which the defenders of that practice would be
+likely to quote; and yet there are many passages which no one, anxious
+to trace the Catholic faith, would willingly neglect. The tendency of
+Clement's mind to blend with the simplicity of the Gospel of Christ the
+philosophy in which he so fully abounded, renders him far less valuable
+as a Christian teacher; but his evidence as to the matter of fact, is
+even rendered more cogent and pointed by this tendency of his mind. I
+would {125} willingly have transferred to these pages whole passages of
+Clement, but the very nature of my address forbids it. Some sentences
+bearing on the subject immediately before us, we must not omit.
+
+Clement has left on record many of his meditations upon the efficacy,
+the duty, and the blessed comfort of prayer. When he speaks of God, and
+of the Christian in prayer, (for prayer he defines to be "communion or
+intercourse with God,") his language becomes often exquisitely
+beautiful, and sometimes sublime. It is impossible by a few detached
+passages to convey an adequate estimate of the original; and yet a few
+sentences may show that Clement is a man whose testimony should not be
+slighted.
+
+"Therefore, keeping the whole of our life as a feast every where, and on
+every part persuaded that God is present, we praise him as we till our
+lands; we sing hymns as we are sailing. The Christian is persuaded that
+God hears every thing; not the voice only, but the thoughts.... Suppose
+any one should say, that the voice does not reach God, revolving as it
+does in the air below; yet the thoughts of the saints cut not only
+through the air, but the whole world. And the divine power like the
+light is beforehand in seeing through the soul.... He" (the Christian
+whom he speaks of throughout as the man of divine knowledge) "prays for
+things essentially good.
+
+"Wherefore it best becomes those to pray who have an adequate knowledge
+of God, and possess virtue in accordance with Him--who know what are
+real goods, and what we should petition for, and when, and how in each
+case. But it is the extreme of ignorance to ask {126} from those who are
+not gods as though they were gods.... Whence since there is one only
+good God, both we ourselves and the angels supplicate from Him alone,
+that some good things might be given to us, and others might remain with
+us. In this way he (the Christian) is always in a state of purity fit
+for prayer. He prays with angels, as being himself equal with angels;
+and as one who is never beyond the holy protecting guard. And if he pray
+alone he has the whole choir of angels with him." [Stromata, lib. vii. §
+7. p. 851, &c.; Section xii. p. 879.]
+
+Clement has alluded to instances alleged by the Greeks of the effects of
+prayer, and he adds, "Our whole Scripture is full of instances of God
+hearing and granting every request according to the prayers of the
+just." [Lib. vi. § iii. p. 753.]
+
+Having in the same section referred to the opinion of some Greeks as to
+the power of demons over the affairs of mortals, he adds, "But they
+think it matters nothing whether we speak of these as gods or as angels,
+calling the spirits of such 'demons,' and teaching that they should be
+worshipped by men, as having, by divine providence, on account of the
+purity of their lives, received authority to be conversant about earthly
+places, in order that they may minister to mortals." [Lib. vi. § iii. p.
+755.]
+
+Is it possible to suppose that this teacher in Christ's school had any
+idea of a Christian praying to saints or angels? In the last passage,
+the language in which he quotes the errors of heathen superstition to
+refute them, so nearly approaches the language of the Church of Rome
+when speaking of the powers of saints and angels to assist the
+suppliant, that if Clement had entertained {127} any thought whatever of
+a Christian praying for aid and intercession to saint or angel, he must
+have mentioned it, especially after the previous passage on the
+absurdity and gross ignorance of praying for any good at the hands of
+any other than the one true God.
+
+In common with his contemporaries, Clement considered the angels to be,
+as we mortals are, in a state requiring all the protection and help to
+be obtained by prayer; he believed that the angels pray with us, and
+carry our prayers to God: but the thought of addressing them by
+invocation does not appear to have occurred to his mind. At the close of
+his Pædagogus he has left on record a form of prayer to God alone very
+peculiar and interesting. He closes it by an ascription of glory to the
+blessed Trinity. But there is no allusion to saint, or angel, or virgin
+mother.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.--TERTULLIAN.
+
+
+Tertullian, of Carthage, was a contemporary of Clement of Alexandria,
+and so nearly of the same age, that doubts have existed, which of the
+two should take priority in point of time. There is a very wide
+difference in the character and tone of their works, as there was in the
+frame and constitution of their minds. The lenient and liberal views of
+the erudite and accomplished master of the school of Alexandria, stand
+out in prominent and broad contrast with the harsh and austere doctrines
+of Tertullian.
+
+Tertullian fell into errors of a very serious kind by joining himself to
+the heretic Montanus; still on his {128} mind is discoverable the
+working of that spirit which animated the early converts of
+Christianity; and his whole soul seems to have been filled with a desire
+to promote the practical influence of the Gospel.
+
+Jerome, the oracle on such subjects, from whom the Roman Catholic Church
+is unwilling to allow any appeal, expressly tells us that Cyprian[47],
+who called Tertullian the Master, never passed a single day without
+studying his works; and that after Tertullian had remained a presbyter
+of the Church to middle age, he was driven, by the envy and revilings of
+the members of the Roman Church, to fall from its unity, and espouse
+Montanism. Bellarmin calls him a heretic, and says he is the first
+heretic who denied that the saints went at once and forthwith to glory.
+[Hieron. edit. 1684. tom. i. p. 183.]
+
+ [Footnote 47: The words of Jerome, who refers to the
+ circumstance more than once, are very striking: "I saw one
+ Paulus, who said that he had seen the secretary (notarium) of
+ Cyprian at Rome, who used to tell him that Cyprian never passed
+ a single day without reading Tertullian; and that he often said
+ to him, 'Give me the Master,' meaning Tertullian."--Hieron. vol.
+ iv. part ii. p. 115.]
+
+A decided line of distinction is drawn by Roman Catholic writers between
+the works of Tertullian written before he espoused the errors of
+Montanus, and his works written after that unhappy step. The former they
+hold in great estimation, the latter are by many considered of far less
+authority. I do not see how such a distinction ought to affect his
+testimony on the historical point immediately before us. If indeed he
+had held the doctrine of the invocation of saints whilst he continued in
+the full communion of the Church, and rejected it afterwards, no honest
+and sensible writer would quote his later opinions against the practice.
+But we are only seeking in his works for evidence of the {129} matter of
+fact,--Is there any proof in the works of Tertullian that the invocation
+of saints formed a part of the doctrine and practice of the Catholic
+Church in his time[48]? His works will be found in the note, arranged
+under those two heads, as nearly as I can ascertain the preponderating
+sentiments of critics[49].
+
+ [Footnote 48: The reader, who may be induced to consult the work
+ of the present Bishop of Lincoln, entitled, "The Ecclesiastical
+ History of the second and third Centuries, illustrated from the
+ writings of Tertullian," will there find, in the examination and
+ application of Tertullian's remains, the union of sound
+ judgment, diligence in research, clearness of perception,
+ acuteness in discovery, and great erudition mingled with
+ charity.]
+
+ [Footnote 49: Works of Tertullian before he became a
+ Montanist:--
+
+ Adversus Judæos.
+ The Tract ad Martyres.
+ The two Books ad Nationes.
+ The Apology, and the Tract de Præscriptione Hæreticorum.
+ The Tract de Testimonio Animæ.
+ The Tracts de Patientia, de Oratione, de Baptismo, de
+ Poenitentia.
+ The two books ad Uxorem.
+
+ Works written after he espoused Montanism:--
+
+ The Tracts de Spectaculis and de Idololatria, though others say
+ these should be ranked among the first class.
+ The Tracts de Corona, and de Fuga in persecutione, Scorpiace,
+ and ad Scapulam.
+ The Tracts de Exhortatione Castitatis, de Monogamia, de
+ Pudicitia, de Jejuniis, de Virginibus Velandis, de Pallio, the
+ five books against Marcion, the Tracts adversus Valentinianos,
+ de Carne Christi, de Resurrectione Carnis, adversus Hermogenem,
+ de Anima, adversus Praxeam, de Cultu Foeminarum.]
+
+I will detain you only by a very few quotations from this father.
+
+In his Apology, sect. 30, we read this very remarkable passage, "We
+invoke the eternal God, the true God, the living God, for the safety of
+the emperor.... {130} Thither (heavenward) looking up, with hands
+extended, because they are innocent; with our head bare, because we are
+not ashamed; in fine, without a prompter, because it is from the heart;
+we Christians pray for all rulers a long life, a secure government, a
+safe home, brave armies, a faithful senate, a good people, a quiet
+world.... For these things I cannot ask in prayer from any other except
+Him from whom I know that I shall obtain; because both He is the one who
+alone grants, and I am the one whom it behoveth to obtain by
+prayer;--his servant, who looks to him alone, who for the sake of his
+religion am put to death, who offer to him a rich and a greater victim,
+which He has commanded; prayer from a chaste frame, from a harmless
+soul, from a holy spirit.... So, let hoofs dig into us, thus stretched
+forward to God, let crosses suspend us, let fires embrace us, let swords
+sever our necks from the body, let beasts rush upon us,--the very frame
+of mind of a praying Christian is prepared for every torment. This do,
+ye good presidents; tear ye away the soul that is praying for the
+emperor." [Page 27.]
+
+In the opening of his reflections on the Lord's Prayer, he says,--
+
+"Let us consider therefore, beloved, in the first place, the heavenly
+wisdom in the precept of praying in secret, by which he required, in a
+man, faith to believe that both the sight and the hearing of the
+Omnipotent God is present under our roofs and in our secret places; and
+desired the lowliness of faith, that to Him alone, whom he believed to
+hear and to see every where, he would offer his worship." [Page 129.]
+
+The only other reference which I will make, is to {131} the solemn
+declaration of Tertullian's Creed; the last clause of which, though in
+perfect accordance with the sentiments of his contemporaries, seems to
+have been regarded with hostile eyes by modern writers of the Church of
+Rome, because it decidedly bids us look to the day of judgment for the
+saints being taken to the enjoyment of heaven; and consequently implies
+that they cannot be properly invoked now.
+
+"To profess now what we defend: By the rule of our faith we believe that
+God is altogether one, and no other than the Creator of the world, who
+produced all things out of nothing by his Word first of all sent down.
+That that Word, called his Son, was variously seen by the patriarchs in
+the name of God; was always heard in the prophets; at length, borne by
+the spirit and power of God the Father into the Virgin Mary, was made
+flesh in her womb, was born of her, and was Jesus Christ. Afterwards He
+preached a new law and a new promise of the kingdom of heaven; wrought
+miracles, was crucified, rose again the third day, and, being taken up
+into heaven, sat on the right hand of the Father; and He sent in his own
+stead the power of the Holy Ghost, to guide believers; that He shall
+come with glory to take the saints to the enjoyment of eternal life and
+the heavenly promises, and to condemn the impious to eternal fire,
+making a reviving of both classes with the restoration of the body." [De
+Præscriptione Hæreticorum, § 13. p. 206.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some notice must here be taken of METHODIUS, a pious Christian, of the
+third century. A work (Methodius, Gl. Combes. Paris, 1644) {132}
+formerly attributed to him has been quoted in proof of the early
+invocation of saints; but the work, among many others, has been long ago
+allowed by the best Roman Catholic critics to be the production of a
+later age. (Fabricius, vol. vii. p. 268, and vol. x. p. 241.) Many
+homilies, purporting to have been delivered on the festival of our
+Lord's presentation in the temple, at so early a period, must be
+received as the works of a later age, because that feast began to be
+observed in the Church so late as the fifteenth year of Justinian, in
+the sixth century. Evidently, moreover, the theological language of the
+homily is of a period long subsequent to the date assigned to Methodius.
+In speaking of our blessed Saviour, for example, he employs expressions
+to guard against the Arian heresy, and makes extracts apparently from
+the Nicene creed, "God of himself, and not by grace," "Very God of very
+God, very light of very light, who for us men and our salvation, &c."
+The general opinion indeed seems to be that this, and many other
+writings formerly ascribed to the first Methodius, were written by
+persons of a subsequent age, who either were of the same name or assumed
+his. Even were the work genuine, it would afford just as strong a
+demonstration that Methodius believed that the city of Jerusalem could
+hear his salutation, as that the saints could hear his prayer; for he
+addresses the same "Hail" to Mary, Symeon, and the Holy City alike,
+calling it the "earthly heaven." [Greek: Chairois hae polis, ho epigeios
+ouranos.] {133}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION V.--THE EVIDENCE OF ORIGEN.
+
+
+Jerome informs us that Tertullian, whose remains we have last examined,
+lived to a very advanced age. Long, therefore, before his death
+flourished Origen, one of the most celebrated lights of the primitive
+Church. He was educated a Christian. Indeed his father is said to have
+suffered martyrdom about the year 202. Origen was a pupil of Clement of
+Alexandria. His virtues and his labours have called forth the admiration
+of all ages; and though he cannot be implicitly followed as a teacher,
+what still remains of his works will be delivered down as a rich
+treasure to succeeding times. He was a most voluminous writer; and
+Jerome asked the members of his church, "Who is there among us that can
+read as many books as Origen has composed?" [Vol. iv. epist. xli. p.
+346.] A large proportion of his works are lost; and of those which
+remain, few are preserved in the original Greek. We are often obliged to
+study Origen through the medium of a translation, the accuracy of which
+we have no means of verifying. A difficult and delicate duty also
+devolves upon the theological student to determine which of the works
+attributed to Origen are genuine and which are spurious; and what parts,
+moreover, of the works received on the whole as genuine came from his
+pen. Of {134} the spurious works, some are so palpably written in a much
+later age, and by authors of different religious views, that no one,
+after weighing the evidence, can be at a loss what decision to make
+concerning them; in the case of others, claims and objections may appear
+to be more evenly balanced. I trust on the one hand to refer to no works
+for Origen's testimony which are not confessedly his, nor on the other
+to exclude any passage which is not decidedly spurious; whilst in one
+particular case more immediately connected with our subject, I am
+induced to enter further in detail into a critical examination of the
+genuineness and value of a passage than the character of this work
+generally requires. The great importance attached to the testimony of
+that passage by some defenders of the worship paid to angels, may be
+admitted to justify the fulness of the criticism. Lest, however, its
+insertion in the body of the work might seem inconveniently to interfere
+with the reader's progress in our argument, I have thought it best to
+include it in a supplementary section at the close of our inquiry into
+the evidence of Origen.
+
+Coccius, in his elaborate work, quotes the two following passages as
+Origen's, without expressing any hesitation or doubt respecting their
+genuineness, in which he is followed by writers of the present day. The
+passages are alleged in proof that Origen held and put in practice the
+doctrine of the invocation of saints; and they form the first quotations
+made by Coccius under the section headed by this title: "That the saints
+are to be invoked, proved by the testimony of the Greek Fathers."
+
+The first passage is couched in these words: "I will {135} begin to
+throw myself upon my knees, and pray to all the saints to come to my
+aid; for I do not dare, in consequence of my excess of wickedness, to
+call upon God. O Saints of God, you I pray with weeping full of grief,
+that ye would propitiate his mercies for me miserable. Alas me! Father
+Abraham, pray for me, that I be not driven from thy bosom, which I
+greatly long for, and yet not worthily, because of the greatness of my
+sins."
+
+Coccius cites this passage as from "Origen in Lament," and it has been
+recently appealed to under the title of "Origen on the Lamentations."
+Here, however, is a very great mistake. Origen's work on the
+Lamentations, called also "Selecta in Threnos," and inserted in the
+Benedictine edition (Vol. iii. p. 321.), is entirely a different
+production from the work which contains the above extract. This
+apocryphal work, on the other hand, does not profess to be the comment
+of Origen on the Lamentations, but the Lament or Wailing of Origen
+himself; or, as it used to be called, the Penitence of Origen. (In the
+Paris edition of 1519 it is called "Planctus, seu Lamentum Origenis."
+Pope Gelasius refers to it as "Poenitentia Origenis.") That this work
+has no pretensions whatever to be regarded as Origen's, has been long
+placed beyond doubt. Even in the edition of 1545, this treatise is
+prefaced by Erasmus in these words, "This Lamentation was neither
+written by Origen nor translated by Jerome, but is the fiction of some
+unlearned man, who attempted, under colour of this, to throw disgrace
+upon Origen." [Basil, 1545. vol. i. p. 498.] In the Benedictine edition
+(Paris, 1733.) no trace of this work is to be found. They do not admit
+it among the doubtful, or even the spurious works; they do not so {136}
+much as give room for it in the appendix; on the contrary, they drop it
+altogether as utterly unworthy of being any longer preserved. Instead,
+however, of admitting the work itself, these editors have supplied
+abundant reason for its exclusion, by inserting the sentiments of
+Huetius, or Huet, the very learned bishop of Avranches. He tells us,
+that formerly to Origen's work on Principles used to be appended a
+treatise called, the Lament of Origen, the Latin translation of which
+Guido referred to Jerome. After quoting the passage of Erasmus (as above
+cited from the edition of 1545) in proof of its having been "neither
+written by Origen nor translated by Jerome, but the fabrication of some
+unlearned man, who attempted, under colour of this, to throw disgrace on
+Origen, just as they forged a letter in Jerome's name, lamenting that he
+had ever thought with Origen," Huet proceeds thus: "And Gelasius in the
+Roman Council writes, 'The book which is called The Repentance of
+Origen, apocryphal.' It is wonderful, therefore, that without any mark
+of its false character, it should be sometimes cited by some theologians
+in evidence. Here we may smile at the supineness of a certain heterodox
+man of the present age, who thought the 'Lament,' ascribed to Origen, to
+be something different from the Book of Repentance." [Vol. iv. part ii.
+p. 326.]
+
+The Decree here referred to of Pope Gelasius, made in the Roman Council,
+A.D. 494, by that pontiff, in conjunction with seventy bishops, contains
+these strong expressions, before enumerating some few of the books then
+condemned: "Other works written by heretics and schismatics, the
+Catholic and Apostolic Church by {137} no means receives; of them we
+think it right to subjoin a few which have occurred to our memory, and
+are to be avoided by Catholics." [Conc. Labb. vol. iv. p. 1265.] Then
+follows a list of prohibited works, among which we read, "the book
+called The Repentance of Origen, apocryphal," the very book which Huet
+identifies with the "Lament of Origen," still cited as evidence even in
+the present day. (See Appendix A.)
+
+The second passage cited by Coccius, and also by writers of the present
+time, as Origen's, without any allusion to its spurious and apocryphal
+character, is from the second book of the work called Origen on Job. The
+words cited run thus: "O blessed Job, who art living for ever with God,
+and remainest conqueror in the sight of the Lord the King, pray for us
+wretched, that the mercy of the terrible God may protect us in all our
+afflictions, and deliver us from all oppressions of the wicked one; and
+number us with the just, and enrol us among those who are saved, and
+make us rest with them in his kingdom, where for ever with the saints we
+may magnify him."
+
+This work, like the former, has no claim whatever to be regarded as
+Origen's. It has long been discarded by the learned. Indeed so far back
+as 1545, Erasmus, in his Censura, proved that it was written long after
+the time of Origen by an Arian. (Basil, 1545. vol. i. p. 408; and
+"Censura.") By the Benedictine editors it is transferred to an appendix
+as the Commentary of an anonymous writer on Job; and they thus express
+their judgment as to its being a forgery: "The Commentary of an
+anonymous writer on Job, in previous editions, is ascribed to Origen;
+{138} but that it is not his, Huet proves by unconquerable arguments.
+This translation is assigned to Hilary, the bishop; but although it is
+clear from various proofs of Jerome, that St. Hilary translated the
+tracts or homilies of Origen on Job, yet there is no reason why that man
+who wrote with the highest praise against the Arians, should be
+considered as the translator of this work, which is infected with the
+corruption of Arianism, and which is not Origen's." [Vol. ii. p. 894.]
+Erasmus calls the prologue to this treatise on Job "the production of a
+silly talkative man, neither learned nor modest."
+
+It is impossible not to feel, with regard to these two works, the
+sentiments which, as we have already seen, the Bishop of Avranches has
+so strongly expressed on one. "It is wonderful, that they should be
+sometimes cited in evidence by some theologians, without any mark of
+their being forgeries."
+
+Proceeding with our examination of the sentiments of Origen, I would
+here premise, that not the smallest doubt can be entertained that Origen
+believed the angels to be ministering spirits, real, active, zealous
+workmen and fellow-labourers with us in the momentous and awful business
+of our eternal salvation. He represents the angels as members of the
+same family with ourselves, as worshippers of the same God, as servants
+of the same master, as children of the same father, as disciples of the
+same heavenly teacher, as learners of one and the same heavenly
+doctrine. He contemplates them as members of our Christian
+congregations, as joining with us in prayer to our heavenly Benefactor,
+as taking pleasure when they hear in our {139} assemblies what is
+agreeable to the will of God, and as being present too not only
+generally in the Christian Church, but also with individual members of
+it[50]. But does Origen, therefore, countenance any invocation of them?
+Let us appeal to himself.
+
+ [Footnote 50: One or two references will supply abundant proof
+ of this: "I do not doubt that in our congregation angels are
+ present, not only in general to the whole Church, but also
+ individually with those of whom it is said, 'Their angels do
+ always behold the face of my Father who is in heaven.' A twofold
+ Church is here: one of men, the other of angels. If we say any
+ thing agreeably to reason and the mind of Scripture, the angels
+ rejoice to pray with us." And a little above, "Our Saviour,
+ therefore, as well as the Holy Spirit, who spoke by the
+ prophets, instructs not only men, but angels and invisible
+ powers."--Hom, xxiii. in Luc. vol. iii. p. 961.
+
+ "Whoever, therefore, confessing his sins, repents, or confesses
+ Christ before men in persecutions, is applauded by his brethren.
+ For there is joy and gladness to the angels in heaven over one
+ sinner that repenteth. By them, therefore, as by brethren (for
+ both men and angels are sons of the same Creator and Father)
+ they are praised."--In Genes. Hom. xvii. p. 110.]
+
+Celsus accused the Christians of being atheists, godless, men without
+God, because they would not worship those gods many and lords many, and
+those secondary, subordinate, auxiliary, and ministering divinities with
+which the heathen mythology abounded: Origen answers, we are not
+godless, we are not without an object of our prayer; we pray to God
+Almighty alone through the mediation only of his Son.
+
+"We must pray to God alone ([Greek: Mono gar proseukteon to epi pasi
+Theo]), who is over all things; and we must pray also to the
+only-begotten and first-born of every creature, the Word of God; and we
+must implore him as our High Priest to carry our prayer, first coming to
+him, to his God and our {140} God, to his Father and the Father of those
+who live agreeably to the word of God." [Cont. Cels. § 8. c. xxvi. vol.
+i. p. 761.]
+
+But Celsus, in this well representing the weakness and failings of human
+nature, still urged on the Christian the necessity, or at all events the
+expediency, of conciliating those intermediate beings who executed the
+will of the Supreme Being, and might haply have much left at their own
+will and discretion to give or to withhold; and therefore the
+desirableness of securing their good offices by prayer. To this Origen
+answers:
+
+"The one God ([Greek: Hena oun ton epi pasi theon haemin
+exenmenisteon])--the God who is over all, is to be propitiated by us,
+and to be appeased by prayer; the God who is rendered favourable by
+piety and all virtue. But if he (Celsus) is desirous, after the supreme
+God, to propitiate some others also, let him bear in mind, that just as
+a body in motion is accompanied by the motion of its shadow, so also by
+rendering the supreme God favourable, it follows that the person has all
+his (God's) friends, angels, souls, spirits, favourable also; for they
+sympathize with those who are worthy of God's favour; and not only do
+they become kindly affected towards the worthy, but they also join in
+their work with those who desire to worship the supreme God; and they
+propitiate him, and they pray with us, and supplicate with us; so that
+we boldly say, that together with men who on principle prefer the better
+part, and pray to God, ten thousands of holy powers join in prayer
+UNASKED ([Greek: aklaetoi])," [UNBIDDEN, UNCALLED upon.] [Cont. Cels.
+lib. viii. § 64. vol. i. p. 789.]
+
+What an opportunity was here for Origen to have stated, that though
+Christians do not call upon demons and the subordinate divinities of
+heathenism to aid {141} them, yet that they do call upon the ministering
+spirits, the true holy angels, messengers and servants of the most High
+God! But whilst speaking of them, and magnifying the blessings derived
+to man through their ministry, so far from encouraging us to ask them
+for their good offices, his testimony on the contrary is not merely
+negative; he positively asserts that when they assist mankind, it is
+without any request or prayer from man. Could this come from one who
+invoked angels?
+
+Another passage, although it adds little to the evidence of the above
+extract, I am unwilling to pass by, because it beautifully illustrates
+by the doctrine and practice of Origen the prayer, the only one adopted
+by the Anglican Church, offered by the Church to God for the succour and
+defence of the holy angels. Speaking of the unsatisfactory slippery road
+which they tread, who either depend upon the agency of demons for good,
+or are distressed by the fear of evil from them, Origen adds, "How far
+better ([Greek: poso Beltion]) were it to commit oneself to God who is
+over all, through Him who instructed us in this doctrine, Jesus Christ,
+and OF HIM to ask for every aid from the holy angels and the just, that
+they may rescue us from the earthly demons." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii. §
+60. vol. i. p. 786.]
+
+In the following passage Origen answers the question of Celsus: "If you
+Christians admit the existence of angels, tell us what you consider
+their nature to be?" [Cont. Cels. lib. v. § 4. p. 579.]
+
+"Come," replies Origen, "let us consider these points. Now we
+confessedly say, that the angels are ministering spirits, and sent to
+minister on account of those who are to be heirs of salvation; that they
+ascend, bearing with them the supplications of men into the most pure
+{142} heavenly places of the world; and that they again descend from
+thence, bearing to each in proportion to what is appointed by God for
+them to minister to the well-doers. And learning that these are, from
+their work, called angels ([Greek: aggeloi], messengers, ministers sent
+to execute some commission), we find them, because they are divine,
+sometimes called even gods in the Holy Scriptures; but not so, as for
+any injunction to be given to us to worship and adore, instead of God,
+those who minister, and bring to us the things of God. For every request
+and prayer, and supplication and thanksgiving, must be sent up to Him
+who is God above all, through the High Priest, who is above all angels,
+even the living Word of God. And we also make our requests to the Word,
+and supplicate Him, and moreover offer our prayer to Him; if we can
+understand the difference between the right use and the abuse of prayer.
+For it is not reasonable for us to call upon angels, without receiving a
+knowledge concerning them which is above man. But supposing the
+knowledge concerning them, wonderful and unutterable as it is, had been
+received; that very knowledge describing their nature, and those to whom
+they are respectively assigned, would not give confidence in praying to
+any other than to Him who is sufficient for every thing, God who is
+above all, through our Saviour, the Son of God, who is the word, and
+wisdom, and the truth, and whatsoever else the writings of the prophets
+of God, and the Apostles of Jesus say concerning Him. But for the angels
+of God to be favourable to us, and to do all things for us, our
+disposition towards God is sufficient; we copy them to the utmost of
+human strength, {143} as they copy God. And our conception concerning
+his Son, the Word, according to what is come to us, is not opposed to
+the more clear conception of the holy angels concerning Him, but is
+daily approximating towards it in clearness and perspicuity."
+
+Again, he thus writes: "But Celsus wishes us to dedicate the
+first-fruits unto the demons; but we to Him who said, Let the earth
+bring forth grass, &c. But to whom we give the first-fruits, to him we
+send up also our prayers; having a great High Priest who is entered into
+the heavens, Jesus the Son of God; and this confession we hold fast as
+long as we live, having God favourable unto us, and his only-begotten
+Son being manifested among us, Jesus Christ. But if we wish to have a
+multitude favourable unto us, we learn that thousand thousands stand by
+Him, and ten thousand thousands minister unto Him; who, regarding those
+as kinsfolks and friends who imitate their piety to God, work together
+for the salvation of them who call upon God and pray sincerely;
+appearing also, and thinking that they ought to listen to them, and as
+if upon one watchword to go forth for the benefit and salvation of those
+who pray to God, to whom they also pray." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii. § 34.
+(Benedict, p. 766.)]
+
+After these multiplied declarations of Origen, not only confessing that
+Christians did not pray to the angels, but vindicating them from the
+charge of impiety brought against them by their enemies for their
+neglect of the worship of angels, is it possible to regard him as a
+witness in favour of prayer to angels?
+
+But it has been said that Origen in another passage (Cont. Cels. lib.
+viii. § 13. p. 751.) {144} plainly implies, that he would not be
+unwilling to discuss the question of some worship being due to angels
+and archangels, provided the idea of that worship, and the acts of the
+worshippers, were first cleared of all misapprehension. And I would not
+that any Catholic, whether in communion with the Church of England or of
+Rome, should make any other answer than Origen here gave to Celsus. Let
+me speak freely on this point. I should not respect the memory of Origen
+as I do, had he taught differently. The word which he uses is the Greek
+word "therapeusis," precisely the same word with that which the learned
+in medicine now use to describe the means of healing diseases. It is a
+word of very wide import. It signifies the care which a physician takes
+of his patient; the service paid to a master; the attention given to a
+superior; the affectionate attendance of a friend; the allegiance of a
+subject; the worship of the Supreme Being. Origen says, Provided Celsus
+will specify what kind of "therapeusis" he would wish to be paid to
+those angels and archangels whose existence we acknowledge, I am ready
+to enter upon the subject with him. This is all he says. And we of the
+Anglican Church are ready from our hearts to join him. Call it by what
+name we may, we are never backward in acknowledging ourselves bound to
+render it. We pay to the angels and archangels, and all the company of
+heaven, the homage of respect, and veneration, and love. They are indeed
+our fellow-servants; they are, like ourselves, creatures of God's hand;
+but they are exalted far above us in nature and in office. By the grace
+of God, we would daily endeavour to become less distant from {145} them
+in purity, in zeal, in obedience. Origen here speaks not one word of
+adoration, of invocation, of prayer. He speaks of a feeling and a
+behaviour, which the Greeks called "therapeusis," and which we best
+render by "respect, veneration, and love." Far from us be the thought of
+lowering the holy angels in the eyes of our fellow-creatures; equally
+far from us be the thought of invoking them, of asking them even for
+their prayers. They are holy creatures and holy messengers: we will
+think and speak of them with reverence, and gratitude, and affection;
+but they are creatures and messengers still, and when we think or speak
+of the object of prayer, we think and speak solely and exclusively of
+God.
+
+With regard to Origen's opinion, as to the invocation of the souls of
+saints departed, a very few words will suffice. He clearly records his
+opinion that the faithful are still waiting for us, and that till we all
+rejoice together, their joy will not be full: he leaves among the
+mysteries not to be solved now the question whether the departed can
+benefit the human race at all; and he has added reflections, full of
+edifying and solemn admonition, which would dissuade his
+fellow-believers from placing their confidence in any virtues, or
+intercessions, or merits of saints, and in any thing except the mere
+mercy of God, through Jesus Christ, and our own individual labour in the
+work of the Lord.
+
+In his seventh homily on Leviticus, in a passage partly quoted by
+Bellarmin, we read[51]--"Not even the Apostles have yet received their
+joy, but even they are waiting, in order that I also may become a
+partaker of {146} their joy. For the saints departing hence do not
+immediately receive all the rewards of their deserts; but they wait even
+for us, though we be delaying and dilatory[52]. For they have not
+perfect joy as long as they grieve for our errors, and mourn for our
+sins." Then, having quoted the Epistle to the Hebrews, he
+proceeds,--"You see, therefore, that Abraham is yet waiting to obtain
+those things that are perfect; so is Isaac and Jacob; and so all the
+prophets are waiting for us, that they might obtain eternal blessedness
+with us. Wherefore, even this mystery is kept, to the last day of
+delayed judgment."
+
+ [Footnote 51: Vol. ii. p. 222. Nondum enim receperunt lætitiam
+ suam, ne apostoli quidem, &c. But see Huetius on Origen, lib.
+ ii. q. 11. No. 10.]
+
+ [Footnote 52: He thinks it probable, that the saints departed
+ feel an interest in the welfare of men on earth. See vol. iv. p.
+ 273.]
+
+Modern Roman Catholic writers tell us, that we must consider Origen here
+as only referring to the reunion of the soul with the body; but his
+words cannot be so interpreted. The cause of the saints still waiting
+for their consummation of bliss, is stated to be the will of God, that
+all the faithful should enter upon their full enjoyment of blessedness
+together.
+
+Again: it may be asked, whether the following passage could have come
+from the pen of one who prayed to the saints, as already reigning with
+Christ in heaven.
+
+"But now whether the saints who are removed from the body and are with
+Christ, act at all, and labour for us, like the angels who minister to
+our salvation; or whether, again, the wicked removed from the body act
+at all according to the purpose of their own mind, like the bad angels,
+with whom, it is said by Christ, that they will be sent into eternal
+fires;--let this too be {147} considered among the secret things of God,
+mysteries not to be committed to writing." [Epist. ad Rom. lib. ii.
+(Benedict. vol. iv. p. 479.) "Jam vero si etiam," &c.]
+
+In a passage found in Origen's Comment on Ezekiel's text, "Though Noah,
+Daniel, and Job, were in it, they should deliver neither son nor
+daughter, they should deliver only their own souls by their
+righteousness," [Hom. iii. vol. iii. p. 372.] independently of the
+testimony borne to the point before us, we read a very interesting and
+awakening lesson of general application:--
+
+"First, let us expound the passage agreeably to its plain sense, in
+consequence of the ignorance of some who maintain the ideas of their own
+mind to be the truth of God, and often say, 'Every one of us will be
+able by his prayers to snatch whomsoever he will from hell,' and
+introduce iniquity to the Lord; not seeing that the righteousness of the
+righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be
+upon him; so that each shall die in his own sin, and each live in his
+own person. My father being a martyr profits me nothing, if I shall not
+live well, and adorn the nobleness of my race,--that is, his testimony
+and confession, by which he was glorified in Christ. It profiteth not
+the Jews to say, 'We were not born of fornication, we have one father,
+the Lord;' and, a little after, 'Abraham is our father.' Whatever they
+may say, whatever they will assume, if they have not the faith of
+Abraham they make their boast in vain; for they will not be saved on
+account of their being children of Abraham. Since, therefore, some have
+formed incorrect notions, we have necessarily brought in the plain sense
+of the passage as to the letter, saying, Noah, Daniel, and Job will not
+rescue sons or daughters; they only will be saved. Let no {149} one of
+us put his trust in a just father, a holy mother, chaste brethren.
+Blessed is the man who hath his hope in himself, and in the right way.
+But to those who place confident trust in the saints, we bring forward
+no improper example,--'Cursed is the man whose hope is in man;' and
+again, 'Trust ye not in man.' And this also, 'It is good to trust in the
+Lord rather than in princes[53].' If we must hope in some object,
+leaving all others, let us hope in the Lord, saying, 'Though a host of
+men were set against me, yet shall not my heart be afraid.'"
+
+ [Footnote 53: These observations may perhaps refer more
+ especially to the saints still on earth; but they apply to all
+ helpers, save God alone.]
+
+He finishes the homily thus: "The righteous see three periods; the
+present, the period of change when the Lord will judge, and that which
+will be after the resurrection,--that is, the eternity of life in heaven
+in Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen."
+
+Can this confessor of the Christian faith have ever taught his
+fellow-believers to plead the merits of the saints, or to pray for their
+intercessions? How strongly are the above sentiments contrasted with a
+passage in the third of the spurious homilies called In Diversos; the
+first clause of which is referred to by Bellarmin, as containing
+Origen's approbation of giving honour to the saints[54].
+
+ [Footnote 54: I hardly need detain the reader by any proof of
+ the spuriousness of this passage; the whole work from which it
+ is taken is rejected altogether by the Benedictine editors:
+ "Reliqua ejusmodi spuria omittenda censuimus, qualia sunt ...
+ Homiliæ in diversos;" and they have not allowed a single line of
+ it to appear in their volumes, not even in the small
+ character.--Vol. iv. p. 1.]
+
+"The memory of these (the Innocents) is always {149} celebrated, as is
+right, in the Churches. These, therefore, since they were unjustly or
+impiously put to death in peace and rest, having suffered much for the
+name of the Lord, were taken from this world, to remain in the eternal
+Church for ever in Christ. But their parents for the merits of their
+suffering will receive a worthy recompense of reward from the just and
+eternal Lord God." Here we have strongly marked indeed the difference
+between Origen himself, and the errors fastened upon him by the design
+or ignorance of subsequent times.
+
+Were not his testimony a subject of great moment, I should plead guilty
+to having detained my readers too long on Origen; and yet I cannot
+dismiss him without first refreshing our minds with the remembrance of
+some of his beautiful reflections on a Christian's prayer. We need not
+read them with a controversial eye, and they may be profitable to us
+all.
+
+"I think, then, (says this early teacher in Christ's school) that when
+proceeding to prayer, a Christian will be more readily disposed, and be
+in a better tone for the general work of prayer, if he will first tarry
+a little, and put himself into the right frame, casting off every
+distracting and disturbing thought, and with his best endeavour
+recalling to mind the vastness of HIM to whom he is drawing near, and
+how unholy a thing it is to approach him with a carelessness and
+indifference, and, as it were, contempt; laying aside also every thing
+foreign to the subject;--so to come to prayer as one who stretcheth
+forth his soul first, before his hands; and lifts up his mind first,
+before his eyes, to God; and before he stands up, raising from the
+ground the leading [150} principle of his nature, and lifting that up to
+the Lord of all. So far casting away all remembrance of evil towards any
+of those who may seem to have injured him, as he wishes God not to
+remember evil against him, who has himself been guilty, and has
+trespassed against many of his neighbours, or in whatever he is
+conscious to have done contrary to right reason." [De Oratione, vol. i.
+§ 31. p. 267.]
+
+"Having divided prayer into its several parts" (he continues), "I may
+bring my work to a close. There are then four parts of prayer requiring
+description, which I have found scattered in the Scriptures, all of
+which every one should embody in his prayer:--
+
+"First, we must offer glory (doxologies) to the best of our ability in
+the opening and commencement of our prayer, to God through Christ who is
+glorified with Him in the Holy Spirit, who is praised together. After
+this each person should offer general thanksgivings both for the
+blessings granted to all, and for those which he has individually
+obtained from God. After the thanksgiving, it appears to me right, that
+becoming, as it were, a bitter accuser of his own sins to God, he should
+petition first of all for a remedy to release him from the habit which
+impels him to transgress, and then for remission of the past. And after
+the confession, I think he ought in the fourth place, to add a
+supplication for great and heavenly things, both individual and
+universal, and for his relations and friends. After all, he should close
+his prayer with an ascription of glory to God through Christ in the Holy
+Ghost." [Sect. 33. p. 271.] {151}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION VI.--SUPPLEMENTARY SECTION ON ORIGEN.
+
+
+I have above intimated my intention of reserving for a separate section
+our examination of a passage ascribed to Origen, in which he is
+represented as having invoked an angel to come down from heaven, to
+succour him and his fellow-creatures on earth. The passage purports to
+be part of Origen's comment on the opening verse of the prophecy of
+Ezekiel, "The heavens were opened." After the fullest investigation, and
+patient weighing of the whole section, I am fully persuaded, first, that
+the passage is an interpolation, never having come from the pen of
+Origen; and secondly, that, whoever were its author, it can be regarded
+only as an instance of those impassioned apostrophes, which are found in
+great variety in the addresses of ancient Christian orators. But since
+some of the most respected writers of the Church of Rome have regarded
+it as genuine, and deemed it worthy of being cited in evidence, I feel
+it incumbent to state at length, for those readers who may desire to
+enter at once fully into the question, the reasons on which my judgment
+is founded; whilst others, who may perhaps consider the discussion of
+the several points here as too great an interruption to the general
+argument, may for the present pass this section, and reserve it for
+subsequent inquiry.
+
+It will be, in the first place, necessary to quote the whole passage
+entire, however long; for the mere extract of that portion which is
+cited as Origen's prayer to an {152} angel, might leave a false
+impression as to the real merits of the case.
+
+"The heavens are opened. The heavens were closed, and at the coming of
+Christ they were opened, IN ORDER THAT THEY BEING LAID OPEN THE HOLY
+GHOST MIGHT COME UPON HIM in the appearance of a dove. For he could not
+come to us unless he had first descended on one who partook of his own
+nature. Jesus ascended up on high, he led captivity captive, he received
+gifts for men. He who descended is the same who ascended above all
+heavens, that he might fill all things; and he gave some as apostles,
+some as prophets, some as evangelists, some as pastors and masters, for
+the perfecting of the saints." [Vol. iii. p. 358. Hom. i. in Ezek.]
+
+"[The heavens were opened. It is not enough for one heaven to be opened:
+very many are opened, that not from one, but from all, angels may
+descend to those who are to be saved; angels who ascended and descended
+upon the Son of man, and came to him, and ministered to him. Now the
+angels descended because Christ first descended, fearing to descend
+before the Lord of all powers and things commanded. But when they saw
+the chieftain of the army of heaven dwelling in earthly places, then
+they entered through the opened road, following their Lord, and obeying
+his will, who distributes them as guardians of those that believe on his
+name. Thou yesterday wast under a devil, to-day thou art under an angel.
+Do not ye, saith the Lord, despise one of the least of those who are in
+the Church? Verily, I say unto you, that their angels through all things
+see the face of the Father who is in heaven. The angels attend on thy
+salvation; they were granted for the ministry of the Son of God, and
+{153} they say among themselves, If he descended, and descended into a
+body, if he is clothed in mortal flesh, and endured the cross, and died
+for man, why are we resting idle? Why do we spare ourselves? Haste away!
+Let all of us angels descend from heaven! Thus also was there a
+multitude of the heavenly host praising and blessing God when Christ was
+born. All things are full of angels. COME, ANGEL, take up one who by the
+word is converted from former error, from the doctrine of demons, from
+iniquity speaking on high, and taking him up like a good physician,
+cherish him, and instruct him. He is a little child, to-day he is born,
+an old man again growing young; and undertake him, granting him the
+baptism of the second regeneration; and summon to thyself other
+companions of thy ministry, that you all may together train for the
+faith those who have been sometime deceived. For there is greater joy in
+heaven over one sinner repenting, than over ninety and nine just persons
+who need no repentance. Every creature exults, rejoices with, and with
+applause addresses those who are to be saved; for the expectation of the
+creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God. And although
+those who have interpolated the apostolical writings are unwilling that
+such passages should be in their books as may prove Christ to be the
+Creator, yet every creature waiteth for the sons of God when they shall
+be freed from sin, when they shall be taken away from the hand of
+Zabulon[55], when they shall be regenerated by Christ. But now it is
+time that we touch somewhat on the present place. The Prophet sees not a
+vision, but visions of God. {154} Why did he see not one, but many
+visions? Hear the Lord promising and saying, I have multiplied visions.
+8. 'The fifth month.' This was the fifth year of the captivity of king
+Joachim. In the thirtieth year of Ezekiel's age, and the fifth of the
+captivity of Joachim, the prophet is sent to the Jews. The most merciful
+Father did not despise the people, nor leave them a long time
+unadmonished. It is the fifth year. How much time intervened? Five years
+elapsed since they were captives in bondage.]
+
+(The portion between brackets is what I regard as an interpolation.)
+
+ [Footnote 55: This word is frequently used for "Diabolum." Thus
+ in a hymn used in the Roman ritual on Michaelmas-day we read,
+ "Michaelem in virtute conterentem Zabulum."]
+
+"Immediately the Holy Spirit descends. He opened the heavens, that they
+who were oppressed by the yoke of bondage might see those things which
+were seen by the prophet. For when he says, The heavens were opened, in
+some measure they see with the eyes of their heart what he had seen even
+with the eyes of his flesh."
+
+Now the question is, Can this apostrophe to an angel be admitted as
+evidence that Origen held, and in his own person acted upon the doctrine
+of the Invocation of Angels?
+
+The nature of the present work precludes us from entering at length on
+the broad question, how far we can with safety regard the several
+writings which now purport to be translations of Origen's compositions,
+as on the whole the works of that early Christian writer. A multitude of
+those works which, until almost the middle of the sixteenth century,
+were circulated as Origen's, have long been by common consent excluded
+from the catalogue of his works[56]. On this subject I {155} would refer
+any one, who desires to enter upon the inquiry, to the several prefaces
+of the Benedictine editors, who point out many sources of information,
+as well from among their friends as from those with whom they differ.
+Our inquiry must be limited within far narrower bounds, though I trust
+our arguments may assist somewhat in establishing the principles on
+which the student may at first guide himself in the wider range of
+investigation.
+
+ [Footnote 56: See preface to vol. iv. of the Benedictine
+ edition.]
+
+We will first look to the external evidence bearing on the passage in
+question, and then to the internal character of the passage itself.
+
+Origen's Commentaries on Ezekiel were divided into no fewer than
+twenty-five volumes, which he is said to have begun in Cæsarea of
+Palestine, and to have finished in Athens. Of these only one single
+fragment remains, namely, part of the twenty-first volume[57]. Jerome
+says that he translated fourteen of Origen's homilies on Ezekiel. Of
+these not one passage in the original language of Origen is known to be
+in existence. We must now, therefore, either receive the existing
+translations generally as Origen's, (whether they are Jerome's
+translations or not,) or we must consider Origen's homilies on Ezekiel
+as altogether lost to us. But supposing that we receive these works as
+containing, on the whole, traditionary translations of Origen, the
+genuineness of any one passage may yet become the subject of fair
+criticism. And whilst some persons reject whole masses of them
+altogether, the history of his works cannot but suggest some very
+perplexing points of suspicion and doubt.
+
+ [Footnote 57: See Benedictine edition, vol. iii. p. 351. and
+ Eusebius, Eccl. Hist. lib. vi. c. 6. there referred to.] {156}
+
+The great body of his homilies, Origen probably delivered extempore in
+the early part of his ministry to the Christians of Cæsarea. Eusebius
+tells us, that not before Origen had reached his sixtieth year did he
+sanction the notaries (persons well known to history and corresponding
+to the short-hand writers[58] of the present day) in publishing any of
+his homilies. [Eccles. Hist. lib. vi. c. 36.] But the Benedictine
+editor, De la Rue, conceives that those men might surreptitiously and
+against the preacher's wishes have published some of Origen's homilies.
+Be this as it may. Suppose that the homilies on Ezekiel were published
+by Origen himself, and were translated by Jerome himself, our doubts are
+not removed even by that supposition. The same editor in the same
+preface tells us, "It is known to the learned that it was Jerome's
+habit, in translating Greek, sometimes to insert some things of his
+own[59]." Not that I for a moment conceive the passage under
+consideration to have come in its Latin dress from the pen of Jerome;
+for my conviction being that it is an interpolation of a much later
+date, I mention the circumstance to show, that even when Jerome, with
+his professed accuracy, is the translator, we can in no case feel sure
+that we are reading the exact and precise sentiments of Origen.
+
+ [Footnote 58: The Latin word "notarius" (notary) does not come
+ so near as our own English expression, "short-hand writer," to
+ the Greek word used by Eusebius,--"tachygraphus,"
+ "quick-writer." The report of Eusebius as to the homilies of
+ Origen having been delivered extempore, and taken down by these
+ "quick-writers," is confirmed by Pamphilus the martyr, as quoted
+ by Valesius, in the annotations on this passage of
+ Eusebius.--Apol. Orig. lib. i.]
+
+ [Footnote 59: Cui in vertendis Græcis sciunt eruditi solemne
+ esse nonnulla interdum de suo inserere.] {157}
+
+Ruffinus, his celebrated contemporary, accused Jerome of many
+inaccuracies in his translations; and yet what were the principles of
+translation adopted by Ruffinus himself, as his own, we are not left to
+infer; for we learn it from his own pen. His voluntary acknowledgment in
+the peroration which he added to Origen's Comment on the Epistle of St.
+Paul to the Romans, strongly and painfully exhibits to us how little
+dependence can safely be placed on such translations whenever the
+original is lost; how utterly insufficient and unsatisfactory is any
+evidence drawn from them, as to the real genuine sentiments and
+expressions of the author. Ruffinus informs us, that with regard to many
+of the various works of Origen, he changed the preacher's extemporary
+addresses, as delivered in the Church, into a more explanatory form,
+"adding, supplying, filling up what he thought wanting[60]."
+
+ [Footnote 60: Dum supplere cupimus ea quæ ab Origene in
+ auditorio Ecclesiæ extempore (non tam explanationis quam
+ ædificationis intentione) perorata sunt.... Si addere quod
+ videar, et explere quæ desunt.--Orig. vol. iv. p. 688.]
+
+Moreover, he proceeds so far as to tell us[61] that his false {158}
+friends had remonstrated with him for not publishing the works under his
+own name, instead of retaining Origen's, his changes having been so
+great; a point, which he was far from unwilling to acknowledge. This
+must appear to every one unsatisfactory in the extreme, and to shake
+one's confidence in any evidence drawn from such a source. Indeed, the
+Benedictine editor, with great cause and candour, laments this course of
+proceeding on the part of Ruffinus, as throwing a doubt and uncertainty,
+and suspicion, over all the works so tampered with. "This one thing
+(observes that honest editor) would the learned desire, that Ruffinus
+had spared himself the labour of filling up what he thought deficient.
+For since the Greek text has perished, it can scarcely with certainty be
+distinguished, where Origen himself speaks, or where Ruffinus obtrudes
+his own merchandise upon us." This is more than enough to justify our
+remarks. I must, however, refer to the conduct of another editor and
+translator of Origen, of a similar tendency. It unhappily shows the
+disposition to sacrifice every thing to the received opinions of the
+Church of Rome, rather than place the whole evidence of antiquity before
+the world, and abide by the result. How many works this principle, in
+worse hands, may have mutilated, or utterly buried in oblivion, and left
+to perish, it is impossible to conjecture; that the principle is
+unworthy the spirit of Christianity will not now be questioned. That
+editor and translator, in his advertisement on the Commentary upon St.
+John, thus professes the principles which he had adopted: "Know,
+moreover, that I have found nothing in this book which {159} seemed to
+be inconsistent with the decrees of holy Mother Church: for had I found
+any, I would not have translated the book, or would have marked the
+suspected place." [Quoted by the Benedictine, vol. iv. p. viii.] The
+Benedictine proceeds to say, that the writer had not kept his word, but
+had allowed many heterodox passages to escape, whilst he had
+deliberately withdrawn others.
+
+ [Footnote 61: His words, as indicative of his principles of
+ translation, and bearing immediately on the question, as to the
+ degree of authority which should be assigned to the remains of
+ Origen, when the original is lost, deserve a place here: "I am
+ exposed to a new sort of charge at their hands; for thus they
+ address me,--In your writings, since very many parts in them
+ (plurima in eis) are considered to be of your own production,
+ give the title of your own name, and write, for example, The
+ Books of Explanations of Ruffinus on the Epistle to the
+ Romans,--but the whole of this they offer me, not from any love
+ of me, but from hatred to the author. But I, who consult my
+ conscience more than my fame, even if I am seen to add some
+ things, and to fill up what are wanting, or to shorten what are
+ too long, yet I do not think it right to steal the title of him,
+ who laid the foundations of the works, and supplied the
+ materials for the buildings. Yet, in truth, it may be at the
+ option of the reader, when he shall have approved of the work,
+ to ascribe the merits to whom he will."]
+
+Many works probably, of the earliest ages, have been wholly or in part
+lost to us from the working of the same principle in its excess. Rather
+than perpetuate any sentiments at variance with the received doctrines
+of the Church, it was considered the duty of the faithful to let works,
+in themselves valuable, but containing such sentiments, altogether
+perish, or to exclude the objectionable passages.
+
+I would now invite you to examine the passage itself, and determine
+whether it does not bear within it internal evidence of its having been
+altogether interpolated.
+
+In the first place, on the words upon which it professes to be a
+comment, the author had already given his comment, and assigned to them
+another meaning. "The heavens were opened," he says: "Before the time of
+Christ the heavens were shut; but at his advent they were opened, THAT
+THE HOLY SPIRIT MIGHT DESCEND FIRST ON HIM;" quoting also among others
+the passage which speaks of Christ taking captivity captive. And then
+after the passage in question, in which he assigns a totally different
+reason for the opening of the heavens; without any allusion to the
+intervening ideas, he carries on, and concludes the comment which he had
+begun,--in words which fit on well with the close of that comment, but
+which, as they stand now at the close of the intervening passage about
+the angels, are abrupt and incoherent--"Forthwith the Holy Spirit {160}
+descended;" recurring also again to the idea which he had before
+introduced of Christ benefiting those who were in captivity. A passage
+which affixes to the words commented upon, a different interpretation
+from one already given in the same paragraph; and which forces itself
+abruptly and incoherently in the middle of a brief comment, must offer
+itself to our examination under strong grounds of suspicion, that it has
+been interpolated. But when we examine the substance of the passage, its
+sentiments, the ideas conveyed, and the associations suggested, and then
+think of the author to whom it is ascribed, few probably will be
+disposed to regard it as a faithful mirror in which to contemplate the
+real sentiments of Origen.
+
+How utterly unworthy of the sublime burst of Christian eloquence which
+now delights us in undoubted works of Origen, is this strange and
+degrading fiction! The true Origen THERE represents the tens of
+thousands of angelic spirits ten thousand times told, as ever
+surrounding the throne of God, and ministering for the blessing of those
+in whose behalf God himself wills them to serve. [Vol. i. p. 767. Contr.
+Cels. viii. 34.] Here he represents the revelation of the holiest of
+holies as a throwing open of the various divisions or compartments of
+the celestial kingdom for all the angels to hasten forth together, from
+their several places of indolence and carelessness and self-indulgence,
+(for such he represents their state to have been,) to visit this earth.
+Surely such a comment would better suit the mythology of the cave and
+dens of Æolus and his imprisoned winds (velut agmine facto qua data
+porta ruunt) than the awfully sublime revelation vouchsafed to the
+prophet Ezekiel. And how unworthy and degrading is that representation
+of the {161} heavenly host, resting inactive, and sparing themselves
+from toil, until they witnessed Christ's descent and humiliation; and
+then when chid and put to shame and rebuke, and mutually roused to
+action by their fellows, coming down to visit this earth, and rushing
+through the opened portals of heaven.
+
+Again, we see how incoherent is the whole section which contains the
+alleged prayer to angels: "Thou wast yesterday under a demon, to-day
+thou art under an angel: the angels minister to thy salvation; they are
+granted for the ministry of the Son of God, &c. All things are full of
+angels. Come, Angel, take up one who is converted from his ancient
+error, &c. And call to thee other companions of thy ministry, that all
+of you alike may train up to the faith those who were once deceived."
+Indeed the passage seems to carry within itself its own condemnation so
+entirely, that what we have before alleged, both of internal and
+external evidence, may appear superfluous. Surely the conceit of a
+preacher of God's word addressing an angel, (which of them he thus
+individually addresses does not appear; for he says not "My Angel," as
+though he were appealing to one whom he regarded as his guardian, the
+view gratuitously suggested in the marginal note of the Benedictine
+editor, "the invocation of a guardian angel,") and bidding some one
+angel, as a sort of summoner, to go and call to himself all the angels
+of heaven to come in one body, and instruct those who are in error, is,
+even as a rhetorical apostrophe, as unworthy the mind of a Christian
+philosopher, as it is in the light of a prayer totally inconsistent with
+the plain sentiments of Origen on the very subject of angelic
+invocation. Even had Origen not left us his deliberate opinions in works
+of undoubted genuineness, such a {162} strange, incoherent, and childish
+rhapsody could never be relied upon by sober and upright men as a
+precedent sanctioning a Christian's prayer to angels; no one would rely
+upon such evidence in points of far less moment, even were it
+uncontradicted by the same witness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION VII.--ST. CYPRIAN.
+
+
+In the middle of the third century, Cyprian [Jerom, vol. iv. p. 342.], a
+man of substance and a rhetorician of Carthage, was converted to
+Christianity. He was then fifty years of age; and his learning, virtues,
+and devotedness to the cause which he had espoused, very soon raised him
+to the dignity, the responsibility, and, in those days, the great
+danger, of the Episcopate. (Cyprian is said to have been converted about
+A.D. 246, to have been consecrated A.D. 248, and to have suffered
+martyrdom A.D. 258.) Many of his writings of undoubted genuineness are
+preserved, and they have been appealed to in every age as the works of a
+faithful son of the Catholic Church. On the subject of prayer he has
+written very powerfully and affectingly; but I find no expression which
+can by possibility imply that he practised or countenanced the
+invocation of saints and angels. I have carefully examined every
+sentence alleged by its most strenuous defenders, and I cannot extract
+from them one single grain of evidence which can bear the test of
+inquiry. Even did the passages quoted require to be taken in the sense
+affixed to them {163} by those advocates, they prove nothing; they do
+not bear even remotely upon the subject, whilst I am persuaded that to
+every unprejudiced mind a meaning will appear to have been attached to
+them which the author did not intend to convey.
+
+The first quotation to which our attention is called is from the close
+of his treatise De Habitu Virginum, which contains some very edifying
+reflections. In the last clause of that treatise the advocates for the
+invocation of saints represent Cyprian as requesting the virgins to
+remember him in their prayers at the throne of grace when they shall
+have been taken to heaven. "As we have borne the image of Him who is of
+the earth, let us also bear the image of him who is from heaven. This
+image the virgin-state bears,--integrity bears it, holiness and truth
+bear it; rules of discipline mindful of God bear it, retaining justice
+with religion, firm in the faith, humble in fear, strong to endure all
+things, gentle to receive an injury, readily disposed to pity, with one
+mind and with one heart in brotherly peace. All which ye ought, O good
+virgins, to observe, to love and fulfil; ye who, retired for the service
+of God and Christ, with your greater and better part are going before
+towards the Lord to whom you have devoted yourselves. Let those who are
+advanced in age exercise rule over the younger; ye younger, offer to
+your equals a stimulus; encourage yourselves by mutual exhortations; by
+examples emulous of virtue invite each other to glory; remain firm;
+conduct yourselves spiritually; gain the end happily. Only remember us
+then, when your virgin-state shall begin to be honoured." [Tantum
+mementote tunc nostri, cum incipiet in vobis virginitas honorari.--Page
+180.] {164}
+
+The second instance, from the close of his letter to Cornelius, puts
+before us a beautiful act of friendship and brotherly affection worthy
+of every Christian brother's and friend's imitation. But how it can be
+applied in supporting the cause of the invocation of saints, I cannot
+see. The supporters of that doctrine say that Cyprian suggests to his
+friend, still living on earth, that whichever of the two should be first
+called away, he should continue when in heaven to pray for the survivor
+on earth. Suppose it to be so. That has not any approximation to our
+praying to one who is already dead and gone to his reward. But Cyprian
+surely intended to convey a very different meaning, namely this, that
+the two friends should continue to pray, each in his place, mutually for
+each other and for their friends, and relieve each other's wants and
+necessities whilst both survived; and whenever death should remove the
+one from earth to happiness, the survivor should not forget their bond
+of friendship, but should still continue to pray to God for their
+brothers and sisters. The passage translated to the letter, runs thus:
+"Let us be mutually mindful of each other, with one mind and one heart.
+On both sides, let us always pray for each other; let us by mutual love
+relieve each other's pressures and distresses; and if either of us from
+hence, by the speed of the Divine favour, go on before the {165} other,
+let our love persevere before the Lord; for our brothers and sisters
+with the Father's mercy let not prayer cease. My desire, most dear
+brother, is that you may always prosper." [Epist. 57. Benedict, p.
+96.--Memores nostri invicem simus concordes atque unanimes: utrobique
+pro nobis semper oremus, pressuras et angustias mutua caritate
+relevemus, et si quis istinc nostrum prior divinæ dignationis celeritate
+præcesserit, perseveret apud Dominum nostra dilectio; pro fratribus et
+sororibus nostris apud misericordiam Patris non cesset oratio. Opto te,
+frater carissime, semper bene valere.--This epistle is by some editors
+numbered as the 60th, by others as the 61st, the 7th, and the 69th, &c.]
+
+Whether the above view of this passage be founded in reason or not, it
+matters little to the point at issue. Let both these passages be
+accepted in the sense assigned to them by some Roman Catholic writers,
+yet there is not a shadow of analogy between the language and conduct of
+Cyprian, and the language and conduct of those who now invoke saints
+departed. In each case Cyprian, still in the body, was addressing
+fellow-creatures still sojourning on earth. The very utmost which these
+passages could be forced to countenance would be, that the righteous,
+when in heaven, may be mindful in their prayers of their friends, who
+are still exposed to the dangers from which they have themselves finally
+escaped, and who, when both were on earth, requested them to remember
+the survivors in their prayers. But this is a question totally different
+from our addressing them in supplication and prayer; a difference which
+I am most anxious that both myself and my readers should keep in mind
+throughout.
+
+In the extract from Cyprian's letter, a modern author having rendered
+the single word "utrobique," by the words "in this world and the next" I
+am induced to add a few further observations on the passage. (The Latin
+original and the version here referred to, will be placed side by side
+in the Appendix.) It will, I think, appear to most readers on a careful
+examination of the passage, that the expression "utrobique[62]" "on both
+sides," or "on both parts," whatever be its precise {166} meaning, so
+far from referring to "this world and the next," must evidently be
+confined to the condition of both parties now in this life, because it
+stands in direct contradistinction to what follows, the supposed case of
+the death of either of the two; and because it applies no less to the
+mutual relief of each other's sufferings and afflictions during their
+joint lives, than to their mutual prayers: it cannot mean that all the
+mutual benefits to be derived from their mutual remembrance of each
+other, were to come solely through the means of their prayers. They were
+doubtless mutually to pray for each other; but, in addition to their
+prayers, they were also to relieve each other's pressures and
+difficulties with mutual love, and that too before the event afterwards
+contemplated, namely, the removal of one of them by death.
+
+ [Footnote 62: Utrobique is rendered by Facciolati [Greek:
+ hekaterothi]--"in utraque parte, utrimque."]
+
+Bishop Fell thus comments on the passage: "The sense seems to be, When
+either of us shall die; whether I, who preside at Carthage, or you, who
+are presiding at Rome, shall be the survivor, let the prayer to God of
+him whose lot shall be to remain the longest among the living,
+persevere, and continue." "Meanwhile," continues the Bishop[63], "we by
+no means doubt that souls admitted into heaven apply to God, the best
+and greatest of Beings, that he would have compassion on those who are
+dwelling on the earth. But it does not thence follow, that prayers
+should be offered to the saints. THE MAN WHO PETITIONS THEM MAKES THEM
+GODS (Deos qui rogat ille facit)." [Oxford, 1682, p. 143.] Rigaltius,
+himself {167} a Roman Catholic, doubts whether, when Cyprian wrote this
+letter, he had any idea before his mind of saints departed praying for
+the living. He translates "utrobique" very much as I have done, "with
+reciprocal love, with mutual charity." His last observations on this
+passage are very remarkable. After having confessed the sentiments to be
+worthy of a Christian, that the saints pray for us, and having argued
+that Cyprian could not have thought it necessary to ask a saint to
+retain his brotherly kindness in heaven, for he could not be a saint if
+he did not continue to love his brethren, he thus concludes: "In truth
+it is a pious and faithful saying, That of those who having already put
+off mortality are made joint-heirs with Christ, and of those who
+surviving on earth will hereafter be joint-heirs with Christ, the Church
+is one, and is by the Holy Spirit so well joined together as not to be
+torn asunder by the dissolution of the body. They pray to God for us,
+and we praise God for them, and thus with mutual affection (utrobique)
+we always pray for each other." [Paris, 1666. p. 92.]
+
+ [Footnote 63: See the note of the Benedictine editors on this
+ passage (p. 467), in which they refer to the sentiments of
+ Rigaltius, Pamelius, and Bishop Fell, whom they call "the most
+ illustrious Bishop of Oxford."]
+
+I will detain you only by one or two more extracts from Cyprian; one
+forming part of the introduction to his Comment on the Lord's Prayer,
+which is fitted for the edification of Christians in every age; the
+other closing his treatise on Mortality, one of those beautiful
+productions by which, during the plague which raged at Carthage in the
+year 252, he comforted and exhorted the Christians, that they might meet
+death without fear or amazement, in sure and certain hope of eternal
+blessedness in heaven. The sentiments in the latter passage will be
+responded to by every good Catholic, whether in communion with the
+Church of Rome or {168} with the Church of England; whilst in the former
+we are reminded, that to pray as Cyprian prayed, we must address
+ourselves to God alone in the name and trusting to the merits only of
+his blessed Son.
+
+"He who caused us to live, taught us also to pray, with that kindness
+evidently by which He deigns to give and confer on us every other
+blessing; that when we speak to the Father in the prayer and
+supplication which his Son taught, we might the more readily be heard.
+He had already foretold, that the hour was coming when the true
+worshippers should worship the Father in spirit and in truth; and He
+fulfilled what He before promised, that we, who have received the spirit
+and truth from his sanctification, may from his instruction offer
+adoration truly and spiritually. For what prayer can be more spiritual
+than that which is given to us by Christ, by whom even the Holy Spirit
+is sent to us? What can be a more true prayer with the Father than that
+which came from the lips of the Son, who is Truth? So that to pray
+otherwise than He taught, is not only ignorance, but a fault; since He
+has himself laid it down and said, Ye reject the Commandment of God to
+establish your own traditions. Let us pray then, most beloved brethren,
+as our teacher, God, has instructed us. It is a welcome and friendly
+prayer to petition God from his own, to mount up to his ears by the
+prayer of Christ. Let the Father recognize the words of his Son. When we
+offer a prayer let Him who dwelleth inwardly in our breast, Himself be
+in our voice; and since we have Him as our advocate with the Father for
+our sins, when as sinners we are petitioning for our sins let us put
+forth the words of our Advocate." [De Orat. Dom. p. 204.]
+
+"We must consider, (he says at the close of his {169} treatise on the
+Mortality [Page 236.],) most beloved brethren, and frequently reflect
+that we have renounced the world, and are meanwhile living here as
+strangers and pilgrims. Let us embrace the day which assigns each to his
+own home ... which restores us to paradise and the kingdom of heaven,
+snatched from hence and liberated from the entanglements of the world.
+What man, when he is in a foreign country, would not hasten to return to
+his native land?... We regard paradise as our country.... We have begun
+already to have the patriarchs for our parents. Why do we not hasten and
+run that we may see our country, and salute our parents? There a large
+number of dear ones are waiting for us, of parents, brothers, children;
+a numerous and full crowd are longing for us; already secure of their
+own immortality, and still anxious for our safety. To come to the sight
+and the embrace of these, how great will be the mutual joy to them and
+to us! What a pleasure of the kingdom of heaven is there without the
+fear of dying, and with an eternity of living! How consummate and
+never-ending a happiness! There is the glorious company of the apostles;
+there is the assembly of exulting prophets; there is the unnumbered
+family of martyrs crowned for the victory of their struggles and
+suffering; there are virgins triumphing, who, by the power of chastity,
+have subdued the lusts of the flesh and the body; there are the merciful
+recompensed, who with food and bounty to the poor have done the works of
+righteousness, who keeping the Lord's commands have transferred their
+earthly inheritance into heavenly treasures. To these, O most dearly
+beloved brethren, let us hasten with most eager longing; {170} let us
+desire that our lot may be to be with these speedily; to come speedily
+to Christ. Let God see this to be our thought; let our Lord Christ
+behold this to be the purpose of our mind and faith, who will give more
+abundant rewards of his glory to them, whose desires for himself have
+been the greater."
+
+Such is the evidence of St. Cyprian.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION VIII.--LACTANTIUS.
+
+
+Cyprian suffered martyrdom about the year 260. Towards the close of this
+century, and at the beginning of the fourth, flourished Lactantius. He
+was deeply imbued with classical learning and philosophy. Before he
+became a writer (as Jerome informs us [Jerom, vol. iv. part ii. p. 119.
+Paris, 1706]) he taught rhetoric at Nicomedia; and afterwards in extreme
+old age he was the tutor of Cæsar Crispus, son of Constantine, in Gaul.
+Among many other writings which Jerome enumerates, he specifies the
+book, "On the Anger of God," as a most beautiful work. Bellarmin,
+however, speaks of him disparagingly, as one who had fallen into many
+errors, and was better versed in Cicero than in the Holy Scriptures. His
+testimony is allowed by the supporters of the adoration of spirits and
+angels to be decidedly against them; they do not refer to a single
+passage likely to aid their cause; and they are chiefly anxious to
+depreciate his evidence. I will call your attention only to two passages
+in his works. The {171} one is in his first book on False Religion: "God
+hath created ministers, whom we call messengers (angels);... but neither
+are these gods, nor do they wish to be called gods, nor to be
+worshipped, as being those who do nothing beyond the command and will of
+God." [Vol. i. p. 31.]
+
+The other passage is from his work on a Happy Life: "Nor let any one
+think that souls are judged immediately after death. For all are kept in
+one common place of guard, until the time come when the great Judge will
+institute an inquiry into their deserts. Then those whose righteousness
+shall be approved, will receive the reward of immortality; and those
+whose sins and crimes are laid open shall not rise again, but shall be
+hidden in the same darkness with the wicked--appointed to fixed
+punishments." [Chap. xxi. p. 574.]
+
+This composition is generally believed to have been written about the
+year 317.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IX.--EUSEBIUS.
+
+
+The evidence of Eusebius, on any subject connected with primitive faith
+and practice, cannot be looked to without feelings of deep interest. He
+flourished about the beginning of the fourth century, and was Bishop of
+Caesarea, in Palestine. His testimony has always been appealed to in the
+Catholic Church, as an authority not likely to be gainsaid. He was a
+voluminous writer, and his writings were very diversified in their
+character. {172} Whatever be our previous sentiments we cannot too
+carefully examine the remains of this learned man. But in his writings,
+historical, biographical, controversial, or by whatever name they may be
+called, overflowing as they are with learning, philosophical and
+scriptural, I can find no one single passage which countenances the
+decrees of the Council of Trent; not one passage which would encourage
+me to hope that I prayed as the primitive Church was wont to pray, if by
+invocation I requested an angel or a saint to procure me any favour, or
+to pray for me. The testimony of Eusebius has a directly contrary
+tendency.
+
+Among the authorities quoted by the champions of the invocation of
+saints, I can find only three from Eusebius; and I sincerely lament the
+observations which truth and justice require me to make here, in
+consequence of the manner in which his evidence has been cited. The
+first passage to which I refer is quoted by Bellarmin from the history
+of Eusebius, to prove that the spirit of a holy one goes direct from
+earth to heaven. This passage is not from the pen of Eusebius; and if it
+were, it would not bear on our inquiry. The second is quoted by the same
+author, from the Evangelica Præparatio, to prove that the primitive
+Christians offered prayers to the saints. Neither is this from the pen
+of Eusebius. The third Extract, from the account of the martyrdom of
+Polycarp, is intended to prove that the martyrs were worshipped. Even
+this, one of the most beautiful passages in ancient history, as it is
+represented by Bellarmin and others, is interpolated.
+
+The first passage, which follows a description of the {173} martyr
+Potamiæna's sufferings, is thus quoted by Bellarmin: "In this manner the
+blessed virgin, Potamniæna, emigrated from earth to heaven." [Hoc modo
+beata Virgo emigravit e terris ad coelum. Vol. ii. p. 854.] And such,
+doubtless, is the passage in the translation of Eusebius, ascribed to
+Ruffinus [Basil, 1535. p. 134]; but the original is, "And such a
+struggle was thus accomplished by this celebrated virgin;" ([Greek: kai
+ho men taes aoidimou koraes toioutos kataegoisisto athlos]; Tale
+certamen ab hac percelebri et gloriosa virgine confectum fait.); and
+such is the Parisian translation of 1581.
+
+The second misquotation is far more serious. Bellarmin thus quotes
+Eusebius: "These things we do daily, who honouring the soldiers of true
+religion as the friends of God, approach to their respective monuments,
+and make OUR PRAYERS TO THEM, as holy men, by whose intercession to God,
+we profess to be not a little aided." [Hæc nos, inquit, quotidie
+factitamus qui veras pietatis milites ut Dei amicos honorantes, ad
+monumenta quoque eorum accedimus, votaque ipsis facimus tanquam viris
+sanctis quorum intercessione ad Deum non parum juvari profitemur.--p.
+902. He quotes it as c. 7.]
+
+By one who has not by experience become familiar with these things it
+would scarcely be believed, that whilst the readers of Bellarmin have
+been taught to regard these as the words of Eusebius, in the original
+there is no mention whatever made of the intercession of the saints;
+that there is no allusion to prayer to them; that there is no admission
+even of any benefit derived from them at all. This quotation Bellarmin
+makes from the Latin version, published in Paris in 1581, or from some
+common source: it is word for word the same. We must either allow him to
+be ignorant of the truth, or to have designedly preferred error. {174}
+The copy which I have before me of the "Evangelica Præparatio," in Greek
+and Latin, was printed in 1628, and dedicated by Viger Franciscus, a
+priest of the order of Jesuits, to the Archbishop of Paris.
+
+Eusebius, marking the resemblance in many points between Plato's
+doctrine and the tenets of Christianity, on the reverence which,
+according to Plato, ought to be paid to the good departed, makes this
+observation: "And this corresponds with what takes place on the death of
+those lovers of God, whom you would not be wrong in calling the soldiers
+of the true religion. Whence also it is our custom to proceed to their
+tombs, and AT THEM [the tombs] to make our prayers, and to honour their
+blessed souls, inasmuch as these things are with reason done by us."
+[Greek: kai tauta de armozei epi tae ton theophilon teleutae ous
+stratiotas taes alaethous eusebeius ouk an hamartois eipon
+paralambanesthai othen kai epi tas thaekas auton ethos haemin parienai
+kai tas euchas para tautais poieisthai, timan te tas makarias auton
+psychas, os eulogos kai touton uph haemon giguomenon.] This translation
+agrees to a certain extent with the Latin of Viger's edition ("Quæ
+quidem in hominum Deo carissimorum obitus egregie conveniunt, quos veræ
+pietatis milites jure appellaris. Nam et eorum sepulchra celebrare et
+preces ibi votaque nuncupare et beatas illorum animas venerari
+consuevimus, idque a nobis merito fieri statuimus"); though the
+translator there has employed words more favourable to the doctrine of
+the saints' adoration, than he could in strictness justify.
+
+The celebrated letter from the Church of Smyrna (Euseb. Cantab. 1720.
+vol. i. p. 163), relating the martyrdom of Polycarp, one of the most
+precious relics of Christian antiquity, has already been examined by us,
+when we were inquiring into the recorded {175} sentiments of Polycarp;
+and to our reflections in that place we have little to add. The
+interpolations to which we have now referred, are intended to take off
+the edge of the evidence borne by this passage of Eusebius against the
+invocation of saints. First, whereas the Christians of Smyrna are
+recorded by Eusebius to have declared, without any limitation or
+qualification whatever, that they could never worship any fellow-mortal
+however honoured and beloved, the Parisian edition limits and qualifies
+their declaration by interpolating the word "as God," implying that they
+would offer a secondary worship to a saint. Again, whereas Eusebius in
+contrasting the worship paid to Christ, with the feelings of the
+Christians towards a martyr, employs only the word "love," Bellarmin,
+following Ruffinus, interpolates the word "veneramur" after "diligimus,"
+a word which may be innocently used with reference to the holy saints
+and servants of God, though it is often in ancient writers employed to
+mean the religious worship of man to God. Still how lamentable is it to
+attempt by such tampering with ancient documents to maintain a cause,
+whatever be our feelings with regard to it!
+
+With two more brief quotations we will close our report of Eusebius.
+They occur in the third chapter of the third book of his Demonstratio
+Evangelica, and give the same view of the feelings and sentiments of the
+primitive Christians towards the holy angels, which we have found Origen
+and all the other fathers to have acknowledged.
+
+"In the doctrine of his word we have learned that there exists, after
+the most high God, certain powers, {176} in their nature incorporeal and
+intellectual, rational and purely virtuous, who ([Greek: choreuousas])
+keep their station around the sovereign King,--the greater part of whom,
+by certain dispensations of salvation, are sent at the will of the
+Father even as far as to men; whom, indeed, we have been taught to know
+and to honour, according to the measure of their dignity, rendering to
+God alone, the sovereign King, the honour of worship." ([Greek:
+gnorizein kai timain kata to metron taes axias edidachthaemen, mono toi
+pambasilei Theoi taen sebasmion timaen aponemontes]) Again: "Knowing the
+divine, the serving and ministering powers of the sovereign God, and
+honouring them to the extent of propriety; but confessing God alone, and
+Him alone worshipping." ([Greek: theias men dynameis hypaeretikas tou
+pambasileos Theou kai leitourgikas eidotes, kai kata to prosaekon
+timontes monon de Theon homologountes, kai monon ekeinon sebontes])
+[Demonst. Evang. Paris, 1628. p. 106.; Præpar. Evang. lib. vii. c. 15.
+p. 237.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION X.--APOSTOLICAL CANONS AND CONSTITUTIONS.
+
+
+The works known by the name of the Apostolical Constitutions and
+Apostolical Canons, though confessedly not the genuine productions of
+the Apostles, or of their age, have been always held in much veneration
+by the Church of Rome. The most learned writers fix their date at a
+period not more remote than the beginning of the fourth century. (See
+Cotelerius; vol. i. p. 194 and 424. Beveridge, in the same vol. p. 427.
+Conc. Gen. Florence, 1759, tom. i. p. 29 and 254.) I invite the reader
+{177} to examine both these documents, but especially the Constitutions,
+and to decide whether they do not contain strong and convincing
+evidence, that the invocation of saints was not practised or known in
+the Church when they were written. Minute rules are given for the
+conducting of public worship; forms of prayer are prescribed to be used
+in the Church, by the bishops and clergy, and by the people; forms of
+prayer and of thanksgiving are recommended for the use of the faithful
+in private, in the morning, at night, and at their meals; forms, too,
+there are of creeds and confessions;--but not one single allusion to any
+religious address to angel or saint; whilst occasions most opportune for
+the introduction of such doctrine and practice repeatedly occur, and are
+uniformly passed by. Again and again prayer is directed to be made to
+the one only living and true God, exclusively through the mediation and
+intercession of the one only Saviour Jesus Christ. Honourable mention is
+made of the saints of the Old Testament, and the apostles and martyrs of
+the New; directions are also given for the observance of their festivals
+[Book viii. p. 415]; but not the shadow of a thought appears that their
+good offices could benefit us; much less the most distant intimation
+that Christians might invoke them for their prayers and intercessions.
+There is indeed very much in these early productions of the Christian
+world to interest every Catholic Christian; and although a general
+admiration of the principles for the most part pervading them does not
+involve an entire approbation of them all, yet perhaps few would think
+the time misapplied which they should devote to the examination of these
+documents. {178}
+
+In book v. c. 6. of the Constitutions, the martyr is represented as
+"trusting in the one only true God and Father, through Jesus Christ, the
+great High Priest, the Redeemer of souls, the Dispenser of rewards; to
+whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen." [Cotel. vol. i. p. 304.]
+
+In the same book and in the following chapter we find an exceedingly
+interesting dissertation on the general resurrection, but not one word
+of saint or martyr being beforehand admitted to glory; on the contrary,
+the declaration is distinct, that not the martyrs only, but all men will
+rise. Surely such an opportunity would not have been lost of stating the
+doctrine of martyrs being now reigning with Christ, had such been the
+doctrine of the Church at that early period.
+
+In the eighth chapter is contained an injunction to honour the martyrs
+in these words: "We say that they should be in all honour with you, as
+the blessed James the bishop and our holy fellow-minister Stephen were
+honoured with us. For they are blessed by God and honoured by holy men,
+pure from all blame, never bent towards sins, never turned away from
+good,--undoubtedly to be praised. Of whom David spake, 'Honourable
+before God is the death of his saints;' and Solomon, 'The memory of the
+just is with praise.' Of whom the prophet also said, 'Just men are taken
+away.'" [p. 309.]
+
+And in book viii. c. 13. we read this exhortation,--"Let us remember the
+holy martyrs, that we may be counted worthy to be partakers of their
+conflict." [p. 404.]
+
+Does this sound any thing at all like adoration or invocation? The word
+which is used in the above {179} passage, _honour_ [[Greek: timê] p.
+241], is employed when (book ii. c. 28.) the respect is prescribed which
+the laity ought to show to the clergy.
+
+To the very marked silence as to any invocation or honour, to be shown
+to the Virgin Mary, I shall call your attention in our separate
+dissertation on the worship now offered to her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION XI.--SAINT ATHANASIUS.
+
+
+The renowned and undaunted defender of the Catholic faith against the
+errors which in his day threatened to overwhelm Gospel-truth, Athanasius
+(the last of those ante-Nicene writers into whose testimony we have
+instituted this inquiry), was born about the year 296, and, after having
+presided in the Church as Bishop for more than forty-six years, died in
+373, on the verge of his eightieth year. It is impossible for any one
+interested in the question of primitive truth to look upon the belief
+and practice of this Christian champion with indifference. When I first
+read Bellarmin's quotations from Athanasius, in justification of the
+Roman Catholic worship in the adoration of saints, I was made not a
+little anxious to ascertain the accuracy of his allegations. The inquiry
+amply repaid me for my anxiety and the labour of research; not merely by
+proving the unsoundness of Bellarmin's representation, but also by
+directing my thoughts more especially, as my acquaintance with his {180}
+works increased, to the true and scriptural views taken by Athanasius of
+the Christian's hope and confidence in God alone; the glowing fervour of
+his piety centering only in the Lord; his sure and certain hope in life
+and in death anchored only in the mercies of God, through the merits and
+mediation of Jesus Christ alone.
+
+Bellarmin, in his appeal to Athanasius as a witness in behalf of the
+invocation of saints, cites two passages; the one of which, though
+appearing in the edition of the Benedictines, amongst the works called
+doubtful, has been adjudged by those editors [Vol. ii. p. 110 and 122]
+to be not genuine; the other is placed by them among the confessedly
+spurious works, and is treated as a forgery.
+
+The first passage is from a treatise called De Virginitate, and even
+were that work the genuine production of Athanasius, would make against
+the religious worship of the saints rather than in its favour, for it
+would show, that the respect which the author intended to be paid to
+them, was precisely the same with what he would have us pay to holy men
+in this life, who might come to visit us. "If a just man enter into
+thine house, thou shalt meet him with fear and trembling, and shalt
+worship before his feet to the ground: for thou wilt not worship him,
+but God who sent him."
+
+The other passage would have been decisive as to the belief of
+Athanasius, had it come from his pen. "Incline thine ear, O Mary, to our
+prayers, and forget not thy people. We cry to thee. Remember us, O Holy
+Virgin. Intercede for us, O mistress, lady, queen, and mother of God."
+[Vol. ii. p. 390-401.]
+
+Had Bellarmin been the only writer, or the last who cited this passage
+as the testimony of St. Athanasius, {181} it would have been enough for
+us to refer to the judgment of the Benedictine editors, who have classed
+the homily containing these words among the spurious works ascribed to
+Athanasius; or rather we might have appealed to Bellarmin himself. For
+it is very remarkable, that though in his anxiety to enlist every able
+writer to defend the cause of the invocation of saints, he has cited
+this passage in his Church Triumphant as containing the words of
+Athanasius, without any allusion to its decided spuriousness, or even to
+its suspicious character; yet when he is pronouncing his judgment on the
+different works assigned to Athanasius, declaring the evidence against
+this treatise to be irresistible, he condemns it as a forgery. [Bellarm.
+de Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis, Cologne, 1617, vol. vii. p. 50.]
+
+Since, however, this passage has been cited in different Roman Catholic
+writers of our own time as containing the words of Athanasius, and in
+evidence of his genuine belief and practice, and that without an
+allusion even to any thing doubtful and questionable in its character,
+it becomes necessary to enter more in detail into the circumstances
+under which the passage is offered to our notice.
+
+The passage is found in a homily called The Annunciation of the Mother
+of God. How long this homily has been discarded as spurious, or how long
+its genuineness had been suspected before the time of Baronius, I have
+not discovered; but certainly two centuries and a half ago, and
+repeatedly since, it has been condemned as totally and indisputably
+spurious, and has been excluded from the works of Athanasius as a
+forgery, not by members of the Reformed Church, but {182} by most
+zealous and steady adherents to the Church of Rome, and the most
+strenuous defenders of her doctrines and practice.
+
+The Benedictine editors[64], who published the remains of St. Athanasius
+in 1698, class the works contained in the second volume under two heads,
+the doubtful and the spurious; and the homily under consideration is
+ranked, without hesitation, among the spurious. In the middle of that
+volume they not only declare the work to be unquestionably a forgery,
+assigning the reasons for their decision, but they fortify their
+judgment by quoting at length the letter written by the celebrated
+Baronius, more than a century before, to our countryman, Stapleton. Both
+these documents are very interesting.
+
+ [Footnote 64: Here I would observe, that though the Benedictine
+ editors differ widely from each other in talent, and learning,
+ and candour, yet, as a body, they have conferred on Christendom,
+ and on literature, benefits for which every impartial and
+ right-minded man will feel gratitude. In the works of some of
+ these editors, far more than in others, we perceive the same
+ reigning principle--a principle which some will regard as an
+ uncompromising adherence to the faith of the Church; but which
+ others can regard only in the light of a prejudice, and a rooted
+ habit of viewing all things through the eyes of Rome.]
+
+The Benedictine editors begin their preface thus: "That this discourse
+is spurious, there is NO LEARNED MAN WHO DOES NOT NOW ADJUDGE ... The
+style proves itself more clear than the sun, to be different from that
+of Athanasius. Besides this, very many trifles show themselves here
+unworthy of any sensible man whatever, not to say Athanasius ... and a
+great number of expressions unknown to Athanasius ... so that it savours
+of inferior Greek. And truly his subtle disputation {183} on the
+hypostasis of Christ, and on the two natures in Christ, persuades us,
+that he lived after the councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon; of which
+councils moreover he uses the identical words, whereas his dissertation
+on the two wills in Christ seems to argue, that he lived after the
+spreading of the error of the Monothelites. But (continue these
+Benedictine editors) we would add here the dissertation of Baronius on
+this subject, sent to us by our brethren from Rome. That illustrious
+annotator, indeed, having read only the Latin version of Nannius, which
+is clearer than the Greek, did not observe the astonishing perplexity of
+the style[65]."
+
+ [Footnote 65: Even in the Bibliotheca Patrum Concionatoria the
+ homily is declared to be not the work of Athanasius, but to have
+ been written after the sixth general council. "It is evident,"
+ say the editors, "that it is the monument of a very learned man,
+ though he has his own blemishes, on which, for the most part, we
+ have remarked in the margin." Paris, 1662. p. 336.]
+
+The dissertation which the Benedictine editors append, was contained in
+a letter written by Baronius to Stapleton, in consequence of some
+animadversions which Stapleton had communicated to Cardinal Allen on the
+judgment of Baronius. The letter is dated Rome, November, 1592. The
+judgment of Baronius on the spurious character of this homily had been
+published to the world some time previously; for after some preliminary
+words of kindness and respect to his correspondent, Baronius proceeds to
+say, that when he previously published his sentiments on this homily, it
+was only cursorily and by the way, his work then being on another
+subject. Nevertheless he conceived, {184} that the little he had then
+stated would be sufficient to show, that the homily was not the
+production of Athanasius, and that all persons of learning, WHO WERE
+DESIROUS OF THE TRUTH, would freely agree with him; nor was he in this
+expectation disappointed; for very many persons expressed their
+agreement with him, congratulating him on separating legitimate from
+spurious children. He then states the arguments which the Benedictine
+editors adopted after him, and which we need not repeat. But he also
+urges this fact, that though Cyril had the works of Athanasius in his
+custody, and though both the disputing parties ransacked every place for
+sentiments of Athanasius countenancing their tenets, yet neither at
+Ephesus nor at Chalcedon was this homily quoted, though it must have
+altogether driven Eutyches and Nestorius from the field, so exact are
+its definitions and statements on the points then at issue. Baronius
+then adds, that so far from reversing the judgment which he had before
+passed against the genuineness of this homily, he was compelled in
+justice to declare his conviction, that it could not have been written
+till after the heresy of the Monothelites had been spread abroad. This
+we know would fix its date, at the very earliest, subsequently to the
+commencement of the SEVENTH century, three hundred years after
+Athanasius attended the Council of Nice. Among the last sentiments of
+Baronius in this letter, is one which implies a principle worthy of
+Christian wisdom, and which can never be neglected without injury to the
+cause of truth. "These sentiments concerning Athanasius I do not think
+are affirmed with any detriment to the Church; for the Church does not
+suffer a loss on this account; who being the pillar {185} and ground of
+the truth, very far shrinks from seeking, like Æsop's Jackdaw, helps and
+ornaments which are not her own: the bare truth shines more beautiful in
+her own naked simplicity." Were this principle acted upon uniformly in
+our discussions on religious points of faith or practice, controversy
+would soon be drawn within far narrower limits; and would gradually be
+softened into a friendly interchange of sentiments, and would well-nigh
+be banished from the world. No person does the cause of truth so much
+injury, as one who attempts to support it by arguments which will not
+bear the test of full and enlightened investigation. And however an
+unsound principle may be for a while maintained by unsound arguments,
+the momentary triumph must ultimately end in disappointment.
+
+Coccius also cites two passages as conveying the evidence of Athanasius
+on this same point; one from the spurious letter addressed to Felix, the
+pope; the other from the treatise to Marcellus, on the interpretation of
+the Psalms. On the former, I need not detain you by any observation; it
+would be fighting with a shadow. The latter, which only recognises what
+I have never affirmed or denied here,--the interest in our welfare taken
+by holy souls departed, and their co-operation with us when we are
+working out our own salvation,--contains a valuable suggestion on the
+principles of devotion.
+
+"Let no one, however, set about to adorn these Psalms for the sake of
+effect with words from without, [artificial and secular phrases,] nor
+transpose, nor alter the expressions. But let every one inartificially
+read and repeat what is written, that those holy persons who employed
+themselves in their production, recognising their own works, may join
+with us in prayer; or {186} rather that the Holy Spirit, who spake in
+those holy men, observing the words with which his voice inspired them,
+may assist us. For just as much as the life of those holy men is more
+pure than ours, so far are their words preferable to any production of
+our own."
+
+But whilst there is not found a single passage in Athanasius to give the
+faintest countenance to the invocation of saints, there are various
+arguments and expressions which go far to demonstrate that such a belief
+and such practices as are now acknowledged and insisted upon by the
+Church of Rome, were neither adopted nor sanctioned by him. Had he
+adopted that belief and practice for his own, he would scarcely have
+spoken, as he repeatedly has, of the exclusion of angels and men from
+any share in the work of man's restoration, without any expressions to
+qualify it, and to protect his assertions from being misunderstood.
+Again, he bids us look to the holy men and holy fathers as our examples,
+in whose footsteps we should tread, if we would be safe; but not a hint
+escapes him that they are to be invoked.
+
+I must detain you by rather a long quotation from this father, and will,
+therefore, now do nothing more than refer you to two passages expressive
+of those sentiments to which I have above alluded. In the thirteenth
+section of his Treatise on the Incarnation of the Word of God, he
+argues, that neither could men restore us to the image of God, nor could
+angels, but the word of God, Jesus Christ, &c. [Vol. i. part i. p. 58.]
+In his Epistle to Dracontius, he says, "We ought to conduct ourselves
+agreeably to the principles of the saints and fathers, and to imitate
+them,--assured that if we {187} swerve from them, we become alienated
+also from their communion." [Vol. i. part i, p. 265.]
+
+The passage, however, to which I would invite the reader's patient and
+impartial thoughts, occurs in the third oration against the Arians, when
+he is proving the unity of the Father and the Son, from the expression
+of St. Paul in the eleventh verse of the third chapter of his first
+Epistle to the Thessalonians.
+
+"Thus then again ([Greek: outo g' oun palin]), when he is praying for
+the Thessalonians, and saying, 'Now our God and Father himself and the
+Lord Jesus Christ direct our way to you,' he preserves the unity of the
+Father and the Son. For he says not 'may THEY direct ([Greek:
+kateuthunoien]),' as though a twofold grace were given from Him AND Him,
+but 'may HE direct ([Greek: katenthunai]),' to show that the Father
+giveth this through the Son. For if there was not an unity, and the Word
+was not the proper offspring of the Father's substance, as the
+eradiation of the light, but the Son was distinct in nature from the
+Father,--it had sufficed for the Father alone to have made the gift, no
+generated being partaking with the Maker in the gifts. But now such a
+giving proves the unity of the Father and the Son. Consequently, no one
+would pray to receive any thing from God AND the angels, or from any
+other created being; nor would any one say 'May God AND the angels give
+it thee;' but from the Father and the Son, because of their unity and
+the oneness of the gift. For whatever is given, is given through the
+Son,--nor is there any thing which the Father works except through the
+Son; for thus the receiver has the gracious favour without fail. But if
+the patriarch Jacob, blessing his descendants Ephraim and Manasseh,
+said, 'The God who nourished {188} me from my youth unto this day, the
+Angel who delivered me from all the evils, bless these lads;' he does
+not join one of created beings, and by nature angels, with God who
+created them; nor dismissing Him who nourished him, God, does he ask the
+blessing for his descendants from an angel, but by saying 'He who
+delivered me from all the evils,' he showed that it was not one of
+created angels, but the WORD OF GOD; and joining him with the Father, he
+supplicated him through whom also God delivers whom he will. For he used
+the expression, knowing him who is called the Messenger of the great
+counsel of the Father to be no other than the very one who blessed and
+delivered from evil. For surely he did not aspire to be blessed himself
+by God, and was willing for his descendants to be blessed by an angel.
+But the same whom he addressed, saying, I will not let Thee go, except
+thou bless me (and this was God, as he says, 'I saw God face to face'),
+Him he prayed to bless the sons of Joseph. The peculiar office of an
+angel is to minister at the appointment of God; and often he went
+onwards to cast out the Amorite, and is sent to guard the people in the
+way; but these are not the doings of him, but of God, who appointed him
+and sent him,--whose also it is to deliver whom he will." [Vol i. p.
+561.]
+
+"For this cause David addressed no other on the subject of deliverance
+but God Himself. But if it belongs to no other than God to bless and
+deliver, and it was no other who delivered Jacob than the Lord Himself,
+and the patriarch invoked for his descendants Him who delivered him, it
+is evident that he connected no one in his prayer except His Word, whom
+for this reason he called an angel, because he alone reveals the
+Father." {189}
+
+"But this no one would say of beings produced and created; for neither
+when the Father worketh does any one of the angels, or any other of
+created beings, work the things; for no one of such beings is an
+effective cause, but they themselves belong to things produced. The
+angels then, as it is written, are ministering spirits sent to minister;
+and the gifts given by Him through the Word they announce to those who
+receive them."
+
+Now if the invocation of angels had been practised by the Church at that
+time, can it be for a moment believed, that a man of such a mind as was
+the mind of Athanasius, a mind strong, clear, logical, cultivated with
+ardent zeal for the doctrines of the Church, and fervent piety, would
+have suffered such passages as these to fall from him, without one
+saving clause in favour of the invocation of angels? He tells us in the
+most unqualified manner, that they act merely as ministers; ready
+indeed, and rejoicing to be employed on errands of mercy, but not going
+one step without the commands of the Lord, or doing one thing beyond his
+word. Had the idea been familiar to the mind of Athanasius, of the
+lawfulness, the duty, the privilege, the benefit of invoking them, would
+he have avoided the introduction of some words to prevent his
+expressions from being misunderstood and misapplied, as subsequent
+writers did long before the time when the denial of the doctrine might
+seem to have made such precaution more necessary?
+
+I close then the catalogue of our witnesses before the Council of Nicæa
+with the testimony of St. Athanasius; whose genuine and acknowledged
+works afford not one jot or tittle in support of the doctrine and
+practice of the invocation of angels and saints, as now insisted upon by
+the Church of Rome; and the direct {190} tendency of whose evidence is
+decidedly hostile both to that doctrine and that practice.
+
+I have seen it observed by some who are satisfied, that the records of
+primitive antiquity do not contain such references to the invocation of
+saints and angels, as we might have expected to find had the custom then
+prevailed, that the earliest Christians kept back the doctrine and
+concealed it, though they held it; fearing lest their heathen neighbours
+should upbraid them with being as much polytheists as themselves[66].
+This is altogether a gratuitous assumption, directly contrary to
+evidence, and totally inconsistent with their conduct. Had those first
+Christians acted upon such a debasing principle, they would have kept
+back and concealed their worship of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, as
+exposing them to a similar charge. They were constantly upbraided with
+worshipping a crucified {191} mortal; but instead of either meeting that
+charge by denying that they worshipped Jesus as their God, or of
+concealing the worship of Him, lest they should expose themselves again
+to such upbraidings, they publicly professed, that He whom the Jews had
+murdered, they believed in as the Son of God, Himself their God. They
+gloried in the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, and did not fear
+what men might do to them, or say of them in consequence. Had they
+believed in the duty of invoking saints and angels, the high principle
+of Christian integrity would not have suffered them to be ashamed to
+confess it, or to practise openly what they believed.
+
+ [Footnote 66: Bishop Morley, (London, 1683,) in a letter written
+ whilst he was in exile at Breda, to J. Ulitius, refers to
+ Cardinal Perron, "Réplique à la Resp. du Roy de la Grande Bret."
+ p. 1402 and 4, for this sentiment: "The Fathers do not always
+ speak what they think, but conceal their real sentiments, and
+ say that which best serves the cause which they sustain, so as
+ to protect it against the objections of the gentiles. The
+ Fathers, as much as in them lies, and as far as they can, avoid
+ and decline all occasions of speaking about the invocation of
+ saints then practised in the Church, fearing lest to the
+ gentiles there might appear a sort of similarity, although
+ untrue and equivocal, between the worship paid to the saints by
+ the Church, and by the Pagans to their false divinities; and
+ lest the Pagans might thence seize a handle, however unfair, of
+ retorting upon them that custom of the Church." Had a member of
+ the Anglican Church thus spoken of the Fathers, and thus pleaded
+ in their name guilty of subterfuge and duplicity, he would have
+ been immediately charged with irreverence and wanton insult, and
+ that with good reason. These sentiments of the Cardinal are in
+ p. 982 of the Paris edition of 1620.] {192}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART II.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+STATE OF WORSHIP AT THE TIME OF THE REFORMATION.
+
+
+One of the points proposed for our inquiry was the state of religious
+worship, with reference to the invocation of saints, at the time
+immediately preceding the reformation. Very far from entertaining a wish
+to fasten upon the Church of Rome now, what then deformed religion among
+us, in any department where that Church has practically reformed her
+services, I would most thankfully have found her ritual in a more
+purified state than it is. My more especial object in referring to this
+period is twofold: first, to show, that consistently with Catholic and
+primitive principles, the Catholic Christians of England ought not to
+have continued to participate in the worship which at that time
+prevailed in our country; and, secondly, by that example both to
+illustrate the great danger of allowing ourselves to countenance the
+very first stages of superstition, and also to impress upon our minds
+the duty of checking in its germ any the least deviation from the
+primitive principles of faith and worship; convinced that by the general
+tendency of human nature, one wrong step will, though imperceptibly, yet
+almost inevitably lead to another; and that only whilst we adhere with
+uncompromising steadiness {193} to the Scripture as our foundation, and
+to the primitive Church, under God, as a guide, can we be saved from the
+danger of making shipwreck of our faith.
+
+On this branch of our subject I propose to do no more than to lay before
+my readers the witness borne to the state of religion in England at that
+time, by two works, which have been in an especial manner forced upon my
+notice. Many other testimonies of a similar tendency might readily be
+adduced; but these will probably appear sufficient for the purposes
+above mentioned; and to dwell longer than is necessary on this point
+would be neither pleasant nor profitable.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION I.
+
+
+The first book to which I shall refer is called The Hours of the most
+blessed Virgin Mary, according to the legitimate use of the Church of
+Salisbury. This book was printed in Paris in the year 1526. The prayers
+in this volume relate chiefly to the Virgin: and I should, under other
+circumstances, have reserved all allusion to it for our separate inquiry
+into the faith and practice of the Church of Rome with regard to her.
+But its historical position and general character seemed to recommend
+our reference to it here. Without anticipating, therefore, the facts or
+the arguments, which will hereafter be submitted to the reader's
+consideration on the worship of the Virgin, I refer to this work now
+solely as illustrative of the lamentable state of superstition which
+three centuries ago overran our country.
+
+The volume abounds with forms of prayer to the Virgin, many of them
+prefaced by extraordinary notifications of indulgences promised to those
+who duly utter {194} the prayers. These indulgences are granted by Popes
+and by Bishops; some on their own mere motion, others at the request of
+influential persons. They guarantee remission of punishment for
+different spaces of time, varying from forty days to ninety thousand
+years; they undertake to secure freedom from hell; they promise pardon
+for deadly sins, and for venial sins to the same person for the same
+act; they assure to those who comply with their directions a change of
+the pain of eternal damnation into the pain of purgatory, and the pain
+of purgatory into a free and full pardon.
+
+It may be said that the Church of Rome is not responsible for all these
+things. But we need not tarry here to discuss the question how far it
+was then competent for a church or nation to have any service-book or
+manual of devotion for the faithful, without first obtaining the papal
+sanction. For clear it is beyond all question, that such frightful
+corruptions as these, of which we are now to give instances, were spread
+throughout the land; that such was the religion then imposed on the
+people of England; and it was from such dreadful enormities, that our
+Reformation, to whatever secondary cause that reformation is to be
+attributed--by the providence of Almighty God rescued us. No one laments
+more than I do, the extremes into which many opponents of papal Rome
+have allowed themselves to run; but no one can feel a more anxious
+desire than myself to preserve our Church and people from a return of
+such spiritual degradation and wretchedness; and to keep far from us the
+most distant approaches of such lamentable and ensnaring superstitions.
+In this feeling moreover I am assured that I am joined by many of the
+most respected and influential members of the Roman Catholic Church
+among us. {195} Still what has been may be; and it is the bounden duty
+of all members of Christ's Catholic Church, to whatever branch of it
+they belong, to join in guarding his sanctuary against such enemies to
+the truth as it is in HIM.
+
+At the same time it would not be honest and candid in me, were I to
+abstain from urging those, who, with ourselves, deprecate these
+excesses, to carry their reflections further; and determine whether the
+spirit of the Gospel does not require a total rejection, even in its
+less startling forms, of every departure from the principle of invoking
+God alone; and of looking for acceptance with Him solely to the
+mediation of his Son, without the intervention of any other merits. As
+we regard it, it is not a question of degree; it is a question of
+principle: one degree may be less revolting to our sense of right than
+another, but it is not on that account justifiable.
+
+The following specimens, a few selected from an overabundant supply,
+will justify the several particulars in the summary which I have above
+given:
+
+1. "The Right Reverend Father in God, Laurence[67], Bishop of Assaven,
+hath granted forty days of pardon to all them that devoutly say this
+prayer in the worship of our blessed Lady, being penitent, and truly
+confessed of all their sins. Oratio, 'Gaude Virgo, Mater Christi,' &c.
+Rejoice, Virgin, Mother of Christ. [Fol. 35.]
+
+ [Footnote 67: This was Laurence Child, who, by papal provision,
+ was made Bishop of St. Asaph, June 18, 1382. He is called also
+ Penitentiary to the Pope. Le Neve, p. 21. Beatson, vol. i. p.
+ 115.]
+
+2. "To all them that be in the state of grace, that daily say devoutly
+this prayer before our blessed Lady of Pity, she will show them her
+blessed visage, and warn them the day and the hour of death; and in
+their last {196} end the angels of God shall yield their souls to
+heaven; and[68] he shall obtain five hundred years, and so many Lents of
+pardon, granted by five holy fathers, Popes of Rome. [Fol. 38.]
+
+ [Footnote 68: The language in many of these passages is very
+ imperfect; but I have thought it right to copy them verbatim.]
+
+3. "This prayer showed our Lady to a devout person, saying, that this
+golden prayer is the most sweetest and acceptablest to me: and in her
+appearing she had this salutation and prayer written with letters of
+gold in her breast, 'Ave Rosa sine spinis'--Hail Rose without thorns.
+[Fol. 41.]
+
+4. "Our holy Father, Sixtus the fourth, pope, hath granted to all them
+that devoutly say this prayer before the image of our Lady the sum of
+XI.M. [eleven thousand] years of pardon. 'Ave Sanctissima Maria, Mater
+Dei, Regina Coeli,' &c. Hail most holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of
+Heaven. [Fol. 42.]
+
+5. "Our holy Father, Pope Sixtus, hath granted at the instance of the
+highmost and excellent Princess Elizabeth, late Queen of England, and
+wife to our sovereign liege Lord, King Henry the Seventh, (God have
+mercy on her sweet soul, and on all Christian souls,) that every day in
+the morning, after three tollings of the Ave bell, say three times the
+whole salutation of our Lady Ave Maria gratia; that is to say, at 6 the
+clock in the morning 3 Ave Maria, at 12 the clock at noon 3 Ave M., and
+at 6 the clock at even, for every time so doing is granted of the
+SPIRITUAL TREASURE OF HOLY CHURCH 300 days of pardon totiens quotiens;
+and also our holy father, the Archbishop of Canterbury and York, with
+other nine Bishops of this realm, have {197} granted 3 times in the day
+40 days of pardon to all them that be in the state of grace able to
+receive pardon: the which begun the 26th day of March, Anno MCCCCXCII.
+Anno Henrici VII.[69] And the sum of the indulgence and pardon for every
+Ave Maria VIII hondred days an LX totiens quotiens, this prayer shall be
+said at the tolling of the Ave Bell, 'Suscipe,' &c. Receive the word, O
+Virgin Mary, which was sent to thee from the Lord by an angel. Hail,
+Mary, full of grace: the Lord with thee, &c. Say this 3 times, &c. [Fol.
+42.]
+
+ [Footnote 69: Henry VII. began to reign in 1485.]
+
+6. "This prayer was showed to St. Bernard by the messenger of God,
+saying, that as gold is the most precious of all other metals, so
+exceedeth this prayer all other prayers, and who that devoutly sayeth it
+shall have a singular reward of our blessed Lady, and her sweet Son
+Jesus. 'Ave,' &c. Hail, Mary, most humble handmaid of the Trinity, &c.
+Hail, Mary, most prompt Comforter of the living and the dead. Be thou
+with me in all my tribulations and distresses with maternal pity, and at
+the hour of my death take my soul, and offer it to thy most beloved Son
+Jesus, with all them who have commended themselves to our prayers. [Fol.
+46.]
+
+7. "Our holy father, the Pope Bonifacius, hath granted to all them that
+devoutly say this lamentable contemplation of our blessed Lady, standing
+under the Cross weeping, and having compassion with her sweet Son Jesus,
+7 years of pardon and forty Lents, and also Pope John the 22 hath
+granted three hondred days of pardon. 'Stabat Mater dolorosa.' [Fol.
+47.]
+
+8. "To all them that before this image of Pity devoutly say 5 Pat. Nos.,
+and 5 Aves, and a Credo, piteously beholding these arms of Christ's
+passion, are {198} granted XXXII.M.VII hondred, and LV (32755) years of
+pardon; and Sixtus the 4th, Pope of Rome hath made the 4 and the 5
+prayer, and hath doubled his aforesaid pardon. [Fol. 54.]
+
+9. "Our holy Father the Pope John 22 hath granted to all them that
+devoutly say this prayer, after the elevation of our Lord Jesu Christ,
+3000 days of pardon for deadly sins. [Fol. 58.]
+
+10. "This prayer was showed to Saint Augustine by revelation of the Holy
+Ghost, and who that devoutly say this prayer, or hear read, or beareth
+about them, shall not perish in fire or water, nother in battle or
+judgment, and he shall not die of sudden death, and no venom shall
+poison him that day, and what he asketh of God he shall obtain if it be
+to the salvation of his soul; and when thy soul shall depart from thy
+body it shall not enter hell." This prayer ends with three invocations
+of the Cross, thus: "O Cross of Christ [cross] save us, O Cross of
+Christ [cross] protect us, O Cross of Christ [cross] defend us. In the
+name of the [cross] Father, [cross] Son, and Holy [cross] Ghost. Amen."
+[Fol. 62.]
+
+11. "Our holy Father Pope Innocent III. hath granted to all them that
+say these III prayers following devoutly, remission of all their sins
+confessed and contrite. [Fol. 63.]
+
+12. "These 3 prayers be written in the Chapel of the Holy Cross, in
+Rome, otherwise called Sacellum Sanctæ Crucis septem Romanorum; who that
+devoutly say them shall obtain X.C.M. [ninety thousand] years of pardon
+for deadly sins granted of our holy Father, John 22, Pope of Rome. [Fol.
+66.]
+
+13. "Who that devoutly beholdeth these arms of {199} our Lord Jesus
+Christ, shall obtain six thousand years of pardon of our holy Father
+Saint Peter, the first pope of Rome, and of XXX [thirty] other popes of
+the Church of Rome, successors after him; and our holy Father, Pope John
+22, hath granted unto all them very contrite and truly confessed, that
+say these devout prayers following in the commemoration of the bitter
+passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, 3000 years of pardon for DEADLY SINS,
+and other 3000 for venial sins." [Fol. 68.]
+
+I will only add one more instance. The following announcement
+accompanies a prayer of St. Bernard: "Who that devoutly with a contrite
+heart daily say this orison, if he be that day in a state of eternal
+damnation, then this eternal pain shall be changed him in temporal pain
+of purgatory; then if he hath deserved the pain of purgatory it shall be
+forgotten and forgiven through the infinite mercy of God."
+
+It is indeed very melancholy to reflect that our country has witnessed
+the time, when the bread of life had been taken from the children, and
+such husks as these substituted in its stead. Accredited ministers of
+the Roman Catholic Church have lately assured us that the pardons and
+indulgences granted now, relate only to the remission of the penances
+imposed by the Church in this life, and presume not to interfere with
+the province of the Most High in the rewards and punishments of the
+next. But, I repeat it, what has been in former days may be again; and
+whenever Christians depart from the doctrine and practice of prayer to
+God alone, through Christ alone, a door is opened to superstitions and
+abuses of every kind; and we cannot too anxiously and too jealously
+guard and fence about, with all our power and skill, the fundamental
+principle, one God and one Mediator. {200}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET, ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS
+MARTYRDOM, DEC. 29.
+
+
+The other instance by which I propose to illustrate the state of
+religion in England before the reformation, is the service of Thomas
+Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, a canonized saint and martyr of the
+Church of Rome. The interest attaching to so remarkable a period in
+ecclesiastical history, and to an event so intimately interwoven with
+the former state of our native land, appears to justify the introduction
+of the entire service, rather than extracts from it, in this place.
+Whilst it bears throughout immediately on the subject of our present
+inquiry, it supplies us at the same time with the strong views
+entertained by the authors of the service, on points which gave rise to
+great and repeated discussion, not only in England, but in various parts
+also of continental Europe, with regard to the moral and spiritual
+merits or demerits of Becket, as a subject of the realm and a Christian
+minister. It is, moreover, only by becoming familiar in all their
+details with some such remains of past times, that we can form any
+adequate idea of the great and deplorable extent to which the legends
+had banished the reading and expounding of Holy Scriptures from our
+churches; and also how much the praises of mortal man had encroached
+upon those hours of public worship, which should be devoted to
+meditations on our Maker, Redeemer, and Sanctifier; to the exclusive
+praises of his holy name; and to supplications {201} to Him alone for
+blessings at his hand, and for his mercy through Christ.
+
+There is much obscurity in the few first paragraphs. The historical or
+biographical part begins at Lesson the First, and continues throughout,
+only interspersed with canticles in general referring to the incidents
+in the narrative preceding each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET[70].
+
+ [Footnote 70: The copies which I have chiefly consulted for the
+ purposes of the present inquiry, are two large folio
+ manuscripts, in good preservation, No. 1512 and No. 2785 of the
+ Harleian MSS. in the British Museum. The service commences about
+ the 49th page, B. of No. 2785. This MS. is considered to be of a
+ date somewhere about 1430. The first parts of the service are
+ preserved also in a Breviary printed in Paris in 1556, with some
+ variations and omissions. There are various other copies in the
+ British Museum, as well printed as in manuscript.]
+
+Let them without change of vestments and without tapers in their hands,
+proceed to the altar of St. Thomas the Martyr, chanting the requiem, the
+chanter beginning,
+
+ _Req._ The grain lies buried beneath the straw;
+ The just man is slain by the spear of the wicked;
+ The guardian of the vine falls in the vineyard,
+ The chieftain in the camp, the husbandman in the threshing-floor.
+
+Then the prose is said by all who choose, in surplices before the altar.
+
+ "Let the Shepherd sound his trumpet of horn."
+
+Let the choir respond to the chant of the prose after every verse, upon
+the letter [super litteram]. {202}
+
+ That the vineyard of Christ might be free,
+ Which he assumed under a robe of flesh,
+ He liberated it by the purple cross.
+ The adversary, the erring sheep,
+ Becomes bloodstained by the slaughter of the shepherd.
+ The marble pavements of Christ
+ Are wetted, ruddy with sacred gore;
+ The martyr presented with the laurel of life.
+ Like a grain cleansed from the straw,
+ Is translated to the divine garners.
+
+But whilst the prose is being sung, let the priest incense the altar,
+and then the image of the blessed Thomas the Martyr; and afterwards
+shall be said with an humble voice: Pray for us, Blessed Thomas.
+
+_The Prayer[71]._ O God for whose Church the glorious {203} high-priest
+and martyr Thomas fell beneath the swords of the wicked, grant, we
+beseech thee, that all who implore his aid may obtain the salutary
+effect of their petition, through Christ.
+
+ [Footnote 71: This Collect is still preserved in the Roman
+ ritual, and is offered on the anniversary of Becket's death. In
+ a very ancient pontifical, preserved in the chapter-house of
+ Bangor, and which belonged to Anianus, who was Bishop of that
+ see (1268), among the "Proper Benedictions for the circuit of
+ the year," are two relating to Thomas Becket; one on the
+ anniversary of his death, the other on the day of his
+ translation. The former is couched in these words: "O God, who
+ hast not without reason mingled the birthday of the glorious
+ high-priest, Thomas, with the joys of thy nativity, by the
+ intervention of his merits" (ipsius mentis intervenientibus),
+ "make these thy servants venerate thy majesty with the reverence
+ of due honour. Amen. And as he, according to the rule of a good
+ shepherd, gave his life for his sheep, so grant thou to thy
+ faithful ones, to fear no tyrannical madness to the prejudice of
+ Catholic truth. Amen. We ask that they, by his example, for
+ obedience to the holy laws, may learn to despise persons, and by
+ suffering manfully to triumph over tyrannical madness. Amen."
+ The latter runs thus: "May God, by whose pity the bodies of
+ saints rest in the sabbath of peace, turn your hearts to the
+ desire of the resurrection to come. Amen. And may he who orders
+ us to bury with honour due the members of the saints whose death
+ is precious, by the merits of the glorious martyr, Thomas,
+ vouchsafe to raise you from the dust of vanity. Amen. Where at
+ length by the power of his benediction ye may be clothed with
+ doubled festive robes of body and soul. Amen."]
+
+ The shepherd slain in the midst of the flock,
+ Purchased peace at the price of his blood.
+ O joyous grief, in mournful gladness!
+ The flock breathes when the shepherd is dead;
+ The mother wailing, sings for joy in her son,
+ Because he lives under the sword a conqueror.
+ The solemnities of Thomas the Martyr are come.
+ Let the Virgin Mother, the Church, rejoice;
+ Thomas being raised to the highest priesthood,
+ Is suddenly changed into another man.
+ A monk, under [the garb of?] a clerk, secretly clothed with haircloth,
+ More strong than the flesh subdues the attempts of the flesh;
+ Whilst the tiller of the Lord's field pulls up the thistles,
+ And drives away and banishes the foxes from the vineyard.
+
+_The First Lesson._
+
+Dearest Brethren, celebrating now the birth-day of the martyr Thomas,
+because we have not power to recount his whole life and conversation,
+let our brief discourse run through the manner and cause of his passion.
+The blessed Thomas, therefore, as in the office of Chancellor, or
+Archdeacon, he proved incomparably strenuous {204} in the conduct of
+affairs, so after he had undertaken the office of pastor, he became
+devoted to God beyond man's estimation. For, when consecrated, he
+suddenly is changed into another man: he secretly put on the hair shirt,
+and wore also hair drawers down to the knee. And under the respectable
+appearance of the clerical garb, concealing the monk's dress, he
+entirely compelled the flesh to obey the spirit; studying by the
+exercise of every virtue without intermission to please God. Knowing,
+therefore, that he was placed a husbandman in the field of the Lord, a
+shepherd in the fold, he carefully discharged the ministry entrusted to
+him. The rights and dignities of the Church, which the public authority
+had usurped, he deemed it right to restore, and to recall to their proper
+state. Whence a grave question on the ecclesiastical law and the customs
+of the realm, having arisen between him and the king of the English, a
+council being convened, those customs were proposed which the king
+pertinaciously required to be confirmed by the signatures as well of the
+archbishop as of his suffragans. The archbishop with constancy refused,
+asserting that in them was manifest the subversion of the freedom of the
+Church. He was in consequence treated with immense insults, oppressed
+with severe losses, and provoked with innumerable injuries. At length,
+being threatened with death, (because the case of the Church had not yet
+become fully known, and the persecution seemed to be personal,) he
+determined that he ought to give place to malice. Being driven,
+therefore, into exile, he was honourably received by our lord the pope
+Alexander[72] at Senon, and recommended {205} with especial care to the
+Monastery of Pontinea (Pontigny).
+
+ [Footnote 72: Pope Alexander III. was at this time residing as a
+ refugee at Sens, having been driven from Italy a few years
+ before by Frederick Barbarossa.]
+
+ Malice, bent on the punishment of Thomas,
+ Condemns to banishment the race of Thomas.
+ The whole family goes forth together.
+ No order, sex, age, or condition
+ Here enjoys any privilege.
+
+_Lesson the Second._
+
+Meanwhile in England all the revenues of the archbishop are confiscated,
+his estates are laid waste, his possessions are plundered, and by the
+invention of a new kind of punishment, the whole kin of Thomas is
+proscribed together. For all his friends or acquaintance, or whoever was
+connected with him, by whatever title, without distinction of state or
+fortune, dignity or rank, age or sex, were alike exiled. For as well the
+old and decrepit, as infants in the cradle and women lying in
+childbirth, were driven into banishment; whilst as many as had reached
+the years of discretion were compelled to swear upon the holy
+[Gospels][73] that immediately on crossing the sea they would present
+themselves to the Archbishop of Canterbury; in order that being so
+oftentimes pierced even by the sword of sympathy, he would bend his
+strength of mind to the king's pleasure. But the man of God, putting his
+hand to deeds of fortitude, with constancy bore exile, reproaches,
+insults, the proscription of parents and friends, for the name of
+Christ; he was never, by any injury, at all broken or changed. For so
+great was the firmness of this confessor of Christ, that he seemed to
+teach all his fellow exiles, that every soil is the brave man's country.
+
+ [Footnote 73: Tactis sacrosanctis. It may mean reliques, or
+ other sacred things.] {206}
+
+ Thomas put his hands to deeds of fortitude,
+ He despised losses, he despised reproaches,
+ No injury breaks down Thomas:
+ The firmness of Thomas exclaimed to all,
+ "Every soil is the brave man's country."
+
+_Third Lesson._
+
+The king therefore hearing of his immoveable constancy, having directed
+commendatory letters by some abbots of the Cistertian order to the
+General Chapter, caused him to be driven from Pontinea. But the blessed
+Thomas fearing that, by occasion of his right, injury would befal the
+saints, retired of his own accord. Yet before he set out from thence he
+was comforted by a divine revelation: a declaration being made to him
+from heaven, that he should return to his Church with glory, and by the
+palm of martyrdom depart to the Lord. When he was disturbed and sent
+from his retreat at Pontinea, Louis, the most Christian king of the
+French, received him with the greatest honour, and supported him most
+courteously till peace was restored. But even he too was often, though
+in vain, urged not to show any grace of kindness towards a traitor to
+the king of England. The hand of fury proceeded further, and a cruelty
+dreadful for pious ears to hear. For whereas the Catholic Church prays
+even for heretics, and schismatics, and faithless Jews, it was forbidden
+that any one should assist him by the supplications of prayer. Exiled,
+then, for six continuous years, afflicted with varied and unnumbered
+injuries, and like a living stone squared by various cuttings and
+pressures for the building of the heavenly edifice, the more he was
+thrust at that he might fall, the more firm and immoveable was he
+enabled to stand. {207} For neither could gold so carefully tried be
+burned away, nor a house, founded on a firm rock, be torn down. Neither
+does he suffer the wolves to rage against the lambs, nor the vineyard to
+pass into a garden of herbs.
+
+ The best of men, holy, and renowned is banished,
+ Lest the dignity of the Church should yield to the unworthy.
+ The estates of the exiled man are the spoil of the malignant,
+ But when placed in the fire, the fire burns him not.
+
+_Fourth Lesson._
+
+At length by the exertions, as well of the aforesaid pontiff as of the
+king of the French, many days were appointed for re-establishing peace:
+and because the servant of God would not accept of peace, unless with
+safety to the honour of God, and the character of the Church, they
+departed in discord from each other. At length the supreme Pontiff,
+pitying the desolation of the Anglican Church, with difficulty at the
+last extorted by threatening measures, that peace should be restored to
+the Church. The realms indeed rejoiced, that the King had been
+reconciled to the Archbishop, whilst some believed that the affair was
+carried on in good faith, and others formed different conjectures.
+Consequently in the seventh year of his exile the noble pastor returned
+into England, that he might either rescue the sheep of Christ from the
+jaws of the wolves, or sacrifice himself for the flock intrusted to his
+care. He is received by the clergy and the people with incalculable joy;
+all shedding tears, and saying, Blessed is he who cometh in the name of
+the Lord. But after a few days he was again afflicted by losses and
+miseries beyond measure and number. Whoever offered to him, {208} or to
+any one connected with him, a cheerful countenance was reckoned a public
+enemy. In all these things his mind was unbroken; but his hand was still
+stretched out for the liberation of the Church. For this he incessantly
+sighed; for this he persevered in watchings, fastings, and prayers; to
+obtain this he ardently desired to sacrifice himself.
+
+ From the greatest joy of affairs,
+ The greatest wailing is in the Church,
+ For the absence of so great a patron.
+ But when the miracles return,
+ Joy to the people returns.
+ The crowd of sick flock together,
+ And obtain the grace of benefits.
+
+_Fifth Lesson._
+
+Now on the fifth day after the birth-day of our Lord, four persons of
+the palace came to Canterbury, men indeed of high birth, but famous for
+their wicked deeds; and having entered, they attack the archbishop with
+reproachful words, provoke him with insults, and at length assail him
+with threats. The man of God modestly answered, to every thing, whatever
+reason required, adding that many injuries had been inflicted upon him
+and the Church of God, since the re-establishment of peace, and there
+was no one to correct what was wrong; that he neither could nor would
+dissemble thereafter, so as not to exercise the duties of his function.
+The men, foolish in heart, were disturbed by this, and having loudly
+given utterance to their iniquity they forthwith went out. On their
+retiring, the prelate proceeded to the Church, to offer the evening
+praises to Christ. The mail-clad satellites of Satan followed him from
+behind with drawn swords, a {209} large band of armed men accompanying
+them. On the monks barring the entrance to the Church, the priest of
+God, destined soon to become a victim of Christ, running up re-opened
+the door to the enemy; "For," said he, "a Church must not be barricaded
+like a castle." As they burst in, and some shouted with a voice of
+phrenzy, "Where is the traitor?" others, "Where is the Archbishop?" the
+fearless confessor of Christ went to meet them. When they pressed on to
+murder him, he said, "For myself I cheerfully meet death for the Church
+of God; but on the part of God I charge you to do no hurt to any of
+mine"--imitating Christ in his passion, when he said, "If ye seek me,
+let these go their way." Then rush the ravening wolves on the pious
+shepherd, degenerate sons on their own father, cruel lictors on the
+victim of Christ, and with fatal swords cut off the consecrated crown of
+his head; and hurling down to the ground the Christ [the anointed] of
+the Lord, in savage manner, horrible to be said, scattered the brains
+with the blood over the pavement.
+
+ Thus does the straw press down the grain of corn;
+ Thus is slain the guard of the vineyard in the vineyard;
+ Thus the general in the camp, the shepherd in the fold, the
+ husbandman in the threshing-floor.
+ Thus the just, slain by the unjust, has changed his house of
+ clay for a heavenly palace.
+ Rachel, weeping, now cease thou to mourn
+ That the flower of the world is bruised by the world.
+ When the slain Thomas is borne to his funeral,
+ A new Abel succeeds to the old.
+ The voice of blood, the voice of his scattered brains,
+ Fills heaven with a marvellous cry. {210}
+
+_Sixth Lesson._
+
+But the last words of the martyr, which from the confused clamour could
+scarcely be distinguished, according to the testimony of those who stood
+near, were these,--"To God, and the blessed Mary, and Saint Dionysius,
+and the holy patrons of this Church, I commend myself and the cause of
+the Church[74]." Moreover, in all the torments which this unvanquished
+champion of God endured, he sent forth no cry, he uttered no groan, he
+opposed neither his arm nor his garment to the man who struck him, but
+held his head, which he had bent towards the swords, unmoved till the
+consummation came; prostrated as if for prayer, he fell asleep in the
+Lord. The perpetrators of the crime, returning into the palace of the
+holy prelate, that they might make the passion of the servant more fully
+resemble the passion of his Lord, divided among them his garments, the
+gold and silver and precious vessels, choice horses, and whatever of
+value they could find, allotting what each should take. These things
+therefore the soldiers did. Who, without weeping, can relate the rest?
+So great was the sorrow of all, so great the laments of each, that you
+would think the prophecy were a second time fulfilled, "A voice is heard
+in Rama, lamentation and great mourning." Nevertheless the divine mercy,
+when temptation was multiplied, made a way to escape; and by certain
+visions, giving as it were a prelude to the future miracles, [declared
+that] the martyr was thereafter to be glorified by wonders, that joy
+would return after sorrow, {211} and a crowd of sick would obtain the
+grace of benefits.
+
+ [Footnote 74: I have already suggested a comparison between this
+ prayer and the commendatory prayer of the Martyr Polycarp, page
+ 92.]
+
+ O Christ Jesus[75], BY THE WOUNDS OF THOMAS,
+ Loosen the sins which bind us;
+ Lest the enemy, the world, or the works of the flesh.
+ Bear us captive to hell.
+ By[76] THEE, O Thomas ...
+ Let the right hand of God embrace us.
+
+ The satellites of Satan rushing into the temple
+ Perpetrate an unexampled, unheard-of, crime.
+ Thomas proceeds to meet their drawn swords:
+ He yields not to threats, to swords, nor even to death.
+
+ Happy place! Happy Church,
+ In which the memory of Thomas lives!
+ Happy the land which gave the prelate!
+ Happy the land which supported him in exile!
+ Happy Father! succour us miserable,
+ That we may be happy, and joined with those above!
+
+ [Footnote 75:
+
+ Christe Jesu per Thomæ vulnera,
+ Quæ nos ligant relaxa scelera
+ Ne captivos ferant ad infera
+ Hostis, mundus, vel carnis opera.
+ ]
+
+ [Footnote 76:
+
+ Per te, Thoma, post lævæ munera
+ Amplexetur nos Dei dextera.
+ ]
+
+_Seventh Lesson._
+
+Jesus said unto his disciples, I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd
+layeth down his life for the sheep.
+
+THE HOMILY OF S. GREGORY, POPE.
+
+Ye have heard, most dear brethren, from the reading of the Gospel, your
+instruction; ye have heard also {212} your danger. For behold! he who is
+not from any gift happening to him, but who is essentially good, says, I
+am the good shepherd; and he adds the character of the same goodness,
+which we may imitate, saying, The good shepherd layeth down his life for
+his sheep. He did what he taught; he showed what he commanded. The good
+shepherd laid down his life for his sheep; that in our sacrament he
+might change his body and blood, and satisfy, by the nourishment of his
+flesh, the sheep which he had redeemed. Here is shown to us the way,
+concerning the contempt of death, which we should follow; the character
+is placed before us to which we should conform. [In the first place, we
+should of our pity sacrifice our external good for his sheep; and at
+last, if it be necessary, give up our own life for the same sheep. From
+that smallest point we proceed to this last and greater. But since the
+soul by which we live is incomparably better than the earthly substance
+which we outwardly possess, who would not give for the sheep his
+substance, when he would give his life for them? And there are some who,
+whilst they love their earthly substance more than the sheep, deservedly
+lose the name of shepherd: of whom it is immediately added, But the
+hireling who is not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the
+wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep and fleeth. He is called not a
+shepherd, but a hireling, who feeds the Lord's sheep not for inward
+love, but with a view to temporal wages. He is a mercenary who seeks
+indeed the place of shepherd, but seeks not the gain of souls.]
+
+(The sentences between brackets are not in MS. No. 1512.)
+
+ To Thomas all things yield and are obedient:
+ Plagues, diseases, death, and devils, {213}
+ Fire, air, land, and seas.
+ Thomas filled the world with glory.
+ The world offers obeisance to Thomas[77].
+
+ [Footnote 77:
+
+ Thomæ cedunt et parent omnia:
+ Pestes, morbi, mors, et dæmonia,
+ Ignis, aer, tellus, et maria.
+ Thomas mundum replevit gloria.
+ Thomæ mundus præstat obsequia.
+ ]
+
+_Eighth Lesson._
+
+In good truth, the holy Thomas, the precious champion of God, was to be
+worthily glorified. For if the cause, yea, forasmuch as the cause makes
+the martyr, did ever a title of holy martyrs exist more glorious?
+Contending for the Church, in the Church he suffered; in a holy place,
+at the holy time of the Lord's nativity, in the midst of his
+fellow-priests and the companies of the religious: since in the agony of
+the prelate all the circumstances seemed so to concur, as perpetually to
+illustrate the title of the sufferer, and reveal the wickedness of his
+persecutors, and stain their name with never-ending infamy. But so did
+the divine vengeance rage against the persecutors of the martyr, that in
+a short time, being carried away from the midst, they nowhere appeared.
+And some, without confession, or the viaticum, were suddenly snatched
+away; others tearing piecemeal their own fingers or tongues; others
+pining with hunger, and corrupting in their whole body, and racked with
+unheard-of tortures before their death, and broken up by paralysis;
+others bereft of their intellects; others expiring with madness;--left
+manifest proofs that they were suffering the penalty of unjust
+persecution and premeditated murder. Let, therefore, the Virgin Mother,
+the Church, rejoice that the new martyr has borne away the triumph over
+the {214} enemies. Let her rejoice that a new Zacharias has been for her
+freedom sacrificed in the temple. Let her rejoice that a new Abel's
+blood hath cried unto God for her against the men of blood. For the
+voice of his blood shed, the-voice of his brain scattered by the swords
+of those deadly satellites, hath filled heaven at once and the world
+with its far-famed cry.
+
+ Thomas shines with new miracles;
+ He adorns with sight those who had lost their eyes;
+ He cleanses those who were stained with the spots of leprosy;
+
+ He looses those that were bound with the bonds of death.
+
+_Ninth Lesson._
+
+For at the cry of this blood the earth was moved and trembled. Nay,
+moreover, the powers of the heavens were moved; so that, as if for the
+avenging of innocent blood, nation rose against nation, and kingdom
+against kingdom; nay, a kingdom was divided against itself, and terrors
+from heaven and great signs took place. Yet, from the first period of
+his martyrdom, the martyr began to shine forth with miracles, restoring
+sight to the blind, walking to the lame, hearing to the deaf, language
+to the dumb. Afterwards, cleansing the lepers, making the paralytic
+sound, healing the dropsy, and all kinds of incurable diseases;
+restoring the dead to life; in a wonderful manner commanding the devils
+and all the elements: he also put forth his hand to unwonted and
+unheard-of signs of his own power; for persons deprived of their eyes
+merited by his merits to obtain new members. But some {215} who presumed
+to disparage his miracles, struck on a sudden, were compelled to publish
+them even unwillingly. At length, against all his enemies the martyr so
+far prevailed, that almost every day you might see that to be repeated
+in the servant which is read of the Only-begotten: "They who spoke evil
+of thee shall come unto thee, and adore the traces of thy feet." Now the
+celebrated champion and martyr of God, Thomas, suffered in the year from
+the incarnation of the Lord, according to Dionysius, 1171, on the fourth
+of the kalends of January, on the third day of the week, about the
+eleventh hour, that the birth-day of the Lord might be for labour, and
+his for rest; to which rest the same our God and Lord Jesus Christ
+vouchsafe to bring us; who with the Father and the Holy Spirit liveth
+and reigneth God, for ever and ever. Amen.
+
+ O good Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS,
+ Forgive us our debts;
+ Visit the house, the gate, the grave;
+ And raise us from the threefold death.
+ What has been lost by act, in mind, or use,
+ Restore with thy wonted pity.
+ Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.
+
+N.B. This appears to be the end of the first service in honour of Thomas
+Becket[78]; and at this point {216} another service seems to commence,
+with a kind of new heading, "In the commemoration of St. Thomas[79]."
+
+ [Footnote 78: All the Lessons between this passage and "In
+ Lauds," are wanting in MS. 1512.]
+
+ [Footnote 79: Another Feast was kept in honour of his
+ translation, on the 7th of July.]
+
+_The First Lesson._
+
+When Archbishop Theobald, of happy memory, in a good old age, slept with
+his fathers, Thomas, archdeacon of the Church of Canterbury, is solemnly
+chosen, in the name of the Holy Trinity, to be archbishop and primate of
+all England, and afterwards is consecrated. Then pious minds entertained
+firm hope and confidence in the Lord[80].
+
+ [Footnote 80: There is much of obscurity in the next paragraph.
+ Reference seems to be made to his twofold character of a regular
+ and a secular clergyman, and to his improved state morally. The
+ Latin is this: "Erat autem piis mentibus spes firma et fiducia
+ in Domino, quod idem consecratus utriusque hominis, habitu
+ mutato moribus melioratus præsideret. Probatissimum siquidem
+ tenebatur sedem illam sedem sanctorum esse sanctam recipere aut
+ facere, vel citius et facile indignum abicere, quod et in beato
+ Thoma Martyre misericorditer impletum est."]
+
+_Second Lesson._
+
+Therefore the chosen prelate of God being elected, and anointed with the
+sanctifying of the sacred oil, immediately obtained a most hallowed
+thing, and was filled with manifold grace of the Holy Spirit. For
+walking in newness of life, a new man, he was changed into another man,
+all things belonging to whom were changed for the better; and with so
+great grace did he consecrate the commencement of his bishopric, that
+clothing himself with a monk's form secretly, he fulfilled the work and
+merit of a monk. {217}
+
+_Third Lesson._
+
+But he, who after the example of the Baptist, with constancy had
+conceived in a perfect heart that the zeal of righteousness should be
+purified, studied also to imitate him in the garb of penitence. For
+casting off the fine linen which hitherto he had been accustomed to use,
+whilst the soft delicacies of kings pleased him, he was clothed on his
+naked body with a most rough hair shirt. He added, moreover, hair
+drawers, that he might the more effectually mortify the flesh, and make
+the spirit live. But these, as also the other exercises of his spiritual
+life, very few indeed being aware of it, he removed from the eyes and
+knowledge of men by superadding other garments, because he sought glory
+not from man, but from God. Even then the man of virtue entering upon
+the justifications of God, began to be more complete in abstinence, more
+frequent in watching, longer in prayer, more anxious in preaching. The
+pastoral office intrusted to him by God, he executed with so great
+diligence, as to suffer the rights neither of the clergy nor of the
+Church to be in any degree curtailed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There seems here also to be another commencement, for the next lesson is
+called the First.
+
+_Lesson First._
+
+So large a grace of compunction was he wont to possess, between the
+secrets of prayer or the solemnities of masses, that with eyes trained
+to weeping he would be wholly dissolved in tears; and in the office
+{218} of the altar his appearance was as though he was witnessing the
+Lord's passion in the flesh. Knowing also that mercy softens justice,
+and that pity hath the promise of the life that now is, and of that
+which is to come, therefore towards the poor and the afflicted did he
+bear the bowels of mercy piteously, and was anxious to reach the poor by
+the blessings of his alms.
+
+_Lesson Second._
+
+The more humble of those whom a character for religion raised high, he
+made his acquaintance and intimates; and that he might learn from them
+to hunger and thirst after righteousness, he enjoyed more frequently
+their secret conversation. Towards such servants and soldiers of Christ
+this merciful man preferred to be liberal and abundant in food and
+raiment, he who determined in himself to be moderate and sparing. For
+what would he deny to Christ, who for Christ was about to shed his
+blood? He who owed his coat or cloak to one who asked it, desired to
+add, moreover, his own flesh. For he knew that the man would never
+freely give his own flesh, who showed himself greedy of any temporal
+thing.
+
+_Lesson Third._
+
+Hitherto the merciful Lord, who maketh poor and enricheth, bringeth low
+and lifteth up, wished to load his servant with riches, and exalt him
+with honours; and afterwards he was pleased to try him with adversity.
+By trying whether he loved Him, He proved it the more certainly; but He
+supplied grace more abundantly. For with the temptation He made a way to
+escape, that he might be able to bear it. Therefore, the envious enemy,
+considering that the new prelate {219} and the new man was flourishing
+with so manifold a grace of virtues, devised to send a burning blight of
+temptation, which might suffocate the germ of his merits already put
+forth. Nor was there any delay. He who severs a man from his God, and
+one friend from his neighbour, sowed irreconcileable quarrels between
+the king and the archbishop.
+
+Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.
+
+_In Lauds._
+
+ A grain falls and gives birth to an abundance of corn.
+ The alabaster-box is broken, and the odour of the
+ ointment is powerful.
+ The whole world vies in love to the martyr,
+ Whose wonderful signs strike all with astonishment.
+ The water for Thomas five times changing colour,
+ Once was turned into milk, four times into blood.
+ At the shrine[81] of Thomas four times the light
+ came down,
+ And to the glory of the saint kindled the wax-tapers.
+ DO THOU BY THE BLOOD OF THOMAS, WHICH HE[82]
+ SHED FOR THEE;
+ MAKE US, O CHRIST, ASCEND,
+ Whither Thomas has ascended.
+
+ Extend[83] succour to us, O Thomas,
+ Guide those who stand, {220}
+ Raise up those who fall,
+
+ Correct our morals, actions, and life;
+
+ And guide us into the way of peace.
+
+ [Footnote 81: Ad Thomæ memoriam.]
+
+ [Footnote 82: Tu per Thomæ sanguinem quem pro te impendit, Fac
+ nos, Christe, scandere, quo Thomas ascendit.]
+
+ [Footnote 83:
+
+ Opem nobis, O Thoma, porrige,
+ Rege stantes, jacentes erige,
+ Mores, actus, et vitam corrige,
+ Et in pacis nos viam dirige.
+ ]
+
+_Final Anthem._
+
+ Hail, O Thomas, the Rod of Justice;[84]
+ The Brightness of the World;
+ The Strength of the Church;
+ The Love of the People;
+ The Delight of the Clergy.
+ Hail, glorious Guardian of the Flock;
+ Save those who rejoice in thy glory.
+
+ [Footnote 84: Salve, Thomas, Virga Justitiæ, Mundi Jubar, Robur
+ Ecclesiæ, Plebis Amor, Cleri Delicia. Salve Gregis Tutor
+ egregie, Salva tuæ gaudentes gloriæ.]
+
+The end of the service of Thomas of Canterbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now for a few moments only let us meditate on this service. I have
+already referred to the lamentable practice of substituting biographical
+legends for the word of God. And what is the tendency of this service?
+What impression was it likely to make, and to leave on minds of ordinary
+powers and instruction? Must it not, of necessity, tend to withdraw them
+from contemplating Christ, and to fix their thoughts on the powers, the
+glory, the exaltation, the merits of a fellow-sinner? It will be said,
+that they will look beyond the martyr, and trace the blessings, here
+enumerated, to Christ, as their primary cause, and will think of the
+merits of Thomas as efficacious only through the merits of their
+Saviour; that in their invocation of Thomas they will implore him only
+to pray for them. But can this be so? Does not the ascription of
+miracles to him {221} and to his power; does not the very form of
+enumerating those miracles tend much to exalt the servant to an equality
+with the Master?
+
+Whilst Thomas by being thus, in words at least, presented to the people
+as working those miracles by his own power, (for there is throughout a
+lamentable absence of immediate ascription of glory to God,) is raised
+to an equality with Christ our Lord; many passages in this service have
+the tendency also of withdrawing the minds of the worshippers from an
+implicit and exclusive dependence on the merits of Christ alone, and of
+tempting them to admit the merits of Thomas to share at least with
+Christ in the work of grace and salvation. Let us place some texts of
+Scripture and some passages of this service side by side.
+
+[Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the other.]
+
+_Scripture._
+
+But after that the kindness and love of God towards man appeared, not by
+works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he
+saved us.--Titus iii. 4, 5.
+
+He who spared not his own Son, but gave him up for us all, how shall he
+not with him also freely give us all things?--Rom. viii. 32.
+
+The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin.--1 John i. 7.
+
+One Mediator.--1 Tim. ii. 5.
+
+Who also maketh intercession for us.--Rom. viii. 34.
+
+He ever liveth to make intercession for them.--Heb. vii. 25.
+
+_Service of Thomas Becket._
+
+O Christ Jesus, by the wounds of Thomas loosen the sins which bind us.
+
+O blessed Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS, forgive us our debts, raise us
+from the threefold death, and restore what has been lost with thy
+accustomed pity.
+
+Do thou, O Christ, by the blood of Thomas, which he shed for thee, make
+us ascend whither Thomas has ascended.
+
+Holy Thomas, pray for us.
+
+And if this service thus seems to mingle the merits of Christ, the
+merits of his blood and of his death, with {222} the merits of a mortal
+man, the immediate address to that mortal as the giver of good things
+temporal and spiritual, very awfully trespasses on that high, exclusive,
+and incommunicable prerogative of the one Lord God Omnipotent, which his
+Spirit hath proclaimed solemnly and repeatedly, and which he has fenced
+around against all invasion with so many warnings and denunciations.
+
+_Scripture._ _Service of Becket_
+
+1. O thou that hearest prayer, 1. For they sake, O Thomas,
+unto thee shall all flesh come.-- let the right hand of God embrace
+Ps. lxv. [vulg. lxiv.] 2. us.
+
+By prayer and supplication,
+with thanksgiving, let your requests
+be made known unto God.--Phil.
+iv. 6.
+
+2. Lord, be thou my helper.-- 2. Send help to us, O Thomas;
+Ps. xxx. [xxix.] 10.
+
+3. Thou shalt guide me by thy 3. Guide thou those who stand;
+counsel.--Ps. lxxiii. [lxxii.] 24.
+
+He, The Holy Spirit, shall guide
+you into all truth.--John xvi. 13.
+
+4. The Lord upholdeth all that 4. Raise up those who fall;
+fall, and raiseth up all those that
+be bowed down.--Psalm cxlv.
+[cxliv.] 14.
+
+5. Create in me a clean heart, 5. Correct our morals, actions
+O God.--Ps. li. [l.] 10. and life;
+
+6. The steps of a good man are 6. And guide us into the way
+ordered by the Lord. Though of peace.
+he fall, he shall not be utterly
+cast down, for the Lord upholdeth
+him.--Ps. xxxvii. [xxxvi.]
+23.
+
+The day-spring from on high
+hath visited us, to guide our feet
+into the way of peace.--Luke i.
+78, 79.
+
+And then again, in celebrating the praises of a mortal {223} man,
+recourse is had to language which can fitly be used only in our hymns
+and praises to the supreme Lord of our destinies, the eternal Creator,
+Redeemer, and Comforter, the only wise God our Saviour.
+
+_Address to Thomas._ _Language of Scripture._
+
+1. Hail, Thomas, Rod of Justice! 1. There shall come a rod out
+ of the stem of Jesse. Ye denied
+ the Holy One, and the Just--Isaiah
+ xi. 1. Acts iii. 14.
+
+2. The brightness of the world. 2. The brightness of his glory.
+ I am the light of the world--Heb.
+ i. 3. John viii. 12.
+
+3. The strength of the Church. 3. I can do all things through
+ Christ, that strengthened me.
+ Christ loved the Church, and
+ gave himself for it.--Phil. iv. 13.
+ Eph. v. 25.
+
+4. The love of the people: the 4. Grace be with all them that
+delight of the Clergy. love our Lord Jesus Christ in
+ sincerity. Delight thyself in the
+ Lord.--Eph. vi. 24. Ps. xxxvii. 4.
+
+5. Hail, glorious Guardian of 5. Our Lord Jesus, that great
+the Flock. Save those who rejoice Shepherd of the sheep. Give ear,
+in thy glory. O Shepherd of Israel; come and
+ save us. He that glorieth, let him
+ glory in the Lord.--Heb. xiii. 20.
+ Psalm lxxx. [lxxix.] 1. 1 Cor.
+ i. 31.
+
+Can that worship become the disciples of the Gospel and the Cross, which
+addresses such prayers and such praises to the spirit of a mortal man?
+Every prayer, and every form of praise here used in honour of Thomas
+Becket, it would well become Christians to offer to the Giver of all
+good, trusting solely and exclusively to the mediation of Christ Jesus
+our Lord for acceptance; and pleading-only the merits of his most
+precious blood. {224} And yet I am bound to confess, that in principle,
+in spirit, and in fact, I can find no substantial difference between
+this service of Thomas of Canterbury, and the service which all in
+communion with the Church of Rome are under an obligation to use even at
+the present hour.
+
+This point remains next for our inquiry, and we will draw from the
+well-head. I would, however, first suggest the application of a general
+test for ascertaining the real _bona-fide_ nature of these prayers and
+praises. The test I would apply is, to try with the change only of the
+name, substituting the holiest name ever named in heaven or in earth for
+the name of Thomas of Canterbury--whether these prayers and praises
+should not be offered to the Supreme Being alone through the atoning
+merits of his Blessed Son; whether they are not exclusively appropriate
+to HIM.
+
+To (Thomas/God Almighty) all things bow and are obedient.
+
+Plagues, diseases, death, and devils,
+Fire, air, land, and sea.
+(Thomas/The Almighty) fills the world with glory.
+
+The world offers obeisance to (Thomas/Almighty God).
+
+(The Martyr Thomas/Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ) began to shine
+forth with miracles [John ii. 11]; restoring sight to the blind [Luke
+vii. 21]; walking to the lame; hearing to the deaf; speech to the dumb;
+cleansing to the lepers [Matt. xi. 5]; making the paralytic sound [Matt.
+iv. 24]; healing the dropsy [Luke xiv. 4]; and all kinds of incurable
+diseases [Luke iv. 40]; restoring the dead to {225} life [Luke viii. 43.
+55]; in a wonderful manner commanding the devils [Matt. viii. 16], and
+all the elements [Luke viii. 25]. He put forth his hand to unwonted and
+unheard-of signs of his own power [Mark ii. 12. John ix. 30].
+
+Do thou, O Lord, by the blood of (Thomas/Christ) cause us to ascend
+whither (Thomas/Christ) has ascended. (O Thomas/O God), send help to us.
+Guide those who stand; raise up those who fall; correct our morals,
+actions, and life; and guide us into the way of peace.
+
+Hail, (Thomas!/Jesus!) Rod of Justice, the Brightness of the world, the
+Strength of the Church, the Love of the people, the Delight of the
+Clergy. Hail, Glorious Guardian of the flock! Save Thou those who
+delight in Thy glory.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We shall apply this same test to many of the collects and prayers used,
+and of necessity to be used, because they are authorized and appointed,
+even at the present day, in the ministrations of the Church of Rome. The
+impiety in many of those instances is not couched in such startling
+language; but it is not the less real. God forbid that we should charge
+our fellow-creatures with idolatry, who declare that they offer divine
+worship to the Supreme Being only; or that we should pronounce any
+professed Christian to have cast off his {226} dependence on the merits
+of Christ alone, who assures us that he looks for mercy only through
+those merits. But I know and feel, that according to the standard of
+Christian truth, and of the pure worship of Almighty God, which the
+Scriptures and primitive antiquity compel me to adopt, I should stain my
+own soul with the guilt of idolatry, and with the sin of relying on
+other merits than Christ's, were I myself to offer those prayers.
+
+That this service excited much disgust among the early reformers, we
+learn from various writers[85]. On the merits of the struggle between
+Becket and his king; on the question of Becket's moral and religious
+worth, (a question long and often discussed among the exercises of the
+masters of Paris in the full assembly of the Sorbonne[86],) or on the
+motives which influenced Henry the Eighth, I intend not to say one word:
+those points belong not to our present inquiry. It may not, however, be
+thought irrelevant here to quote a passage {227} from the ordinance of
+this latter monarch for erasing Becket's service out of the books, and
+his name from the calendar of the saints.
+
+ [Footnote 85: See Mornay "De la Messe," Saumur, 1604. p. 826.
+ Becon, in his "New Year's Gift," London, 1564, p. 183, thus
+ speaks: "What saint at any time thought himself so pure,
+ immaculate, and without all spot of sin, that he durst presume
+ to die for us, and to avouch his death to be an oblation and
+ sacrifice for our lives to God the Father, except peradventure
+ we will admit for good payment these and such like blasphemies,
+ which were wont full solemnly to be sung in the temples unto the
+ great ignominy of the glorious name of God, and the dishonour of
+ Christ's most precious blood." Then quoting the lines from the
+ service of Thomas Becket, on which we have above commented, he
+ adds, "I will let pass many more which are easy to be searched
+ and found out." Becon preached and wrote in the reign of Henry
+ VIII. and was then persecuted for his religion, as he was
+ afterwards in the reign of Mary.]
+
+ [Footnote 86: We are told that forty-eight years after his
+ death, the masters of Paris disputed whether Thomas was a
+ condemned sinner, or admitted into heaven.]
+
+In Henry the Eighth's proclamation, dated Westminster, 16th November, in
+the thirtieth year of his reign, printed by Bertholet, is the following
+very curious passage:--
+
+ "ITEM, for as moche as it appereth now clerely, that Thomas
+ Becket, sometyme Archbyshop of Canterburie, stubburnly to
+ withstand the holsome lawes establyshed agaynste the enormities
+ of the clergie, by the kynges highness mooste noble progenitour,
+ kynge HENRY the Seconde, for the common welthe, reste, and
+ tranquillitie of this realme, of his frowarde mynde fledde the
+ realme into Fraunce, and to the bishop of Rome, mayntenour of
+ those enormities, to procure the abrogation of the sayd lawes,
+ whereby arose moch trouble in this said realme, and that his
+ dethe, which they untruely called martyrdome, happened upon a
+ reskewe by him made, and that, as it is written, he gave
+ opprobrious wordes to the gentyllmen, whiche than counsayled hym
+ to leave his stubbernesse, and to avoyde the commocion of the
+ people, rysen up for that rescue. And he not only callyd the one
+ of them bawde, but also toke Tracy by the bosome, and violently
+ shoke and plucked hym in suche maner, that he had almoste
+ overthrowen hym to the pavement of the Churche; so that upon
+ this fray one of their company, perceivynge the same, strake
+ hym, and so in the thronge Becket was slayne. And further that
+ his canonization was made onely by the bysshop of Rome, bycause
+ he had ben a champion of maynteyne his usurped auctoritie, and a
+ bearer of the iniquitie of the clergie, for these and for other
+ great and urgent causes, longe to recyte, the Kynge's {228}
+ Maiestie, by the advyse of his counsayle, hath thought expedient
+ to declare to his lovynge subjectes, that notwithstandynge the
+ sayde canonization, there appereth nothynge in his lyfe and
+ exteriour conversation, wherby he shuld be callyd a sainct, but
+ rather estemed to have ben a rebell and traytour to his prynce.
+ Therefore his Grace strayghtly chargeth and commandeth that from
+ henseforth the sayde Thomas Becket shall not be estemed, named,
+ reputed, nor called a sayncte, but bysshop Becket; and that his
+ ymages and pictures, through the hole realme, shall be putte
+ downe, and avoyded out of all churches, chapelles, and other
+ places; and that from henseforthe, the dayes used to be
+ festivall in his name shall not be observed, nor the service,
+ office, antiphoners, colletes, and prayers, in his name redde,
+ but rased and put out of all the bokes[87]."
+
+ [Footnote 87: In the Roman Breviary, adapted to England, several
+ biographical lessons are appointed for the Anniversary of "St.
+ Thomas, bishop and martyr," interspersed with canticles. In one
+ of these we read, "This is truly a martyr, who, for the name of
+ Christ, shed blood; who feared not the threats of judges, nor
+ sought the glory of earthly dignity. But he reached the heavenly
+ kingdom."--Norwich, 1830. Hiem. p. 251.] {229}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+COUNCIL OF TRENT.
+
+
+In the process of ascertaining the real state of doctrine and practice
+in the worship of the Church of Rome at the present day, we must first
+gain as clear and accurate a knowledge of the decree of the Council of
+Trent, as its words will enable us to form. Into the character of that
+Council, and of those who constituted it, our present investigation does
+not lead us to inquire. It is now, I believe, generally understood, that
+its decrees are binding on all who profess allegiance to the Sovereign
+Roman Pontiff; and that the man would be considered to have renounced
+the Roman Catholic Communion, who should professedly withhold his assent
+from the doctrines there promulgated as vital, or against the oppugners
+of which the Council itself pronounced an anathema.
+
+Ecclesiastical writers[88] assure us, that the wording of the decrees of
+that Council was in many cases on purpose framed ambiguously and
+vaguely. The latitude, however, of the expressions employed, does not in
+itself {230} of necessity imply any of those sinister and unworthy
+motives to which it has been usual with many writers to attribute it. In
+charity, and without any improbable assumption, it may be referred to an
+honest and laudable desire of making the terms of communion as wide as
+might be, with a view of comprehending within what was regarded the pale
+of the Catholic Church, the greatest number of those who professed and
+called themselves Christians. Be this as it may, the vagueness and
+uncertainty of the terms employed, compel us in many instances to have
+recourse to the actual practice of the Church of Rome, as the best
+interpreter of doubtful expressions in the articles of that Council. The
+decree which bears on the subject of this volume is drawn up in the
+following words:--
+
+ [Footnote 88: See Mosheim, xvi. Cent. c. i. vol. iv. p. 196.
+ London, 1811.]
+
+ "SESSION XXV.[89]
+
+ "On the invocation, veneration, and reliques of saints, and of
+ sacred images.
+
+ "The Holy Council commands all bishops and others bearing the
+ office and care of instruction, that according to the usage of
+ the Catholic and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive
+ times of the Christian religion, and the consent of holy
+ fathers, and decrees of sacred councils, they in the first place
+ should instruct the faithful concerning the intercession and
+ invocation of saints, the honour of reliques, and the lawful use
+ of images, teaching them, that the SAINTS REIGNING TOGETHER WITH
+ CHRIST, offer their own {231} prayers for men to God: that it is
+ good and profitable SUPPLIANTLY TO INVOKE THEM: and to fly to
+ their PRAYERS, HELP, and ASSISTANCE, for obtaining benefits from
+ God, by his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer
+ and Saviour. But that those who deny that the saints, enjoying
+ everlasting happiness in heaven, are to be invoked; or who
+ assert either that they do not pray for us; or that the
+ invocation of them to pray for us even as individuals is
+ idolatry, or is repugnant to the word of God, and is opposed to
+ the honour of the one Mediator of God and man, Jesus Christ; or
+ that it is folly, by voice or mentally, to supplicate those who
+ reign in heaven, hold impious sentiments.
+
+ "That the bodies also of the holy martyrs and others living with
+ Christ, which were living members of Christ, and a temple of the
+ Holy Ghost to be raised by Him to eternal life, and to be
+ glorified, are to be worshipped by the faithful; by means of
+ which many benefits are conferred on men by God; so that those
+ who affirm that worship and honour are not due to the reliques
+ of the saints, or that they and other sacred monuments are
+ unprofitably honoured by the faithful; and that the shrines of
+ the saints are frequented in vain for the purpose of obtaining
+ their succour, are altogether to be condemned, as the Church has
+ long ago condemned them, and now also condemns them."
+
+ [Footnote 89: The Latin, which will be found in the Appendix, is
+ a transcript from a printed copy of the Acts of the Council of
+ Trent, preserved in the British Museum, to which are annexed the
+ autograph signatures of the secretaries (notarii), and their
+ seals.]
+
+An examination of this decree, in comparison with the form and language
+of other decrees of the same Council, forces the remark upon us, That
+the Council does not assert that the practice of invoking saints has any
+foundation in Holy Scripture. The absence of all such declaration is the
+more striking and important, because in the very decree immediately
+preceding this, {232} which establishes Purgatory as a doctrine of the
+Church of Rome, the Council declares that doctrine to be drawn from the
+Holy Scriptures. In the present instance the Council proceeds no further
+than to charge with impiety those who maintain the invocation of saints
+to be contrary to the word of God. Many a doctrine or practice, not
+found in Scripture, may nevertheless be not contrary to the word of God;
+but here the Council abstains from affirming any thing whatever as to
+the scriptural origin of the doctrine and practice which it
+authoritatively enforces. In this respect the framers of the decree
+acted with far more caution and wisdom than they had shown in wording
+the decree on Purgatory; and with far more caution and wisdom too than
+they exercised in this decree, when they affirmed that the doctrine of
+the invocation of saints was to be taught the people according to the
+usage of the Catholic and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive
+times of the Christian religion, and the consent of the holy fathers. I
+have good hope that these pages have already proved beyond gainsaying,
+that the invocation of saints is a manifest departure from the usage of
+the Primitive Church, and contrary to the testimony of "the holy
+fathers." However, the fact of the Council not having professed to trace
+the doctrine, or its promulgation, to any authority of Holy Scripture,
+is of very serious import, and deserves to be well weighed in all its
+bearings.
+
+With regard to the condemnatory clauses of this decree, I would for
+myself observe, that I should never have engaged in preparing this
+volume, had I not believed, "that it was neither good nor profitable to
+invoke the saints, or to fly to their prayers, their assistance, and
+succour." I am bound, with this decree {233} before me, to pronounce,
+that it is a vain thing to offer supplications, either by the voice or
+in the mind, to the saints, even if they be reigning in heaven; and that
+it is also in vain for Christians to frequent the shrines of the saints
+for the purpose of obtaining their succour.
+
+I am, moreover, under a deep conviction, that the invocation of them is
+both at variance with the word of God, and contrary to the honour of the
+one Mediator between God and man, Jesus Christ.
+
+On this last point, indeed, I am aware of an anxious desire prevailing
+on the part of many Roman Catholics, to establish a distinction between
+a mediation of Redemption, and a mediation of Intercession: and thus by
+limiting the mediation of the saints and angels to intercession, and
+reserving the mediation of redemption to Christ only, to avoid the
+setting up of another to share the office of Mediator with Him, who is
+so solemnly declared in Scripture to be the one Mediator between God and
+man. But this distinction has no foundation in the revealed will of God;
+on the contrary, it is directly at variance with the words and with the
+spirit of many portions of the sacred volume. There we find the two
+offices of redemption and mediation joined together in Christ. "If any
+man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
+Righteous, and He is the propitiation for our sins." [1 John ii. 1, 2.
+Heb. ix. 12. vii. 25.] In the Epistle to the Hebrews, the same Saviour
+who is declared "by his own blood to have obtained eternal redemption,"
+is announced also as the Mediator of Intercession. "Wherefore he is able
+to save them to the uttermost who come unto God through him, seeing he
+ever liveth to make intercession for them." The {234} redemption wrought
+by Christ, and the intercession still made in our behalf by Christ, are
+both equally declared to us by the most sure warrant of Holy Scripture;
+of any other intercession by saints in glory, by angels, or Virgin, to
+be sought by our suppliant invocations to them, the covenant of God
+speaks not.
+
+It may be observed, that the enactment of this decree by the Council of
+Trent, has been chiefly lamented by some persons on the ground of its
+presenting the most formidable barrier against any reconciliation
+between the Church of Rome, and those who hold the unlawfulness of the
+invocation of saints. Indeed persons of erudition, judgment, piety, and
+charity, in communion with Rome, have not been wanting to express openly
+their regret, that decrees so positive, peremptory, and exclusive,
+should have been adopted. They would have been better satisfied with the
+terms of communion in the Church to which they still adhered, had
+individuals been left to their own responsibility on questions of
+disputable origin and doubtful antiquity, involving rather the subtilty
+of metaphysical disquisitions, than agreeable to the simplicity of
+Gospel truth, and essential Christian doctrine. On this point I would
+content myself with quoting the sentiments of a Roman Catholic author.
+Many of the facts alleged in his interesting comments deserve the
+patient consideration of every Christian. Here (observes the commentator
+on Paoli Sarpi's History of the Council of Trent[90]) the Council makes
+it a duty to pray to saints, though the ancient Church never regarded it
+as necessary. The practice cannot be proved to be introduced into public
+worship {235} before the sixth century; and it is certain, that in the
+ancient liturgies and sacramentaries no direct invocation is found. Even
+in our modern missals, being those of our ecclesiastical books in which
+the ancient form has been longest retained, scarcely is there a collect
+[those he means in which mention is made of the saints] where the
+address is not offered directly to God, imploring Him to hear the
+prayers of the saints for us; and this is the ancient form of
+invocation. It is true, that in the Breviaries and other ecclesiastical
+books, direct prayers to the saints have been subsequently introduced,
+as in litanies, hymns, and even some collects. But the usage is more
+modern, and cannot be evidence for ancient tradition. For this [ancient
+tradition] only some invocations addressed to saints in public harangues
+are alleged, but which ought to be regarded as figures of rhetoric,
+_apostrophes_, rather than real invocations; though at the same time
+some fathers laid the foundation for such a practice by asserting that
+one could address himself to the saints, and hope for succour from them.
+
+ [Footnote 90: Histoire du Conc. de Trent, par Fra. Paoli Sarpi,
+ traduit par Pierre François de Courayer. Amsterdam, note 31.
+ 1751. vol. iii. p. 182.]
+
+We have already alluded to the very great latitude of interpretation
+which the words of this Council admit. The expressions indeed are most
+remarkably elastic; capable of being expanded widely enough to justify
+those of the Church of Rome who allow themselves in the practice of
+asking for aid and assistance, temporal and spiritual, to be expected
+from the saints themselves; and at the same time, the words of the
+decree admit of being so far contracted as not in appearance palpably to
+contradict those who allege, that the Church of Rome never addresses a
+saint with any other petition, than purely and simply that the saint
+would by prayer intercede for the worshippers. The words "suppliantly
+{236} to invoke them," and "to fly to their prayers, HELP, and SUCCOUR,"
+are sufficiently comprehensive to cover all kinds of prayer for all
+kinds of benefits, whilst "the invocation of them to pray for us even
+individually," will countenance those who would restrict the faithful to
+an entreaty for their prayers only.
+
+Whatever may be the advantage of this latitude of interpretation, in one
+point of view it must be a subject of regret. Complaints had long been
+made in Christendom, that other prayers were offered to the saints,
+besides those which petitioned only for their intercession; and if the
+Council of Trent had intended it to be a rule of universal application,
+that in whatever words the invocations of the saints might be couched,
+they should be taken to mean only requests for their prayers, it may be
+lamented, that no declaration to that effect was given.
+
+The manner in which writers of the Church of Rome have attempted to
+reconcile the prayers actually offered in her ritual, with the principle
+of invoking the saints only for their prayers, is indeed most
+unsatisfactory. Whilst to some minds the expedient to which those
+writers have had recourse carries with it the stamp of mental
+reservation, and spiritual subterfuge, and moral obliquity; others under
+the influence of the purest charity will regret in it the absence of
+that simplicity, and direct openness in word and deed, which we regard
+as characteristic of the religion of the Gospel; and will deprecate its
+adoption as tending, in many cases inevitably, to become a most
+dangerous snare to the conscience. I will here refer only to the
+profession of that principle as made by Bellarmin. Subsequent writers
+seem to have adopted his sentiments, and to have expressed themselves
+very much in his words. {237}
+
+Bellarmin unreservedly asserts that Christians are to invoke the saints
+solely and exclusively for their prayers, and not for any benefits as
+from the saints themselves. But then he seems to paralyse that
+declaration by this refinement: "It must nevertheless be observed that
+we have not to do with words, but with the meaning of words; for as far
+as concerns the words, it is lawful to say, 'Saint Peter, have mercy on
+me! Save me! Open to me the entrance of heaven!' So also, 'Give to me
+health of body, Give me patience, Give me fortitude!' Whilst only we
+understand 'Save me, and have mercy upon me BY PRAYING for me: Give me
+this and that, BY THY PRAYERS AND MERITS.' For thus Gregory of
+Nazianzen, in his Oratio in Cyprianum; and the Universal Church, when in
+the hymn to the Virgin she says,
+
+ Mary, Mother of Grace,
+ Mother of Mercy,
+ Do thou protect us from the enemy,
+ And take us in the hour of death.
+
+"And in that of the Apostles,
+
+ 'To whose command is subject'
+ The health and weakness of all:
+ Heal us who are morally diseased;
+ Restore us to virtue.
+
+"And as the Apostle says of himself 'that I might save some,' [Rom. xi.]
+and 'that he might save all,' [I Cor. ix.] not as God, but Thy prayer
+and counsel."
+
+I wish not to enter upon the question how far this distinction is
+consistent with that openness and straightforward undisguised dealing
+which is alone allowable when we are contending for the truth; nor how
+far the {238} charge of moral obliquity and double dealing, often
+brought against it, can be satisfactorily met. But suppose for a moment
+that we grant (what is not the case) that in the metaphysical
+disquisitions of the experienced casuist such a distinction might be
+maintained, how can we expect it to be recognized, and felt, and acted
+upon by the large body of Christians? Abstractedly considered, such an
+interpretation in a religious act of daily recurrence by the mass of
+unlearned believers would, I conceive, appear to reflecting minds most
+improbable, if not utterly impossible. And as to its actual _bona-fide_
+result in practice, a very brief sojourn in countries where the religion
+of Rome is dominant, will suffice to convince us, that such subtilties
+of the casuist are neither received nor understood by the great body of
+worshippers; and that the large majority of them, when they pray to an
+individual saint to deliver them from any evil, or to put them in
+possession of some good, do in very deed look to the saint himself for
+the fulfilment of their wishes. It is a snare to the conscience only too
+evidently successful.
+
+And I regret to add, that in the errors into which such language of
+their prayers may unhappily betray them, they cannot be otherwise than
+confirmed as well by the recorded sentiments of men in past years, whom
+they have been taught to reverence, as by the sentiments which are
+circulated through the world now, even by what they are accustomed to
+regard as the highest authority on earth[91].
+
+ [Footnote 91: See in subsequent parts of this work the
+ references to Bonaventura, Bernardin Sen., Bernardin de Bust.,
+ &c.; and also the encyclical letter of the present (A.D. 1840)
+ reigning pontiff.]
+
+To this point, however, we must repeatedly revert {239} hereafter; at
+present, I will only add one further consideration. If, as we are now
+repeatedly told, the utmost sought by the invocation of saints is that
+they would intercede for the supplicants; that no more is meant than we
+of the Anglican Church mean when we earnestly entreat our
+fellow-Christians on earth to pray for us,--why should not the prayers
+to the saints be confined exclusively to that form of words which would
+convey the meaning intended? why should other forms of supplicating them
+be adopted, whose obvious and direct meaning implies a different thing?
+If we request a Christian friend to pray for us, that we may be
+strengthened and supported under a trial and struggle in our spiritual
+warfare, we do not say, "Friend, strengthen me; Friend, support me."
+That entreaty would imply our desire to be, that he would visit us
+himself, and comfort and strengthen us by his own kind words and
+cheering offices of consolation and encouragement. To convey our
+meaning, our words would be, "Pray for me; remember me in your
+supplications to the throne of grace. Implore God, of his mercy, to give
+me the strength and comfort of his Holy Spirit." If nothing more is ever
+intended to be conveyed, than a similar request for their prayers, when
+the saints are "suppliantly invoked," in a case of such delicacy, and
+where there is so much danger of words misleading, why have other
+expressions of every variety been employed in the Roman Liturgies, as
+well as in the devotions of individuals, which in words appeal to the
+saints, not for their prayers, but for their own immediate exertion in
+our behalf, their assistance, succour, defence, and comfort,--"Protect
+us from our enemies--Heal the diseases of our minds--Release us from our
+sin--Receive us at the hour of death?" {240}
+
+In the present work, however, were it not for the example and warning
+set us by this still greater departure from Scripture and the primitive
+Church, we need not have dwelt on this immediate point; because we
+maintain that any invocation of saint or angel, even if it were confined
+to a petitioning for their prayers and intercessions, is contrary both
+to God's word and to the faith and practice of the primitive, Catholic,
+and Apostolic Church. We now proceed to the next portion of our proposed
+inquiry,--the present state of Roman Catholic worship, with respect to
+the invocation of saints and angels. {241}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SECTION I.--PRESENT SERVICE IN THE CHURCH OF ROME.
+
+
+In submitting to the reader's consideration the actual state of Roman
+Catholic worship at the present hour, I disclaim all desire to fasten
+upon the Church of Rome any of the follies and extravagancies of
+individual superstition. Probably many English Roman Catholics have been
+themselves shocked and scandalized by the scenes which their own eyes
+have witnessed in various parts of continental Europe. It would be no
+less unfair in us to represent the excesses of superstition there forced
+on our notice as the genuine legitimate fruits of the religion of Rome,
+than it would be in Roman Catholics to affiliate on the Catholics of the
+Anglican Church the wild theories and revolting tenets of all who assume
+the name of opponents to Rome. Well indeed does it become us of both
+Churches to watch jealously and adversely as against ourselves the
+errors into which our doctrines, if not preserved and guarded in their
+purity and simplicity, might have a tendency to seduce the unwary. And
+whilst I am fully alive to the necessity of us Anglican Catholics
+prescribing to ourselves a {242} practical application of the same rule
+in various points of faith and discipline, I would with all delicacy and
+respect invite Roman Catholics to do likewise. Especially would I
+entreat them to reflect with more than ordinary scrutiny and solicitude
+on the vast evils into which the practice of praying to saints and
+angels, and of pleading their merits at the throne of grace, has a
+tendency to betray those who are unenlightened and off their guard; and
+unless my eyes and my ears and my powers of discernment have altogether
+often deceived and failed me, I must add, actually betrays thousands.
+Often when I have witnessed abroad multitudes of pilgrims prostrate
+before an image of the Virgin, their arms extended, their eyes fixed on
+her countenance, their words in their native language pouring forth her
+praises and imploring her aid, I have asked myself, If this be not
+religious worship, what is? If I could transport myself into the midst
+of pagans in some distant part of the world at the present day; or could
+I have mingled with the crowd of worshippers surrounding the image of
+Minerva in Athens, or of Diana in Ephesus, when the servants of the only
+God called their fellow-creatures from such vanities, should I have seen
+or heard more unequivocal proofs that the worshippers were addressing
+their prayers to the idols as representations of their deities? Would
+any difference have appeared in their external worship? When the
+Ephesians worshipped their "great goddess Diana and the image which fell
+down from Jupiter," could their attitude, their eyes, or their words
+more clearly have indicated an assurance in the worshipper, that the
+Spirit of the Deity was especially present in that image, than the
+attitude, the eyes, the words of the pilgrims at Einsiedlin for example,
+are indications of the same {243} belief and assurance with regard to
+the statue of the Virgin Mary? These thoughts would force themselves
+again and again on my mind; and though since I first witnessed such
+things many years have intervened, chequered with various events of
+life, yet whilst I am writing, the scenes are brought again fresh to my
+remembrance; the same train of thought is awakened; and the lapse of
+time has not in the least diminished the estimate then formed of the
+danger, the awful peril, to which the practice of addressing saints and
+angels in prayer, even in its most modified and mitigated form, exposes
+those who are in communion with Rome. I am unwilling to dwell on this
+point longer, or to paint in deeper or more vivid colours the scenes
+which I have witnessed, than the necessity of the case requires. But it
+would have been the fruit of a morbid delicacy rather than of brotherly
+love, had I disguised, in this part of my address, the full extent of
+the awful dread with which I contemplate any approximation to prayers,
+of whatever kind, uttered by the lips or mentally conceived, to any
+spiritual existence in heaven above, save only to the one God
+exclusively. It is indeed a dread suggested by the highest and purest
+feelings of which I believe my frame of mind to be susceptible; it is
+sanctioned and enforced by my reason; and it is confirmed and
+strengthened more and more by every year's additional reflection and
+experience. Ardently as I long and pray for Christian unity, I could not
+join in communion with a Church, one of whose fundamental articles
+accuses of impiety those who deny the lawfulness of the invocations of
+saints.
+
+But I return from this digression on the peril of idolatry, to which as
+well the theory as the practice of {244} the Roman Catholic Church
+exposes her members; and willingly repeat my disclaimer of any wish or
+intention whatever to fasten and filiate upon the Church of Rome the
+doctrines or the practice of individuals, or even of different sections
+of her communion. Still, in the same manner as I have referred to the
+extravagancies which offend us in many parts of Christendom now, I would
+recall some of the excesses into which renowned and approved authors of
+her communion have been betrayed. I seek not to fix on those members of
+the Roman Church who disclaim any participation in such excesses, the
+folly or guilt of others; but when we find many of the most celebrated
+among her sons tempted into such lamentable departures from primitive
+Christian worship, we are naturally led to ascertain whether the
+doctrine be not itself the genuine cause and source of the
+mischief;--whether the malady be not the immediate and natural effect of
+the tenet and practice operating generally, and not to be referred to
+the idiosyncrasy of the patient. A voice seems to address us from every
+side, when such excesses are witnessed, Firmly resist the beginnings of
+the evil; oppose its very commencement; it is not a question of degree,
+exclude the principle itself from your worship; give utterance to no
+invocation; mentally conceive no prayer to any being, save God alone;
+plead no other merits with Him than the merits of his only Son. Then,
+and then only, are you safe. Then, and then only, is your prayer
+catholic, primitive, apostolic, and scriptural.
+
+The[92] most satisfactory method of conducting this {245} branch of our
+inquiry seems to be, that we should examine the Roman Ritual with
+reference to those several and progressive stages to which I have before
+generally referred; from the mere rhetorical apostrophe to the direct
+prayer for spiritual blessings petitioned for immediately from the
+person addressed. I am neither anxious to establish the progress
+historically, nor do I wish to tie myself down in all cases to the exact
+order of those successive stages, in my present citation of testimonies
+from the Roman Ritual. My anxiety is to give a fair view of what is now
+the real character of Roman Catholic worship, rather than to draw fine
+distinctions. I shall therefore survey within the same field of view the
+two fatal errors by which, as we believe, the worship of the Church of
+Rome is rendered unfit for the family of Christ to acknowledge it
+generally as their own: I mean the adoration of saints, and the pleading
+of their merits at the throne of grace, instead of trusting to the alone
+exclusive merits of the one only Mediator Jesus Christ our Lord, and
+addressing God Almighty alone.
+
+ [Footnote 92: I believe the method best calculated to supply us
+ with the very truth is, as I have before observed, to trace the
+ conduct of Christians at the shrines of the martyrs, and follow
+ them in their successive departures further and further from
+ primitive purity and simplicity, on the anniversaries of those
+ servants of God. What was hailed there first in the full warmth
+ of admiration and zeal for the honour and glory of a national or
+ favourite martyr, crept stealthily, and step by step, into the
+ regular and stated services of the Church.]
+
+I. In the original form of those prayers in which mention was made of
+the saints departed, Christians addressed the Supreme Being alone,
+either in praise for the mercies shown to the saints themselves, and to
+the Church through their means; or else in supplication, that the
+worshippers might have grace to follow their example, and profit by
+their instruction. Such, for instance, is the prayer in the Roman
+ritual[93] on St. {246} John's day[94] which is evidently the foundation
+of the beautiful Collect now used in the Anglican Church,--"Merciful
+Lord, we beseech thee to cast thy bright beams of light upon thy Church,
+that it being enlightened by the doctrine of thy Apostle and Evangelist
+St. John, may so walk in the light of thy truth, that it may at length
+attain to the light of everlasting life, through Jesus our Lord. Amen."
+Such too is the close of the Prayer for the whole state of Christ's
+Church militant here on earth, offered in our Anglican service,--"We
+bless thy holy name for all thy servants departed this life in thy faith
+and fear, beseeching thee to give us grace so to follow their good
+examples, that with them we may be partakers of thy heavenly kingdom.
+Grant this, O Father, for the sake of Jesus Christ our only Mediator and
+Advocate. Amen."
+
+ [Footnote 93: The references will generally be given to the
+ Roman Breviary as edited by F.C. Husenbeth, Norwich, 1830. That
+ work consists of four volumes, corresponding with the four
+ quarters of the ecclesiastical year--Winter, Hiem.; Spring,
+ Vern.; Summer, _Æstiv_.; Autumn, Aut.; and the volumes will be
+ designated by the corresponding initials, H. V. Æ. A.]
+
+ [Footnote 94: "Ecclesiam, tuam, Domine, benignus illustra, ut
+ beati Johannis Apostoli tui et evangelistæ illuminata doctrinis,
+ ad dona perveniat sempiterna. Per Dominum."--Husen. H. p. 243.]
+
+II. The second stage supplies examples of a kind of rhetorical
+apostrophe; the speaker addressing one who was departed as though he had
+ears to hear. Were not this the foundation stone on which the rest of
+the edifice seems to have been built, we might have passed it by
+unnoticed. Of this we have an instance in the address to the Shepherds
+on Christmas-day. "Whom have ye seen, ye shepherds? Say ye, tell ye, who
+hath appeared on the earth? Say ye, what saw ye? Announce to us the
+nativity of Christ[95]."
+
+ [Footnote 95: Quem vidistis, Pastores? Dicite, Annunciate nobis.
+ In terris quis apparuit? Dicite quidnam vidistis? Et annunciate
+ Christi nativitatem.--H. 219.] {247}
+
+Another instance is seen in that beautiful song ascribed to Prudentius
+and used on the day of Holy Innocents:
+
+ "Hail! ye flowers of Martyrs." [Salvete flores martyrum. H. 249.]
+
+It is of the same character with other songs, said to be from the same
+pen, in which the town of Bethlehem is addressed, and even the Cross.
+
+ "O Thou of mighty cities." [O sola magnarum urbium. H. 306.]
+ "Bend thy boughs, thou lofty tree...."
+ [Flecte ramos arbor alta, &c. Aut. 344.]
+ "Worthy wast thou alone
+ To bear the victim of the world."
+
+Thus, on the feast of the exaltation of the Cross, this anthem is
+sung,--"O blessed Cross, who wast alone worthy to bear the King of the
+heavens and the Lord." [O crux benedicta, quæ sola fuisti digna portare
+Regem coelorum et Dominum. Alleluia. A. 345.] Though unhappily, in an
+anthem on St. Andrew's day, this apostrophe becomes painful and
+distressing, in which not only is the cross thus apostrophised, but it
+is prayed to, as though it had ears to hear, and a mind to understand,
+and power to act,--"Hail, precious Cross! do thou receive the disciple
+of Him who hung upon thee, my master, Christ." [Salve, crux pretiosa
+suscipe discipulum ejus, qui pependit in te, magister meus Christus. A.
+547.] The Church of Rome, in this instance, gives us a vivid example of
+the ease with which exclamations and apostrophes are made the
+ground-work of invocations. In the legend of the day similar, though not
+the same, words form a part of the salutation, which St. Andrew is there
+said to have addressed {248} to the cross of wood prepared for his own
+martyrdom, and then bodily before his eyes. There are many such
+addresses to the Cross, in various parts of the Roman ritual. (See A.
+344.)
+
+In such apostrophes the whole of the Song of the Three Children abounds;
+and we meet with many such in the early writers.
+
+III. The third stage supplies instances of prayer to God, imploring him
+to allow the supplication of his saints to be offered for us. Of this we
+find examples in the Collects for St. Andrew's Eve and Anniversary, for
+the feast of St. Anthony, and various others.
+
+"We beseech thee, Almighty God, that he whose feast we are about to
+celebrate may implore thy aid for us," &c. [Quæsumus omnipotens Deus, ut
+beatus Andreas Apostolus cujus prævenimus festivitatem, tuum pro nobis
+imploret auxilium. A. 545.]
+
+"That he may be for us a perpetual intercessor." [Ut apud te sit pro
+nobis perpetuus intercessor. A. 551.]
+
+"We beseech thee, O Lord, let the intercession of the blessed Anthony
+the Abbot commend us, that what we cannot effect by our own merits, we
+may obtain by his patronage [Ejus patrocinio assequamur. H. 490.]:
+through the Lord."
+
+These prayers I could not offer in faith. I am taught in the written
+word to look for no other intercessor in heaven, than one who is eternal
+and divine, therefore I can need no other. Had God, by his revealed
+word, told me that the intercessions of his servants departed should
+prevail with Him, provided I sought that benefit by prayer, I should,
+without any misgiving, have implored Him to receive their {249} prayers
+in my behalf; but I can find no such an intimation in the covenant. In
+that covenant the word of the God of truth and mercy is pledged to
+receive those, and to grant the prayers of those who come to him through
+his blessed Son. In that covenant, I am strictly commanded and most
+lovingly invited to approach boldly the Supreme Giver of all good things
+myself, and to ask in faith nothing wavering, with an assurance that He
+who spared not his own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, will, with
+Him, also freely give us all things. In this assurance I place implicit
+trust; and as long as I have my being in this earthly tabernacle, I
+will, by his gracious permission and help, pray for whatever is needful
+for the soul and the body; I will pray not for myself only, but for all,
+individually and collectively, who are near and dear to me, and all who
+are far from me; for my friends, and for those who wish me ill; for my
+fellow Christians, and for those who are walking still in darkness and
+sin;--I will pray for mercy on all mankind. And I will, as occasion
+offers, desire others among the faithful on earth to pray for me; and
+will take comfort and encouragement and holy hope from the reflection
+that their prayers are presented to God in my behalf, and that they will
+continue to pray for me when my own strength shall fail and the hour of
+my departure shall draw nigh. But for the acceptance of my own prayers
+and of theirs I can depend on no other Mediator in the world of spirits,
+than on HIM, whom his own Word declares to be the one Mediator between
+God and men, who prayed for me when He was on earth, who is ever making
+intercession for me in heaven. I know of no other in the unseen world,
+by whom I can have access to the Father; I find no other offered to me,
+I seek no {250} other, I want no other. I trust my cause,--the cause of
+my present life, the cause of my soul's eternal happiness,--to HIM and
+to his intercession. I thank God for the blessing. I am satisfied; and
+in the assurance of the omnipotence of his intercession, and the perfect
+fulness of his mediation, I am happy.
+
+On this point it were well to compare two prayers both offered to God;
+the one pleading with Him the intercession of the passion of his only
+Son, the other pleading the prayers of a mortal man. The first prayer is
+a collect in Holy Week, the second is a collect on St. Gregory's Day.
+
+ We beseech thee, Almighty God, that we who among so many
+ adversities from our own infirmity fail, the passion of thy only
+ begotten Son interceding for us, may revive. V. 243.
+
+ O God, who hast granted the rewards of eternal blessedness[96]
+ to the soul of thy servant Gregory, mercifully grant that we who
+ are pressed down by the weight of our sins, may, by his prayers
+ with Thee, be raised up. V. 480.
+
+ [Footnote 96: I can never read this, and such passages as this,
+ without asking myself, can such an assertion be in accordance
+ with the inspired teaching?--"Judge nothing before the time,
+ until the Lord come, who both will bring to light the hidden
+ things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the
+ hearts: and then shall every man have praise of God." I Cor. iv.
+ 5.]
+
+IV. The next form of prayer to which I would invite your serious
+attention, is one from which my judgment and my feelings revolt far more
+decidedly even than from the last-mentioned; and I have the most clear
+denouncement of my conscience, that by offering it I should do a wrong
+to my Saviour, and ungratefully disparage his inestimable merits, and
+the full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice and satisfaction of his
+omnipotent {251} atonement: I mean those prayers, still addressed to
+God, which supplicate that our present and future good may be advanced
+by the merits of departed mortals, that by their merits our sins may be
+forgiven, and our salvation secured; that by their merits our souls may
+be made fit for celestial joys, and be finally admitted into heaven.
+
+Of these prayers the Roman Breviary contains a great variety of
+examples, some exceeding others very much in their apparent
+forgetfulness and disregard of the merits of the only Saviour, and
+consequently far more shocking to the reason and affections of us who
+hold it a point of conscience to make the merits of Christ alone, all in
+all, exclusive of any other to be joined with them, the only ground of
+our acceptance with God.
+
+We find an example of this prayer in the collect on the day of St.
+Saturnine. "O God, who grantest us to enjoy the birth-day of the blessed
+Saturnine, thy martyr, grant that we may be aided by his merits, through
+the Lord." [Ejus nos tribue meritis adjuvari per Dominum. A. 544.]
+
+Another example, in which the supplicants plead for deliverance from
+hell, to be obtained by the merits and prayers of the saint together, is
+the Collect for December 6th, the day of St. Nicolas.
+
+"O God, who didst adorn the blessed Pontiff Nicolas with unnumbered
+miracles, grant, we beseech Thee, that by his merits and prayers we may
+be set free from the fires of hell, through," &c. [Ut ejus meritis et
+precibus à gehennæ incendiis liberemur. H. 436.]
+
+Another example, in like manner specifying both the merits and
+intercession of the departed saint, contains {252} expressions very
+unacceptable to many of those who are accustomed to make the Bible their
+study. It is a prayer to Joseph, the espoused husband of the Virgin
+Mary. Of him mention is made by name in the Gospel just before and just
+after the birth of Christ, as an upright, merciful man, to whom God on
+three several occasions made a direct revelation of his will, by the
+medium of a dream, with reference to the incarnate Saviour. Again, on
+the holy family visiting Jerusalem, when our Lord was twelve years of
+age, Mary, his mother, in her remonstrance with her Son, speaks to Him
+of Joseph thus: "Why hast Thou thus dealt with us? Behold thy father and
+I have sought Thee sorrowing." Upon which not one word was uttered by
+our Saviour that would enable us to form an opinion as to his own will
+with regard to Joseph. Our Lord seems purposely to have drawn their
+thoughts from his earthly connexion with them, and to have raised their
+minds to a contemplation of his unearthly, his heavenly, and eternal
+origin. "How is it that ye sought me? Wist ye not that I must be about
+my Father's business?" After this time, though the writings of the Holy
+Book, either historical, doctrinal, or prophetic, at the lowest
+calculation embrace a period of fourscore years, no allusion is made to
+Joseph as a man still living, or to his memory as one already dead. And
+yet he is one of those for the benefit of whose intercession the Church
+of Rome teaches her members to pray to God, and from whose merits they
+are taught to hope for succour.
+
+On the 19th of March the following Collect is offered to the Saviour of
+the world:--
+
+"We beseech thee, O Lord, that we may be succoured by the merits of the
+husband of thy most holy mother, {253} so that what we cannot obtain by
+our own power, may be granted to us by his intercession. Who livest,"
+&c. [V. 486.]
+
+It is anticipating our instances of the different stages observable in
+the invocation of saints, to quote here direct addresses to Joseph
+himself; still it may be well to bring at once to a close our remarks
+with regard to the worship paid to him. We find that in the Litany of
+the Saints, "St. Joseph, pray for us," is one of the supplications; but
+on his day (March 19) there are three hymns addressed to Joseph, which
+appear to be full of lamentable superstition, assigning, as they do, to
+him a share at least in the work of our salvation, and solemnly stating,
+as a truth, what, whether true or not, depends upon a groundless
+tradition, namely, that our blessed Lord and Mary watched by him at his
+death; ascribing to Joseph also that honour and praise, which the Church
+was wont to offer to God alone. The following are extracts from those
+hymns:
+
+First hymn. "Thee, Joseph, let the companies of heaven celebrate; thee
+let all the choirs of Christian people resound; who, bright in merits,
+wast joined in chaste covenant with the renowned Virgin. Others their
+pious death consecrates after death; and glory awaits those who deserve
+the palm. Thou alive, equal to those above, enjoyest God, more blessed
+by wondrous lot. O Trinity, most High, spare us who pray; grant us to
+reach heaven [to scale the stars] BY THE MERITS OF JOSEPH, that at
+length we may perpetually offer to thee a grateful song." [Te Joseph
+celebrent agmina coelitum. V. 485.]
+
+Second hymn. "O, Joseph, the glory of those in heaven, and the sure hope
+of our life, and the safeguard {254} of the world, benignly ACCEPT THE
+PRAISES WHICH WE joyfully sing TO THEE.... Perpetual praise to the most
+High Trinity, who granting to thee honours on high, give to us, BY THY
+MERITS, the joys of a blessed life." [Coelitum, Joseph, Decus. V. 486.]
+
+Third hymn. "He whom we, the faithful, worship with joy, whose exalted
+triumphs we celebrate, Joseph, on this day obtained by merit the joys of
+eternal life. O too happy! O too blessed! at whose last hour Christ and
+the Virgin together, with serene countenance, stood watching. Hence,
+conqueror of hell, freed from the bands of the flesh, he removes in
+placid sleep to the everlasting seats, and binds his temples with bright
+chaplets. Him, therefore, reigning, let us all importune, that he would
+be present with us, and that he obtaining pardon for our transgressions,
+would assign to us the rewards of peace on high. Be praises to thee, be
+honours to thee, O Trine God, who reignest, and assignest golden crowns
+to thy faithful servant for ever. Amen." [Iste, quem læti colimus
+fideles. V. 490.]
+
+It is painful to remark, that in these last clauses the very same word
+is employed when the Church of Rome applies to Joseph to assign to the
+faithful the rewards of peace, and when she ascribes glory to God for
+assigning to his faithful servants crowns of gold. Indeed these hymns
+contain many expressions which ought to be addressed to the Saviour
+alone, whose "glory is in the heavens," who is "the hope of us on
+earth," and "the safeguard of the world."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Under this fourth head I will add only one more specimen. Would it were
+not to be found in the Roman {255} Liturgies since the Council of Trent:
+God grant it may ere long be wiped out of the book of Christian worship!
+It is a collect in which the Church of Rome offers this prayer to God
+the Son:--
+
+"O God, whose right hand raised the blessed Peter when walking on the
+waves, that he sank not; and rescued his fellow-apostle Paul, for the
+third time suffering shipwreck, from the depth of the sea; mercifully
+hear us, and grant that by the merits of both we may obtain the glory of
+eternity." [H. 149.]
+
+Now suppose for a moment it had been intended in any one prayer
+negatively to exclude the merits of Christ from the great work of our
+eternal salvation, and to limit our hopes of everlasting glory to the
+merits of St. Peter and St. Paul, could that object have been more
+effectually and fully secured than by this prayer? Not one word alluding
+to the redemption which is in Christ can be found in this prayer. The
+sentiment in the first member of the prayer refers us to the power
+exercised by the Son of God, and Son of man, when he was intabernacled
+in our flesh; and the second expression teaches us to contemplate the
+providence of our Almighty Saviour in his deeds of beneficence. But no
+reference, even by allusion, is here made to the merits of Christ's
+death--none to his merits as our great Redeemer; none to his merits as
+our never-ceasing and never-failing Intercessor. We are led to approach
+the throne of grace only with the merits of the two Apostles on our
+tongue. If those who offer it hope for acceptance through THE MEDIATION
+of Jesus Christ, and for the sake of his merits, that hope is neither
+suggested nor fostered by this prayer. The truth, as it is in Jesus,
+would compel us in addressing {256} Him, the Saviour of the world, to
+think of the merits of neither Peter nor Paul, of neither angel nor
+spirit. Instead of praying to him that we may obtain the glories of
+eternity for their merits, true faith in Christ would bid us throw
+ourselves implicitly on his omnipotent merits alone, and implore so
+great a blessing for his own mercy's sake. If we receive the whole
+truth, can it appear otherwise than a disparagement of his perfect and
+omnipotent merits, to plead with Him the merits of one, whom the Saviour
+himself rebuked with as severe a sentence as ever fell from his lips,
+"Get thee behind me, Satan, thou art an offence to me; for thou
+savourest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men;"
+[Matt. xvi. 23.] and of another who after his conversion, when speaking
+of the salvation wrought by Christ, in profound humility confesses
+himself to be a chief of those sinners for whom the Saviour died, "This
+is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus
+came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief?" [1 Tim. i.
+15.] We feel, indeed, a sure and certain hope that these two
+fellow-creatures, once sinners, but by God's grace afterwards saints,
+have found mercy with God, and will live with Christ for ever; but to
+pray for the same mercy at his gracious hands for the sake of their
+merits is repugnant to our first principles of Christian faith. When we
+think of merits, for which to plead for mercy, we can think of Christ's,
+and of Christ's alone.
+
+V. Our thoughts are next invited to that class of prayers which the
+Church of Rome authorizes and directs to be addressed immediately to the
+Saints themselves. {257} Of these there are different kinds, some far
+more objectionable than others, though all are directly at variance with
+that one single and simple principle, to which, as we believe, a
+disciple of the cross can alone safely adhere--prayer to God, and only
+to God. The words of the Council of Trent are, as we have already
+observed, very comprehensive on this subject. They not only declare it
+to be a good and useful thing supplicantly to invoke the saints reigning
+with Christ: but also for the obtaining of benefits from God, through
+Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer and Saviour, to fly to
+their prayers, HELP, and ASSISTANCE. Whether these last words can be
+interpreted as merely words of surplusage, or whether they must be
+understood to mean that the faithful must have recourse to some help and
+assistance of the saints beyond their intercession, is a question to
+which we need not again revert. If it had been intended to embrace other
+kinds of beneficial succour, and other help and assistance, perhaps it
+would be difficult to find words more expressive of such general aid and
+support as a human being might hope to derive, in answer to prayer from
+the Giver of all good. And certainly they are words employed by the
+Church, when addressing prayers directly to God. Be this as it may, the
+public service-books of the Church of Rome unquestionably, by no means
+adhere exclusively to such addresses to the saints, as supplicate them
+to pray for the faithful on earth. Many a prayer is couched in language
+which can be interpreted only as conveying a petition to them
+immediately for their assistance, temporal and spiritual.
+
+But let us calmly review some of the prayers, supplications,
+invocations, or by whatever name religious addresses now offered to the
+saints may be called; and {258} first, we will examine that class in
+which the petitioners ask merely for the intercession of the saints.
+
+We have an example of this class in an invocation addressed to St.
+Ambrose on his day, December 7; the very servant of Christ in whose
+hymns and prayers no address of prayer or invocation to any saint or
+martyr can be found.
+
+"O thou most excellent teacher, the light of the Holy Church, O blessed
+Ambrose, thou lover of the divine law, deprecate for us [or intercede
+for us with] the Son of God[97]."
+
+ [Footnote 97: H. 438. "Deprecare pro nobis Filium Dei." This
+ invocation to Ambrose is instantly followed by this prayer to
+ God: "O God, who didst assign to thy people the blessed Ambrose
+ as a minister of eternal salvation, grant, we beseech Thee, that
+ we may deserve to have him as our intercessor in heaven, whom we
+ had as a teacher of life on earth."]
+
+The Church of Rome has wisely availed herself of the pious labours of
+Ambrose, Bishop of Milan; and has introduced into her public worship
+many of the hymns usually ascribed to him. Would she had followed his
+example, and addressed her invocations to no one but our Creator, our
+Redeemer, and our Sanctifier! Could that holy man hear the supplications
+now offered to him, and could be make his voice heard in return among
+those who now invoke him, that voice, we believe, would only convey a
+prohibitory monition like that of the Angel to St. John when he fell
+down before him, See thou do it not; I am thy fellow-servant; worship
+God.
+
+It is needless to multiply instances of this fifth kind of invocation.
+In the "Litany of the Saints" more than fifty different saints are
+enumerated by name, and are invoked to pray and intercede for those who
+join in {259} it. Among the persons invoked are Raphael [Æ. cxcii.],
+Gervasius, Protasius, and Mary Magdalene; whilst in the Litany [Æ.
+cxcvi.] for the recommendation of the soul of the sick and dying, the
+names of Abel, and Abraham, are specified.
+
+Under this head I will call your attention only to one more example.
+Indeed I scarcely know whether this hymn would more properly be classed
+under this head, or reserved for the next; since it appears to partake
+of the nature of each. It supplicates the martyr to obtain by his
+prayers spiritual blessings, and yet addresses him as the person who is
+to grant those blessings. It implores him to liberate us by the love of
+Christ; but so should we implore the Father of mercies himself. Still,
+as the more safe course, I would regard it as a prayer to St. Stephen
+only to intercede for us. But it may be well to derive from it a lesson
+on this point; how easily the transition glides from one false step to a
+worse; how infinitely wiser and safer it is to avoid evil in its very
+lowest and least noxious appearance:
+
+"Martyr of God [or Unconquered Martyr], who, by following the only Son
+of the Father, triumphest over thy conquered enemies, and, as conqueror,
+enjoyest heavenly things; by the office of thy prayer wash out our
+guilt; driving away the contagion of evil; removing the weariness of
+life. The bands of thy hallowed body are already loosed; loose thou us
+from the bands of the world, by the love of the Son of God [or by the
+gift of God Most High]." [H. 237.]
+
+In the above hymn the words included within brackets are the readings
+adopted in the last English edition of the Roman Breviary; and in this
+place, when we are about to refer to many hymns now in use, it may be
+well to observe, that in the present day we find {260} various readings
+in the hymns as they are still printed for the use of Roman Catholics in
+different countries. In some instances the changes are curious and
+striking. Grancolas, in his historical commentary on the Roman Breviary
+(Venice, 1734, p. 84), furnishes us with interesting information as to
+the chief cause of this diversity. He tells us that Pope Urban VIII.,
+who filled the papal throne from 1623 to 1644, a man well versed in
+literature, especially in Latin poetry, and himself one of the
+distinguished poets of his time, took measures for the emendation of the
+hymns in the Roman Breviary. He was offended by the many defects in
+their metrical composition, and it is said that upwards of nine hundred
+and fifty faults in metre were corrected, which gave to Urban occasion
+to say that the Fathers had begun rather than completed the hymns.
+These, as corrected, he caused to be inserted in the Breviary. Grancolas
+proceeds to tell us that many complained of these changes, alleging that
+the primitive simplicity and piety which breathed in the hymns had been
+sacrificed to the niceties of poetry. "Accessit Latinitas, et recessit
+pietas." The verse was neater, but the thought was chilled.
+
+VI. But the Roman Church by no means limits herself to this kind of
+invocation; prayers are addressed to saints, imploring them to hear,
+and, as of themselves, to grant the prayers of the faithful on earth,
+and to release them from the bands of sin, without any allusion to
+prayers to be made by those saints. It grieves me to copy out the
+invocation made to St. Peter on the 18th of January, called the
+anniversary of the Chair of St. Peter at Rome; the words of our Blessed
+Lord himself, and of his beloved and inspired Apostle, seem to rise up
+in judgment against that prayer, and condemn it. It {261} will be well
+to place that hymn addressed to St. Peter, side by side with the very
+word of God, and then ask, Can this prayer be safe?
+
+1. Now, O good Shepherd, 1. Jesus saith, I am the good
+merciful Peter, Shepherd. John x. 11.
+
+2. Accept the prayers of us 2. Whatsoever ye shall ask in
+who supplicate, my name, that will I do. That
+ whatsoever ye shall ask the
+ Father in my name, he may give
+ it you. John xiv. 13; xv. 16.
+
+3. And loose the bands of our 3. The blood of Jesus Christ
+sins, by the power committed to his Son cleanseth us from all sin.
+thee, 1 John i. 7.
+
+4. By which thou shuttest 4. These things saith he that
+heaven against all by a word, is holy, he that is true, he that
+and openest it[98]. openeth and no man shutteth, and
+ shutteth and no man openeth.
+ Rev. iii. 7.
+
+ I am he that liveth and was
+ dead, and am alive for evermore,
+ and have the keys of hell and of
+ death. Rev. i. 18.
+
+ [Footnote 98: This hymn is variously read. In the edition of Mr.
+ Husenbeth (H. 497.) it is: "O Peter, blessed shepherd, of thy
+ mercy receive the prayers of us who supplicate, and loose by thy
+ word the bands of our sins, thou to whom is given the power of
+ opening heaven to the earth, and of shutting it when
+ open."--"Beate pastor, Petre, clemens accipe voces precantum,
+ criminumque vincula verbo resolve, cui potestas tradita aperire
+ terris coelum, apertum claudere." H. 497.]
+
+Let it not be answered that many a Christian minister is now called a
+good shepherd. Let it not be said that the very words of our ordination
+imply the conveyance of the power of loosing and binding, of opening and
+shutting the gates of heaven. When prayer is contemplated, we can think
+only of One, HIM, who has appropriated the title of Good Shepherd to
+{262} himself. And we must see that Peter cannot, by any latitude of
+interpretation, be reckoned now among those to whom the awful duty is
+assigned of binding and loosing upon earth.
+
+The same unsatisfactory associations must be excited in the mind of
+every one who takes a similar view of Christian worship with myself, by
+the following supplication to various saints on St. John's day:
+
+ "Let the heaven exult with praises[99],
+ Let the earth resound with joy; {263}
+ The sacred solemnities sing
+ The glory of the Apostles.
+ O ye Just Judges of the age,
+ And true lights of the world,
+ We pray you with the vows of our hearts,
+ Hear the prayers of your suppliants.
+ Ye who shut the heaven by a word,
+ And loose its bars,
+ Loose us by command, we beseech you,
+ From all our sins.
+ Ye to whose word is subject
+ The health and weakness of all,
+ Cure us who are diseased in morals,
+ Restore us to virtues.
+ So that when Christ shall come,
+ The Judge at the end of the world,
+ He may make us partakers
+ Of eternal joy.
+ To God the Father be Glory,
+ And to his only Son,
+ With the Spirit the Comforter,
+ Now and for ever. Amen[100]."
+
+ [Footnote 99: Having inserted in the text a translation of this
+ hymn from a copy with which I had been long familiar, I think it
+ right to insert here the two forms side by side. They supply an
+ example of the changes to which we have already alluded.
+
+ _Lille_, 1823. _Norwich_, 1830.
+
+ OLD VERSION. POPE URBAN'S VERSION.
+
+ Exultet coelum laudibus, Exultet orbis gaudiis,
+ Resultet terra gaudiis, Coelum resultet laudibus,
+ Apostolorum gloriam Apostolorum gloriam
+ Sacra canunt solemnia. Tellus et astra concinunt.
+ Vos sæcli justi judices Vos sæculorum judices
+ Et vera mundi lamina, Et vera mundi lumina,
+ Votis precamur cordium Votis precamur cordium
+ Audite preces supplicum. Audite voces supplicum.
+ Qui coelum verbo clauditis Qui templa coeli clauditis
+ Serasque ejus solvitis, Serasque verbo solvitis,
+ Nos a peccatis omnibus Nos a reatu noxios
+ Solvite jussu, quæsumus. Solvi jubete quæsumus.
+ Quorum præcepto subditur Præcepta quorum protinus
+ Salus et languor omnium, Languor salusque sentiunt,
+ Sanate ægros moribus, Sanate mentes languidas,
+ Nos reddentes virtutibus. Augete nos virtutibus.
+ Ut cum judex advenerit Ut cum redibit arbiter
+ Christus in fine sæculi, In fine Christus sæculi,
+ Nos sempiterni gaudii Nos sempiterni gaudii
+ Faciat esse compotes. Concedat esse compotes.
+ Deo Patri sit gloria, Jesu, tibi sit gloria
+ Ejusque soli Filio, Qui natus es de virgine,
+ Cum Spiritu paracleto, Cum Patre et Almo Spiritu,
+ Et nunc et in perpetuum. In sempiterna sæcula.
+
+ Amen. Amen.
+ (H. 243.)
+ ]
+
+ [Footnote 100: Or as in the present Roman Breviary:--
+
+ Let the world exult with joy,
+ Let the heaven resound with praise;
+ The earth and stars sing together
+ The glory of the Apostles.
+ Ye judges of the ages
+ And true lights of the world,
+ With the prayers of our hearts we implore,
+ Hear the voices of your suppliants.
+ Ye who shut the temples of heaven,
+ And loose its bars by a word,
+ Command ye us, who are guilty,
+ To be released from our sins; we pray.
+ Ye whose commands forthwith
+ Sickness and health feel,
+ Heal our languid minds,
+ Increase us in virtues,
+ That when Christ, the Judge, shall return,
+ In the end of the world,
+ He may grant us to be partakers
+ Of eternal joy.
+ Jesus, to thee be glory,
+ Who wast born of a virgin,
+ With the Father and the Benign Spirit,
+ Through eternal ages. Amen. {264}
+ ]
+
+Many a pious and humble Catholic of the Roman Communion, I have no
+doubt, would regard these prayers as little more than an application to
+Peter and the rest of the Apostles for absolution, and would interpret
+its several clauses as an acknowledgment only of that power, which
+Christ himself delegated to them of binding and loosing sins on earth.
+But the gulf fixed between these prayers, and the lawful use of the
+power given to Christ's ordained ministers on earth, is great indeed. To
+satisfy the mind of this, it is not necessary to enter upon even the
+confines of the wide field of controversy, as to what was really
+conveyed by Christ to his Apostles. I would ask only two questions.
+Could any of us address these same words to one of Christ's ministers on
+earth? And could we address our blessed Saviour himself in stronger or
+more appropriate language, as the Lord of our destinies--the God who
+heareth prayer--the Physician of our souls?
+
+Suppose for example we were celebrating the anniversary of Christ's
+Nativity, of his Resurrection, or his Ascension, what word in this hymn,
+expressive of {265} power, and honour, and justice, and mercy, would not
+be appropriate? What word would not apply to Him, in most perfect
+accordance with Scripture language? And can we without offence, without
+doing wrong to his great Name, address the same to our fellow-servants,
+even though we may believe them to be with Him in glory?
+
+ Let the heaven exult with praises--
+ Let the earth resound with joy;
+ The sacred solemnities sing
+ The glory of the Lord.
+ O Thou just Judge of the age,
+ And true light of the world,
+ We pray Thee with the supplications of our hearts
+ Hear the prayers of Thy suppliants,
+ Thou who shuttest the heavens by a word,
+ And loosest its bars.
+ Loose us by command, we beseech Thee,
+ From all our sins.
+ Thou to whose word is subject
+ The health and weakness of all,
+ Cure us who are diseased in morals,
+ Restoring us to virtue.
+ So that when Thou shalt come,
+ The Judge at the end of the world,
+ Thou mayest make us partakers
+ Of eternal joy.
+ Glory to Thee, O Lord,
+ Who wast born of a virgin,
+ With the Father and the Holy Spirit,
+ For ever and ever. Amen.
+
+Only for a moment let us see how peculiarly all these expressions are
+fitting in a hymn of prayer and praise {266} to our God and Saviour,
+recalling to our minds the words of inspiration; and then again let us
+put the question to our conscience, Is this language fit for us to use
+to a fellow-creature?
+
+Let the heaven exult with praises, Let the heavens rejoice, and
+Let the earth resound with joy: let the earth be glad ... (exultet
+ is the very word used in the Vulgate
+ translation of the Psalm)--before
+ the Lord, for He cometh
+ to judge the earth.--Ps. xcvi
+ (xcv). 11.
+
+The holy solemnities sing Ye shall have a song, as in the
+The glory of the Lord. night when a holy solemnity is
+ kept ... And the Lord shall cause
+ His glorious voice to be heard.
+ Isa. xxx. 29. Let the heaven
+ and earth praise Him. Ps. lxix
+ (lxviii). 34.
+
+Thou just Judge of mankind, All judgment is committed
+And true light of the world, unto the Son. John v. 22. That
+ was the true Light, which lighteth
+ every man that cometh into
+ the world. John i. 9.
+
+With the prayers of our hearts we With my whole heart have I
+ pray Thee, sought Thee. Ps. cxix (cxviii).
+Hear the prayers of Thy suppliants. 10. Hear my prayer, O God.
+ Ps. lxi (lx). 1. Whom have I in
+ heaven but Thee? Ps. lxxiii
+ (lxxii). 25. And this is the
+ confidence that we have in Him,
+ that if we ask any thing according to
+ His will, He heareth us. 1 John
+ v. 14.
+
+Thou who shuttest heaven by I have the keys of death and of
+ Thy word, hell. These things saith He that
+And loosest its bars, is holy, He that is true: He
+ that hath the key of David. He
+ that openeth and no man shutteth,
+ and shutteth and no man {267}
+ openeth. I have set before thee
+ an open door, and no man can
+ shut it. Rev. i. 18; iii. 7,8
+
+Release us by command, we pray Thy sins be forgiven thee.
+Thee, Matt. ix. 22. Bless the Lord, O
+From all our sins. my soul ... who forgiveth all
+ thine iniquities. Ps. ciii. 2. This
+ is your blood of the New Testament,
+ which is shed for many
+ for the remission of sins. Matt.
+ xxvi. 28. Have mercy upon me,
+ O God ... according to the
+ multitude of Thy tender mercies,
+ blot out my transgressions. Wash
+ me throughly from mine iniquity,
+ and cleanse me from my
+ sin. Ps. li (l).
+
+Thou to whose word is subject Bless the Lord, O my soul ...
+The health and weakness of all, who healeth all thy diseases. Ps.
+ ciii (cii). 2, 3.
+
+Do Thou heal us who are morally Create in me a clean heart, O
+diseased, God, and renew a right spirit
+Restoring us to virtue; within me. Ps. li. 10 (4.)
+That when Thou, the Judge, shalt
+appear in the end of the world,
+Thou mayest grant us to be
+partakers of eternal joy.
+
+This would be a Christian prayer, a primitive prayer, a scriptural
+prayer, a prayer well fitting mortal man to utter by his tongue and from
+his heart, to the God who heareth prayer; and him who shall in sincere
+faith offer such a prayer, Christ will never send empty away. But if
+this prayer, fitted as it seems only to be addressed to God, be offered
+to the soul of a departed saint--I will not talk of blasphemy, and
+deadly sin, and idolatry,--I will only ask members of the Church of Rome
+to weigh all these things well, one by one. These are not subjects for
+crimination and recrimination. {268}
+
+We have had far too much of those unholy weapons on both sides. Speaking
+the truth in love, I should be verily guilty of a sin in my own
+conscience were I, with my views of Christian worship, to offer this
+prayer to the soul of a man however holy, however blessed, however
+exalted.
+
+The next part of our work will be given exclusively to the worship of
+the Blessed Virgin Mary. {269}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SECTION I.--THE VIRGIN MARY.
+
+
+The worship of the blessed Virgin Mary is so highly exalted in the
+Church of Rome, as to require the formation of a new name to express its
+high character. Neither could the Latin language provide a word which
+would give an adequate idea of its excellence, nor could any word
+previously employed by the writers in Greek, meet the case
+satisfactorily. The newly invented term Hyperdulia, meaning "a service
+above others," seems to place the service of the Virgin on a footing
+peculiarly its own, as raised above the worship of the saints departed,
+and of the angels of God, cherubim and seraphim, with all the hosts of
+principalities and powers in heavenly places. The service of the Virgin
+Mary thus appears not only to justify, but even to require a separate
+and distinct examination in this volume. The general principles,
+however, which we have already endeavoured to establish and illustrate
+with regard as well to the study of the Holy Scriptures as to the
+evidence of primitive antiquity, are equally applicable here; and with
+those principles present to our minds, {270} we will endeavour now to
+ascertain the truth with regard to the worship of the Virgin as now
+witnessed in the Roman Catholic Church.
+
+Of the Virgin Mary, think not, brethren of the Church of Rome, that a
+true member of the Anglican branch of the Catholic Church will speak
+disparagingly or irreverently. Were such an one found among us, we
+should say of him, he knows not what spirit he is of. Our church, in her
+Liturgy, her homilies, her articles, in the works too of the best and
+most approved among her divines and teachers, ever speaks of Saint Mary,
+the blessed Virgin, in the language of reverence, affection, and
+gratitude.
+
+She was a holy virgin and a holy mother. She was highly favoured,
+blessed among women. The Lord was with her, and she was the mother of
+our only Saviour. She was herself blessed, and blessed was the fruit of
+her womb. We delight in the language of our ancestors, in which they
+were used to call her "Mary, the Blissful Maid." Should any one of those
+who profess and call themselves Christians and Catholics, entertain a
+wish to interrupt the testimony of every succeeding age, and to
+interpose a check to the fulfilment of her own recorded prophecy, "All
+generations shall call me blessed," certainly the Anglican Catholic
+Church will never acknowledge that wish to be the genuine desire of one
+of her own sons. The Lord hath blessed her; yea, and she shall be
+blessed.
+
+But when we are required either to address our supplications to her, or
+else to sever ourselves from the communion of a large portion of our
+fellow-Christians, we have no room for hesitation; the case offers us no
+alternative. Our love of unity must yield to our love {271} of truth; we
+cannot join in that worship which in our conscience we believe to be a
+sin against God. Whether we are right or wrong in this matter, God will
+himself judge: and, compared with his acquittal and approval, the
+severity of man's judgment cannot turn us aside from our purpose. But
+before any one pronounces a sentence of condemnation against us, or of
+approval on himself, it well becomes him patiently and dispassionately
+to weigh the evidence; lest his decision may not be consistent with
+justice and truth.
+
+In addition to what has been already said on the general subject of
+addressing our invocation to any created being--to any one among the
+principalities and thrones, dominions, powers, angels, archangels, and
+all the hosts of heaven, to any one among the saints, martyrs,
+confessors, and holy men departed hence in the Lord--I would submit to
+my brethren of the Roman Catholic Church some considerations
+specifically applicable to the case of the blessed Virgin, and to the
+practice of the Church of Rome in the religious worship paid to her.
+
+First, it will be well for us to possess ourselves afresh of whatever
+light is thrown on this subject by the Scriptures themselves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--EVIDENCE OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.
+
+
+The first intimation given to us that a woman was in the providence of
+God appointed to be the instrument, or channel by which the Saviour of
+mankind should be brought into the world, was made immediately after the
+Fall, and at the very first dawn of the day of salvation. {272} I am
+fully aware how the various criticisms on the words in which that first
+promise of a Saviour is couched, have been the well-spring of angry
+controversy. I will not enter upon that field. The authorized English
+version thus renders the passage: "I will put enmity between thee and
+the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head,
+and thou shalt bruise his heel." [Gen. iii. 15.] The Roman Vulgate,
+instead of the word "it," reads "she." Surely such a point as this
+should be made a subject of calm and enlightened criticism, without
+warmth or heart-burnings on either side. But for our present purpose, it
+matters little what turn that controversy may take. I believe our own to
+be the true rendering: but whether the word dictated here by the Holy
+Spirit to Moses should be so translated as to refer to the seed of the
+woman generally, as in our authorized version, or to the male child, the
+descendant of the woman, as the Septuagint renders it, or to the word
+"woman" itself; and if the latter, whether it refer to Eve, the mother
+of every child of a mortal parent, or to Mary, the immediate mother of
+our Saviour: whatever view of that Hebrew word be taken, no Christian
+can doubt, that before the foundations of the world were laid, it was
+foreordained in the counsels of the Eternal Godhead, that the future
+Messiah, the Redeemer of Mankind, should be of the seed of Eve, and in
+the fulness of time be born of a Virgin of the name of Mary, and that in
+the mystery of that incarnation should the serpent's head be bruised. I
+wish not to dwell on this, because it bears but remotely and
+incidentally on the question at issue. I will, therefore, pass on,
+quoting {273} only the words of one of the most laborious among Roman
+Catholic commentators, De Sacy. "The sense is the same in the one and in
+the other, though the expression varies. The sense of the Hebrew is, The
+Son of the Woman, Jesus Christ, Son of God, and Son of a Virgin, shall
+bruise thy head, and by establishing the kingdom of God on earth,
+destroy thine. The sense of the Vulgate is, The woman, by whom thou hast
+conquered man, shall bruise thy head, not by herself, but by Jesus
+Christ." [Vol. i. p. 132.]
+
+The only other passage in which reference appears to be made in the Old
+Testament to the Mother of our Lord, contains that celebrated prophecy
+in the seventh chapter of Isaiah, about which I am not aware that any
+difference exists between the Anglican and the Roman Churches. "A Virgin
+shall conceive and bear a Son, and shall call his name Immanuel."
+[Isaiah vii. 4.]
+
+I find no passage in the Old Testament which can by any inferential
+application be brought to bear on the question of Mary's being a proper
+object of invocation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the New Testament, mention by name is made of the Virgin Mary by St.
+Matthew, St. Mark, and St. Luke, and by St. John in his Gospel, as the
+Mother of our Lord, but not by name; and by no other writer. Neither St.
+Paul in any one of his many Epistles, though he mentions the names of
+many of our Lord's disciples, nor St. James, nor St. Peter, who must
+often have seen her during our Lord's ministry, nor St. Jude, nor St.
+John in any of his three Epistles, or in the {274} Revelation (though,
+as we learn from his own Gospel, she had of especial trust been
+committed to his care)--no one of these either mentions her as living,
+or alludes to her memory as dead.
+
+The first occasion on which any reference is made in the New Testament
+to the Virgin Mary is the salutation of the Angel, as recorded by St.
+Luke in the opening chapter of his Gospel. The last occasion is when she
+is mentioned by the same Evangelist, as "Mary the Mother of Jesus," in
+conjunction with his brethren and with the Apostles and the women all
+continuing in prayer and supplication, immediately after the ascension
+of our blessed Lord. Between these two occasions the name of Mary occurs
+under a variety of circumstances, on every one of which we shall do well
+to reflect.
+
+The first occasion, we have already said, is the salutation of Mary by
+the angel, announcing to her that she should be the Mother of the Son of
+God. Surely no daughter of Eve was ever so distinguished among women;
+and well does it become us to cherish her memory with affectionate
+reverence. The words addressed to her when on earth by the angel in that
+announcement, with a little variation of expression, are daily addressed
+to her by the Roman Catholic Church, now that she is no longer seen, but
+is removed to the invisible world. "Hail, thou that art highly
+favoured!" (or as the Vulgate reads it, "full of grace") "the Lord is
+with thee. Blessed art thou among women." [Luke i. 28.] On the
+substitution of the expression, "full of grace," for "highly favoured,"
+or, as our margin suggests, "graciously accepted, or much graced," I am
+not desirous {275} of troubling you with any lengthened remark. I could
+have wished that since the Greek is different in this passage, and in
+the first chapter of St. John, where the words "full of grace" are
+applied to our Saviour, a similar distinction had been observed in the
+Roman translation. But the variation is unessential. The other
+expression, "Blessed art thou among women," is precisely and identically
+the same with the ascription of blessedness made by an inspired tongue,
+under the elder covenant, to another daughter of Eve. "Blessed above
+women," or (as both the Septuagint and the Vulgate render the word)
+"Blessed among women shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be."
+[Judges v. 24.] We can see no ground in such ascription of blessedness
+for any posthumous adoration of the Virgin Mary.
+
+The same observation applies with at least equal strictness to that
+affecting interview between Mary and Elizabeth, when, enlightened
+doubtless by an especial revelation, Elizabeth returned the salutation
+of her cousin by addressing her as the Mother of her Lord, and hailing
+her visit as an instance of most welcome and condescending kindness,
+"Whence is this to me, that the mother of my Lord should come unto me?"
+[Luke i. 43.] Members of the Anglican Church are taught to refer to this
+event in Mary's life with feelings of delight and gratitude. On this
+occasion she uttered that beautiful hymn, "The Song of the blessed
+Virgin Mary," which our Church has selected for daily use at Evening
+Prayer. These incidents bring before our minds the image of a spotless
+Virgin, humble, pious, obedient, holy: a chosen servant of God--an
+exalted pattern for her fellow-creatures; but still a fellow-creature,
+and a fellow-servant: {276} a virgin pronounced by an angel blessed on
+earth. But further than this we cannot go. We read of no power, no
+authority, neither the power and influence of intercession, nor the
+authority or right of command being ever, even by implication, committed
+to her; and we dare not of our own minds venture to take for granted a
+statement of so vast magnitude, involving associations so awful. We
+reverence her memory as a blessed woman, the virgin mother of our Lord.
+We cannot supplicate any blessing at her hand; we cannot pray to her for
+her intercession.
+
+The angel's announcement to Joseph, whether before or after the birth of
+Christ, the visit of the Magi, the flight into Egypt, and the return
+thence, in the record of all of which events by St. Matthew the name of
+Mary occurs, however interesting and important in themselves, seem to
+require no especial attention with reference to the immediate subject of
+our inquiry. To Joseph the angel speaks of the blessed Virgin as "Mary
+thy wife." [Matt. i. 20.] In every other instance she is called "The
+young child's mother," or "His mother."
+
+In relating the circumstances of Christ's birth the Evangelist employs
+no words which seem to invite any particular examination. Joseph went up
+into the city of David to be taxed with Mary his espoused wife; and
+there she brought forth her first-born son, and wrapped him in swaddling
+clothes, and laid him in a manger. And the shepherds found Mary and
+Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger. And Mary kept all these things,
+and pondered them in her heart. [Luke ii. 19.]
+
+Between the birth of Christ, and the flight into Egypt, St. Luke records
+an event to have happened by no means unimportant--the presentation of
+Christ in {277} the temple. "And when the days of her purification
+according to the law of Moses were accomplished, they brought him to
+Jerusalem to present him to the Lord. And he (Simeon) came by the Spirit
+into the temple; and when the parents brought in the child Jesus to do
+for him after the custom of the law, then took he him up in his arms,
+and blessed God, and said, Lord, &c. And Joseph and his mother marvelled
+at those things which were spoken of him. And Simeon blessed them, and
+said unto Mary his mother, Behold, this child is set for the fall and
+rising again of many in Israel; and for a sign that shall be spoken
+against, (yea, a sword shall pierce through thine own soul also) that
+the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed." [Luke ii. 28.] In this
+incident it is worthy of remark, that Joseph and Mary are both mentioned
+by name, that they are both called the parents of the young child; that
+both are equally blessed by Simeon; and that the good old Israelite,
+illumined by the spirit of prophecy, when he addresses himself
+immediately to Mary, speaks only of her future sorrow, and does not even
+most remotely or faintly allude to any exaltation of her above the other
+daughters of Abraham. "A sword shall pass through thine own soul also,"
+a prophecy, as St. Augustine interprets it, accomplished when she
+witnessed the sufferings and death of her Son. (See De Sacy, vol. xxxii.
+p. 138.)
+
+The next occasion on which the name of the Virgin Mary is found in
+Scripture, is the memorable visit of herself, her husband, and her Son,
+to Jerusalem, when he was twelve years old. And the manner in which this
+incident is related by the inspired Evangelist, so far from intimating
+that Mary was destined to be an object of worship to the believers in
+her Son, affords {278} evidence which exhibits strongly a bearing the
+direct contrary. Here again Joseph and Mary are both called his parents:
+Joseph is once mentioned by name, and so is Mary. If the language had
+been so framed as on purpose to take away all distinction of preference
+or superiority, it could not more successfully have effected its
+purpose. But not only so, of the three addresses recorded as having been
+made by our blessed Lord to his beloved mother (and only three are
+recorded in the New Testament), the first occurs during this visit to
+Jerusalem. It was in answer to the remonstrance made by Mary, "Son, why
+hast thou thus dealt with us? Behold, thy father and I have sought thee
+sorrowing." [Luke ii. 48.] "How is it that ye sought me? Knew ye not
+that I must be about my Father's business?"--[or in my Father's house,
+as some render it.] He lifts up their minds from earth to heaven, from
+his human to his eternal origin. He makes no distinction here,--"Wist YE
+not." Again, I would appeal to any dispassionate person to pronounce,
+whether this reproof, couched in these words, countenances the idea that
+our blessed Lord intended his human mother to receive such divine honour
+from his followers to the end of time as the Church of Rome now pays?
+and whether St. Luke, whose pen wrote this account, could have been made
+cognizant of any such right invested in the Virgin?
+
+The next passage calling for our consideration is that which records the
+first miracle: "And the third day there was a marriage in Cana of
+Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there, and both Jesus was called
+and his disciples to the marriage. And when they wanted wine (when the
+wine failed), the mother of {279} Jesus saith unto him, They have no
+wine. Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine
+hour is not yet come." [John ii. 1.]
+
+I have carefully read the comments on this passage, which different
+writers of the Roman Catholic communion have recommended for the
+adoption of the faithful, and I desire not to make any remarks upon
+them. Let the passage be interpreted in any way which enlightened
+criticism and the analogy of Scripture will sanction, and I would ask,
+after a careful weighing of this incident, the facts, and the words in
+all their bearings, would any unprejudiced mind expect that the holy and
+beloved person, towards whom the meek and tender and loving Jesus
+employed this address, was destined by that omniscient and omnipotent
+Saviour to be an object of those religious acts with which, as we shall
+soon be reminded, the Church of Rome now daily approaches her?
+
+It is pain and grief to me thus to extract and to comment upon these
+passages of Holy Writ. The feelings of affection and of reverence
+approaching awe, with which I hold the memory of that blessed Virgin
+Mother of my Lord, raise in me a sincere repugnance against dwelling on
+this branch of our subject, beyond what the cause of the truth as it is
+in Jesus absolutely requires; and very little more of the same irksome
+task awaits us. You will of course expect me to refer to an incident
+recorded with little variety of expression, and with no essential
+difference, by the first three Evangelists. St. Matthew's is the most
+full account, and is this,--"While he yet talked to the people, behold
+his mother and his brethren stood without desiring to speak with him.
+Then one said unto him, {280} Behold, thy mother and thy brethren stand
+without, desiring to speak with thee. But he answered and said unto him
+that told him, Who is my mother, and who are my brethren? And he
+stretched forth his hand toward his disciples and said, Behold my mother
+and my brethren. For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is
+in heaven, the same is my brother and sister and mother." [Matt. xii.
+46.] Or, as St. Luke expresses it,--"And he answered and said unto them,
+My mother and my brethren are these, who hear the word of God and do
+it." [Luke viii. 21.]
+
+Humanly speaking, could a more favourable opportunity have presented
+itself to our blessed Lord of referring to his beloved mother, in such a
+manner as to exalt her above her fellow daughters of Eve,--in such a
+manner too, as that Christians in after days, when the Saviour's bodily
+presence should have been taken away from them, and the extraordinary
+communications of the Spirit of truth should have been withdrawn, might
+have remembered that He had spoken these things, and have been
+countenanced by his words in doing her homage? But so far is this from
+the plain and natural tendency of the words of her blessed Son, that,
+had He of acknowledged purpose (and He has condescended to announce to
+us, in another place (John xiii. 19, &c.), the purpose of his words)
+wished to guard his disciples, whilst the world should last, against
+being seduced by any reverence and love which they might feel towards
+Himself into a belief that they ought to exalt his mother above all
+other created beings, and pay her holy worship, we know not what words
+He could have adopted more fitted for that purpose. There was nothing in
+the communication which seemed to call for {281} such a remark. A plain
+message announces to Him as a matter of fact one of the most common
+occurrences of daily life. And yet He fixes upon the circumstance as the
+groundwork not only of declaring the close union which it was his good
+pleasure should exist between obedient and true believers and Himself,
+but of cautioning all against any superstitious feelings towards those
+who were nearly allied to Him by the ties of his human nature. With
+reverence I would say, it is as though He desired to record his
+foreknowledge of the errors into which his disciples were likely to be
+seduced, and warned them beforehand to shun and resist the temptation.
+The evidence borne by this passage against our offering any religious
+worship to the Virgin, on the ground of her having been the mother of
+our Lord, seems clear, strong, direct, and inevitable. She was the
+mother of the Redeemer of the world, and blessed is she among women; but
+that very Redeemer Himself, with his own lips, assures us that every
+faithful servant of his heavenly Father shall be equally honoured with
+her, and possess all the privileges which so near and dear a
+relationship with Himself might be supposed to convey.--Who is my
+mother? Or, who are my brethren? Behold my mother and my brethren!
+Whosoever shall do the will of my Father in heaven, the same is my
+brother, and my sister, and my mother.
+
+No less should we be expected in this place to take notice of that most
+remarkable passage of Holy Scripture, [Luke xi. 27.] in which our
+blessed Lord is recorded under different circumstances to have expressed
+the same sentiments, but in words which will appear to many even more
+strongly indicative of his desire to prevent any {282} undue exaltation
+of his mother. "As he spake these things, a certain woman of the company
+lifted up her voice and said unto him, Blessed is the womb that bare
+thee, and the paps which thou hast sucked." On the truth or wisdom of
+that exclamation our Lord makes no remark; He refers not to his mother
+at all, not even to assure them (as St. Augustine in after-ages taught,
+see De Sacy, vol. xxxii. p. 35.), that however blessed Mary was in her
+corporeal conception of the Saviour, yet far more blessed was she
+because she had fully borne Him spiritually in her heart. He alludes not
+to his mother except for the purpose of instantly drawing the minds of
+his hearers from contemplating any supposed blessedness in her, and of
+fixing them on the sure and greater blessedness of his true, humble,
+faithful, and obedient disciples, to the end of time. "But he said, Yea,
+rather [or, as some prefer, yea, verily, and] blessed are they that hear
+the word of God, and keep it." Again, it must be asked, could such an
+exclamation have been met by such a reply, had our Lord's will been to
+exalt his mother, as she is now exalted by the Church of Rome? Rather,
+we would reverently ask, would He have given this turn to such an
+address, had He not desired to check any such feeling towards her?
+
+That most truly affecting and edifying incident recorded by St. John as
+having taken place whilst Jesus was hanging in his agony on the cross,
+an incident which speaks to every one who has a mind to understand and a
+heart to feel, presents to us the last occasion on which the name of the
+Virgin Mother of our Lord occurs in the Gospels. No paraphrase could add
+force, or clearness, or beauty to the simple narrative of the
+Evangelist; no exposition could bring out its parts more prominently or
+{283} affectingly. The calmness and authority of our blessed Lord, his
+tenderness and affection, his filial love in the very midst of his
+agony, it is impossible to describe with more heart-stirring and
+heart-soothing pathos than is conveyed in the simple language of him
+whom the Saviour at that awful hour addressed, as He committed his
+mother to him of especial trust. But not one syllable falls from the
+lips of Christ, or from the pen of the beloved disciple, who records
+this act of his blessed Master's filial piety, which can by possibility
+be construed to imply, that our blessed Lord intended Mary to be held in
+such honour by his disciples, as would be shown in the offering of
+prayer and praise to her after her dissolution. He who could by a word,
+rather by the mere motion of his will, have bidden the whole course of
+nature and of providence, so to proceed as that all its operations
+should provide for the health and safety, the support and comfort of his
+mother--He, when He was on the cross, and when He was on the point of
+committing his soul into the hands of his Father, leaves her to the care
+of one whom He loved, and whose sincerity and devotedness to Him He had,
+humanly speaking, long experienced. He bids him treat Mary as his own
+mother, He bids Mary look to John as to her own son for support and
+solace: "Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother, and his
+mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene. When
+Jesus, therefore, saw his mother and the disciple standing by whom he
+loved, he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son; then saith he to
+the disciple, Behold thy mother." [John xix. 25.] And He added no more.
+If Christ willed that his beloved mother should end her days in peace,
+removed equally {284} from want and the desolation of widowhood on the
+one hand, and from splendour and notoriety on the other, nothing could
+be more natural than such conduct in such a Being at such a time. But if
+his purpose was to exalt her into an object of religious adoration, that
+nations should kneel before her, and all people do her homage, then the
+words and the conduct of our Lord at this hour seem altogether
+unaccountable: and so would the words of the Evangelist also be, "And
+from that hour that disciple took her unto his own home."
+
+After this not another word falls from the pen of St. John which can be
+made to bear on the station, the character, the person, or circumstances
+of Mary. After his resurrection our Saviour remained on earth forty days
+before He finally ascended into heaven. Many of his interviews and
+conversations with his disciples during that interval are recorded in
+the Gospel. Every one of the four Evangelists relates some act or some
+saying of our Lord on one or more of those occasions. Mention is made by
+name of Mary Magdalene, of Mary [the mother] of Joses, of Mary [the
+mother] of James, of Salome, of Joanna, of Peter, of Cleophas, of the
+disciple whom Jesus loved, at whose house the mother of our Lord then
+was; of Thomas, of Nathanael. The eleven also are mentioned generally.
+But by no one of the Evangelists is reference made at all to Mary the
+mother of our Lord, as having been present at any one of those
+interviews; her name is not alluded to throughout.
+
+On one solitary occasion subsequently to the ascension of Christ,
+mention is made of Mary his mother, in company with many others, and
+without any further distinction to separate her from the rest: "And when
+{285} they were come in (from having witnessed the ascension of our
+Saviour), they went up into an upper room, where abode both Peter, and
+James, and John, and Andrew, Philip, and Thomas, Bartholomew and
+Matthew, James the son of Alphaeus, and Simon Zelotes, and Judas the
+brother of James. These all continued with one accord in prayer and
+supplication with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his
+brethren." [Acts i. 13.] Not one word is said of Mary having been
+present to witness even the ascension of her blessed Son; we read no
+command of our Lord, no wish expressed, no distant intimation to his
+disciples that they should even show to her marks of respect and honour;
+not an allusion is there made to any superiority or distinction and
+preeminence. Sixty years at the least are generally considered to be
+comprehended within the subsequent history of the New Testament before
+the Apocalypse was written; but neither in the narrative, nor in the
+Epistles, nor yet in the prophetic part of the Holy Book, is there the
+most distant allusion to Mary. Of him to whose loving care our dying
+Lord committed his beloved mother of especial trust, we hear much. John,
+we find, putting forth the miraculous power of Christ at the Beautiful
+Gate of the Temple; we find him imprisoned and arraigned before the
+Jewish authorities; but not one word is mentioned as to what meanwhile
+became of Mary. We find John confirming the Church in Samaria; we find
+him an exile in the island of Patmos; but no mention is made of Mary.
+Nay, though we have three of his epistles, and the second of them
+addressed to one "whom he loved in the truth," we find neither from the
+tongue nor from the pen of St. John, one single allusion to the mother
+of our Lord alive or dead. And then, whatever may have been the matter
+{286} of fact as to St. Paul, neither the many letters of that Apostle,
+nor the numerous biographical incidents recorded of him, intimate in the
+most remote degree that he knew any thing whatever concerning her
+individually. St. Paul does indeed refer to the human nature of Christ
+derived from his human mother, and had he been taught by his Lord to
+entertain towards her such sentiments as the Roman Church now professes
+to entertain, he could not have had a more inviting occasion to give
+utterance to them. But instead of thus speaking of the Virgin Mary, he
+does not even mention her name or state at all, but refers only in the
+most general way to her nature and her sex as a daughter of Adam: "But
+when the fulness of time was come, God sent forth his Son, MADE OF A
+WOMAN, made under the law; to redeem them that were under the Law, that
+we might receive the adoption of sons." [Gal. iv. 4.] From a time
+certainly within a few days of our Saviour's ascension the Scriptures
+are totally silent throughout as to Mary, whether in life or in death.
+
+Here we might well proceed to contrast this view which the Scriptures of
+eternal truth give of the blessed Virgin Mary with the authorized and
+appointed worship of that branch of the Christian Church which is in
+communion with Rome. We must first, however, here also examine the
+treasures of Christian antiquity, and ascertain what witness the
+earliest uninspired records bear on this immediate point. {287}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.--EVIDENCE OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.
+
+
+Closing the inspired volume, and seeking at the fountain-head for the
+evidence of Christian antiquity, what do we find? For upwards of three
+centuries and a half (the limit put to our present inquiry) we discover
+in no author, Christian or heathen, any trace whatever of the invocation
+of the Virgin Mary by Catholic Christians. I have examined every passage
+which I have found adduced by writers of the Church of Rome, and have
+searched for any other passages which might appear to deserve
+consideration as bearing favourably on their view of the subject; and
+the worship of the Virgin, such as is now insisted upon by the Council
+of Trent, prescribed by the Roman ritual, and practised in the Church of
+Rome, is proved by such an examination to have had neither name, nor
+place, nor existence among the early Christians. Forgive my importunity
+if I again and again urge you to join us in weighing these facts well;
+and to take your view of them from no advocate on the one side or the
+other. Search the Scriptures for yourselves, search the earliest writers
+for yourselves, and for yourselves search with all diligence into the
+authentic and authorized liturgies of your own Church, your missals, and
+breviaries, and formularies. Hearsay evidence, testimony {288} taken at
+second or third hand, vague rumours and surmises will probably expose
+us, on either side, to error. Let well-sifted genuine evidence be
+brought by an upright and an enlightened mind to bear on the point at
+issue, and let the issue joined be this, Is the practice of praying to
+the Virgin, and praising her, in the language of the prayers and praises
+now used in the prescribed formularies of the Roman Church, primitive.
+Catholic, Apostolical?
+
+I am aware that among those who adhere to the Tridentine Confession of
+faith, there are many on whom this investigation will not be allowed to
+exercise any influence.
+
+The sentiments of Huet, wherever they are adopted, would operate to the
+total rejection of such inquiries as we are instituting in this work.
+His words on the immaculate conception of the Virgin are of far wider
+application than the immediate occasion on which he used them, "That the
+blessed Mary never conceived any sin in herself is in the present day an
+established principle of the Church, and confirmed by the Council of
+Trent. In which it is our duty to acquiesce, rather than in the dicta of
+the ancients, if any seem to think otherwise, among whom must be
+numbered Origen." [Origen's Works, vol. iv. part 2, p. 156.]
+
+In this address, however, we take for granted that the reader is open to
+conviction, desirous of arriving at the truth, and, with that view,
+ready to examine and sift the evidence of primitive antiquity.
+
+In that investigation our attention is very soon called to the
+remarkable fact, that, whereas in the case of the invocation of saints
+and angels, the defenders of that doctrine and practice bring forward a
+great variety of passages, in which mention is supposed to be made of
+{289} those beings as objects of honour and reverential and grateful
+remembrance, the passages quoted with a similar view, as regards the
+Virgin Mary, are very few indeed: whilst the passages which intimate
+that the early Christians paid her no extraordinary honour (certainly
+not more than we of the Anglican Church do now) are innumerable.
+
+I have thought that it might be satisfactory here to refer to each
+separately of those earliest writers, whose testimony we have already
+examined on the general question of the invocation of saints and angels,
+and, as nearly as may be, in the same order.
+
+In the former department of our investigation we first endeavoured to
+ascertain the evidence of those five primitive writers, who are called
+the Apostolical Fathers; and, with regard to the subject now before us,
+the result of our inquiry into the same works is this:
+
+1. In the Epistle ascribed to BARNABAS we find no allusion to Mary.
+
+2. The same must be affirmed of the book called The Shepherd of HERMAS.
+
+3. In CLEMENT of Rome, who speaks of the Lord Jesus having descended
+from Abraham according to the flesh, no mention is made of that daughter
+of Abraham of whom he was born.
+
+4. IGNATIUS in a passage already quoted (Ad Eph. vii. p. 13 and 16)
+speaks of Christ both in his divine and human nature as Son of God and
+man, and he mentions the name of Mary, but it is without any adjunct or
+observation whatever, "both of Mary and of God." In another place he
+speaks of her virgin state, and the fruit of her womb; and of her having
+borne our God Jesus the Christ; but he adds no {290} more; not even
+calling her "The blessed," or "The Virgin." In the interpolated Epistle
+to the Ephesians, the former passage adds "the Virgin" after "Mary," but
+nothing more.
+
+5. In the Epistle of POLYCARP we find an admonition to virgins (Page
+186), how they ought to walk with a spotless and chaste conscience, but
+there is no allusion to the Virgin Mary.
+
+JUSTIN MARTYR. In this writer I do not find any passage so much in point
+as the following, in which we discover no epithet expressive of honour,
+or dignity, or exaltation, though it refers to Mary in her capacity of
+the Virgin mother of our Lord:--"He therefore calls Himself the Son of
+Man, either from his birth of a virgin, who was of the race of David,
+and Jacob, and Isaac, and Abraham, or because Abraham himself was the
+father of those persons enumerated, from whom Mary drew her origin."
+[Trypho, § 100. p. 195.] And a little below he adds, "For Eve being a
+virgin and incorrupt, having received the word from the serpent, brought
+forth transgression and death; but Mary the Virgin having received faith
+and joy (on the angel Gabriel announcing to her the glad tidings, that
+the Spirit of the Lord should come upon her, and the power of the
+Highest overshadow her) answered, Be it unto me according to thy word.
+And of her was born He of whom we have shown that so many Scriptures
+have been spoken; He by whom God destroys the serpent, and angels and
+men resembling [the serpent]; but works a rescue from death for such as
+repent of evil and believe in Him." One more passage will suffice, "And
+according to the command of God, Joseph, taking Him with Mary, went into
+Egypt." [Trypho, § 102. p. 196.] {291}
+
+Among those "Questions" to which we have referred under the head of
+Justin Martyr's works, but which are confessedly of a much less remote
+date, probably of the fifth century, an inquiry is made, How could
+Christ be free from blame, who so often set at nought his parent? The
+answer is, that He did not set her at nought; that He honoured her in
+deed, and would not have hurt her by his words;--but then the respondent
+adds, that Christ chiefly honoured Mary in that view of her maternal
+character, under which all who heard the word of God and kept it, were
+his brothers and sisters and mother; and that she surpassed all women in
+virtue. [Qu. 136. p. 500.]
+
+IRENÆUS. To the confused passage relied upon by Bellarmin, in which
+Irenæus is supposed to represent Mary as the advocate of Eve, we have
+already fully referred (page 120 of this work). In that passage there is
+no allusion to any honour paid, or to be paid to her, nor to any
+invocation of her. In every passage to which my attention has been
+drawn, Irenæus speaks of the mother of our Lord as Mary, or the Virgin,
+without any adjunct, or term of reverence.
+
+CLEMENT of Alexandria speaks of the Virgin, and refers to an opinion
+relative to her virgin-state, but without one word of honour. [Stromat.
+vii. 16. p. 889.]
+
+TERTULLIAN[101]. The passages in which this ancient writer refers to the
+mother of our Lord are very far from countenancing the religious worship
+now paid to her by Roman Catholics: "The brothers of the Lord had not
+believed on him, as it is contained in the Gospel published {292} before
+Marcion. His mother likewise is not shown to have adhered to him;
+whereas others, Marys and Marthas, were frequently in his company." (See
+Tert. De carne Christi, c. 7. (p. 364. De Sacy, 29. 439.)) And he tells
+us that Christ was brought forth by a virgin, who was also about to be
+married once after the birth, that the two titles of sanctity might be
+united in Christ by a mother who was both a virgin and also once
+married[102].
+
+ [Footnote 101: Paris, 1675. De carne Christi, vii. p. 315. De
+ Monogamia, vii. p. 529. N.B. Both these treatises were probably
+ written after he became a Montanist.]
+
+ [Footnote 102: On the works once ascribed to Methodius, but now
+ pronounced to be spurious, see above, p. 131.]
+
+ORIGEN thus speaks: "Announcing to Zacharias the birth of John, and to
+Mary the advent of our Saviour among men." [Comment on John, § 24. vol.
+iv. p. 82.] In his eighth homily on Leviticus, he refers to Mary as a
+pure Virgin. [Vol. ii. p. 228.] In the forged work of later times, the
+writer, speaking of our Saviour, says, "He had on earth an immaculate
+and chaste mother, this much blessed Virgin Mary." [Hom. iii. in
+Diversos.]
+
+In CYPRIAN we do not find one word expressive of honour or reverence
+towards the Virgin Mary. Nor is her name mentioned in the letter of his
+correspondent Firmilian, Bishop of Cappadocia.
+
+LACTANTIUS speaks of "a holy virgin" [Vol. i. p. 299.] chosen for the
+work of Christ but not one other word of honour, or tending to
+adoration; though whilst dwelling on the incarnation of the Son of God,
+had he or his fellow-believers paid religious honour to her, he could
+scarcely have avoided all allusion to it.
+
+EUSEBIUS speaks of the Virgin Mary, but is altogether silent as to any
+religious honour of any kind being due to her. In the Oration of the
+Emperor Constantine (as it is recorded by Eusebius), direct mention is
+made of the "chaste virginity," and of the maid who was mother {293} of
+God, and yet remained a virgin. But the object present to the author's
+mind was so exclusively God manifest in the flesh, that he does not
+throughout even mention the name of Mary, or allude to any honour paid
+or due to her. [Cantab. 1720. § 11. p. 689. and § 19. p. 703.]
+
+ATHANASIUS, bent ever on establishing the perfect divinity and humanity
+of Christ, thus speaks: "The general scope of Holy Scripture is to make
+a twofold announcement concerning the Saviour, that He was always God,
+and is a Son; being the Word and the brightness and wisdom of the
+Father, and that He afterwards became man for us, taking flesh of the
+Virgin Mary, who bare God ([Greek: taes theotokou])." [Athan. Orat. iii.
+Cont. Arian. p. 579.]
+
+The work which we have already examined, called The Apostolical
+Constitutions, compiled probably about the commencement of the fourth
+century, cannot be read without leaving an impression clear and powerful
+on the mind, that no religious honour was paid to the Virgin Mary at the
+time when they were written; certainly not more than is now cheerfully
+paid to her memory by us of the Anglican Church. Take, for example, the
+prayer prescribed to be used on the appointment of a Deaconess; the
+inference from it must be, that others with whom the Lord's Spirit had
+dwelt, were at least held in equal honour with Mary: "O Eternal God,
+Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, Maker of male and female, who didst
+fill with thy Spirit Miriam, and Hannah, and Holda, and didst not
+disdain that thy Son should be born of a woman," &c. [Book viii. c. 20.]
+Thus, {294} too, in another passage, Mary is spoken of just as other
+women who had the gift of prophecy; and of her equally and in
+conjunction with the others it is said, that they were not elated by the
+gift, nor lifted themselves up against the men. "But even have women
+prophesied; in ancient times Miriam, the sister of Aaron and Moses;
+after her Deborah; and afterwards Huldah and Judith; one under Josiah,
+the other under Darius; and the mother of the Lord also prophesied, and
+Elizabeth her kinswoman; and Anna; and in our day the daughters of
+Philip; yet they were not lifted up against the men, but observed their
+own measure. Therefore among you also should any man or woman have such
+a grace, let them be humble, that God may take pleasure in them." [Book
+viii. c. 2.]
+
+In the Apostolical Canons I find no reference to Mary; nor indeed any
+passage bearing on our present inquiry, except the last clause of all,
+containing the benediction. In this passage not only is the prayer for
+spiritual blessings addressed to God alone, but it is offered
+exclusively through the mediation of Christ alone, without alluding to
+intercessions of angels saints, or the Virgin: "Now may God, the only
+unproduced Being, the Creator of all things, unite you all by peace in
+the Holy Ghost; make you perfect unto every good work, not to be turned
+aside, unblameable, not deserving reproof; and may He deem you worthy of
+eternal life with us, by the mediation of his beloved Son Jesus Christ
+our God and Saviour: with whom be glory to Him the Sovereign God and
+Father, in the Holy Ghost the Comforter, now and ever, world without
+end. Amen." [Vol. i. p. 450.]
+
+I have not intentionally omitted any ancient author {295} falling within
+the limits of our present inquiry, nor have I neglected any one passage
+which I could find bearing testimony to any honour paid to the Virgin.
+The result of my research is, that I have not discovered one solitary
+expression which implies that religious invocation and honour, such as
+is now offered to Mary by the Church of Rome, was addressed to her by
+the members of the primitive Catholic Church. {296}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.--THE ASSUMPTION OF THE VIRGIN MARY.
+
+
+By the Church of England, two festivals are observed in grateful
+commemoration of two events relating to Mary as the mother of our
+Lord:--the announcement of the Saviour's birth by the message of an
+angel, called, "The Annunciation of the blessed Virgin Mary," and "The
+Presentation of Christ in the Temple," called also, "The Purification of
+Saint Mary the Virgin." In the service for the first of these
+solemnities, we are taught to pray that, as we have known the
+incarnation of the Son of God by the message of an angel, so by his
+Cross and Passion we may be brought to the glory of his resurrection. In
+the second, we humbly beseech the Divine Majesty that, as his
+only-begotten Son was presented in the Temple in the substance of our
+flesh, so we may be presented unto Him with pure and clean hearts by the
+same, his Son Jesus Christ our Lord. These days are observed to
+commemorate events declared to us on the most sure warrant of Holy
+Scripture; and these prayers are primitive and evangelical. They pray
+only to God for spiritual blessings through his Son. The second prayer
+was used in the Church {297} from very early times, and is still
+retained in the Roman Breviary (Hus. Brev. Rom. H. 536.); whereas,
+instead of the first[103], we find there unhappily a prayer now
+supplicating that those who offer it, "believing Mary to be truly the
+Mother of God, might be aided by her intercessions with Him." [V. 496.]
+
+ [Footnote 103: This collect also is found in the Roman Missal,
+ as a Prayer at the Post Communion; though it does not appear in
+ the Breviarium Romanum.]
+
+In the Roman Catholic Church, on the other hand, feasts are observed to
+the honour of the Virgin Mary, in which the Anglican Church cannot join;
+such as the Nativity of the Virgin Mary, and the immaculate conception
+of her by her mother. On the origin and nature of these feasts it is not
+my intention to dwell. I can only express my regret, that by appointing
+a service and a collect commemorative of the Conception of the
+Virgin[104] in her mother's womb, and praying that the observance of
+that solemnity may procure the votaries an increase of peace, the Church
+of Rome has given countenance to a superstition, against which at its
+commencement, so late as the 12th century, St. Bernard strongly
+remonstrated, in an epistle to the monks of Lyons; a superstition which
+has been supported and explained by discussions in no way profitable to
+the head or the heart. [Epist. 174. Paris, 1632, p. 1538.]
+
+ [Footnote 104: Ut quibus beatæ Virginis partus exstitit salutis
+ exordium, conceptionis ejus votiva solemnitas pacis tribuat
+ incrementum. H. 445.]
+
+Of all these institutions however in honour of the Virgin, the Feast of
+the ASSUMPTION appears to be as it were the crown and the
+consummation[105]. This festival {298} is kept to celebrate the
+miraculous taking up (assumptio) of the Virgin Mary into heaven. And its
+celebration, in Roman Catholic countries, is observed in a manner worthy
+a cause to which our judgment would give deliberately its sanction; in
+which our feelings would safely and with satisfaction rest on the
+firmness of our faith; from joining in which a truly pious mind would
+have no ground for inward misgiving, nor for the aspiration, Would it
+were founded in truth!
+
+ [Footnote 105: "The Assumption of the Virgin Mary is the
+ greatest of all the festivals which the Church celebrates in her
+ honour. It is the consummation of all the other great mysteries
+ by which her life was rendered most wonderful. It is the
+ birthday of her true greatness and glory, and the crown of all
+ the virtues of her whole life, which we admire single in her
+ other festivals." Alban Butler, vol. viii. p. 175.]
+
+Before such a solemn office of praise and worship were ever admitted
+among the institutions of the religion of truth, its originators and
+compilers should have built upon sure grounds; careful too should they
+also be who now join in the service, and so lend it the countenance of
+their example; more especially should those sift the evidence well, who,
+by their doctrine and writings, uphold, and defend, and advance it; lest
+they prove at the last to love Rome rather than the truth as it is in
+Jesus. So solemn, so marked, a religious service in the temples and at
+the altar of HIM who is the truth, a service so exalted above his
+fellows, ought beyond question to be founded on the most sure warrant of
+Holy Scripture, or at the least on undisputed historical evidence, as to
+the alleged matter of fact on which it is built,--the certain,
+acknowledged, uninterrupted, and universal testimony of the Church
+Catholic from the very time. They incur a momentous responsibility who
+aid in propagating for religious truths the inventions of men[106].
+
+ [Footnote 106: Very different opinions are held by Roman
+ Catholic writers as to the antiquity of this feast. All, indeed,
+ maintain that it is of very ancient introduction; but whilst
+ some, with Lambecius (lib. viii. p. 286), maintain the antiquity
+ of the festival to be so remote, that its origin cannot be
+ traced; and thence infer that it was instituted by a silent and
+ unrecorded act of the Apostles themselves; others (among whom
+ Kollarius, the learned annotator on the opinion of Lambecius)
+ acknowledged, that it was introduced by an ordinance of the
+ Church, though not at the same time in all countries of
+ Christendom. That annotator assigns its introduction at Rome to
+ the fourth century; at Constantinople to the sixth; in Germany
+ and France to the ninth.] {299}
+
+But what is the real state of the case with regard to the fact of the
+Assumption of the Virgin Mary? It rests (as we shall soon see) on no
+authentic history; it is supported by no primitive tradition. I profess
+my surprise to have been great, when I found the most celebrated
+defenders of the Roman Catholic cause, instead of citing such evidence
+as would bear with it even the appearance of probability, appealing to
+histories written more than a thousand years after the alleged event, to
+forged documents and vague rumours. I was willing to doubt the
+sufficiency of my research; till I found its defenders, instead of
+alleging and establishing by evidence what God was by them said to have
+done, contenting themselves with asserting his omnipotence, in proof
+that the doctrine implied no impossibility; dwelling on the fitness and
+reasonableness of his working such a miracle in the honour of her who
+was chosen to be the mother of his eternal Son; and whilst they took the
+fact as granted, substituting for argument glowing and fervent
+descriptions of what might have been the joy in heaven, and what ought
+to be the feelings of mortals on earth.
+
+At every step of the inquiry into the merits of this case, the principle
+recurs to the mind, that, as men really and in earnest looking onward to
+a life after this, our duty is to ascertain to the utmost of our {300}
+power, not what God could do, not what we or others might pronounce it
+fit that God should do, but what He has done; not what would be
+agreeable to our feelings, were it true, but what, whether agreeably or
+adversely to our feelings or wishes, is proved to be true. The very
+moment a Christian writer refers me from evidence to possibilities, I
+feel that he knows not the nature of Christianity; he throws me back
+from the sure and certain hope of the Gospel to the "beautiful fable" of
+Socrates,--"It were better to be there than here, IF THESE THINGS ARE
+TRUE."
+
+But let us inquire into the facts of the case.
+
+First, I would observe that it is by no means agreed among all who have
+written upon the subject, what was the place, or what was the time of
+the Virgin's death. Whilst some have maintained that she breathed her
+last at Ephesus, the large majority assert that her departure from this
+world took place at Jerusalem. And as to the time of her death, some
+have assigned it to the year 48 of the Christian era, about the time at
+which Paul and Barnabas (as we read in Holy Scripture) returned to
+Antioch; whilst others refer it to a later date. I am not, however,
+aware of any supposition which fixes it at a period subsequent to that
+at which the canon of Scripture closes. Epiphanius indeed, towards the
+close of the fourth century, reminding us that Scripture is totally and
+purely silent on the subject as well of Mary's death and burial, as of
+her having accompanied St. John in his travels or not, without alluding
+to any tradition as to her assumption, thus sums up his sentiments: "I
+dare to say nothing; but considering it, I observe silence." [Epiph.
+vol. i. p. 1043.] {301}
+
+Should any of my readers have deliberately adopted as the rule of their
+faith the present practice of the Church of Rome, I cannot hope that
+they will take any interest in the following inquiry; but I have been
+assured, by most sensible and well-informed members of that Church, that
+there is a very general desire entertained to have this and other
+questions connected with our subject examined without prejudice, and
+calmly placed before them. To such persons I trust this chapter may not
+appear altogether unworthy of their consideration. Those who would turn
+from it on the principle to which we have here alluded, will find
+themselves very closely responding to the sentiments professed by St.
+Bernard, "Exalt her who is exalted above the choirs of angels to the
+heavenly kingdom. These things the Church sings to me of her, and has
+taught me to sing the same to others. For my part, what I have received
+from it, I am secure in holding and delivering; which also, I confess, I
+am not OVER-SCRUPULOUS in admitting. (Quod non scrupulosius fateor
+admiserim.) I have received in truth from the Church that that day is to
+be observed with the highest veneration on which she was TAKEN up
+(assumpta) from this wicked world, and carrying with her into heaven
+feasts of the most celebrated joys[107]."
+
+ [Footnote 107: See Lambecius, book viii. p. 286. The letter of
+ St. Bernard is addressed to the Canons of Lyons on the
+ Conception of the holy Mary. Paris, 1632, p. 1538. His
+ observations in that letter, with a view of discountenancing the
+ rising superstition, in juxtaposition with these sentiments, are
+ well deserving the serious consideration of every one.]
+
+Let us then, with the authorized and enjoined service of the Church of
+Rome for the 15th of August before us, examine the evidence on which
+that religious {302} service, the most solemn consummation of all the
+rest, is founded.
+
+In the service of the Assumption, more than twice seven times is it
+reiterated in a very brief space, and with slight variations of
+expression, that Mary was taken up into heaven; and that, not on any
+general and indefinite idea of her beatific and glorified state, but
+with reference to one specific single act of divine favour, performed at
+a fixed time, effecting her assumption, as it is called, "to-day." [Æs.
+595.] "To-day Mary the Virgin ascended the heavens. Rejoice, because she
+is reigning with Christ for ever." "Mary the Virgin is taken up into
+heaven, to the ethereal chamber in which the King of kings sits on his
+starry throne." "The holy mother of God hath been exalted above the
+choirs of angels to the heavenly realms." "Come, let us worship the King
+of kings, to whose ethereal heaven the Virgin Mother was taken up
+to-day." And that it is her bodily ascension, her corporeal assumption
+into heaven, and not merely the transit of her soul[108] from mortal
+life to eternal bliss, which the Roman Church maintains and propagates
+by this service, is put beyond doubt by the service itself. In the
+fourth and sixth reading[109], or lesson, for example, we find these
+{303} sentences:--"She returned not into the earth but is seated in the
+heavenly tabernacles." "How could death devour, how could those below
+receive, how could corruption invade, THAT BODY, in which life was
+received? For it a direct, plain, and easy path to heaven was prepared."
+
+ [Footnote 108: Lambecius, indeed (book viii. p. 306), distinctly
+ affirms, that one object which the Church had in view was to
+ condemn the HERESY of those who maintain that the reception of
+ the Virgin into heaven, was the reception of her soul only, and
+ not also of her body. "Ut damnet eorum hæresin qui sanctissimæ
+ Dei genetricis rcceptionem in coelum ad animam ipsius tantum,
+ non vero simul etiam ad corpus pertinere existimant."]
+
+ [Footnote 109: Non reversa est in terram, sed ... in coelestibus
+ tabernaculis collocatum. Quomodo mois devoraret, quomodo inferi
+ susciperent, quomodo corruptio invaderit CORPUS ILLUD in quo
+ vita suscepta est? Huic recta plana et facilis ad coelum parata
+ est via. Æs. 603, 604.]
+
+Now, on what authority does this doctrine rest? On what foundation stone
+is this religious worship built? The holy Scriptures are totally and
+profoundly silent, as to the time, the place, the manner of Mary's
+death. Once after the ascension of our Lord, and that within eight days,
+we find mentioned the name of Mary promiscuously with others; after
+that, no allusion is made to her in life or in death; and no account, as
+far as I can find, places her death too late for mention to have been
+made of it in the Acts of the Apostles. The historian, Nicephorus
+Callistus, refers it to the 5th year of Claudius, that is about A.D. 47:
+after which period, events through more than fifteen years are recorded
+in that book of sacred Scripture.
+
+But closing the holy volume, what light does primitive antiquity enable
+us to throw on this subject?
+
+The earliest testimony quoted by the defenders of the doctrine, that
+Mary was at her death taken up bodily into heaven, is a supposed entry
+in the Chronicon of Eusebius, opposite the year of our Lord 48. This is
+cited by Coccius without any remark; and even Baronius rests the date of
+Mary's assumption upon this testimony. [Vol. i. 403.] The words referred
+to are these,--"Mary the Virgin, the mother of Jesus, was taken up into
+heaven; as some write that it had been revealed to them." {304}
+
+Now, suppose for one moment that this came from the pen of Eusebius
+himself, to what does it amount? A chronologist in the fourth century
+records that some persons, whom he does not name, not even stating when
+they lived, had written down, not what they had heard as matter of fact,
+or received by tradition, but that a revelation had been made to them of
+a fact alleged to have taken place nearly three centuries before the
+time of that writer. But instead of this passage deserving the name of
+Eusebius as its author, it is now on all sides acknowledged to be
+altogether a palpable interpolation. Suspicions, one would suppose, must
+have been at a very remote date suggested as to the genuineness of this
+sentence. Many manuscripts, especially the seven in the Vatican, were
+known to contain nothing of the kind; and the Roman Catholic editor of
+the Chronicon at Bordeaux, A.D. 1604, tells us that he was restrained
+from expunging it, only because nothing certain as to the assumption of
+the Virgin could be substituted in its stead. [P. 566.] Its spuriousness
+however can no longer be a question of dispute or doubt; it is excluded
+from the Milan edition of 1818, by Angelo Maio and John Zohrab; and no
+trace of it is to be found in the Armenian[110] version, published by
+the monks of the Armenian convent at Venice, in 1818.
+
+ [Footnote 110: The author visited that convent whilst this
+ edition of the Chronicon of Eusebius was going through the
+ press, and can testify to the apparent anxiety of the monks to
+ make it worthy of the patronage of Christians.]
+
+The next authority, to which we are referred, is a letter[111] said to
+have been written by Sophronius the {305} presbyter, about the
+commencement of the fifth century. The letter used to be ascribed to
+Jerome; Erasmus referred it to Sophronius; but Baronius says it was
+written "by an egregious forger of lies," ("egregius mendaciorum
+concinnator,") who lived after the heresies of Nestorius and Eutyches
+had been condemned. I am not at all anxious to enter upon that point of
+criticism; that the letter is of very ancient origin cannot be doubted.
+This document would lead us to conclude, that so far from the tradition
+regarding the Virgin's assumption being general in the Church, it was a
+point of grave doubt and discussion among the faithful, many of whom
+thought it an act of pious forbearance to abstain altogether from
+pronouncing any opinion on the subject. Whoever penned the letter, and
+whether we look to the sensible and pious sentiments contained in it, or
+to its undisputed antiquity, the following extract cannot fail to be
+interesting[112].
+
+ [Footnote 111: The letter is entitled "Ad Paulam et Eustochium
+ de Assumptione B.M. Virginis." It is found in the fifth volume
+ of Jerome's works, p. 82. Edit. Jo. Martian.]
+
+ [Footnote 112: Baronius shows great anxiety (Cologne, 1609, vol.
+ i. p. 408) to detract from the value of this author's testimony,
+ whoever he was; sharply criticising him because he asserts, that
+ the faithful in his time still expressed doubts as to the matter
+ of fact of Mary's assumption. By assigning, however, to the
+ letter a still later date than the works of Sophronius, Baronius
+ adds strength to the arguments for the comparatively recent
+ origin of the tradition of her assumption. See Fabricius
+ (Hamburgh, 1804), vol. ix. p. 160.]
+
+"Many of our people doubt whether Mary was taken up together with her
+body, or went away, leaving the body. But how, or at what time, or by
+what persons her most holy body was taken hence, or whither removed, or
+whether it rose again, is not known; although some will maintain that
+she is already revived, and is clothed with a blessed immortality with
+Christ in heavenly places, which very many affirm also of the blessed
+{306} John, the Evangelist, his servant, to whom being a virgin, the
+virgin was intrusted by Christ, because in his sepulchre, as it is
+reported, nothing is found but manna, which also is seen to flow forth.
+Nevertheless which of these opinions should be thought the more true we
+doubt. Yet it is better to commit all to God, to whom nothing is
+impossible, than to wish to define rashly[113] by our own authority any
+thing, which we do not approve of.... Because nothing is impossible with
+God, we do not deny that something of the kind was done with regard to
+the blessed Virgin Mary; although for caution's sake (salva fide)
+preserving our faith, we ought rather with pious desire to think, than
+inconsiderately to define, what without danger may remain unknown." This
+letter, at the earliest, was not written until the beginning of the
+fifth century.
+
+ [Footnote 113: These last words, stamping the author's own
+ opinion, "Which we do not approve of," are left out in the
+ quotation of Coccius.]
+
+Subsequent writers were not wanting to fill up what this letter declares
+to have been at its own date unknown, as to the manner and time of
+Mary's assumption, and the persons employed in effecting it. The first
+authority appealed to in defence of the tradition relating to the
+assumption of the Virgin[114], is usually cited as a well-known work
+written by Euthymius, who was contemporary with Juvenal, Archbishop of
+Jerusalem. And the testimony simply quoted as his, offers to us the
+following account of the miraculous transaction[115]:--
+
+ [Footnote 114: Coccius heads the extract merely with these
+ words: "Euthumius Eremita Historiæ Ecclesiasticæ, lib. iii. c.
+ 40;" assigning the date A.D. 549.]
+
+ [Footnote 115: This version by Coccius differs in some points
+ from the original. Jo. Dam. vol. ii. p. 879.]
+
+"It has been above said, that the holy Pulcheria {307} built many
+churches to Christ at Constantinople. Of these, however, there is one
+which was built in Blachernæ, in the beginning of Marcian I's _reign_ of
+divine memory. These, therefore, namely, Marcian and Pulcheria, when
+they had built a venerable temple to the greatly to be celebrated and
+most holy mother of God and ever Virgin Mary, and had decked it with all
+ornaments, sought her most holy body, which had conceived God. And
+having sent for Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, and the bishops of
+Palestine, who were living in the royal city on account of the synod
+then held at Chalcedon, they say to them, 'We hear that there is in
+Jerusalem the first and famous Church of Mary, mother of God and ever
+Virgin, in the garden called Gethsemane, where her body which bore the
+Life was deposited in a coffin. We wish, therefore, her relics to be
+brought here for the protection of this royal city. But Juvenal
+answered, 'In the holy and divinely inspired Scripture, indeed, nothing
+is recorded of the departure of holy Mary, mother of God. But from an
+ancient and most true tradition we have received, that at the time of
+her glorious falling asleep, all the holy Apostles who were going
+through the world for the salvation of the nations, in a moment of time
+borne aloft, came together at Jerusalem. And when they were near her,
+they had a vision of angels, and divine melody of the highest powers was
+heard: and thus with divine and more than heavenly glory, she delivered
+her holy soul into the hands of God in an unspeakable manner. But that
+which had conceived God being borne with angelic and apostolic psalmody,
+with funeral rites, was deposited in a coffin in Gethsemane. In this
+place the chorus and singing of the angels continued for three whole
+days. But {308} after three days, on the angelic music ceasing, since
+one of the Apostles had been absent, and came after the third day, and
+wished to adore the body which had conceived God, the Apostles, who were
+present, opened the coffin; but the body, pure and every way to be
+praised, they could not at all find. And when they found only those
+things in which it had been laid out and placed there, and were filled
+with an ineffable fragrancy proceeding from those things, they shut the
+coffin. Being astounded at the miraculous mystery, they could form no
+other thought, but that He, who in his own person had vouchsafed to be
+clothed with flesh, and to be made man of the most holy Virgin, and to
+be born in the flesh, God the Word, and Lord of Glory, and who after
+birth had preserved her virginity immaculate, had seen it good after she
+had departed from among the living, to honour her uncontaminated and
+unpolluted body by a translation before the common and universal
+resurrection."
+
+Such is the passage offered to us in its insulated form, as an extract
+from Euthymius. To be enabled, however, to estimate its worth, the
+inquirer must submit to the labour of considerable research. He will not
+have pursued his investigation far, before he will find, that a thick
+cloud of uncertainty and doubt hangs over this page of ecclesiastical
+history. Not that the evidence alleged in support of the reputed miracle
+can leave us in doubt as to the credibility of the tradition; for that
+tradition can scarcely be now countenanced by the most zealous and
+uncompromising maintainers of the assumption of the Virgin. What I would
+say is, that the question as to the genuineness and authenticity of the
+works by which the tradition is said to have been preserved, is far more
+difficult and complicated, than {309} those writers must have believed,
+who appeal to such testimony without any doubt or qualification. The
+result of my own inquiries I submit to your candid acceptance.
+
+The earliest author in whose reputed writings I have found the
+tradition, is John Damascenus, a monk of Jerusalem, who flourished
+somewhat before the middle of the eighth century. The passage is found
+in the second of three homilies on the "Sleep of the Virgin," a term
+generally used by the Greeks as an equivalent for the Latin word
+"Assumptio." The original publication of these homilies in Greek and
+Latin is comparatively of a late date. Lambecius, whose work is dated
+1665, says he was not aware that any one had so published them before
+his time[116]. But not to raise the question of their genuineness, the
+preacher's introduction of this passage into his homily is preceded by a
+very remarkable section, affording a striking example of the manner in
+which Christian orators used to indulge in addresses and appeals not
+only to the spirits of departed men, but even to things which never had
+life. The speaker here in his sermon addresses the tomb of Mary, as
+though it had ears to hear, and an understanding to comprehend; and then
+represents the tomb as having a tongue to answer, and as calling forth
+from the preacher and his congregation an address of admiration and
+reverence. Such apostrophes as these cannot be too steadily borne in
+mind, or too carefully weighed, when any argument is sought to be drawn
+from similar salutations offered by ancient Christian orators to saint,
+or angel, or the Virgin.
+
+ [Footnote 116: Vol. viii. p. 281. Le Quien, who published them
+ in 1712, refers to earlier homilies on the Dormitio Virginis.
+ Jo. Damas. Paris, 1712. vol. ii. p. 857.] {310}
+
+The following are among the expressions in which the preacher, in the
+passage under consideration, addresses the Virgin's tomb: "Thou, O Tomb,
+of holy things most holy (for I will address thee as a living being),
+where is the much desired and much beloved body of the mother of God?"
+[Vol. ii. p. 875.] The answer of the tomb begins thus, "Why seek ye her
+in a tomb, who has been taken up on high to the heavenly tabernacles?"
+In reply to this, the preacher first deliberating with his hearers what
+answer he should make, thus addresses the tomb: "Thy grace indeed is
+never-failing and eternal," &c. [P. 881.] By the maintainers of the
+invocation of saints, many a passage far less unequivocal and less
+cogent than this has been adduced to show, that saints and martyrs were
+invoked by primitive worshippers.
+
+We find John Damascenus thus introducing the passage of Euthymius, "Ye
+see, beloved fathers and brethren, what answer the all-glorious tomb
+makes to us; and that these things are so, in the EUTHYMIAC HISTORY, the
+third book and fortieth chapter, is thus written word for word." [P.
+877.]
+
+Lambecius maintains, that the history here quoted by John Damascenus was
+not an ecclesiastical history, written by Euthymius, who died in A.D.
+472, but a biographical history concerning Euthymius himself, written by
+an ecclesiastic, whom he supposes to be Cyril, the monk, who died in
+A.D. 531. This opinion of Lambecius is combated by Cotelerius; the
+discussion only adding to the denseness of the cloud which involves the
+whole tradition. But whether the work quoted had Euthymius for its
+author or its subject, the work itself is lost; and an epitome only of
+such a work has come down to {311} our time. In that abridgment the
+passage quoted by Damascenus is not found.
+
+The editor of John Damascenus, Le Quien, in his annotations on this
+portion of his work, offers to us some very interesting remarks, which
+bear immediately on the agitated question as to the first observance of
+the feast of the Assumption, as well as on the tradition itself. Le
+Quien infers, from the words of Modestus, patriarch of Jerusalem, that
+scarcely any preachers before him had addressed their congregations on
+the departure of the Virgin out of this life; he thinks, moreover, that
+the Feast of the Assumption was at the commencement of the seventh
+century only recently instituted. Though all later writers affirm that
+the Virgin was buried in the valley of Jehoshaphat, in the garden of
+Gethsemane, the same editor says, that this could not have been known to
+Jerome, who passed a great part of his life in Bethlehem, and yet
+observes a total silence on the subject; though in his "Epitaph on
+Paula," [Jerome, Paris, 1706. Vol. iv. p. 670-688, ep. 86.] he
+enumerates all the places in Palestine consecrated by any remarkable
+event. Neither, he adds, could it have been known to Epiphanius, who,
+though he lived long in Palestine, yet declares that nothing was known
+as to the death or burial of the Virgin. [Vol. ii, p. 858.]
+
+Again, in his remarks upon the writings falsely attributed to Melito,
+the same editor says, that since this Pseudo-Melito speaks many jejune
+things of the Virgin Mary, (such for example as at the approach of death
+her exceeding fear of being exposed to the wiles of Satan,) he
+concludes, from that circumstance, that the work was written before the
+Council of Ephesus; alleging this very remarkable reason, that "after
+that {312} time there BEGAN TO BE ENTERTAINED, as was right, not only in
+the East, but also in the West, a far better estimate of the parent of
+God." [P. 880.]
+
+Many of the remarks of this editor would appear to savour of prejudice
+had they come from the pen of one who denied the reality of the
+assumption, or oppugned the honour and worship now paid by members of
+the Church of Rome to the Virgin. Nor could the suspicion of such
+prejudice be otherwise than increased by the insinuation which the same
+editor throws out against the honesty of Archbishop Juvenal, and on the
+possibility of his having invented the whole story, and so for sinister
+purposes deceived Marcian and Pulcheria; just as he fabricated the
+writings which he forged for the purpose of securing the primacy of
+Palestine; a crime laid to the charge of Juvenal by Leo the Great, in
+his letter to Maximus, Bishop of Antioch. [P. 879. See Leo. vol. i. p.
+1215. Epist. cxix.]
+
+It is moreover much to be regretted that in making the extract from John
+Damascenus those who employ it as evidence of primitive belief, have not
+presented it to their readers whole and entire. In the present case the
+system of quoting garbled extracts is particularly to be lamented,
+because the paragraphs omitted in the quotation carry in themselves
+clear proof that Juvenal's answer, as it now appears in John Damascenus,
+could not have been made by Juvenal to Marcian and Pulcheria. For in it
+is quoted from Dionysius the Areopagite by name, a passage still found
+in the works ascribed to him; whereas by the judgment of the most
+learned Roman Catholic writers, those spurious works did not make their
+appearance in Christendom till the beginning of the sixth century, fifty
+years after the Council of Chalcedon, to assist at which {313} Juvenal
+is said to have been present in Constantinople when the emperor and
+empress held the alleged conversation with him.
+
+The remainder of the passage from the history of Euthymius, rehearsed in
+this oration of John Damascenus, is as follows: "There were present with
+the Apostles at that time both the most honoured Timothy the Apostle,
+and first bishop of the Ephesians, and Dionysius the Areopagite,
+himself, as the great Dionysius testifies in the laboured words
+concerning the blessed Hierotheus, himself also then being present, to
+the above-named apostle Timothy, saying thus, Since with the inspired
+hierarchs themselves, when we also as thou knowest, and yourself, and
+many of our holy brethren had come together to the sight of the body
+which gave the principle of life; and there was present too James the
+brother of the Lord ([Greek: adelphotheos]), and Peter the chief and the
+most revered head of the apostles ([Greek: theologon]); then it seemed
+right, after the spectacle, that all the hierarchs (as each was able)
+should sing of the boundless goodness of the divine power. After the
+apostles, as you know, he surpassed all the other sacred persons, wholly
+carried away, and altogether in an ecstasy, and feeling an entire
+sympathy with what was sung; and by all by whom he was heard, and seen,
+and known (and he[117] knew it not), he was considered to be an inspired
+and divine hymnologist. And why should I speak to you about the things
+there divinely said, for unless I have even forgotten myself, I know
+that I have often heard from you some portions also of those inspired
+canticles? And the royal personages having heard this, requested of
+Juvenal the archbishop, that the holy coffin, with the {314} clothes of
+the glorious and all-holy Mary, mother of God, sealed up, might be sent
+to them. And this, when sent, they deposited in the venerable temple of
+the Mother of God, built in Blachernae; and these things were so."
+
+ [Footnote 117: This seems confused in the original ([Greek: kai
+ eginosketo, kai ouk eginoske]). The whole passage is involved in
+ great obscurity.]
+
+It is a fact no less lamentable than remarkable, that out of the lessons
+appointed by the Church of Rome for the feast of the Assumption, to be
+read to believers assembled in God's house of prayer, three of those
+lessons are selected and taken entirely from this very oration of John
+Damascenus[118].
+
+ [Footnote 118:
+
+ The Fourth Lesson begins "Hodie sacra et animata arca."
+ The Fifth " " "Hodie virgo immaculata."
+ The Sixth " " "Eva quæ serpentis," &c.--Æ. 603.
+
+ These contain the passages to which we have before referred as
+ fixing the belief of the Church of Rome to be in the CORPOREAL
+ assumption of Mary. "Quomodo corruptio invaderet CORPUS ILLUD in
+ quo vita suscepta est? [Greek: pos diaphthora tou zoodochon
+ katatolmaeseie somatos.]"]
+
+This, then, is the account nearest to the time of the supposed event;
+and yet can any thing be more vague, and by way of testimony, more
+worthless? A writer near the middle of the sixth century refers to a
+conversation, said to have taken place in the middle of the fifth
+century; in this reported conversation at Constantinople, the Bishop of
+Jerusalem is represented to have informed the Emperor and Empress of an
+ancient tradition, which was believed, concerning a miraculous event,
+said to have taken place nearly four hundred years before, that the body
+was taken out of a coffin without the knowledge of those who had
+deposited it there: Whilst the primitive and inspired account, recording
+most minutely the journeys and proceedings of some of those very
+persons, and the letters of others, makes no mention at all of any
+transaction of the kind; and of {315} all the intermediate historians
+and ecclesiastical writers not one gives the slightest intimation that
+any rumour of it had reached them[119].
+
+ [Footnote 119: Baronius appears not to have referred to this
+ history of Euthymius, but he refers to Nicephorus, and also to a
+ work ascribed to Melito, c. 4, 5. Nicephorus, Paris, 1630. vol.
+ i. p. 168. lib. ii. c. 21. Baronius also refers to lib. 15. c.
+ 14. This Nicephorus was Patriarch of Constantinople. He lived
+ during the reign of our Edward the First, or Edward the Second,
+ and cannot, therefore, be cited in any sense of the word as an
+ ancient author writing on the events of the primitive ages;
+ though the manner in which his testimony is appealed to would
+ imply, that he was a man to whose authority on early
+ ecclesiastical affairs we were now expected to defer.]
+
+Another authority to which the writers on the assumption of the Virgin
+appeal, is that of Nicephorus Callistus, who, at the end of the
+thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century, dedicated his
+work to Andronicus Palæologus. The account given by Nicephorus is this:
+
+In the fifth year of Claudius, the Virgin at the age of fifty-nine, was
+made acquainted with her approaching death. Christ himself then
+descended from heaven with a countless multitude of angels, to take up
+the soul of his mother; He summoned his disciples by thunder and storm
+from all parts of the world. The Virgin then bade Peter first, and
+afterwards the rest of the Apostles, to come with burning torches[120].
+The Apostles surrounded her bed, and "an outpouring of miracles flowed
+forth." The blind beheld the sun, the deaf heard, the lame walked, and
+every disease fled away. The Apostles and others sang, as the coffin was
+borne from Sion to Gethsemane, angels preceding, surrounding, and
+following it. {316} A wonderful thing then took place. The Jews were
+indignant and enraged, and one more desperately bold than the rest
+rushed forward, intending to throw down the holy corpse to the ground.
+Vengeance was not tardy; for his hands were cut off from his arms[121].
+The procession stopped; and at the command of Peter, on the man shedding
+tears of penitence, his hands were joined on again and restored whole.
+At Gethsemane she was put into a tomb, but her Son transferred her to
+the divine habitation.
+
+ [Footnote 120: This author here quotes the forged work ascribed
+ to Dionysius the Areopagite, to which we have before referred.]
+
+ [Footnote 121: This tradition seems to have been much referred
+ to at a time just preceding our Reformation. In a volume called
+ "The Hours of the most blessed Mary, according to the legitimate
+ rite of the Church of Salisbury," printed in Paris in 1526, from
+ which we have made many extracts in the second part of this
+ work, the frontispiece gives an exact representation of the
+ story at the moment of the Jew's hands being cut off. They are
+ severed at the wrist, and are lying on the coffin, on which his
+ arms also are resting. In the sky the Virgin appears between the
+ Father and the Son, the Holy Dove being seen above her. The same
+ print occurs also in another part of the volume.]
+
+Nicephorus then refers to Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, as the
+authority on which the tradition was received, that the Apostles opened
+the coffin to enable St. Thomas (the one stated to have been absent) to
+embrace the body; and then he proceeds to describe the personal
+appearance of the Virgin. [Vol. i. p. 171.]
+
+I am unwilling to trespass upon the patience of my readers by any
+comment upon such evidence as this. Is it within the verge of
+credibility that had such an event as Mary's assumption taken place
+under the extraordinary circumstances which now invest the tradition, or
+under any circumstances whatever, there would have been a total silence
+respecting it in the Holy Scriptures? {317} That the writers of the
+first four centuries should never have referred to such a fact? That the
+first writer who alludes to it, should have lived in the middle of the
+fifth century, or later; and that he should have declared in a letter to
+his contemporaries that the subject was one on which many doubted; and
+that he himself would not deny it, not because it rested upon probable
+evidence, but because nothing was impossible with God; and that nothing
+was known as to the time, the manner, or the persons concerned, even had
+the assumption taken place? Can we place any confidence in the relation
+of a writer in the middle of the sixth century, as to a tradition of
+what an archbishop of Jerusalem attending the council of Chalcedon, had
+told the sovereigns at Constantinople of a tradition, as to what was
+said to have happened nearly four hundred years before, whilst in the
+"Acts" of that Council, not the faintest trace is found of any allusion
+to the supposed fact or the alleged tradition, though the transactions
+of that Council in many of its most minute circumstances are recorded,
+and though the discussions of that Council brought the name and
+circumstances of the Virgin Mary continually before the minds of all who
+attended it?
+
+This, however, is a point of too great importance to be dismissed
+summarily; and seems to require us to examine, however briefly, into the
+circumstances of that Council. {318}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.--COUNCILS OF CONSTANTINOPLE, EPHESUS, AND THE GENERAL
+COUNCIL OF CHALCEDON
+
+
+The legend on which the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary is
+founded professes to trace the tradition to Juvenal, Archbishop of
+Jerusalem, when he was sojourning in Constantinople for the purpose of
+attending the General Council of Chalcedon. To the Emperor and Empress,
+who presided at that council, Juvenal is said to have communicated the
+tradition, as received in Palestine, of the miraculous taking up of
+Mary's body into heaven. This circumstance seems, as we have already
+intimated, of itself, to require us to examine the records of that
+Council, with the view of ascertaining whether any traces may be found
+confirmatory of the tradition, or otherwise; and since that Council
+cannot be regarded as an insulated assembly, but as a continuation
+rather or resumption of the preceding minor Councils of Constantinople
+and Ephesus, we must briefly refer to the occasion and nature generally
+of that succession of Christian synods. I am not aware that in the
+previous Councils any thing had transpired {319} which could be brought
+as evidence on the subject of our inquiry. The questions which had
+disturbed the peace of Christendom, and which were agitated in these
+Councils, inseparable from a repeated mention of the Virgin Mary's name,
+afforded an opportunity at every turn for an expression of the
+sentiments of those who composed the Councils, and of all connected with
+them, including the Bishop of Rome himself, towards her. It would be
+altogether foreign from the purpose of this address to enter in any way
+at large upon the character and history of those or the preceding
+Councils, yet a few words seem necessary, to enable us to judge of the
+nature and weight of the evidence borne by them on the question
+immediately before us.
+
+The source of all the disputes which then rent the Church of HIM who had
+bequeathed peace as his last and best gift to his followers, was the
+anxiety to define and explain the nature of the great Christian mystery,
+the Incarnation of the Son of God; a point on which it were well for all
+Christians to follow only so far as the Holy Scriptures lead them by the
+hand. All parties appealed to the Nicene Council; though there seems to
+have been, to say the least, much misunderstanding and unnecessary
+violence and party spirit on all sides. The celebrated Eutyches of
+Constantinople was charged with having espoused heterodox doctrine, by
+maintaining that in Christ was only one nature, the incarnate Word. On
+this charge he was accused before a Council held at Constantinople in
+A.D. 448. His doctrine was considered to involve a denial of the human
+nature of the Son of God. The Council condemned him of heresy, deposed,
+and excommunicated him. From this proceeding Eutyches appealed to a
+General Council. A council (the authority of which, however, {320} has
+been solemnly, but with what adequate reason we need not stop to
+examine, repudiated), was convened at Ephesus in the following year, by
+the Emperor Theodosius. The proceedings of this assembly were
+accompanied by lamentable unfairness and violence. Eutyches was
+acquitted, and restored by this council[122]; and his accusers were
+condemned and persecuted; Flavianus, Archbishop of Constantinople, who
+had summoned the preceding council, being even scourged and exiled. In
+his distress that patriarch sought the good offices of Leo, Bishop of
+Rome, who espoused his cause, but who failed nevertheless of inducing
+Theodosius to convene a General Council. His successor Marcian, however,
+consented; and in the year 451 the Council of Chalcedon was convened,
+first meeting at Nice, and by adjournment being removed to Chalcedon. In
+this council all the proceedings as well of the Council of
+Constantinople as of Ephesus, were rehearsed at length; and from a close
+examination of the proceedings of those three councils, only one
+inference seems deducible, namely, that the invocation and worship of
+saints and of the Virgin Mary had not then obtained that place in the
+Christian {321} Church, which the Church of Rome now assigns to it; a
+place, however, which the Church of England, among other branches of the
+Catholic Church, maintains that it has usurped, and cannot, without a
+sacrifice of the only sound principle of religious worship, be suffered
+to retain.
+
+ [Footnote 122: The sentiments of Eutyches, even as they are
+ recorded by the party who charged him with heresy, seem to imply
+ so much of soundness in his principles, and of moderation in his
+ maintenance of those principles, that one must feel sorrow on
+ finding such a man maintaining error at any time. The following
+ is among the records of transactions rehearsed at Chalcedon:
+ "He, Eutyches, professed that he followed the expositions of the
+ holy and blessed Fathers who formed the Councils of Nicæa and
+ Ephesus, and was ready to subscribe to them. But if any where it
+ might chance, as he said, that our fathers were deceived and led
+ astray, that as for himself he neither accepted nor accused
+ those things, but he only on such points investigated the divine
+ Scriptures as more to be depended upon [Greek: os
+ bebaioteras]."]
+
+The grand question then agitated with too much asperity, and too little
+charity, was, whether by the incarnation our blessed Saviour became
+possessed of two natures, the divine and human. Subordinate to this, and
+necessary for its decision, was involved the question, What part of his
+nature, if any, Christ derived from the Virgin Mary? Again and again
+does this question bring the name, the office, the circumstances, and
+the nature of that holy and blessed mother of our Lord before these
+Councils. The name of Mary is continually in the mouth of the accusers,
+the accused, the judges, and the witnesses; and had Christian pastors
+then entertained the same feelings of devotion towards her; had they
+professed the same belief as to her assumption into heaven, and her
+influence and authority in directing the destinies of man, and in
+protecting the Church on earth; had they habitually appealed to her with
+the same prayers for her intercession and good offices, and placed the
+same confidence in her as we find now exhibited in the authorized
+services of the Roman Ritual, it is impossible to conceive that no
+signs, no intimation of such views and feelings, would, either directly
+or incidentally, have shown themselves, somewhere or other, among the
+manifold and protracted proceedings of these Councils. I have searched
+diligently, but I can find no expression as to her nature and office, or
+as to our feelings and conduct towards Mary, in which, as a {322}
+Catholic of the Anglican Church, I should not heartily acquiesce. I can
+find no sentiment implying invocation, or religious worship of any kind,
+or in any degree; I find no allusion to her Assumption.
+
+Pope Leo, who is frequently in these documents [Vol. v. p. 1418.] called
+Archbishop of Rome, in a letter to Julianus, Bishop of Cos, speaks of
+Christ as born of "A Virgin," "The blessed Virgin," "The pure, undefiled
+Virgin;" and in a letter to the empress Pulcheria, he calls Mary simply
+"The Virgin Mary." In his celebrated letter to Flavianus, not one iota
+of which (according to the decree of the Roman council under Pope
+Gelasius) was to be questioned by any man on pain of incurring an
+anathema, Pope Leo says that Christ was conceived by the Holy Ghost in
+the womb of the Virgin Mary his mother, who brought him forth with the
+same virgin purity as she had conceived him. Flavianus, Archbishop of
+Constantinople, in his Declaration of faith to the Emperor Theodosius,
+affirms, that Christ was born "of Mary, the Virgin--of the same
+substance with the Father according to his Godhead--of the same
+substance with his mother according to his manhood." [Vol. vi. p. 539.]
+He speaks of her afterwards as "The holy Virgin."
+
+There is, indeed, one word used in a quotation from Cyril of Alexandria,
+and adopted in these transactions, which requires a few words of
+especial observation. The word is _theotocos_[123], which the Latins
+were accustomed {323} to transfer into their works, substituting only
+Roman instead of Greek characters, but which afterwards the authors of
+the Church of Rome translated by Deipara, and in more recent ages by Dei
+Mater, Dei Genetrix, Creatoris Genetrix, &c. employing those terms not
+in explanation of the twofold nature of Christ's person, as was the case
+in these Councils, but in exaltation of Mary, his Virgin mother. This
+word was adopted by Christians in much earlier times than the Council of
+Chalcedon; but it was employed only to express more strongly the
+Catholic belief in the union of the divine and human nature in Him who
+was Son both of God and man; and by no means for the purpose of raising
+Mary into an object of religious adoration. The sense in which it was
+used was explained in the seventh Act of the Council of Constantinople,
+(repeated at Chalcedon) as given by Cyril of Alexandria. "According to
+this sense of an unconfused union, we confess the holy Virgin to be
+theotocos, because that God the Word was made flesh, and became man, and
+from that very conception united with himself the temple received from
+her."
+
+ [Footnote 123: [Greek: Theotokos]. To those who would depend
+ upon this word _theotocos_ as a proof of the exalted honour in
+ which the early Christians held the Virgin, and not as
+ indicative of an anxiety to preserve whole and entire the
+ doctrine of the union of perfect God and perfect man in Christ,
+ deriving his manhood through her, I would suggest the necessity
+ of weighing well that argument with this fact before them; that
+ to the Apostle James, called in Scripture the Lord's brother,
+ was assigned the name of Adelphotheos, or God's brother. This
+ name was given to James, not to exalt him above his
+ fellow-apostles, but to declare the faith of those who gave it
+ him in the union of the divine and human nature of Christ.--See
+ Joan. Damascenus, Hom. ii. c. 18. In Dormit. Virg. vol. ii. p.
+ 881. Le Quien, Paris, 1712. The Latin translation renders it
+ Domini frater.]
+
+Nothing in our present inquiry turns upon the real {324} meaning of that
+word _theotocos_. Some who have been among the brightest ornaments of
+the Anglican Church have adopted the translation "mother of God," whilst
+many others among us believe that the original sense would be more
+correctly conveyed by the expression "mother of Him who was God."
+
+I am induced here to lay side by side, with the second Article of our
+Anglican Church, the Confession of Faith from Cyril, first recited at
+Constantinople, then repeated at Ephesus, and afterwards again rehearsed
+at Chalcedon; in its last clause the expression occurs which gave rise
+to these remarks.
+
+ _Ancient Confession._
+
+ We confess that our Lord Jesus, the Christ, the only begotten
+ Son of God, perfect God and perfect man, from a reasonable soul
+ and body, begotten from everlasting of the Father according to
+ his Godhead, and in these last days, He the same for us and for
+ our salvation [was born] of Mary, the Virgin, according to his
+ manhood--of the same substance with the Father according to his
+ Godhead, of the same substance with us according to his manhood.
+ For of two natures there became an union. Wherefore we confess
+ one Christ, one Lord. According to this sense of the unconfused
+ union, we confess the holy Virgin to be theotocos, because that
+ God the Word was made flesh, and became man, and from that very
+ conception united with himself the temple received from her.
+
+ [Vol. vi. p. 736.]
+
+ _Second Article of Anglican Church._
+
+ The Son, which is the Word of the Father, begotten from
+ everlasting of the Father, the very and eternal God, and of one
+ substance with the Father, took man's nature in the womb of the
+ blessed Virgin, of her substance: so that two whole and perfect
+ natures, that is to say, the Godhead and Manhood, were joined
+ together in one Person, never to be divided, whereof is one
+ Christ, very God, and very man; who truly suffered, was
+ crucified, dead and buried, to reconcile his Father to us, and
+ to be a sacrifice, not only for original guilt, but also for
+ actual sins of men. {325}
+
+But there are other points in the course of these important proceedings
+to which I would solicit your especial attention, with the view of
+comparing the sentiments of the Bishop of Rome at that day, and also the
+expressions employed by other Chief Pastors of Christ's flock, with the
+language of the appointed authorized services of the Roman Church now,
+and the sentiments of her reigning Pontiff, and of his accredited
+ministers.
+
+The circumstances of the Church Catholic, as represented in Leo's letter
+in the fifth century, and the circumstances of the Church of Rome, as
+lamented by the present Pope in 1832[124], are in many respects very
+similar. The end desired by Leo and Flavianus, his brother pastor and
+contemporary, Bishop of Constantinople, and by Gregory, now Bishop of
+Rome, is one and the same, namely, the suppression of heresy, the
+prevalence of the truth, and the unity of the Christian Church. But how
+widely and how strikingly different are the foundations on which they
+respectively build their hopes for the attainment of that end!
+
+ [Footnote 124: "The encyclical letter of our most holy Father,
+ Pope Gregory, by divine providence, the sixteenth of that name,
+ to all patriarchs, primates, archbishops, and bishops."]
+
+The present Roman Pontiff's hopes, and desires, and exhortations are
+thus expressed[125]:--
+
+ [Footnote 125: This is the translation circulated in the Roman
+ Catholic Annual, p. 15, called, The Laity's Directory for the
+ year 1833; on the title page of which is this notice: "The
+ Directory for the Church Service, printed by Messrs. Keating and
+ Brown, is the only one which is published with the authority of
+ the Vicars Apostolic in England.--London, Nov. 12, 1829." Signed
+ "James, Bishop of Usula, Vic. Ap. Lond."]
+
+"That all may have a successful and happy issue, let us raise our eyes
+to the most blessed Virgin Mary, {326} WHO ALONE DESTROYS HERESIES, who
+is our GREATEST HOPE, yea, the ENTIRE GROUND OF OUR HOPE[126]. May she
+exert her patronage to draw down an efficacious blessing on our desires,
+our plans, and proceedings in the present straitened condition of the
+Lord's flock. We will also implore, in humble prayer, from Peter, the
+prince of the Apostles, and from his fellow-Apostle Paul, that you may
+all stand as a wall to prevent any other foundation than what hath been
+laid; and supported by this cheering hope, we have confidence that the
+author and finisher of faith, Jesus Christ, will at last console us all
+in the tribulations which have found us exceedingly."
+
+ [Footnote 126: On this word there is a note of reference to S.
+ Bern. Serm. de Nat. B.M.V. 7.]
+
+"To you, venerable brethren, and the flocks committed to your care, we
+most lovingly impart, as auspicious of celestial help, the Apostolic
+Benediction. Given at Rome from St. Mary Major's, August 15th, the
+Festival of the Assumption of the same blessed Virgin Mary, the year of
+our Lord 1832, of our Pontificate the Second."
+
+How deplorable a change, how melancholy a degeneracy is here evinced
+from the faith, and hopes, and sentiments of Christian bishops in days
+of old! In the expressed hopes of Leo and Flavianus, you will seek in
+vain for any reference or allusion "to the blessed Virgin Mary, as the
+destroyer of heresies, the greatest hope, the entire ground of a
+Christian's hope;" you will in vain seek for any exhortation for the
+faithful "to raise their eyes to her in order to obtain a merciful and
+happy issue." Equally vain would be your search for any "imploring in
+humble prayer," of Peter and Paul, or any even distant allusion to help
+from them. {327} To God and God alone are the faithful exhorted to pray;
+on God and God alone do those Christians express that their hopes rely;
+God alone they regard as the destroyer of heresy, the restorer of peace,
+and the protector of the Church's unity. "Their greatest hope, yea, the
+entire ground of their hope," the Being to be "implored in humble
+prayer," is not Mary, nor Peter, nor Paul, but God alone, the Creator,
+the Redeemer, the Sanctifier of Mary, and of Peter, and of Paul.
+
+Thus Flavian writing to Leo says, "Wherefore (in consequence of those
+errors, and heresies, and distractions, which he had deplored) we must
+be sober and watch unto prayer, and draw nigh to God." [Vol. v. 1330.]
+And again, "Thus will the heresy which has arisen, and the consequent
+commotion, be easily destroyed by your holy letters with the assistance
+of God." [Vol. v. 1355.] Thus Leo in his turn writing to Julian, Bishop
+of Cos, utters this truly Christian sentiment. "May the mercy of God, as
+we trust, grant that without the loss of any soul, against the darts of
+the devil the sound parts may be entirely preserved, and the wounded
+parts may be healed. May God preserve you safe and sound, most honoured
+brother!" [Vol. v. 1423.] Thus the same Bishop of Rome writing to
+Flavian, expresses his hopes in these words: "Confidently trusting that
+the help of God will be present, so that one who has been misled,
+condemning the vanity of his own thoughts, may be saved. May God
+preserve you in health and strength, most beloved brother!" [Vol. v.
+1390.]
+
+I will detain you by only one more reference to these most interesting
+documents. The whole Council of Chalcedon, at the conclusion of all, and
+when the {328} triumph was considered to have been secured over
+Eutyches, and their gratitude was expressed that the heresies had been
+destroyed--instead of referring to Mary as the "sole destroyer of
+heresies," shout, as if with the voice of one man, from every side, "It
+is God alone who hath done this!" [Vol. vii. p. 174.] Neither
+antecedently did their chief pastors exhort them to raise their eyes to
+Mary, and promise to "implore" the blessing they needed, "in humble
+prayer from Peter and Paul." Neither "in the straitened condition of the
+Lord's flock" did they invoke any other than God. And when truth
+prevailed, and the victory was won, whilst they were lavish of their
+grateful thanks to the emperor and his queen, who were present and had
+succoured them; of help from the invisible world they make no mention,
+save only of the Lord's; they had implored neither angel, nor saints,
+nor Virgin to be their protector and patron; no angel, nor saint, nor
+virgin, shared their praises;--God alone was exalted in that day.
+
+And, let not the answer, ever at hand when reference is thus made to the
+prayers or professions of individuals, whether popes or canonized
+saints, seduce any now from a pursuit of the very truth. These, it is
+said, "are the prayers and professions of individuals, it is unfair then
+to make the Church responsible for them; we appeal from them to the
+Church." But in this case the words of the Sovereign Pontiff are in good
+faith the words of the Church of Rome; not because I at all would
+identify the words of a Pope with the Church, but because the prayers of
+the Church of Rome in her authorized solemn services and acts of worship
+justify {329} Pope Gregory in every sentiment he utters, and every
+expression he employs. Does Gregory bid the faithful lift up their eyes
+to Mary the sole destroyer of heresies? The Roman ritual in the Lesser
+Office of the holy Virgin thus addresses her, "Rejoice, O Mary Virgin;
+thou alone hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world:" And again:
+"Under thy protection we take refuge, holy parent of God; despise not
+thou our prayers in our necessities, but from all dangers ever deliver
+us, O glorious and blessed Virgin." Does Gregory assure the faithful
+that he will implore in humble prayer of Peter and Paul? in doing so he
+is only treading in the very footsteps of the Roman Church itself. In an
+address, which we have already quoted (see p. 262), Peter is thus
+invoked. "Now O good shepherd, merciful Peter, accept the prayers of us
+who supplicate, and loose the bands of our sins, by the power committed
+to thee, by which thou shuttest heaven against all by a word, and
+openest it."
+
+These things are now; but from the beginning it was not so. {330}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+SECTION I.--PRESENT WORSHIP OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN IN THE AUTHORIZED AND
+ENJOINED SERVICES OF THE CHURCH OF ROME.
+
+
+When from examining the evidence of antiquity we turn to the present
+enjoined services of the Church of Rome, it is impossible not to be
+struck by the fact repeatedly forced upon our notice, that whereas the
+invocation of the Virgin seems to have been introduced at a period much
+later than those addresses to the martyrs which have already invited our
+attention, her worship now assumes so much higher a place, and claims so
+large a share in the public worship of the Roman Catholic portions of
+Christendom above martyrs, saints, and angels. The offices of the Virgin
+present instances of all those various and progressive stages of divine
+worship, which we have already exemplified in the case of the martyrs,
+from the first primitive and Christian practice of making the
+anniversary of the Saint a day either of especial praise and prayer to
+God for the mercies of redemption generally, or of returning thanks to
+God for the graces manifested in his holy servants now in peace, with
+prayers for light and strength to enable the worshippers to follow them,
+as they followed Christ--down to the last and worst stage, the
+consummation {331} of all, namely, prayer directly to saints and angels
+for protection, succour, and spiritual benefits at their hands.
+
+I. Of the first class is the following collect, retained almost word for
+word in our Anglican service.
+
+_On the day of the Purification._
+
+"Almighty and everlasting God, we humbly beseech thy majesty, that as
+thy only begotten Son was this day presented in the temple in substance
+of our flesh, so Thou wouldest cause us to be presented unto Thee with
+purified minds. Through the same."
+
+(Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, majestatem tuam supplices exoramus, ut
+sicut unigenitus Filius tuus hodierna die cum nostræ carnis substantia
+est præsentatus, ita nos facias purificatis tibi mentibus præsentari.
+Per eundem Dominum.--H. 536.)
+
+Such a prayer is founded on the facts of revelation, and is primitive,
+catholic, apostolic, and evangelical.
+
+II. Of the second progressive stage towards the adoration of the saints,
+the offices of the Virgin supply us with various instances; the case,
+namely, of the Christian orator being led by the flow of his eloquence
+to apostrophize the spirit of the Saint, and address him as though he
+were present, witnessing the celebration of his day, hearing the
+panegyrics uttered for his honour, and partaking with the congregation
+in their religious acts of worship.
+
+"O holy and spotless virginhood; with what praises to extol thee I know
+not: because Him, whom the heavens could not contain, thou didst bear in
+thy bosom. {332} Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit
+of thy womb. Thou art blessed, O Virgin Mary, who didst carry the Lord,
+the Creator of the world. Thou didst give birth to Him who made thee,
+and remainest a virgin for ever. [Beata es Virgo Maria, quæ Dominum
+portasti Creatorem mundi: genuisti qui te fecit, et in æternum permanes
+virgo.--Vern. clxii.] Hail, holy parent, who didst in child-birth bring
+forth the King who ruleth heaven and earth for ever and ever. Amen."
+[Salve sacra parens enixa puerpera regem, qui coelum terramque regit in
+sæcula sæculorum. Amen.--Introit. at the mass on the Nativity of the
+Virgin.]
+
+In apostrophes like these, the members of the Anglican Church see
+nothing in itself harmful, so long as they are kept within due bounds.
+Many of the passages cited from the ancient writers in proof of their
+having espoused the doctrine, and exemplified in themselves the practice
+of invoking saints, are nothing more than these glowing addresses. They
+have been responded to by one of the brightest ornaments, and sweetest
+minstrels of the Anglican Church, whose apostrophe at the same time by
+its own words would guard us against the abuses and excesses in which in
+the Roman Catholic Church this practice, followed without restraint and
+indulged in with less and less of caution and soberness, unhappily
+ended; abuses against which also we cannot ourselves now be too
+constantly and carefully on our guard.
+
+ "Ave Maria! Blessed maid,
+ Lily of Eden's fragrant shade,
+ Who can express the love,
+ That nurtured thee so pure and sweet;
+ Making thy heart a shelter meet
+ For Jesus' holy Dove? {333}
+ Ave Maria! mother blest,
+ To whom, caressing and caress'd,
+ Clings the Eternal Child!
+ Favour'd beyond archangel's dream,
+ When first on thee with tenderest gleam
+ The newborn Saviour smiled.
+ Ave Maria! thou whose name,
+ ALL BUT ADORING love may claim,
+ Yet may we reach thy shrine;
+ For HE, thy Son and Saviour, vows,
+ To crown all lowly lofty brows
+ With love and joy like thine.
+ Bless'd is the womb that bare Him,--bless'd
+ The bosom where his lips were press'd;
+ But rather bless'd are they
+ Who hear his word and keep it well,
+ The living homes where Christ shall dwell,
+ And never pass away."
+
+ J. Keble's Christian Year. "The Annunciation."
+
+Would that no branch of the Church Catholic had ever passed the boundary
+line drawn here so exquisitely by this Anglican Catholic, from whose
+lips or pen no syllable could ever fall in disparagement of the holy
+Virgin, as blessed among women, and the holy mother of our Lord. To
+bring about the re-union of Christians would in that case have been a
+far more hopeful task than it is now.
+
+III. In the third stage, a prayer was offered to God, that He would
+permit the intercessions of the saints to help us; or the prayer
+contained the expression of a wish,--a desire not addressed either to
+God or to the saint, merely words expressive of the hope of the
+individual. The following are some of the many instances now contained
+in the Roman Breviary: {334}
+
+"May the Virgin of virgins herself intercede for us to the Lord. Amen."
+[Ipsa Virgo virginum intercedat pro nobis ad Dominum. Amen.--Vern.
+cxlviii.]
+
+In the Post-communion, on the day of the Assumption, this prayer is
+offered:--"Partakers of the heavenly table, we implore thy clemency, O
+Lord our God, that we who celebrate the Assumption of the mother of God,
+may, by her intercession, be freed from all impending evils. Through,"
+&c. [Mensæ coelestis participes effecti imploramus clementiam tuam,
+Domine Deus noster, ut qui Assumptionem Dei Genetricis colimus, a
+cunctis malis imminentibus ejus intercessione liberemur. Per.--Miss.
+Rom.]
+
+"We beseech Thee, O Lord, let the glorious intercession of the blessed
+and glorious ever Virgin Mary protect us and bring us to life eternal."
+[Beatæ et gloriosæ semper Virginia Mariæ, quæsumus, Domine, intercessio
+gloriosa nos protegat, et ad vitam producat æternam.--Vern. clv.]
+
+"Pardon, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the offences of thy servants, that we,
+who cannot please Thee of our own act, may be saved by the intercession
+of the mother of thy Son, our Lord, who liveth with Thee." [Famulorum
+tuorum quæsumus, Domine, delictis ignosce, ut qui tibi placere de
+nostris actibus non valemus, Genetricis Filii tui, Domini nostri,
+intercessione salvemur, qui tecum vivit.--Vern. clxix.]
+
+On the vigil of the Epiphany, this prayer is offered in the
+Post-communion at the mass,--"Let this communion, O Lord, purge us from
+guilt, and by the intercession of the blessed Virgin, mother of God, let
+it make us partakers of the heavenly cure. Through the same." [Hæc nos
+communio, Domine, purget a crimine, et intercedente beata Virgine Dei
+genetrice coelestis remedii faciat esse consortes. Per eundem.--Miss.
+Rom.]
+
+"Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord God, that we thy {335} servants may
+enjoy perpetual health of body and mind, and be freed from present
+sorrow, and enjoy eternal gladness, by the glorious intercession of the
+blessed Mary, ever Virgin. Through." [Concede nos famulos tuos,
+quæsumus, Domine Deus, perpetua mentis et corporis sanitate gaudere, et
+gloriosa beatæ Mariæ semper Virginis intercessione a præsenti liberari
+tristitia, et æterna perfrui lætitia. Per Dominum.--Vern. cxlvi.]
+
+On the second Sunday after Easter, we find a further and more sad
+departure from the simplicity of Christian worship, in which the Church
+of Rome declares that the offerings made to God at the Lord's Supper
+were made for the honour of the Virgin.--"Having received, O Lord, the
+helps of our salvation, grant, we beseech Thee, that by the patronage of
+Mary, ever Virgin, we may be every where protected; in veneration of
+whom we make these offerings to thy Majesty." [Sumptis, Domine, salutis
+nostræ subsidiis, da, quæsumus, beatæ Mariæ semper Virginis patrociniis
+ubique protegi, _in cujus veneratione_ hæc tuæ obtulimus
+Majestati.--Post Commun. Mis. Rom.]
+
+On the octave of Easter, at the celebration of mass, in the Secret, the
+intercession of the Virgin is made to appear as essential a cause of our
+peace and blessedness as the propitiation of Christ; or rather, the two
+are represented as joint concurrent causes; as though the office of the
+Saviour was confined to propitiation, exclusive altogether of
+intercession, whilst the office of intercession was assigned to the
+Virgin.--"By thy propitiation, O Lord, and by the intercession of the
+blessed Mary, ever Virgin, may this offering be profitable to us for
+perpetual and present prosperity and peace." [Tua, Domine, propitiatione
+et beatæ Marisæ semper Virginis intercessione ad perpetuam atque
+prsesentem hæc oblatio nobis profecerit prosperitatem et pacem.] {336}
+
+IV. A fourth station in this lamentable progress was evidenced when
+Christians at the tombs of martyrs implored, yet still in prayer to God,
+that He would, for the sake of the martyrs, and by their merits and good
+offices, grant to the petitioner some benefit temporal or spiritual. Of
+that practice, we have an example in this prayer: "O God, who didst
+deign to choose the blessed Virgin's womb in which to dwell, vouchsafe,
+we beseech thee, to make us, defended by her protection, to take
+pleasure in her commemoration." [Deus qui virginalem aulam beatæ Mariæ
+in qua habitares eligerere dignatus es, da, quæsumus, ut sua nos
+defensione munitos jucundos facias suæ interesse commemorationi.--Æst.
+clvi.]
+
+"By the Virgin mother, may the Lord grant us health and peace. Amen."
+[Per Virginem Matrem concedat nobis Dominus salutem et pacem.
+Amen.--Vern. cxliii.]
+
+"By the prayers and merits of the blessed Mary, ever Virgin, and of all
+saints, may the Lord bring us to the kingdom of heaven." [Precibus et
+meritis beatæ Mariæ Virginis et omnium sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad
+regna coelorum.--Vern. cxlvii.]
+
+"May the Virgin Mary bless us, together with a pious offspring." [Nos
+cum prole pia benedicat Virgo Maria.--Vern. cxlvii.]
+
+V. The fifth grade involves a still more melancholy departure from
+Christian truth and primitive simplicity, when the prayer is no longer
+addressed to God, but is offered to the Virgin, imploring her to
+intercede with God for the supplicants, yet still asking nothing but her
+prayers.
+
+"Blessed mother, Virgin undefiled, glorious Queen of the world,
+intercede for us with the Lord." [Beata Mater, et intacta Virgo,
+gloriosa regina mundi, intercede pro nobis ad Dominum.--Aut. cxliv.]
+{337}
+
+"Blessed mother of God, Mary, perpetual Virgin, the temple of the Lord,
+the holy place of the holy Spirit, thou alone without example hast
+pleased our Lord Jesus Christ: Pray for the people, mediate for the
+clergy, intercede for the female sex who are under a vow." [Beata Dei
+Genitrix, Maria Virgo perpetua, templum Domini, sacrarium Spiritus
+Sancti, sola sine exemplo placuisti Domino nostro Jesu Christo; ora pro
+populo, interveni pro clero, intercede pro devoto femineo sexu.--Vern.
+clxiii.]
+
+ "Holy Mary, pray for us!
+ Holy mother of God, pray for us!
+ Holy Virgin of virgins, pray for us!"
+
+In the form of prayer called Litaniæ Lauretanæ, between the most solemn
+addresses to the ever blessed Trinity, and to the Lamb of God that
+taketh away the sins of the world, are inserted more than forty
+addresses to the Virgin, invoking her under as many varieties of title.
+She is appealed to as--The Mirror of Justice, The Cause of our Joy, The
+mystical Rose, The Tower of David, The Tower of Ivory, The House of
+Gold, The Arc of the Covenant, The Gate of Heaven, The Refuge of
+Sinners, The Queen of Angels, the Queen of all Saints. [Vern. ccxxxix.]
+
+In examining the case of the invocation of saints, we placed under this
+head, as the safer course, a kind of invocation which seemed to
+vacillate between this appeal to them merely for intercession, and the
+last consummation of all, direct prayer to them for blessings. We
+exemplified it by the hymn to St. Stephen. The following seems very much
+of the same character, addressed to the Virgin:--
+
+ "Hail, O Queen, Mother of mercy, our life, sweetness, and hope,
+ Hail! To thee we cry, banished sons {338} of Eve. To thee we
+ sigh, groaning and weeping in this valley of tears. Come then,
+ our Advocate, turn those compassionate eyes of thine on us, and
+ after this exile show to us Jesus, the blessed fruit of thy
+ womb. O merciful! O pious! O sweet Virgin Mary! [Salve, Regina,
+ Mater Misericordiæ, vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra, salve. Ad te
+ clamamus exules filii Evæ. Ad te suspiramus gementes et flentes
+ in hac lachrymarum valle. Eja ergo Advocata nostra, illos tuos
+ misericordes oculos ad nos converte, et Jesum benedictum fructum
+ ventris tui nobis post hoc exilium ostende. O clemens! O pia! O
+ dulcis Virgo Maria!]
+
+ "Pray for us, O holy Mother of God, that we may be made worthy
+ of the promises of Christ." [Ora pro nobis, Sancta Dei Genetrix,
+ ut digni efficiamur promissionibus Christi.--Æst. 151.]
+
+VI. Unhappily, in the appointed religious services of the Roman ritual,
+we have too many examples of prayer for benefits spiritual and temporal,
+addressed directly to the Virgin. It is in vain to say that all that is
+meant is to ask her intercession; the people will not, cannot, do not,
+regard it in that light. It is affirmed that when the Church of Rome
+guides and directs her sons and daughters to pray for specific benefits
+at the hands of the Virgin mother, without any mention of her prayers,
+without specifying that her petitions are all that they ask; yet they
+are taught only to ask for her intercession, and are not encouraged to
+look for the blessings as her gift and at her hands. But, can this be
+right and safe? In an act of all human acts the most solemn and holy,
+can recourse be had to such refinements without great danger?
+
+Among many others of a similar kind this invocation frequently recurs,
+"Deem me worthy to praise thee, {339} O sacred Virgin; give to me
+strength against thy enemies." [Dignare me laudare te, Virgo sacrata. Da
+mihi virtutem contra hostes tuos.--Æst. clvi.]
+
+The following seems to be among the most favourite addresses to the
+Virgin:--"Hail, Star of the Sea, kind Mother of God, and ever Virgin!
+Happy Gate of Heaven, taking that 'Hail!' from the mouth of Gabriel,
+establish us in peace,--changing the name of Eve. For the guilty, loose
+their bonds; bring forth light for the blind; drive away our evils;
+demand for us all good things. SHOW THAT THOU ART A MOTHER. Let Him who
+endured for us to be thy Son, through thee receive our prayers. O
+excellent Virgin, meek among all, us, FREED FROM FAULT, MAKE MEEK AND
+CHASTE; make our life pure; prepare a safe journey; that, beholding
+Jesus, we may always rejoice. Praise be to God the Father, glory to
+Christ most high, and to the Holy Spirit; one honour to the three.
+Amen."
+
+ [Ave Man's Stella,
+ Dei Mater alma,
+ Atque semper Virgo!
+ Felix coeli porta,
+ Sumens illud Ave
+ Gabrielis ore,
+ Funda nos in pace,
+ Mutans Evæ nomen.
+ Solve vincla reis,
+ Profer lumen cæcis,
+ Mala nostra pelle,
+ Bona cuncta posce.
+ MONSTRA TE ESSE MATREM;
+ Sumat per te preces,
+ Qui pro nobis natus
+ Tulit esse tuus.
+ Virgo singularis,
+ Inter omnes mitis,
+ Nos culpa solutos,
+ Mites fac et castos,
+ Vitam præsta puram,
+ Iter para tutum,
+ Ut videntes Jesum
+ Semper collætemur.
+
+ Sit laus Deo Patri, summo Christo decus,
+ Spiritui Sancto, tribus honor unus. Amen.--Æst. 597.
+ ]
+
+In the body of this hymn, there is undoubtedly reference to an
+application to be made to the Son, &c.; but can it be fitting that such
+language as is here suggested to the Virgin, for her to use, should be
+addressed by a {340} mortal to God? can such a call upon her to show her
+power and influence over the eternal Son of the eternal Father be
+fitting--"Show that thou art a mother?" I confess that against what is
+here implied, my understanding and my heart entirely revolt.[127]
+
+ [Footnote 127: At the present day some versions, contrary to the
+ whole drift and plain sense and meaning of the passage, have
+ translated it, as though the prayer was, that Mary would, by her
+ maternal good offices in our behalf, prove to us that she was
+ our mother. An instance of what I mean occurs in a work called
+ "Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques," p. 353.
+
+ "Monstra te esse Matrem: Faites voir que vous êtes véritablement
+ notre mère." In an English manual, first printed in 1688, and
+ then called "The Prince of Wales's Manual," the lines are thus
+ rendered--
+
+ Shew us a Mother's care,
+ To Him convey our prayer,
+ Who for our sake put on
+ The title of thy Son.
+
+ I rejoice to see an indication of a feeling of impropriety in
+ the sentiment in its plain, obvious meaning; still the change is
+ inadmissible. She is addressed above, in the second line, as the
+ mother of God; Jesus is immediately mentioned, in the very next
+ line, and through the entire stanza, as her Son; and the prayer
+ is, that through her that Being who endured to be her Son would
+ hear the prayers of the worshippers.
+
+ Since I first prepared this note for the press, I have found a
+ proof, that the obvious grammatical and logical meaning, "show
+ thyself to be His mother," is the sense in which it was received
+ and interpreted before the Reformation. In a work dedicated to
+ the "Youth of England studious of good morals," and entitled
+ "Expositio Sequentiarum," the only interpretation given to this
+ passage is thus expressed: "Show thyself to be a MOTHER, namely
+ BY APPEASING THY SON, and let thy Son take our prayers through
+ thee, who (namely, the Son born of the Virgin Mary,) for us
+ miserable sinners endured to be thy Son." "Monstra te esse
+ MATREM (sc.) placando TILIUM TUUM, et filius tuus sumat precem,
+ id est, deprecationes nostras per te qui (sc.) filius natus ex
+ Virgine Maria pro nobis (sc.) miseris peccatoribus tulit, id
+ est, sustinuit esse tuus filius." It must be observed, that this
+ work was expressly written for the purpose of explaining these
+ parts of the ritual according to the use of Sarum. It was
+ printed by the famous W. de Worde, at the sign of the Sun in
+ Fleet-street, 1508. The passage occurs in p. 33. b. This is by
+ no means the only book of the kind. I have before me one printed
+ at Basil, in 1504, and another at Cologne the same year. They
+ are evidently all drawn from some common source, but are not
+ reprints all of the same work, for there are in each some
+ variations. The Cologne edition tells us, that it was the
+ reprint of a familiar commentary long ago (jamdudum) published
+ on the hymns. All these join in construing the passage so as to
+ represent the prayer to the Virgin to be, that she would show
+ and prove that she was mother by appeasing her Son, and causing
+ him to hear our prayers. Nor can any other meaning be attached
+ to the translation of the words as given by Cardinal Du Perron
+ (Replique à la Rep. du Roy de la G. Bretagne. Paris, 1620, p.
+ 970). "Et pourtant quand l'Eglise dit à la saincte Vierge,
+ 'Defends nous de l'ennemy, et nous reçoy à l'heure delamort,'
+ elle n'entend pas prier la Vierge qu'elle nous reçoive par sa
+ propre virtu, mais par impetration de la grace de son Fils,
+ comme l'Eglise le temoigne en ces mots: 'Monstre que tu es mère,
+ reçoive par toy nos prieres celuy, qui né pour nous a eu
+ agreeable d'être tien!'" This novel interpretation I have not
+ found in any one book of former days.] {341}
+
+Another prayer runs thus: "Under thy protection we take refuge, Holy
+Mother of God. Despise not our supplications in our necessities; but
+from all dangers ever deliver us, O glorious and Blessed Virgin." [Sub
+tuum præsidium confugimus, sancta Dei Genetrix; nostras deprecationes ne
+despicias in necessitatibus, sed a periculis cunctis libera nos semper,
+Virgo gloriosa et benedicta.--Æst. cxlvi.]
+
+Let us suppose the object of these addresses to be changed; and instead
+of the Virgin let us substitute the name of the ever-blessed God and
+Father of us all. The very words here addressed to the Virgin are
+offered to Him, and spoken of Him in some of the most affecting prayers
+and praises recorded in the Bible[128].
+
+ [Footnote 128: The identity of the prayers offered to the Virgin
+ with those offered in the Book of inspiration, or in the Roman
+ Ritual to the Almighty, becomes very striking, if we lay side by
+ side the authorized language of the Roman Liturgy, and the only
+ translation of the Scriptures authorized by the Roman Church.
+
+ _Roman Ritual in addressing the _Roman Ritual, or Translation
+ Virgin_ of the Bible, in addressing
+ the Almighty_.
+
+ Sub tuum præsidium confugimus. Dominus, firmamentum meum et
+ refugium meum. Ad te
+ confugi.--Ps. xvii. 1; cxlii.
+ 11.
+
+ Nostras deprecationes ne despicias Ne despexeris deprecationem
+ in necessitatibus. meam.--Ps. liv. 1.
+
+ Sed a periculis cunctis libera nos. Libera, Domine, animam servi
+ tui ab omnibus periculis
+ inferni. Hiem. ccvi.
+
+ Libera nos a malo. Orat. Dom.
+
+ A periculo mortis libera nos,
+ Domine.--Hiem. cciv.
+
+ Tu nos ab hoste protege. Eripe me de inimicis meis,
+ Domine.--Ps. cxlii. 11.
+
+ Et hora mortis SUSPICE. _Suscipe_, Domine, servum
+ tuum.--Hiem. ccvi. {342}
+ ]
+
+But another hymn in the office of the Virgin, addressed in part to the
+blessed Saviour himself, and partly to the Virgin Mary, is still more
+revolting to all my feelings with regard to religious worship. The
+Redeemer is only asked to remember his mortal birth; no blessing is here
+supplicated for at his hands; his protection is not sought; no
+deliverance of our souls at the hour of death is implored from Him;
+these blessings, and these heavenly benefits, and these divine mercies,
+are sought for exclusively at the hands of the Virgin alone. Can such a
+mingled prayer, can such a contrast in prayer, be the genuine fruit of
+that Gospel which bids us ask for all we need in prayer to God in the
+name and for the sake of his blessed Son?
+
+ "Author of our salvation, remember that once, by {343} being
+ born of a spotless virgin, thou didst take the form of our body!
+ Mary, mother of grace, mother of mercy, do thou protect us from
+ the enemy, and receive us at the hour of death. Glory to thee, O
+ Lord, who wast born of a Virgin, with the Father and the Holy
+ Spirit, through eternal ages. Amen[129]."
+
+ [Footnote 129:
+
+ Memento, Salutis Auctor, Tu nos ab hoste protege,
+ Quod nostri quondam corporis, Et hora mortis suscipe.
+ Ex illibata Virgine, Gloria tibi, Domine,
+ Nascendo formam sumpseris. Qui natus es de Virgine,
+ Maria mater gratiæ, Cum Patre et Sancto Spiritu,
+ Mater misericordiæ, In sempiterna sæcula. Amen.
+
+ In the new version, (referred to in page 260 of the present
+ work,) this hymn stands thus:--
+
+ Memento, rerum Conctitor, Maria mater gratiæ,
+ Nostri quod olim corporis, Dulcis parens clementiæ,
+ Sacrata ab alvo Virginis, Tu nos ab hoste protege,
+ Nascendo forrnam sumpseris. In mortis hora suscipe, &c.
+
+ Æst. clv.]
+
+Could the beloved John, to whose kind and tender care our blessed Lord
+gave his mother of especial trust, have offered to her such a prayer as
+this? To God alone surely would he have prayed for deliverance from all
+evil and mischief. To God alone would he have prayed:--"In the hour of
+death, good Lord, deliver us, and all for Jesus Christ's sake, our only
+Saviour and Mediator."
+
+To one other example of the practice of the Church of Rome I must refer.
+The rubric in our Book of Common Prayer directs that "at the end of
+every Psalm throughout the year, shall be repeated, Glory be to the
+Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost: As it was in the
+beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen." In the
+Roman Breviary also we find this rubric: "This verse, _Gloria_, is
+always said in the end of all psalms, EXCEPT IT BE OTHERWISE {344}
+NOTED." [Æst. 3.] Such notifications occur at the end of various psalms.
+On the Feast of the Assumption [Æst. 595.], fourteen psalms are
+appointed to be used. At the close of every one of these psalms, without
+however any note that the Gloria is not to be said, there is appended an
+anthem to the Virgin. In some cases, so intimately is the anthem
+interwoven with the closing words of the psalm, as that under other
+circumstances it would induce us to infer that the Gloria was intended
+to be left out, especially as in the Parvum Officium of the Virgin [Æst.
+clv.], though to the various psalms anthems in the same manner have been
+annexed, yet the words "Gloria Patri et Filio" are inserted in each case
+between the psalm and the anthem. Be this as it may, the annexation of
+the anthem has a lamentable tendency to withdraw the thoughts of the
+worshippers from the truths contained in the inspired psalm, and to fix
+them upon Mary and her Assumption; changing the Church's address from
+the Eternal Being, alone invoked by the Psalmist, to one, who though a
+virgin blessed among women, is a creature of God's hand. Thus, at the
+conclusion of the 8th psalm; "O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is thy
+name in all the world," we find immediately annexed these two anthems,
+"The holy mother of God is exalted above the choirs of angels to the
+heavenly realms. The gates of paradise are opened to us by thee, [by
+thee, O Virgin [Quæ gloriosa]] who glorious triumphest with the angels."
+Thus again, an anthem is attached to the last verse of the 95th (in the
+Hebrew and English versions the 96th). "He shall judge the earth in
+equity, and the people with his truth. Rejoice, {345} O Virgin Mary;
+thou alone hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world. Deem me
+worthy to praise thee, hallowed Virgin: Give me strength against thy
+enemies." To the 96th (97th), the latter clause of that address is
+repeated, with the addition of the following: "After the birth thou
+didst remain a virgin inviolate. Mother of God, intercede for us."
+
+An instance of the anthem being so intimately interwoven with the psalm,
+as to render the insertion of the "Gloria," between the two, to say the
+least, forced and unnatural, occurs at the close of the 86th (87th)
+psalm. The vulgate translation of the last verse, differing entirely
+from the English, is this: "As the habitation of all who rejoice is in
+thee." This sentence of the Psalmist is thus taken up in the Roman
+Ritual: "As the habitation of all us who rejoice is in THEE, Holy Mother
+of God."
+
+The object proposed by the Church from of old in concluding each psalm
+by an ascription of glory to the eternal Trinity, was to lead the
+worshipper to apply the sentiments of the psalm to the work of our
+salvation accomplished by the three Persons of the Godhead. The
+analogous end of these anthems in the present service of the Church of
+Rome is to fix the thoughts of the worshipper upon Mary. This practice
+unhappily sanctions the excesses into which Bonaventura and others have
+run in their departures from the purity and integrity of primitive
+worship.
+
+Cardinal du Perron informs us, that at the altar in the office of the
+mass, prayer is not made directly to any saint, but only obliquely, the
+address being always made to God. But if prayers are offered in other
+parts of the service directly to them, it is difficult to see what is
+gained by that announcement. Surely it is trifling {346} to make such
+immaterial distinctions. If as a priest I could address the following
+prayer to the Virgin in preparing for offering mass, why should I not
+offer a prayer to the same being during its celebration?
+
+"O mother of pity and mercy, blessed Virgin Mary, I a miserable and
+unworthy sinner, flee to thee with my whole heart and affection, and I
+pray thy most sweet pity, that as thou didst stand by thy most sweet Son
+hanging upon the cross, so thou wouldest vouchsafe mercifully to stand
+by me a miserable priest, and by all priests who here and in all the
+holy Church offer Him this day, that, aided by thy grace, we may be
+enabled to offer a worthy and acceptable victim in the sight of the most
+high and undivided Trinity. Amen." [O Mater pietatis et misericordiæ,
+beatissima Virgo Maria, ego miser et indignus peccator ad te confugio
+toto corde et affectu. Et precor dulcissimam pietatem tuam, ut sicut
+dulcissimo Filio tuo in cruce pendenti astitisti, ita et mihi misero
+sacerdoti et sacerdotibus omnibus hic et in tota sancta ecclesia ipsum
+hodie offerentibus, clementer assistere digneris, ut tua gratia adjuti
+dignam et acceptabilem hostiam in conspectu summæ et individuæ
+Trinitatis offerre valeamus. Amen.--Rom. Brev. Hus. Hiem. p. ccxxxiii.]
+
+This is called, in the Roman Breviary, "A PRAYER to the blessed Virgin
+before the celebration of the mass," and is immediately followed by
+another prayer directed to be offered to any saint, male or female,
+whose feast is on that day celebrated. "O Holy N. behold I, a miserable
+sinner, DERIVING CONFIDENCE FROM THY MERITS, now offer the most holy
+sacrament of the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, FOR THY HONOUR
+AND GLORY. I humbly and devotedly pray thee that thou wouldest deign to
+intercede for me to-day, that I may be enabled to offer so great a
+sacrifice {347} worthily and acceptably, and to praise Him eternally
+with thee and with all his elect, and that I may live with Him for
+ever." [O sancte N. ecce ego miser peccator de tuis mentis confisus,
+offero nunc sacratissimura sacramentum corporis et sanguinis Domini
+nostri Jesu Christ! PRO TUO HONORE ET GLORIA; precor te humiliter et
+devote ut pro me hodie intercedere digneris, ut tantum sacrificium digne
+et acceptabiliter offerre valeam, ut Eum tecum et cum omnibus electis
+ejus æternaliter laudare et cum eo semper regnare valeam.--Hiem.
+ccxxxiii.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such, Christian brethren, is the result of our inquiries into the real
+practice of the Church of Rome with regard to the worship of the Virgin
+Mary at the present day, in every part of the world where allegiance to
+that Church is acknowledged. Can we wonder that individuals, high in
+honour with that Church, have carried out the same worship to far
+greater lengths? I have ever present to my mind the principle of fixing
+upon the Church of Rome herself that only which is to be found in her
+canons, acknowledged decrees, and formularies. And unhappily of that
+which directly contravenes the Gospel-rule and primitive practice, far
+more than enough is found in her authorized rituals to compel all who
+hold to the Gospel and the integrity of primitive times, to withdraw
+their assent and consent from her worship. But with this principle
+before us, surely common justice and common prudence require that we
+should see for ourselves the practical workings of the system. "By their
+fruits ye shall know them," is a principle no less sanctioned by the
+Gospel than suggested by common sense and experience And, indeed, the
+shocking lengths to which priests, bishops, cardinals, and canonized
+persons have gone in this particular of the worship of the Virgin, might
+well {348} cause every upright and enlightened Roman Catholic to look
+anxiously to the foundation; to determine honestly, though with tender
+caution and pious care, for himself, whether the corruption be not in
+the well-head, whether the stream do not flow impregnated with the
+poison from the very fountain itself; whether the prayers authorized and
+directed by the Church of Rome to be offered to the Virgin be not in
+themselves at variance with the first principles of the Gospel--Faith in
+one God, the giver of every good, and in one Mediator and Intercessor
+between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, whose blood cleanseth from
+all sin: in a word, to see whether all the aberrations of her children
+in this department of religious duty have not their prototype in the
+laws and ordinances, the rules and injunctions, the example and practice
+of their mother herself.
+
+Indeed I am compelled here to say, that, however revolting to us as
+believers in Jesus, and as worshippers of the one true God, are those
+extravagant excesses into which the votaries of the Virgin Mary have
+run, I have found few of their most unequivocal ascriptions of divine
+worship to her, for a justification of which they cannot with reason
+appeal to the authorized ritual of the Church of Rome.
+
+In leaving this point of our inquiry, I would suggest two
+considerations: 1st, If it was intended that the invocation of the
+Virgin should be exclusively confined to requests, praying her to pray
+and intercede by prayer for the petitioners, why should language be
+addressed to her which in its plain, obvious, grammatical, and common
+sense interpretation conveys the form of direct prayers to her for
+benefits believed to be at her disposal? And, 2ndly, If the Church had
+{349} intended that her members, when they suppliantly invoked the
+Virgin Mary, and had recourse to her aid, should have offered to her
+direct and immediate prayers that she would grant temporal and spiritual
+benefits, to be dispensed at her own will, and by her own authority and
+power, in that case, what words could the Church have put into the mouth
+of the petitioners which would more explicitly and unequivocally have
+conveyed that idea?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN, CONTINUED.
+
+
+I have no intention of dwelling at any length on the extraordinary
+excesses to which the adoration of the Virgin Mary has been carried in
+the Church of Rome, I do not mean by obscure and illiterate or fanatical
+individuals, but by her celebrated prelates, doctors, and saints. My
+researches have brought to my knowledge such a mass of error and
+corruption in the worship of Christians as I never before had any
+conception of; and rather than bring it all forward, and exhibit it to
+others, I would turn my own eyes from it altogether. Still many reasons
+render it absolutely necessary that we should not pass over the subject
+entirely in silence. Few in England, I believe, are aware of the real
+facts of the case; and it well becomes us to guard ourselves and others
+against such melancholy results as would appear to be inseparable from
+the invocation and worship of the Virgin. If indeed we could be
+justified in regarding such palpable instances of her worship in its
+most objectionable form as the {350} marks of former and less
+enlightened times, most gladly would I draw a veil over them, and hide
+them from our sight for ever. But when I find the solemn addresses of
+the present chief authorities in the Church, nay, the epistles of the
+present sovereign Pontiff himself, cherishing, countenancing, and
+encouraging the selfsame evil departures from primitive truth and
+worship, it becomes a matter not of choice, but of necessity, to give
+examples at least of the deplorable excesses into which the highest and
+most honoured in that communion have been betrayed. On the present
+Pope's encyclical letter [A.D. 1840] we have already observed; and in
+this place I propose to examine only one more of those many excesses
+meeting us on every side, which characterize the public worship of the
+Virgin. The instance to which I refer seems to take a sort of middle
+station between the authorized enjoined services of the Church of Rome,
+and the devotions of individuals and family worship. It partakes on the
+one hand far too much of a public character to be considered in the
+light of private religious exercises; and on the other it wants that
+authority which would rank it among the appointed services of the
+Church. The devotional parts of the services are found neither in the
+Missals nor the Breviaries, and the adoption and celebration of the
+service seems to be left to the option and care of individuals. But the
+service is performed in the Churches,--a Priest presides,--the Host is
+presented to the adorations of the people,--and a sermon is preached by
+an appointed minister. The service to which I am referring is performed
+every evening through the entire month of May, and is celebrated
+expressly in honour of the Virgin Mary. {351}
+
+The month of May is dedicated to her, and is called Mary's month.
+Temporary altars are raised to her honour, surrounded by flowers and
+adorned with garlands and drapery; her image usually standing before the
+altar. Societies are formed chiefly for the celebration of the Virgin's
+praises, and in some Churches the effect, both to the eye and to the
+ear, corresponds with the preparation. One thing only is wanting--the
+proper object of worship. I have now before me a book of hymns published
+professedly for the religious fraternities in Paris, and used in the
+Churches there. [Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques à l'usage des confréries
+des Paroisses de Paris. Paris, 1839.] Many of these hymns are addressed
+to the Virgin alone; some without any reference to the Son of God and
+Man, the only Saviour, and without any allusion to the God of
+Christians; indeed, an address to a heathen Goddess more entirely
+destitute of Christianity can scarcely be conceived. I copy one hymn
+entire.
+
+ "Around the altars of Mary
+ Let us, her children, press;
+ To that mother so endeared
+ Let us address the sweetest prayers.
+ Let a lively and holy mirth
+ Animate us in this holy day:
+ There exists no sadness
+ For a heart full of her love.
+ Let us adorn this sanctuary with flowers;
+ Let us deck her revered altar;
+ Let us redouble our efforts to please her.
+ Be this month consecrated to her;
+ Let the perfume of these crowns
+ Form a delicious incense, {352}
+ Which ascending even to her throne
+ May carry to her both our hearts and our prayers.
+ Let the holy name of Mary
+ Be for us a name of salvation!
+ Let our softened soul
+ Ever pay to her a sweet tribute of love.
+ Let us join the choirs of angels
+ The more to celebrate her beauty;
+ And may our songs of praise
+ Resound in eternity.
+ O holy Virgin! O our mother!
+ Watch over us from fhe height of heaven;
+ And when from this sojourning of misery,
+ We present our prayers to you;
+ O sweet, O divine Mary!
+ Lend an ear to our sighs,
+ And after this life
+ Make us to taste of immortal pleasures."
+
+ [Autour des autels de Marie
+ Nous ses enfants, empressons-nous;
+ A cette Mère si chérie,
+ Adressons les voeux les plus doux.
+ Qu'une vive et sainte allégresse
+ Nous anime dans ce saint jour;
+ Il n'existe point de tristesse
+ Pour un coeur plein de son amour.
+ Ornons des fleurs ce sanctuaire,
+ Parons son autel révéré,
+ Redoublons d'efforts pour lui plaire.
+ Que ce mois lui soi, consacré;
+ Que le parfume de ces couronnes
+ Forme un encens délicieux,
+ Qui s'élevant jusqu'à son trône,
+ Lui porte et nos coeurs et nos voeux.
+ Que le nom sacré de Marie
+ Soit pour nous un nom de salut;
+ Que toujours notre âme attendrie,
+ D'amour lui paie un doux tribut.
+ Unissons-nous aux choeurs des anges,
+ Pour mieux célébrer sa beauté.
+ Et puissent nos chants de louanges
+ Retentir dans l'éternité.
+ O Vierge sainte! ô notre Mère!
+ Veillez sur nous du haut des cieux;
+ Et de ce séjour de misère,
+ Quand nous vous présentons nos voeux,
+ O douce, ô divine Marie!
+ Prêtez l'oreille à nos soupirs;--
+ Et faites qu'après cette vie,
+ Nous goûtions d'immortels plaisirs.
+
+ --"Cantiques à l'usage des Confréries." Paris, 1839, p. 175.]
+
+In the course of the present work I have already suggested the propriety
+of trying the real import, {353} the true intent, and meaning and force
+of an address to a Saint, by substituting the holiest name ever uttered
+on earth, for the name of the Saint to whom such address is offered; and
+if the same words, without any change, form a prayer fit to be offered
+by us sinners to the Saviour of the world, then to ask ourselves, Can
+this be right? I would earnestly recommend the application of the same
+test here; and in many other of the prayers now offered (for many such
+there are now offered) by Roman Catholics to the Virgin. Suppose,
+instead of offering these songs of praise and prayer, and self-devotion
+to Mary in the month of May, we were to offer them, on the day of his
+nativity, to our blessed Lord, would they not form an act of faith in
+Him as our Saviour and our God?
+
+ "Around the altar of Jesus,
+ Let us, his children, press;
+ To that Saviour so endeared
+ Let us address the sweetest prayers. {354}
+ Let a lively and holy mirth
+ Animate us in this holy day:
+ There exists no sadness
+ For a heart full of his love.
+ Let the holy name of Jesus
+ Be for us a name of salvation!
+ Let our softened soul
+ Ever pay to HIM a sweet tribute of love.
+ O holy Jesus! O our Saviour!
+ Watch over us from the height of heaven;
+ And when from this sojourning of misery,
+ We present our prayers to Thee;
+ O sweet, O divine Redeemer,
+ Lend an ear to our sighs; and after this life,
+ Make Thou us to taste of immortal pleasures."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--BONAVENTURA.
+
+
+I will now briefly call your attention to the devotional works of the
+celebrated Bonaventura. He is no ordinary man; and the circumstances
+under which his works were commended to the world are indeed remarkable.
+I know not how a Church can give the impress of its own name and
+approval in a more full or unequivocal manner to the works of any human
+being, than the Church of Rome has stamped her authority on the works of
+this her saint.
+
+In the "Acta Sanctorum", [Antwerp, 1723, July 14, p. 811-823.] it is
+stated, that this celebrated man was born in 1221, and died in 1274. He
+passed through all degrees of ecclesiastical dignities, {355} short only
+of the pontifical throne itself. He was of the order of St. Francis, and
+refused the archbishopric of York, when it was offered to him by Pope
+Clement the Fourth, in 1265; whose successor, Gregory the Tenth,
+elevated him to the dignity of cardinal bishop. His biographer expresses
+his astonishment, that such a man's memory should have been so long
+buried with his body; but adds, that the tardiness of his honours was
+compensated by their splendour.
+
+More than two centuries after his death, his claims to canonization were
+urged upon Sixtus the Fourth; and that Pope raised him to the dignity of
+saint; the diploma of his canonization bearing date 18 kalends of May,
+1482, the eleventh year of that pope's reign.
+
+Before a saint is canonized by the Pope, it is usually required, that
+miracles wrought by him, or upon him, or at his tomb, be proved to the
+satisfaction of the Roman court[130]. We need not dwell on the nature of
+an inquiry into a matter-of-fact, alleged to have been done by an
+individual two hundred years before; and whose memory is said to have
+lain buried with his corpse. Among the miracles specified, it is
+recorded, that on one occasion, when he was filled with solemn awe and
+fear at the celebration of the Lord's Supper, God, by an angel, took a
+particle of the consecrated host from the hands of the priest, and
+gently placed it in the holy man's mouth. But, with these transactions,
+I am not anxious to interfere, except so far as to ascertain the degree
+of authority with which any pious Roman Catholic must be induced to
+invest Bonaventura as a teacher and instructor in the doctrines of
+Christianity, authorized and appointed by his Church. The case stands
+thus:--Pope Sixtus IV. states in his {356} diploma, that the proctor of
+the order of Minors, proved by a dissertation on the passage of St.
+John, "There are three that bear record in heaven," that the blessed
+Trinity had borne testimony to the fact of Bonaventura being a saint in
+heaven: the Father proving it by the attested miracles; the Son, in the
+WISDOM OF HIS DOCTRINE; the Holy Spirit, by the goodness of his life.
+The pontiff then adds, in his own words, "He so wrote on divine
+subjects, THAT THE HOLY SPIRIT SEEMS TO HAVE SPOKEN IN HIM." [Page 831.
+"Ea de divinis rebus scripsit, ut in eo Spiritus Sanctus locutus
+videatur."] A testimony referred to by Pope Sixtus the Fifth.
+
+ [Footnote 130: See the canonization of St. Bonaventura in the
+ Acta Sanctorum.]
+
+This latter pontiff was crowned May 1, 1585, more than a century after
+the canonization of Bonaventura, and more than three centuries after his
+death. By his order, the works of Bonaventura were "most carefully
+emendated." The decretal letters, A.D. 1588, pronounced him to be an
+acknowledged doctor of Holy Church, directing his authority to be cited
+and employed in all places of education, and in all ecclesiastical
+discussions and studies. The same act offers plenary indulgence to all
+who assist at the mass on his feast, in certain specified places, with
+other minor immunities on the conditions annexed. [Page 837.]
+
+In these documents Bonaventura[131] is called the Seraphic Doctor; and I
+repeat my doubt, whether it is possible for any human authority to give
+a more full, entire, and unreserved sanction to the works of any human
+being than the Church of Rome has given to {357} the writings of
+Bonaventura. And what do those works present to us, on the subject of
+the Invocation and worship of the Virgin Mary?
+
+ [Footnote 131: The edition of his works which I have used was
+ published at Mentz in 1609; and the passages referred to are in
+ vol. vi. between pp. 400 and 500.]
+
+Taking every one of the one hundred and fifty psalms[132], Bonaventura
+so changes the commencement of each, as to address them not as the
+inspired Psalmist did, to the Lord Jehovah, the One only Lord God
+Almighty, but to the Virgin Mary; inserting much of his own composition,
+and then adding the Gloria Patri to each. It is very painful to refer to
+these prostitutions of any part of the Holy Book of revealed truth; but
+we must not be deterred from looking this evil in the face. A few
+examples, however, will suffice.
+
+ [Footnote 132: It is curious to find the Cardinal Du Perron, in
+ his answer to our King James, declaring that he had never seen
+ nor met with this Psalter in his life, and he was sure it was
+ never written by Bonaventura; alleging that it was not mentioned
+ by Trithemius or Gesner. The Vatican editors, however, have set
+ that question at rest. They assure us that they have thrown into
+ the appendix all the works about the genuineness of which there
+ was any doubt, and that Bonaventura wrote many works not
+ mentioned by Trithemius, which they have published from the
+ Vatican press. Of this Psalter there is no doubt. See Cardinal
+ Du Perron, Replique à la Rep. du Roi de Grand Bretagne. Paris,
+ 1620, p. 974.]
+
+In the 30th psalm. "In thee, O Lord, have I trusted; let me not be
+confounded for ever," &c., the Psalter of the Virgin substitutes these
+words: [In te, Domina, speravi; non confundar in æternum, &c. &c. In
+manus tuas, Domina, commendo spiritum meum, totam vitam meam, et diem
+ultimum meum.--P. 480.]
+
+"In thee, O Lady, have I trusted; let me not be confounded for ever: in
+thy grace take me.
+
+"Thou art my fortitude and my refuge; my consolation and my protection.
+{358}
+
+"To thee, O Lady, have I cried, while my heart was in heaviness; and
+thou didst hear me from the top of the eternal hills.
+
+"Bring thou me out of the snare which they have hid for me; for thou art
+my succour.
+
+"Into thy hands, O Lady, I commend my spirit, my whole life, and my last
+day.--Gloria Patri," &c.
+
+In the 31st psalm we read, "Blessed are they whose hearts love thee, O
+Virgin Mary; their sins shall be mercifully blotted out BY THEE...."
+[Beati quorum corda te diligunt, Virgo Maria; peccata ipsorum A TE
+misericorditer diluentur.--P. 481.]
+
+In the 35th, v. 2. "Incline thou the countenance of God upon us; COMPEL
+HIM to have mercy upon sinners. O Lady, thy mercy is in the heaven, and
+thy grace is spread over the whole earth." [Inclina vultum Dei super
+nos. COGE illum peccatoribus misereri; Domina, in coelo misericordia
+tua, et gratia diffusa est super terram.]
+
+In the 67th, instead of, "Let God arise, and let his enemies be
+scattered," the Psalter of the Virgin has,
+
+"Let Mary arise, and let her enemies be scattered." [Exurgat Maria, et
+dissipentur inimici ejus.--P. 483.]
+
+In the opening of the 93rd psalm there is a most extraordinary, rather,
+as it sounds to me, a most impious and blasphemous comparison of the
+Supreme God with the Virgin Mary, in reference to the very Attribute,
+which shines first, last, and brightest in HIM,--His eternal mercy. Nay,
+it draws the contrast in favour of the Virgin, and against God. Most
+glad should I be, to find that I had misunderstood this passage; and
+that it admits of another acceptation[133]. But I fear its real meaning
+is beyond controversy.
+
+ [Footnote 133: A similar idea indeed pervades some addresses to
+ the Virgin of the present day, representing the great and only
+ potentate as her heavenly husband, in himself full of rage, but
+ softened into tenderness towards her votaries by her influence.
+ See a hymn, in the Paris collection already referred to, p. 353,
+ &c. of this work (Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques, p. 183).
+
+ Daignez, Marie, en ce jour Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day
+ Ecouter nos soupirs, To hear our sighs,
+ Et seconder nos désirs. And to second our desires.
+ Daignez, Marie, en ce jour Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day
+ Recevoir notre encens, notre amour. To receive our incense, our
+ love.
+ Du céleste époux Calm the rage
+ Calmez le courroux, Of thy heavenly husband,
+ Qu'il se montre doux Let HIM show himself kind
+ A tous qui sont à vous. To all those who are thine.
+ Du céleste époux Of thy heavenly husband
+ Calmez le courroux, Calm the rage,
+ Que son coeur s'attendrisse sur nous. Let his heart be softened
+ towards us. {359}
+ ]
+
+"The Lord is a God of vengeance; but thou, O Mother of Mercy, bendest to
+be merciful." [Deus ultionum Dominus; sed tu, Mater Misericordiæ, ad
+miserandum inflectis.--P. 485.]
+
+The well known and dearly valued penitentiary psalm (129th) "De
+profundis," is thus addressed to Mary:--
+
+"Out of the depths have I called to thee, O Lady:
+
+"O Lady, hear my voice. Let thine ears be attent to the voice of thy
+praise and glorifying: deliver me from the hand of my enemies: confound
+their imaginations and attempts against me. Rescue me in the evil day;
+and, in the day of death, forget not my soul. Carry me into the haven of
+safety: let my name be enrolled among the just." [De profundis clamavi
+ad te, Domina: Domina, exaudi vocem meam. Fiant aures tuæ intendentes in
+vocem laudis et glorificationis tuæ. Libera me de manu adversariorum
+meorum: confunde ingenia et conatus eorum contra me. Erue me in die
+mala: et in die mortis ne obliviscaris animæ meæ. Deduc me ad portum
+salutis: inter justos scribatur nomen meum.--P. 489.] {360}
+
+But, as the penitential psalms are thus turned, from Him to whom the
+Psalmist addressed them, so his hymns of praise to Jehovah, are made to
+flow through the same channel to the Virgin. And all nature in the sea,
+on the earth, in the heavens, and heaven of heavens, is called upon to
+praise and glorify Mary. Thus, in the 148th psalm, we read,--
+
+"Praise our Lady of heaven, glorify her in the highest. Praise her, all
+ye men and cattle, ye birds of the heaven, and fishes of the sea. Praise
+her, sun and moon; ye stars and circles of the planets. Praise her,
+cherubim and seraphim, thrones and dominions, and powers. Praise her,
+all ye legions of angels. Praise her, all ye orders of spirits above."
+[Laudate Dominam nostram de coelis: glorificate eam in excelsis. Laudate
+eam omnes homines et jumenta: volucres coeli et pisces maris. Laudate
+eam sol et luna: stellæ, et circuli planetarum. Laudate eam cherubim et
+seraphim: throni et dominationes, et potestates. Laudate eam omnes
+legiones angelorum. Laudate eam omnes ordines spirituum supernorum.--P.
+491.]
+
+The last sentence of the psalms is thus rendered,--"Let every spirit
+[_or_ every thing that hath breath] praise our Lady."
+
+To this Psalter are added many hymns changed in the same manner. One,
+entitled, "A Canticle, like that of Habakkuk iii." presents to us an
+address to the Virgin Mary, of the very words which our blessed Saviour
+most solemnly addressed to his heavenly Father.
+
+O Lord, I have heard thy O Lady, I have heard thy report,
+speech, and was afraid, &c. &c. and was astonished; I considered
+ thy works, O Lady, and
+ I was afraid at thy work. In the
+ midst of the years thou hast revived
+ it. {361}
+
+ I will confess to thee, O Lady,
+ because thou hast hid these things
+ from the wise, and hast revealed
+ them to babes.
+
+ Thy glory hath covered the
+ heavens, and the earth is full of
+ thy mercy.
+
+ Thou, O Virgin, wentest forth
+ for the salvation of thy people,
+ for salvation with thy Christ [thy
+ anointed].
+
+ O thou Blessed, our salvation
+ rests in thy hands. Remember
+ our poverty, O thou pious One.
+
+ WHOM THOU WILLEST, HE
+ SHALL BE SAVED; AND HE FROM
+ WHOM THOU TURNEST AWAY THY
+ COUNTENANCE, GOETH INTO DESTRUCTION.
+
+[Domina, audivi auditionem tuam, et obstupui: consideravi opera tua, et
+expavi, Domina, opus tuum: circa medium annorum vivificasti illud.
+
+Confitebor tibi, Domina: quia abscondisti hæc a sapientibus: et
+revelasti ea parvulis. Operuit coelos gloria tua, et misericordia tua
+plena est terra.
+
+Egressa es, Virgo, in salutem populi tui: in salutem cum Christo tuo. O
+Benedicta, in manibus tuis est reposita nostra salus; recordare, pia,
+paupertatis nostræ.
+
+Quem vis, ipse salvus erit, et a quo avertis vultum tuum, vadit in
+interitum.--G.P., &c.]
+
+The song of the Three Children is altered in the same manner. In it as
+well as in the Canticle of Zacharias, these prayers are introduced;
+
+"O Mother of Mercy, have mercy upon us miserable sinners; who neglect to
+repent of our past sins, and commit every day many to be repented of."
+[Miserere, misericordiæ Mater, nobis miseris peccatoribus, qui retroacta
+peccata poenitere negligimus, ac multa quotidie poenitenda committimus.]
+{362}
+
+The Te Deum is thus lamentably perverted:
+
+"We praise thee, Mother of God; we acknowledge thee, Mary the Virgin.
+[Te Matrem Dei laudamus; Te Mariam Virginem profitemur.]
+
+"All the earth doth worship thee, spouse of the eternal Father.
+
+"To thee all Angels and Archangels, Thrones and Principalities,
+faithfully do service....
+
+"To thee the whole angelic creation with incessant voice proclaim,
+
+"Holy! Holy! Holy! Mary, parent, mother of God, and virgin!...
+
+"... Thou with thy Son sittest at the right hand of the Father....
+
+"O Lady, SAVE THY PEOPLE, that we may partake of the inheritance of thy
+Son.
+
+"And rule us and guard us for ever....
+
+"Day by day we salute thee, O pious One; and we desire to praise thee in
+mind and voice even for ever.
+
+"Vouchsafe, O sweet Mary, now and for ever, to keep us without sin.
+
+"Have mercy upon us, O pious One; have mercy upon us.
+
+"Let thy great mercy be with us, because we put our trust in thee, O
+Virgin Mary.
+
+"In thee, sweet Mary, do we hope, defend thou us eternally. {363}
+
+"Praise becomes thee, empire becomes thee; to thee be virtue and glory
+for ever and ever. Amen."
+
+[SALVUM FAC POPULUM tuum, Domina, ut simus participes hæreditatis Filii
+tui,
+
+Et rege nos et custodi nos in æternum.
+
+Dignare, Dulcis Maria, mine et semper nos sine delicto conservare.
+Miserere, Pia, nobis! miserere nobis! Fiat misericordia tua magna
+nobiscum, quia in te, Virgo Maria, confidimus. In te, Dulcis Maria,
+speramus, nos defendas in æternum. Te decet laus, te decet imperium,
+tibi virtus et gloria in sæcula sæculorum, Amen.]
+
+Can this by any the most subtle refinement be understood to be a mere
+request to her to pray for us?
+
+The Athanasian Creed is employed in the same manner; and it is very
+remarkable that the Assumption itself of the Virgin into heaven is there
+specified as one of the points to be believed on pain of losing all
+hopes of salvation.
+
+"Whosoever will be saved, before all things it is necessary that he hold
+firm the faith concerning the Virgin Mary: which except a man keep whole
+and undefiled, without doubt he shall perish everlastingly....
+[Quicunque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est ut teneat de Maria
+firmam fidem.]
+
+"Whom at length He took up (assumpsit) unto heaven, and she sitteth at
+the right hand of her Son, not ceasing to pray to her Son for us. [Quam
+demum ipse in coelum assumpsit, et sedit ad dexteram Filii, non cessans
+pro nobis Filium exorare.]
+
+"This is the faith concerning Mary the Virgin, which except every one
+believe faithfully and firmly he cannot be saved." [Hæc est fides de
+Maria Virgine: quam nisi quisque fideliter firmiterque crediderit,
+salvus esse non poterit.]
+
+In the Litany addressed to her, these sentences are found.
+
+"Holy Mary, whom all things praise and venerate, pray for us,--be
+propitious,--spare us, O Lady.
+
+"From all evil deliver us, O Lady.
+
+"In the devastating hour of death, deliver us, O Lady.
+
+"From the horrible torments of hell, deliver us, O Lady.
+
+"We sinners do beseech thee to hear us.
+
+"That thou wouldest vouchsafe to give eternal rest {364} to all the
+faithful departed, we beseech thee to hear us. &c. &c."
+
+ [Sancta Maria, quam omnia laudant
+ Et venerantur, ora pro nobis.
+ Propitia esto. Parce nobis, Domina.
+ Ab omni malo libera nos, Domina.
+ In hora mortis devastante libera nos, Domina.
+ Ab inferni horribili cruciamine libera nos, Domina.
+ Peccatores te rogamus, audi nos.
+ Ut cunctis fidelibus defunctis requiem
+ Æternam donare digneris, te rogamus, audi nos.]
+
+I will add to this catalogue of prayers and praises to the Virgin, only
+the translation of one prayer more from the same canonized Saint; it
+contains a passage often referred to, but the existence of which has
+been denied. It stands, however, in his works, vol. vi. page 466.
+
+"Therefore, O Empress, and our most benign Lady, by THY RIGHT OF MOTHER
+COMMAND thy most beloved Son [JURE MATRIS IMPERA tuo dilectissimo
+Filio], our Lord, Jesus Christ, that He vouchsafe to raise our minds
+from the love of earthly things to heavenly desires, who liveth and
+reigneth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now let any man of common understanding and straightforward principles
+say, whether any, the most ingenious refinement can interpret all this
+to mean merely that Bonaventura invoked the Virgin Mary to pray for him,
+or for his fellow-creatures. It looks as though he were resolved on set
+purpose to exalt her to an equality with the Almighty, when we find him
+not once, not casually, not in the fervent rapture of momentary
+excitement, but deliberately, through one hundred and fifty Psalms,
+applying to Mary the very words dictated by the Holy Spirit to the
+Psalmist, and consecrated {365} to the worship of the one supreme God;
+and then selecting the most solemn expressions by which the Christian
+Church approaches the Lord of heaven and earth, our Father, our Saviour,
+our Sanctifier: employing too the very words of her most solemn form of
+belief in the ever-blessed Trinity, and substituting Mary's name for the
+God of Christians. On the words, "By thy right of mother command thy
+Son," beyond the assertion of the fact that there they are to this day,
+I wish to add nothing, because the very denial of their existence often
+repeated shows, that many Roman Catholics themselves regard them as
+objectionable.
+
+But, if such a man as Bonaventura, one of the most learned and
+celebrated men of his age, could be tempted by the views cherished by
+the Church of Rome, to indulge in such language, what can be fairly
+expected of the large mass of persons who find that language published
+to the world with the highest sanction which their religion can give, as
+the work of a man whom the Almighty declared when on earth, by miracles,
+to be a chosen vessel, and to be under the guidance of the Holy Spirit;
+and of whom they are taught by the infallible testimony[134] of his
+canonization, that he is now reigning with Christ in heaven, and is
+himself the lawful and appointed object of religious invocation. I
+profess to you that I see no way by which Christians can hold and
+encourage this doctrine of the Invocation of Saints, without at the same
+time countenancing and cherishing what, were I to join in such
+invocation, would stain my soul with the guilt of idolatry. If the
+doctrine were confessedly Scriptural, come what would come, our duty
+would be to maintain it at all hazards, {366} and to brave every danger
+rather than from fear of consequences to renounce what we believe to
+have come from God; securing the doctrine at all events, and then
+putting forth our very best to guard against its perversion and abuse.
+But surely, it well becomes our brethren of the Church of Rome, to
+examine with most rigid and unsparing scrutiny into the very foundation
+of such a doctrine as this; a doctrine which in its mildest and most
+guarded form is considered by a very large number of their fellow
+Christians, as a dishonouring of God and of his Son, our Saviour; and
+which in its excess, an excess witnessed in the books of learned and
+sainted authors, and in the every day practice of worshippers, seems to
+be in no wise distinguishable from the practices of acknowledged
+polytheism, and pagan worship. If that foundation, after honest and
+persevering examination, approves itself as based sure and deep on the
+word of God, and the faith and practice of the apostles and the Church
+founded by them from the first, I have not another word to say, beyond a
+fervent prayer that the God in whom we trust would pour the bright beams
+of his Gospel abundantly into the hearts of all who receive that Gospel
+as the word of life. But were they my dying words to my dearest friend
+who had espoused that doctrine, I would say to him, Look well yourself
+to the foundation, because I am, after long examination, convinced,
+beyond a shadow of doubt that the doctrine and practice of the
+Invocation of Saints and Angels is as contrary to the doctrine and
+practice of the primitive Church, as it is in direct opposition to the
+express words of Scripture, and totally abhorrent from the spirit which
+pervades the whole of the Old, and the whole of the New Testament of
+God's eternal truth.
+
+ [Footnote 134: Bellarmin, in his Church Triumphant, maintains
+ that in the act of Canonization, the Church is infallible. Vol.
+ ii. p. 871.] {367}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.--BIEL, DAMIANUS, BERNARDINUS DE BUSTIS, BERNARDINUS
+SENENSIS, &c.
+
+
+Unhappily these excesses in the worship of the Virgin Mary are not
+confined to Bonaventura, or to his age. We have too many examples of the
+same extravagant exaltation of her as an object of adoration and praise
+in men, whose station and abilities seemed to hold them forth to the
+world as burning and shining lights. Again, let me repeat, that in thus
+soliciting your attention to the doctrines and expressed feelings of a
+few from among the host of the Virgin's worshippers, I am far from
+believing that the enlightened Roman Catholics in England now are ready
+to respond to such sentiments. My desire is that all persons should be
+made aware of the excesses into which even celebrated teachers have been
+tempted to run, when they once admitted the least inroad to be made upon
+the integrity of God's worship; and I am anxious also, without offence,
+but with all openness, to caution my countrymen against encouraging that
+revival of the worship of the Virgin in England, to promote which the
+highest authorities in the Church of Rome have lately expressed their
+solicitude, intimating, at the same time, their regret that the worship
+of the Virgin at the present time has, in England, degenerated from its
+exaltation in former ages, and that England is now far behind her
+continental neighbours in her worship. Though these excessive departures
+from Gospel truth and the primitive worship of one God by one Mediator
+may not be the doctrines of all who belong to the Church of Rome, yet
+they are the tenets of some of her most {368} celebrated doctors, of men
+who were raised to her highest dignities in their lifetime, and solemnly
+enrolled by her among the saints of glory after their death. Their words
+and their actions are appealed to now in support of similar tenets and
+doctrines, though few, in this country at least, are found to put them
+forth in all their magnitude and fulness. But even in their mildest and
+least startling form these doctrines are awfully dangerous.
+
+The fact is, that the direct tendency of the worship of the Virgin, as
+practically illustrated in the Church of Rome, is to make GOD himself an
+object of FEAR, and the VIRGIN an object of LOVE; to invest Him, who is
+the Father of mercy and God of all comfort, with awfulness, and majesty,
+and with the terrors of eternal justice, and in direct and striking
+contrast to array the Virgin mother with mercy and benignity, and
+compassionate tenderness. Christians cannot be too constantly and too
+carefully on their guard against doing this wrong to our heavenly
+Father. His own inspired word invites us to regard Him not only as the
+God of love, but as Love itself. "God is love;" [1 John iv. 8.] and so
+far from terrifying us by representations of his tremendous majesty, and
+by declarations that we cannot ourselves draw nigh to God; so far from
+bidding us to approach Him with our suits and supplications through
+mediators whom we should regard as having, more than our blessed
+Redeemer, a fellow-feeling with us, and at the same time resistless
+influence with Him; his own invitation and assurance is, "Come unto me,
+and I will give you rest:" [Matt. xi. 28.] "No one cometh unto the
+Father but by me:" [John xiv. 6.] "Him that cometh to me I will {369} in
+no wise cast out:" [John vi. 37.] "Let us come boldly unto the throne of
+grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of
+need." [Heb. iv. 16.]
+
+How entirely opposed to such passages as these, breathing the spirit
+that pervades the whole Bible, are those doctrines which represent the
+Virgin Mary as the Mediatrix by whom we must sue for the divine
+clemency; as the dispenser of all God's mercies and graces; as the
+sharer of God's kingdom, as the fountain of pity, as the moderator of
+God's justice, and the appeaser of his wrath. "Show thyself a mother."
+"Compel thy Son to have pity." "By thy right of mother command thy Son."
+"God is a God of vengeance; but thou, Mary, dost incline to mercy;" such
+expressions convey sentiments and associations shocking to our feelings,
+and from which our reason turns away, when we think of God's
+perfections, and the full atonement and omnipotent intercession of his
+Son Christ our Redeemer. But it must not be disguised, that these are
+the very sentiments in which the most celebrated defenders of the
+worship of the Virgin, in the Church of Rome, teach their disciples to
+acquiesce, and in which they must have themselves fully acquiesced, if
+they practised what they taught. It is very painful to make such
+extracts as leave us no alternative in forming our opinions on this
+point; but it is necessary to do so, otherwise we may injure the cause
+of truth by suppressing the reality; a reality over which there seems to
+be a strong disposition, in the present day, in part at least, to draw a
+veil; an expedient which can only increase the danger.
+
+The first author, whose sentiments I would request you to weigh, is
+Gabriel Biel, a schoolman of great celebrity[135]. {370} In his
+thirty-second lecture, on the Canon of the Mass, he thus expresses
+himself, referring to a sermon of St. Bernard, "The will of God was,
+that we should have all through Mary.... You were afraid to approach the
+Father, frightened by only hearing of Him.... He gave you Jesus for a
+Mediator. What could not such a Son obtain with such a Father? He will
+surely be heard for his own reverence-sake; for the Father loveth the
+Son. But, are you afraid to approach even Him? He is your brother and
+your flesh; tempted through all, that He might become merciful. THIS
+BROTHER MARY GAVE TO YOU. But, perhaps, even in Him you fear the divine
+Majesty, because, although He was made man, yet He remained God. You
+wish to have an advocate even to Him. Betake yourself to Mary. For, in
+Mary is pure humanity, not only pure from all contamination, but pure
+also by the singleness of her nature[136]. Nor should I, with any doubt
+say, she too will be heard for her own reverence-sake. The Son, surely,
+will hear the Mother, and the Father will hear the Son."
+
+ [Footnote 135: Tubingen, 1499. Gabriel Biel, born at Spires
+ about A.D. 1425, was in A.D. 1484 appointed the first Professor
+ of Theology in the then newly founded University of Tubingen. He
+ afterwards retired to a monastery, and died A.D. 1495.]
+
+ [Footnote 136: This is a very favourite argument in the present
+ day, often heard in the pulpits on the Continent.]
+
+In his 80th lecture, the same author comments on this prayer, which is
+still offered in the service of the Mass:
+
+"Deliver us, we beseech thee, O Lord, from all evils past, present, and
+future; and by the intercession of the blessed and glorious ever-virgin
+mother of God, Mary, with thy blessed apostles, Peter and Paul, and
+Andrew, and all saints, mercifully grant peace in our days, that, aided
+by the help of thy mercy, we may be both ever {371} free from sin, and
+free from all disquietude. Through the same our Lord, &c."
+
+On this prayer Biel observes, "Again we ask, in this prayer, the defence
+of peace; and since we cannot, nor do we presume to obtain this by our
+own merit, ... therefore, in order to obtain this, we have recourse, in
+the second part of this prayer, to the suffrages of all his saints, whom
+He hath constituted, in the court of his kingdom, as our mediators, most
+acceptable to himself, whose prayers his love does not reject. But, of
+them, we fly, in the first place, to the most blessed Virgin, the Queen
+of Heaven, to whom the King of kings, the heavenly Father, has given the
+half of his kingdom; which was signified in Hester, the queen, to whom,
+when she approached to appease king Asuerus, the king said to her, Even
+if thou shalt ask the half of my kingdom, it shall be given thee. So the
+heavenly Father, inasmuch as He has justice and mercy as the more valued
+possessions of his kingdom, RETAINING JUSTICE TO HIMSELF, GRANTED MERCY
+to the Virgin Mother. We, therefore, ask for peace, by the intercession
+of the blessed and glorious Virgin." [Cum habeat justitiam et
+misericordiam tanquam potiora regni sui bona, justitia sibi retenta,
+misericordiam Matri Virgini concessit.]
+
+The very same partition of the kingdom of heaven, is declared to have
+been made between God himself and the Virgin by one who was dignified by
+the name of the "venerable and most Christian Doctor," John Gerson[137],
+who died in 1429; excepting that, instead of justice and mercy, Gerson
+mentions power and mercy as the two parts of which God's kingdom
+consists, and that, whilst power remained with the Lord, the part of
+mercy ceded "to the mother of Christ, and the reigning {372} spouse;
+hence, by the whole Church, she is saluted as Queen of Mercy."
+
+ [Footnote 137: Paris, 1606. Tract iv. Super "Magnificat," part
+ iii. p. 754. See Fabricius, vol. iii. p. 49. Patav. 1754.]
+
+I would next refer to a writer who lived four centuries before Biel, but
+whose works received the papal sanction so late as the commencement of
+the seventeenth century, Petrus Damianus, Cardinal and Bishop. His works
+were published at the command of Pope Clement VIII., who died A.D. 1604,
+and were dedicated to his successor, Paul V., who gave the copyright for
+fifteen years to the Editor, Constantine Cajetan, A.D. 1606. I will
+quote only one passage from this author. It is found in his sermon on
+the nativity of the Virgin, whom he thus addresses: "Nothing is
+impossible with thee, with whom it is possible to restore those in
+despair to the hope of blessedness. For how could that authority, which
+derived its flesh from thy flesh, oppose thy power? For thou approachest
+before that golden altar of human reconciliation not only asking, but
+commanding; a mistress, not a handmaid." [Accedis enim ante illud aureum
+humanæ reconciliationis altare, non solum rogans, sed imperans; Domina,
+non ancilla. Paris, 1743. vol. ii. p. 107. Serm. 44.]
+
+I must now solicit your attention to the sentiments of two writers,
+whose partial identity of name has naturally led, in some instances, to
+the one being mistaken for the other, Bernardinus de Bustis, and
+Bernardinus Senensis. Bernardinus de Bustis, [Fabricius, vol. i. 215.]
+in the country of Milan, was the celebrated author of the "Office of the
+Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin," which was confirmed by the
+bull of Sixtus the Fourth, and has since been celebrated on the 8th of
+December.
+
+He composed different works in honour of the Virgin, {373} to one of
+which he gave the title "Mariale." In this work, with a great variety of
+sentiments of a similar tendency, he thus expresses himself:--
+
+"Of so great authority in the heavenly palace is that empress, that,
+omitting all other intermediate saints, we may appeal to her from every
+grievance.... With confidence, then, let every one appeal to her,
+whether he be aggrieved by the devil, or by any tyrant, or by his own
+body, or by divine justice;" [Cologne, 1607. Part iii. Serm. ii. p.
+176.] and then, having specified and illustrated the three other sources
+of grievance, he thus proceeds: "In the fourth place, he may APPEAL TO
+HER, if any one feels himself AGGRIEVED BY THE JUSTICE OF GOD [Licet ad
+ipsam appellare, si quis a Dei justitia se gravari sentit.] ... That
+empress, therefore, Hester, was a figure of this empress of the heavens,
+with whom God divided his kingdom. For, whereas God has justice and
+mercy, He retained justice to himself to be exercised in this world, and
+granted mercy to his mother; and thus, if any one feels himself to be
+aggrieved in the court of God's justice, let him appeal to the court of
+mercy of his mother." [Ideo si quis sentit se gravari in foro justitiæ
+Dei, appellet ad forum misericordiæ matris ejus.]
+
+For one moment, let us calmly weigh the import of these words:--Is it
+any thing short of robbing the Eternal Father of the brightest jewel in
+his crown, and sharing his glory with another? Is it not encouraging us
+to turn our eyes from the God of mercy as a stern and ruthless judge,
+and habitually to fix them upon Mary as the dispenser of all we want for
+the comfort and happiness of our souls?
+
+In another place, this same author thus exalts Mary:
+
+"Since the Virgin Mary is mother of God, and God is her Son; and every
+son is naturally inferior to his {374} mother, and subject to her; and
+the mother is preferred above, and is superior to her son, it follows
+that the blessed Virgin is herself superior to God, and God himself is
+her subject, by reason of the humanity derived from her;" [Part ix.
+Serm. ii. p. 605.] and again. "O the unspeakable dignity of Mary, who
+was worthy to command the Commander of all." [Part xii. Serm, ii. p.
+816.]
+
+I will detain you by only one more quotation from this famed Doctor. It
+appears to rob God of his justice and power, as well as of his mercy;
+and to turn our eyes to Mary for the enjoyment of all we can desire, and
+for safety from all we can dread. Would that Bernardine stood alone in
+the propagation of such doctrines. "We may say, that the blessed Virgin
+is chancellor in the court of heaven. For we see, that in the chancery
+of our lord the pope, three kinds of letters are granted: some are of
+simple justice, others are of pure grace, and the third mixed,
+containing justice and grace.... The third chancellor is he to whom it
+appertains to give letters of pure grace and mercy. And this office hath
+the blessed Virgin; and therefore she is called the mother of grace and
+mercy: but those letters of mercy she gives only in the present life.
+For, to some souls, as they are departing, she gives letters of pure
+grace; to others, of simple justice; and to others, mixed, namely, of
+justice and grace. For some were very much devoted to her, and to them
+she gives letters of pure grace, by which she COMMANDS, that glory be
+given to them without any pain of purgatory: others were miserable
+sinners, and not devoted to her, and to them she gives letters of simple
+justice, by which she COMMANDS that condign vengeance be done upon them;
+others were lukewarm and remiss in devotion, and to them she gives
+letters of justice and grace, by which {375} she COMMANDS that grace be
+given to them, and yet, on account of their negligence and sloth, some
+pain of purgatory be also inflicted on them." [Part xii. Serm. ii. On
+the twenty-second excellence, p. 825.]
+
+The only remaining author, to whom I will at present refer you, is a
+canonized saint, Bernardinus Senensis. A full account of his life, his
+miracles, and his enrolment among the saints in heaven, is found in the
+Acta Sanctorum, vol. v. under the 20th of May, the day especially
+dedicated to his honour. Eugenius IV. died before the canonization of
+Bernardine could be completed: the next pope, Nicholas V. on Whitsunday
+1450, in full conclave, enrolled him among the saints, to the joy, we
+are told, of all Italy. In 1461, Pius the Second said that Bernardine
+was taken for a saint even in his lifetime; and, in 1472, Sixtus IV.
+issued a bull, in which he extols the saint, and authorizes the
+translation of his body into a new church, dedicated, as others had
+been, to his honour.
+
+This Bernardine is equally explicit with others, in maintaining, that
+all the blessings which Christians can receive on earth are dispensed by
+Mary; that her princedom equals the princedom of the Eternal Father;
+that all are her servants and subjects, who are the subjects and
+servants of the Most High; that all who adore the Son of God should
+adore his virgin-mother, and that the Virgin has repaid the Almighty for
+all that He has done for the human race. Some of these doctrines were to
+me quite startling; I was not prepared for them; but I have been assured
+they find an echo in the pulpits in many parts of the continent. Very
+few quotations will suffice. [Opera, per John de la Haye. Paris, 1636.
+Five volumes bound in two.] {376}
+
+"As many creatures do service to the glorious Mary, as do service to the
+Trinity.... For he who is the Son of God, and of the blessed Virgin,
+wishing (so to speak) to make, in a manner, the princedom of his mother
+equal to the princedom of his father, he who was God, served his mother
+on earth. Moreover, this is true, all things, even the Virgin, are
+servants of the divine empire; and again, this is true, all things, even
+God, are servants of the empire of the Virgin." [Vol. iv. Serm. v. c.
+vi. p. 118.]
+
+"Therefore, all the angelic spirits are the ministers and servants of
+this glorious Virgin." [Serm. iii. c. iii. p. 104.]
+
+"To comprise all in a brief sentence, I do not doubt that God made all
+the liberations and pardons in the Old Testament on account of the
+reverence and love of this blessed maid, by which God preordained from
+eternity, that she should be, by predestination, honoured above all his
+works. On account of the immense love of the Virgin, as well Christ
+himself, as the whole most blessed Trinity, frequently grants pardon to
+the most wicked sinners." [Serm. v. c. ii. p. 116.]
+
+"By the law of succession, and the right of inheritance, the primacy and
+kingdom of the whole universe is due to the blessed Virgin. Nay, when
+her only Son died on the cross, since He had no one on earth to succeed
+Him of right, his mother, by the laws of all, succeeded, and by this
+acquired the principality of all. [Serm. v. c. vii. p. 118.] ... But, of
+the monarchy of the universe, Christ never made any testamentary
+bequest, because that could never be done without prejudice to his
+mother. Moreover, HE KNEW THAT A MOTHER CAN ANNUL THE {377} WILL OF HER
+SON, IF IT BE MADE TO THE PREJUDICE OF HERSELF." [Insuper noverat quod
+potest mater irritare Filii testamentum si in sui præjudicium sit
+confectum.--P. 118.]
+
+"The Virgin Mother[138], from the time she conceived God, obtained a
+certain jurisdiction and authority in every temporal procession of the
+Holy Spirit, so that no creature could obtain any grace of virtue from
+God except according to the dispensation of his Virgin mother[139]. As
+through the neck the vital breathings descend from the head into the
+body, so the vital graces are transfused from the head Christ into his
+mystical body, through the Virgin. I fear not to say, that this Virgin
+has a certain jurisdiction over the flowing of all graces. And, because
+she is the mother of such a Son of God, who produces the Holy Spirit;
+THEREFORE, ALL THE GIFTS, VIRTUES, AND GRACES OF THE HOLY SPIRIT ARE
+ADMINISTERED BY THE HANDS OF HERSELF, TO WHOM SHE WILL, WHEN SHE WILL,
+HOW SHE WILL, AND IN WHAT QUANTITY SHE WILL." [Serm. v. p. 119.]
+
+ [Footnote 138: Serm. v. c. viii. and Serm. vi. c. ii. p. 120 and
+ 122. There is an omission (probably by an error of the press) in
+ the first passage, which the second enables us to supply.]
+
+ [Footnote 139: This writer is constantly referring to St.
+ Bernard's doctrine, "No grace comes from heaven upon the earth,
+ but what passes through the hands of Mary."]
+
+"She is the queen of mercy, the temple of God, the habitation of the
+Holy Spirit, always sitting at the right hand of Christ in eternal
+glory. Therefore she is to be venerated, to be saluted, and to be adored
+with the adoration of hyperdulia. And therefore she sits at the right
+hand of the King, that as often as you adore Christ the king you may
+adore also the mother of Christ." [Serm. vi. p. 121.]
+
+"The blessed Virgin Mary alone has done more for {378} God; or as much
+(so to speak) as God hath done for the whole human race. For I verily
+believe that God will grant me indulgence if I now speak for the Virgin.
+Let us gather together into one what things God hath done for man, and
+let us consider what satisfaction the Virgin Mary hath rendered to the
+Lord." Bernardine here enumerates many particulars, placing one against
+the other, which for many reasons I cannot induce myself to transfer
+into these pages, and then he sums up the whole thus: "Therefore,
+setting each individual thing one against another, namely, what things
+God had done for man, and what things the blessed Virgin has done for
+God, you will see that Mary has done more for God, than God has for man;
+so that thus, on account of the blessed Virgin, (whom, nevertheless, He
+himself made,) God is in a certain manner under greater obligations to
+us than we are to Him." [Serm. vi. p. 120.]
+
+The whole treatise he finishes with this address to the Virgin:--
+
+"Truly by mere babbling are we uttering these thy praises and
+excellences; but we suppliantly pray thy immense sweetness. Do thou, by
+thy benignity, supply our insufficiencies, that we may worthily praise
+thee through the endless ages of ages. Amen."
+
+In closing these brief extracts I would observe, that by almost every
+writer in support of the worship of the Virgin, an appeal is made to St.
+Bernard[140] as their chief authority. Especially is the following
+passage quoted by many, either whole or in part, at almost every turn of
+their argument:--
+
+ [Footnote 140: The present Pope, in the same manner, refers to
+ him in his Encyclical Letter.--A.D. 1840.]
+
+"If thou art disturbed by the heinousness of thy crimes, and confounded
+by the foulness of thy conscience, {379} if terrified by the horror of
+judgment thou begin to be swallowed up in the gulf of despair, think of
+Mary, invoke Mary; let her not depart from thy heart, let her not depart
+from thy mouth. For whilst thinking of her, thou dost not err; imploring
+her, thou dost not despair; following her, thou dost not lose thy way;
+whilst she holds thee, thou dost not fall; whilst she protects thee,
+thou dost not fear; whilst she is thy leader, thou art not wearied;
+whilst she is favourable, thou reachest thy end[141]."
+
+ [Footnote 141: See Bern. Sen. vol. iv. p. 124. The passage is
+ found in Bernard, Paris, 1640. p. 25.]
+
+If the Virgin Mary is thus regarded as the source and well-head of all
+safety and blessing, we cannot wonder, that glory and praise are
+ascribed in the selfsame terms to her as to the Almighty. Cardinal
+Bellarmin closes the several portions of his writings with "Praise to
+God and the blessed Virgin Mary[142]." It is painful to reflect, that
+either the highest glory, due to that God who will not share his glory
+with another, is here ascribed to one of the creatures of his hand
+(however highly favoured and full of grace), or else that to the most
+high God is ascribed an inferior glory and praise, such as it is lawful
+for us to address to an exalted fellow-creature. Surely the only
+ascription fitting the lips and the heart of those who have been
+enlightened by the bright beams of Gospel truth, is Glory to God alone
+through Christ his Son.
+
+ [Footnote 142: Such ascriptions are very common. Joannes de
+ Carthagena, a most voluminous writer of homilies, adopts this as
+ the close of his sections: "Praise and glory to the Triune God,
+ to the Humanity of Christ, to the Blessed Virgin Mary his
+ mother, and to St. Joseph her dearest spouse."--Catholic
+ Homilies on the Sacred Secrets of the Mother of God, and Joseph,
+ p. 921. Paris, 1615.] {380}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION V.--MODERN WORKS OF DEVOTION AMONG ROMAN CATHOLICS.
+
+
+It may perhaps be surmised, that the authors referred to in the last
+section lived many years ago, and that the sentiments of the faithful
+members of the Church of Rome have undergone material changes on these
+points. Assurances are given on every side, that the invocation of the
+saints and of the Virgin is nothing more than a request, that they would
+intercede with God, and implore his mercy for the suppliants. But
+whatever implicit reliance we may place on the good faith with which
+these declarations are made, we can discover no new key by which to
+interpret the forms of prayer and praise satisfactorily. Confessedly
+there are no changes in the authorized services. We discover no traces
+of change in the worship of private devotion. The Breviary and Missal
+contain the same offices of the Virgin Mary as in former days. The same
+sentiments are expressed towards her in public; the same forms of
+devotion[143], both in prayer and praise, are prepared for the use of
+individuals in their daily exercises. Whatever meaning is to be attached
+to the expressions employed, the prevailing expressions themselves
+remain the same as we found them to have been in past ages.
+
+ [Footnote 143: Works of this character abound in every place,
+ where Catholic books may be purchased.]
+
+Since I made these extracts from the learned and celebrated doctors and
+canonized saints of former ages, my attention has been invited to the
+language now {381} used in forms of devotion, the spirit of which
+implies similar views of the power and love of the Virgin Mary, as the
+fountain of mercies to mankind, and the dispenser of every heavenly
+blessing.
+
+At the head of these modern works, I was led to read over again the
+encyclical letter of the present sovereign pontiff, from the closing
+sentences of which I have already made extracts. And referring his words
+to a test which we have more than once applied in a similar case--that
+of changing the name of the person, and substituting the name of God, or
+his blessed Son, I cannot see how the spirit of his sentiments falls in
+the least below the highest degree of religious worship. His words, in
+the third paragraph of his letter, as they appear in the Laity's
+Directory for 1833, are these:--
+
+"But having at length taken possession of our see in the Lateran Basilic
+according to the custom and institution of our predecessors, we turn to
+you without delay, venerable brethren, and in testimony of our feelings
+towards you, we select for the date of our letter this most joyful day
+on which we celebrate the solemn festival of the most blessed Virgin's
+triumphant assumption into heaven, that she who has been through every
+great calamity our patroness and protectress, may WATCH OVER US WRITING
+TO YOU, AND LEAD OUR MIND BY HER HEAVENLY INFLUENCE to those counsels
+which may prove most salutary to Christ's flock."
+
+Let us substitute for the name of Mary, the holiest of all, The Eternal
+Spirit of Jehovah Himself; and will not these words be a proper vehicle
+of the sentiments of a Christian pastor? Let us fix upon Christmas-day,
+or Easter, or Holy Thursday, and what word expressive {382} of gratitude
+for past mercies to the supreme Giver of all good things, or of hope and
+trust in the guidance of the Spirit of counsel, and wisdom, and
+strength--of the most High God, who alone can order the wills and ways
+of men--might not a bishop of Christ's flock take from this declaration
+of the Sovereign Pontiff, and use in its first and natural sense, when
+speaking of the Lord Jehovah Himself? "We select for the date of our
+letter this most joyful day on which we celebrate the solemn festival of
+the most blessed Redeemer's nativity, (or glorious resurrection, or
+ascension,) that He who has been through every great calamity our patron
+and protector, may watch over us writing to you, and lead our mind by
+his heavenly influence to those counsels which may prove most salutary
+to Christ's flock."
+
+In these sentiments of the present Pope there is no allusion (as there
+is in the other clause) to Mary's prayers and intercessions. Looking to
+and weighing the words employed, and as far as words can be relied upon
+as interpreters of the thoughts, looking to the spirit of his
+profession, only one inference can be fairly drawn. However direct and
+immediate the prayers of the suppliants may be to the Virgin for her
+protection and defence from all dangers, spiritual and bodily, and for
+the guidance of the inmost thoughts in the right way, (blessings which
+we of the Anglican Catholic Church, following the footsteps of the
+primitive flock of Christ, have always looked for at the hand of God
+Almighty only, to be granted by Him for the sake of his blessed Son,)
+such petitioners to Mary would be sanctioned to the utmost by the
+principles and example of the present Roman Pontiff.
+
+We have already, when examining the records of {383} the Council of
+Chalcedon, compared the closing words of this encyclical letter with the
+more holy and primitive aspirations of the Bishops of Rome and
+Constantinople in those earlier days; and the comparison is striking
+between the sentiments now expressed in the opening parts of the same
+letter, and the spirit of the collects which were adopted for the use of
+the faithful, before the invocation of saints and of the Virgin had
+gained its present strong hold in the Church of Rome. For example, a
+collect at Vespers teaches us to pray to God as the source from whom all
+holy desires and all good counsels proceed [Hiem. 149.]; and on the
+fifth Sunday after Easter this prayer is offered: "O God, from whom all
+good things do come, grant, we pray Thee, that by thy inspiration we may
+think those things that be good; and by thy guidance may perform the
+same;" whilst on the fifth Sunday after the Epiphany, in a collect, the
+spirit of which is strongly contrasted with the sentiments in both parts
+of this encyclical letter, God is thus addressed: "We beseech thee, O
+Lord, with thy continual pity, guard thy family, that, leaning on the
+sole hope of heavenly grace, it may ever be defended by thy protection."
+[Ut quæ in _sola_ spe gratiæ coelestis innititur, tua semper protectione
+muniatur.--Hiem, 364. "Let us raise our eyes to the Blessed Virgin, who
+is our greatest hope, yea, the entire ground of our hope."]
+
+Similar materials are abundant. A whole volume, indeed, might readily be
+composed consisting solely of rules and instructions, confessions and
+forms of prayer, appertaining to the Virgin and the Saints, published by
+authority at the present day, both in our country and on the Continent,
+for the use of our Roman Catholic {384} brethren; but to which the word
+of God, and the doctrine and practice of the primitive Church, are in
+our estimation as much opposed as to the prayers of Bonaventura, or to
+the doctrine of either of the Bernardins. It would, however, be
+unprofitable to dwell on this subject at any great length. I will,
+therefore, only briefly refer to two publications of this sort, to which
+my own attention has been accidentally drawn: "The Imitation of the
+Blessed Virgin,"[144] and "The Little Testament of the Holy
+Virgin."[145]
+
+ [Footnote 144: "The Imitation of the Blessed Virgin, composed on
+ the plan of the Imitation of Christ. London, 1816. Approved by
+ T.R. Asselini, Doctor of Sorbonne, last Bishop of Boulogne. From
+ the French."]
+
+ [Footnote 145: "The Little Testament of the Holy Virgin,
+ translated from the French, and revised by a Catholic Priest.
+ Third Edition. Dublin, 1836."]
+
+The first professes to be "composed on the plan of the 'Imitation of
+Christ.'" This is, in itself, highly objectionable; its tendency is to
+exalt Mary, by association, to the same place in our hearts and minds,
+which Thomas à Kempis had laboured, in his "Imitation of Christ," to
+secure for the Saviour; and it reminds us of the proceedings of
+Bonaventura, who wrote psalms to the honour of the Virgin after the
+manner which David used in his hymns to the Lord of Glory. In this work
+we read the following prayer to the Virgin, which seems to be stained
+with the error, the existence of which elsewhere we have already
+noticed, of contrasting the justice and the stern dealings even of the
+Saviour, with the mercy, and loving-kindness, and fellow-feeling of
+Mary; making God an object of fear, Mary an object of love.
+
+"Mother of my Redeemer, O Mary, in the last moments {385} of my life, I
+implore thy assistance with more earnestness than ever. I find myself,
+as it were, placed between heaven and hell. Alas! what will become of
+me, if thou do not exert, in my behalf, thy powerful influence with
+Jesus?... I die with SUBMISSION since JESUS has ORDAINED it; but
+notwithstanding the natural horror which I have of death, I die with
+PLEASURE, because I die under THY protection." [Chap. xiii. p. 344.]
+
+In the fourteenth chapter the following passage occurs: "It is giving to
+the blessed Virgin a testimony of love particularly dear and precious to
+her, to make her holy spouse Joseph the first object of our devotion,
+next to that which consecrates us to her service.... The name of Joseph
+is invoked with singular devotion by all the true faithful. They
+frequently join it with the sacred names of Jesus and Mary. Whilst Jesus
+and Mary lived at Nazareth, if we had wished to obtain some favour from
+them, could we have employed a more powerful protector than St. Joseph?
+Will he now have less power and credit? GO THEREFORE TO JOSEPH, (Gen.
+xli. 55.) that he may intercede for you. Whatever favour you ask, God
+will grant it you at his request.... Go to Joseph in all your
+necessities; but especially to obtain the grace of a happy death. The
+general opinion that he died in the arms of Jesus and Mary has inspired
+the faithful with great confidence, that, through his intercession, they
+will have an end as happy and consoling as his. In effect, it has been
+remarked, that it is particularly at the hour of death that those who
+have been during their life careful to honour this great saint, reap the
+fruit of their devotion." [P. 347.]
+
+In this passage the unworthy idea, itself formed on a groundless
+tradition, is introduced of paying reverence {386} to one saint, in
+order to gratify and conciliate another. Joseph must be especially
+honoured in order to do what is most acceptable to Mary. Surely this
+tends to withdraw the mind from that habitual reference of all our
+actions immediately to God, which the primitive teachers were so anxious
+to cultivate in all Christians.
+
+In the "Little Testament of the Holy Virgin," the following (p. 46) is
+called, "A Prayer to the blessed Virgin." Can any words place more on an
+entire level with each other, the eternal Son of God and the Virgin?
+"Jesus and Mary?!"
+
+"O Mary! what would be our poverty and misery if the Father of Mercies
+had not drawn you from his treasury to give you to earth! Oh! my Life
+and Consolation, I trust and confide in your holy name. My heart wishes
+to love you; my mouth to praise you; my mind to contemplate you; my soul
+sighs to be yours. Receive me, defend me, preserve me; I cannot perish
+in your hands. Let the demons tremble when I pronounce your holy name,
+since you have ruined their empire; but we shall say with Saint Anselm,
+that he does not know God, who has not an idea sufficiently high of your
+greatness and glory. We shall esteem it the greatest honour to be of the
+number of your servants. Let your glory, blessed Mother, be equal to the
+extent of your name; reign, after God, over all that is beneath God;
+but, above all, reign in my heart; you will be my consolation in
+suffering, my strength in weakness, my counsel in doubt. At the name of
+Mary my hope shall be enlightened, my love inflamed. Oh! that I could
+deeply engrave the dear name on every heart, suggest it to every tongue,
+and make all celebrate it with me. Mary! sacred name, under which no one
+{387} should despair. Mary! sacred name, often assaulted, but always
+victorious. Mary! it shall be my life, my strength, my comfort! Every
+day shall I envoke IT AND THE DIVINE NAME OF JESUS. The Son will awake
+the recollection of the mother, and the mother that of the Son. JESUS
+AND MARY! this is what my heart shall say at the last hour, if my tongue
+cannot; I shall hear them on my death bed,--they shall be wafted on my
+expiring breath, and I with them, to see THEM, know THEM, bless and love
+THEM for eternity. Amen."
+
+There may, perhaps, be a reasonable ground for our hoping that these are
+not the sentiments entertained by the enlightened Roman Catholics of our
+country and age. Any one has a full right to say, "These are productions
+of individuals for which we and the Church to which we belong are not
+responsible, any more than the Church of England is responsible for all
+doctrines and sentiments expressed by writers in her communion! Even the
+sentiments above referred to of the present reigning pope, you have no
+right to allege as the doctrines of the Church!" But I would again
+venture to suggest to every one, who would thus speak, the duty of
+ascertaining for himself, whether the sentiments of those who at present
+fill the highest places, and which fully justify these devotional
+exercises and prayers to the Virgin and the Saints, be not themselves
+fully justified by the authorized ritual of the Roman Church. On this
+point are supplied, even in this volume, materials sufficiently
+diversified and abundant in quantity to enable any one to form a correct
+judgment.
+
+By two brief extracts I will now bring this branch of our inquiry to a
+close. The first is from the concluding paragraphs of a discourse lately
+delivered and {388} published. In principle, the sentiments here
+professed apparently admit not only of being identified with those of
+the authorized services of the Church of Rome, but also, though not so
+naked and revolting in appearance as the doctrines of Bonaventura, Biel,
+and the two Bernardins, yet in reality they equally depart from the
+simplicity of the Gospel, and are equally at direct variance with that,
+its first and its last principle, ONE GOD AND ONE MEDIATOR BETWEEN GOD
+AND MEN, THE MAN CHRIST JESUS.
+
+"Remember that this day you have put yourselves and your families under
+the protection of the ever-blessed Mother of God, and Her chaste Spouse,
+St. Joseph; of those who were chosen of God to protect the infancy of
+Jesus from the danger by a persecuting world. ENTREAT THEM TO PROTECT
+YOU AND YOURS FROM THE PERILS of a seducing and ensnaring world; to
+plead your interests in heaven, and secure by their intercession your
+everlasting crown. Loudly proclaim the praises of your heavenly Queen,
+but at the same time turn Her power to your everlasting advantage by
+your earnest supplications to HER." (See Appendix.)
+
+The other extract, which sanctions to the full whatever offerings of
+praise and ascriptions of glory we have found individuals making to the
+Virgin and to Saints, is from an announcement in, I believe, the last
+English edition of the Roman Breviary published, in its present form,
+under the sanction of the Pope himself.
+
+"To those who devoutly recite the following prayer after the office,
+Pope Leo the Tenth hath granted pardon (indulsit) for the defects and
+faults in celebrating it, contracted by human frailty.
+
+"To the most holy and undivided Trinity; to the manhood {389} of our
+crucified Lord Jesus Christ; to the fruitful spotlessness of the most
+blessed and most glorious and ever-Virgin Mary; and to the entire body
+of all the Saints, be eternal praise, honour, virtue, and glory, from
+every creature, and to us remission of all sins, through endless ages of
+ages. Amen." [Norwich, 1830. Æst.]
+
+On the indulgence for pardon given by Pope Leo the Tenth, more than 300
+years ago, for such defects and faults in celebrating a religious
+service as may be contracted by human frailty; and on the fact of the
+notification of that indulgence being retained, and set forth so
+prominently in the service books at the present day, I will say nothing.
+Whatever associations may be raised in our minds by these circumstances,
+the subject does not fall within our present field of inquiry. But to
+join the Holy Trinity with the Virgin Mother, and all the Saints in one
+and the same ascription of ETERNAL PRAISE, HONOUR, and GLORY, is as
+utterly subversive of the integrity of primitive Christian Worship, as
+it is repugnant to the plainest sense of holy Scripture, and derogatory
+to the dignity of that Supreme Being, who declares Himself to be a
+jealous God.
+
+It has, indeed, been maintained that such ascriptions of glory and
+praise jointly to God and his Saints, is sanctioned by the language of
+our blessed Saviour Himself when He speaks of his having given his glory
+to his disciples [John xvii. 22.], and of his second advent, when He
+shall come in his own glory, and in his Father's, and of the holy
+angels. [Luke ix. 26.] But between the two cases there is no analogy
+whatever; the inference is utterly fallacious. We know that the Lord of
+Hosts is the King of glory, and that his eternal Son shared the glory of
+his Father before the foundations {390} of the world were laid. We know,
+too, that the Almighty has been pleased to create beings of various
+degrees and orders, differing from each other in kind or in excellence
+according to his supreme will. Among those creatures of his hand are the
+angels whom we reverence and love, as his faithful servants and his
+ministers to us for good. But when we speak and think of religious
+adoration; of giving thanks; and ascribing eternal glory and honour, we
+have only one object in our minds,--the supreme Sovereign Lord of all.
+
+With regard to the gracious words of our Saviour in his prayer to the
+Father, on the eve of his death, St. Peter's acts and words supply us
+with a plain and conclusive comment. He was himself one of those to whom
+Christ had declared that He had given the glory which his Father had
+given to Him; and yet when Cornelius fell down at his feet to worship
+him, he took him up, saying, "Stand up; I myself also am a man." [Acts
+x. 26.] The Saviour was pleased to impart his glory to his Apostles,
+dividing to them his heavenly gifts severally as He willed. We praise
+Him for those graces which shone so brightly in them, and we pray to Him
+to enable us by his grace to follow them, as they followed his blessed
+steps. We reverence their memory, but we give God alone the praise.
+
+As to the other instance, the words of our Lord (assuring us that the
+angels should accompany Him at his second advent in their glory, the
+glory which He assigned to them in the order of creation,) no more
+authorize us to ascribe praise and glory by a religious act to them,
+when we praise the God of angels and men, than would {391} the assurance
+of an inspired apostle, that "there is one glory of the sun, another
+glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars," sanction us in
+joining those luminaries in the same ascription of glory with their
+Almighty Creator and ours. Just as reasonably would a pagan justify his
+worship of the sun, the moon, and the stars, by this passage of
+Scripture, as our Roman Catholic brethren would justify themselves by
+the former passage in their ascription of praise and glory to the holy
+angels, and saints, and the blessed Virgin. We honour the holy angels,
+we praise God for the glory which He has imparted to them, and for the
+share which He has been pleased to assign to them in executing his
+decrees of mercy in the heavenly work of our salvation; and we pray to
+HIM to grant that they may by his appointment succour and defend us on
+earth, through Jesus Christ our Lord. But we address no invocation to
+them; we ascribe no glory to them as an act of religious worship. By
+offering thanks and praise to God He declares that we honour HIM; by
+offering thanks and praise, and by ascribing glory and honour to angel,
+saint, or virgin, we make them gods. {392}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+We have now, my fellow Christians, arrived at the conclusion of the task
+which I proposed to undertake. I have laid before you, to the utmost of
+my abilities and means, the result of my inquiry into the evidence of
+holy Scripture and primitive antiquity, on the invocation of saints and
+angels, and the blessed Virgin Mary. In this inquiry, excepting so far
+as was necessary to elucidate the origin and history of the Roman
+Catholic tenet of the Assumption of the Virgin, we have limited our
+researches to the writers who lived before the Nicene Council. That
+Council has always been considered a cardinal point,--a sort of
+climacteric in the history of the early Church. It was the first Council
+to which all the bishops of Christendom were summoned; and the influence
+of its decrees is felt beneficially in the Catholic Church to this very
+day. In fixing upon this Council as our present boundary line, I was
+influenced by a conviction, that the large body of Christians, whether
+of the Roman, the Anglican, or any other branch of the Church Catholic,
+would consent to this as an indisputable axiom,--that what the Church
+Catholic did not believe or practise up to {393} that date of her
+existence upon earth, cannot be regarded as either Catholic or
+primitive, or apostolical. Ending with St. Athanasius, (who, though he
+was present at that Council, yet brings his testimony down through
+almost another half century, his death not having taken place till A.D.
+873, on the verge of his eightieth year,) we have examined the remains
+of Christian antiquity, reckoning forward to that Council from the times
+of the Apostles. We have searched diligently into the writings, the
+sentiments, and the conduct of those first disciples of our Lord. We
+have contemplated the words of our blessed Saviour himself, and the
+inspired narrative of his life and teaching. With the same object in
+view we have studied the prophets of the Old Testament, and the works of
+Moses; and we have endeavoured, at the fountainhead, to ascertain what
+is the mind and will of God, as revealed to the world from the day when
+He made man, on the question of our invoking the angels and saints to
+intercede with Him in our behalf, or to assist and succour us on the
+earth. And the result is this:--From first to last, the voice of God
+Himself, and the voices of the inspired messengers of heaven, whether
+under the patriarchal, the Mosaic, or the Christian dispensations, the
+voices too of those maintainers of our common faith in Christ, who
+prayed, and taught, in the Church, before the corruptions of a
+degenerate world had mingled themselves with the purity of Christian
+worship, combine all, in publishing, throughout the earth, one and the
+self-same principle, "Pray only to God; draw nigh to Him alone; invoke
+no other; seek no other in the world of spirits, neither angel, nor
+beatified saint; seek Him, and He will favourably, with mercy, hear your
+prayers." To this one {394} principle, when the Gospel announced the
+whole counsel of God in the salvation of man, our Lord himself, his
+Apostles, and his Church, unite in adding another principle of eternal
+obligation,--There is one Mediator between God and men, the man Christ
+Jesus; whatsoever the faithful shall ask the Father in the name of that
+Mediator, He will grant it to them: He is ever living to make
+intercession for those who believe in Him: Invoke we no other
+intercessor, apply we neither to saint nor angel, plead we the merits of
+no other. Let us lift up our hearts to God Almighty himself, and make
+our requests known to Him in the name, and through the mediation of
+Christ, and He will fulfil our desires and petitions as may be most
+expedient for us; He will grant to us, in this world, a knowledge of his
+truth, and in the world to come life everlasting!
+
+Watching the tide of evidence through its whole progress, we find it to
+flow all in this one direction. Here and there indeed attempts have been
+made to raise some mounds and barriers of human structure, in order to
+arrest its progress, and turn it from its straight course, but in vain;
+unchecked by any such endeavours, it rolls on in one full, steady,
+strong, and resistless current. Until we have long passed the Nicene
+Council, we find no one writer of the Christian Church, whose remains
+tell us, that he either himself invoked saints and angels, and the
+Virgin Mary, or was at all aware of any such practice prevailing in
+Christendom. Suppose, for one moment, that our doctrine is right; and
+then we find the whole tenour of the Old and New Testaments, and the
+ancient writers, in their plain meaning, agreeably to the interpretation
+of the most learned and unbiassed critics, fully coinciding in every
+respect with our view of God being the sole object of invocation, {395}
+and of the exclusive character of Christ's intercession, mediation, and
+advocacy. Suppose, for another moment, the Roman Catholic theory to be
+correct, then the whole general tenour and drift of Scripture must be
+evaded; the clearest statements and announcements must be explained away
+by subtle distinctions, gratuitous definitions, and casuistical
+refinements, altogether foreign from the broad and simple truths of
+Revelation; then, too, in ascertaining the sentiments of an author, not
+his general and pervading principles, evidenced throughout his writings,
+must be appealed to; but casual and insulated expressions must be
+contracted or expanded as may best seem to counteract the impression
+made by the testimony of those principles. We may safely ask, Is there
+such evidence, that the primitive Church offered invocations to saints
+and angels, and the Virgin, as would satisfy us in the case of any
+secular dispute with regard to ancient usage? On the contrary, is not
+the evidence clear to a moral demonstration, that the offering of such
+addresses is an innovation of later days, unknown to the primitive
+Christians till after the middle of the fourth century, and never
+pronounced to be an article of faith, until the Council of Trent, more
+than a thousand years after its first appearance in Christendom, so
+decreed it.
+
+The tendency, indeed, of some Roman Catholic writings, especially of
+late years, is to draw off our minds on these points from the written
+word of God, and the testimony of the earliest Church, and to dwell upon
+the possibility, the reasonableness of the doctrines of the Church of
+Rome in this respect, their accordance with our natural feelings, and
+their charitableness. But in points of such vast moment, in things
+concerning the soul's salvation, we can depend with satisfaction and
+{396} without misgiving, only on the sure word of promise; nothing short
+of God's own pledge of his own eternal truth can assure us, that all is
+safe. Such substitution of what may appear to us reasonable, and
+agreeable to our natural sentiments, and desirable if true, in place of
+the assurances of God's revealed Will, may correspond with the arguments
+of a heathen philosopher unacquainted with the truth as it is in Jesus,
+but cannot satisfy disciples of Him who brought life and immortality to
+light by his Gospel. Such questions as these, "Is there any thing
+unreasonable in this? Would not this be a welcome tenet, if true?" well
+became the lips of Socrates in his defence before his judges, but are in
+the strict sense of the word preposterous in a Christian. With the
+Christian the first question is, What is the truth? What is revealed?
+What has God promised? What has He taught man to hope for? What has He
+commanded man to do? By his own words, by the words and by the example
+of his inspired messengers, by the doctrine and practice of his Church,
+the witness and interpreter of the truth, how has He directed us to sue
+for his mercy and all its blessings? On what foundation, sure and
+certain, can we build our hopes that "He will favourably with mercy hear
+our prayers?" For in this matter, a matter of spiritual life and death,
+we can anchor our hope on no other rock than his sure word of promise.
+
+That sure word of promise, if I am a faithful believer, I have; but it
+is exclusive of any invocation by me of saint, or angel, or virgin. The
+pledge of heaven is most solemnly and repeatedly given; God, who cannot
+lie, has, in language so plain, that he may run who readeth it, assured
+me that if I come to HIMSELF by HIS SON, my prayer shall not be cast
+out, my suit shall {397} not be denied, I shall not be sent empty away.
+In every variety of form which language can assume, this assurance is
+ratified and confirmed. His own revealed will directs me to pray for my
+fellow-creatures, and to expect a beneficial effect from the prayers of
+the faithful upon earth in my behalf. To pray for them, therefore, and
+to seek their prayers, and to wait patiently for an answer to both, are
+acts of faith and of duty. And were it also appointed by God's will to
+be an act of faith and duty in a Christian to seek the prayers, and aid,
+and assistance, of saints and angels by supplicatingly invoking them,
+surely the same word of truth would have revealed that also. Whereas the
+reverse shows itself under every diversified state of things, from the
+opening of the sacred book to its very last page. The subtle distinction
+of religious worship into latria, dulia, and hyperdulia, the refined
+classification of prayer under the two heads of direct, absolute, final,
+sovereign, on the one hand, and of oblique, relative, transitory,
+subaltern, on the other, swell indeed many elaborate works of casuistry,
+but are not discoverable in the remains of primitive Christians, nor in
+the writings of God's word have they any place. I cannot find in the
+inspired Apostles any reference to the necessity, the duty, the
+lawfulness, the expediency of our seeking by prayer the good offices of
+the holy dead, or of the angels of light. In their successors the
+earliest inspired teachers and pastors of Christ's fold, I seek in vain
+for any precept, or example, or suggestion, or incidental allusion
+looking that way. Why then should a Christian wish to add to that which
+God has been pleased to appoint and to reveal? Why should I attempt to
+enter heaven through any other gate than {398} that gate which the Lord
+of heaven has opened for me? or why should I seek to reach that gate by
+any other way than the way which He has made for me; which He has
+Himself plainly prescribed to me; in which He has promised that his word
+shall be a lantern unto my feet; and along which those saints and
+servants of his, who received the truth from his own lips, and sealed it
+by their blood, have gone before?
+
+Whenever a maintainer of the doctrine and practice of invoking the
+Saints asks me, as we have lately been asked in these words, "May I not
+reasonably hope that their prayers will be more efficacious than my own
+and those of my friends? And, under this persuasion, I say to them, as I
+just now said to you, holy Mary, holy Peter, holy Paul, pray for me.
+What is there in reason or revelation to forbid me to do so?" To this
+and similar questions and suggestions, I answer at once, God has
+solemnly covenanted to grant the petitions of those who ask HIM for his
+mercy, in the name and for the sake of his Son; and in his holy word
+has, both by precept and example, taught us in this life to pray for
+each other, and to ask each other's prayers [James v. 16; I Tim. ii.
+1.]; but that He will favourably answer the prayers which we supplicate
+angels to offer, or which we offer to Himself through the merits and by
+the intercession of departed mortals, is no where in the covenant.
+Moreover, when God invites me and commands me to approach Him myself, in
+the name of his Son, and trusting to his merits, it is not Christian
+humility, rather it savours of presumption, and intruding into those
+things which we have not seen [Coloss. ii. 18.], to seek to prevail with
+Him by {399} pleading other merits, and petitioning creatures, however
+glorious, to interest themselves with Him in our behalf, angels and
+saints, of whose power even to hear us we have no evidence. When Jesus
+Himself, who knows both the deep counsels of the Eternal Spirit, and
+man's wants and weaknesses and unworthiness, and who loveth his own to
+the end, pledges his never-failing word, that whatsoever we ask the
+Father in his name, He will give it us, can it be less than an unworthy
+distrust of his truth and faithfulness to ask the Father for the merits
+and by the intercession of another? and as though in fear lest God
+should fail of his promise, or be unmindful of us Himself, to invoke
+angels and the good departed to make our wants known unto HIM, and
+prevail with HIM to relieve us?
+
+Surely it were wiser and safer to adhere religiously to that one way
+which cannot fail, than to adopt for ourselves methods and systems, for
+the success of which we have no guarantee; which may be unacceptable in
+his sight; and the tendency of which may be to bring down a curse and
+not a blessing.
+
+May the great Shepherd and Bishop of souls pour down upon his Church the
+abundance of his mercy, preserving those in the truth who now possess
+it, restoring it to those by whom it has been lost, and imparting it to
+all who are yet in darkness. And, whilst we speak the truth in love, and
+endeavour to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, may HE,
+for his own glory, and for the safety and comfort of his people, shed
+this truth abroad in our hearts, and enlighten us to receive it in all
+its fulness and integrity, and in the very sense in which the Holy
+Spirit, when He guided {400} the pen of St. Paul, willed the Church to
+interpret it, "There is one God and one Mediator between God and men,
+the man Christ Jesus."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services of
+Angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant, that as thy holy
+Angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by thy appointment they may
+succour and defend us on earth, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
+
+O Almighty God, who hast built thy Church upon the foundation of the
+Apostles and Prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the head corner-stone;
+Grant us so to be joined together in unity of spirit by their doctrine,
+that we may be made an holy temple, acceptable unto Thee, through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. Amen.
+
+O Almighty God, who hast knit together thine elect in one communion and
+fellowship, in the mystical body of thy Son Christ our Lord; Grant us
+grace, so to follow thy blessed Saints in all virtuous and godly living,
+that we may come to those unspeakable joys, which Thou hast prepared for
+them that unfeignedly love Thee; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
+{401}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Note.--Pages 107 and 110.
+
+The following is the original of the passages discussed in the text.
+Justin Martyr, Apol. I. p. 47. § vi. Benedictine Edition by P. Maran.
+Paris, A.D. 1742.
+
+[Greek: Enthende kai atheoi keklaemetha; kai homologoumen ton toiouton
+nomizomenon theon atheoi einai, all' ouchi tou alaethestatou, kai patros
+dikaiosunaes kai sophrosunaes, kai ton allon areton, anepimiktou te
+kakias Theou; all' ekeinon te, kai ton par' autou huion elthonta kai
+didaxanta haemas tauta, kai ton ton allon hepomenon kai exomoioumenon
+agathon angelon straton, pneuma te to prophaetikon sebometha, kai
+proskunoumen, logoi kai alaetheiai timontes, kai panti boulomenoi
+mathein, hos edidachthaemen, aphthonos paradidontes.]
+
+Ibid. page 50, 51. sect. xiii.--[Greek: 'Atheoi men oun hos ouk esmen,
+ton daemiourgon toude tou pantos sebomenoi, ... ton didaskalon te touton
+genomenon haemin, kai eis touto genaethenta Iaesoun Christon ton
+staurothenta epi Pontiou Pilatou, tou genomenou en Ioudaiai epi chronois
+Tiberiou Kaisaros epitropou, huion autou tou ontos Theou mathontes, kai
+en deuterai chorai echontes, pneuma te prophaetikon en tritaei taxei,
+hoti meta logou timomen, apodeixomen....]
+
+Note.--Page 134.
+
+In the text it has been observed, that "Coccius in his elaborate work
+quotes the two following passages as Origen's, without expressing {402}
+any hesitation or doubt respecting their genuineness; in which he is
+followed by writers of the present day."
+
+The modern works, to which reference is here made, are chiefly the
+Lectures delivered by Dr. Wiseman, in the Roman Catholic Chapel in
+Moorfields in the year 1836, and the compilation of Messrs. Berington
+and Kirk [Berington and Kirk. London, 1830, p. 403.], from which Dr.
+Wiseman in his preface to his Lectures (p. ix.) informs us, that in
+general he had drawn his quotations of the Fathers. In citing the
+testimony of Origen in support of the invocation of saints, it is
+evident that Dr. Wiseman has drawn from that source; for whereas the two
+confessedly spurious passages, from the Lament, and from the Book on
+Job, are in that compilation quoted in the same page, Dr. Wiseman cites
+only the passage from the Lament, as from a work on the Lamentations,
+but gives his reference to the Book on Job. His words are these:--"Again
+he (Origen) thus writes on the Lamentations: 'I will fall down on my
+knees, and not presuming, on account of my crimes, to present my prayer
+to God, I will invoke all the saints to my assistance. O ye saints of
+heaven, I beseech you with a sorrow full of sighs and tears; fall at the
+feet of the Lord of mercies for me, a miserable sinner,'--Lib. ii. De
+Job." [Lectures on the Principal Doctrines and Practices of the Catholic
+Church, by Nicholas Wiseman, D.D. London, 1836. Vol. i. preface, p. ix.
+and vol. ii. p. 107.]
+
+When we find such passages as these, which have been so long ago and so
+repeatedly pronounced to be utterly spurious, yet cited in evidence at
+the present time, and represented as conveying the genuine testimony of
+Origen, we shall be pardoned for repeating the sentiments expressed so
+many years ago by the learned Bishop of Avranches with regard to the
+very work here cited, "It is wonderful that, WITHOUT ANY MARK OF THEIR
+BEING FORGERIES, they should be sometimes cited in evidence by some
+theologians."
+
+Note.--Page 151.
+
+The whole passage cited as Origen's comment on the words of Ezekiel,
+"The heavens are opened," is in the Latin version as follows. The Greek
+original, if it ever existed, is lost. The portion between brackets is
+the part suspected of being an interpolation.
+
+6. _Et aperti sunt coeli_. Clausi erant coeli, et ad adventum Christi
+aperti sunt, ut reseratis illis veniret super eum Spiritus Sanctus in
+specie columbæ. Neque enirn poterat ad nos commeare nisi primum {403} ad
+suæ naturæ consortem descendisset. _Ascendit Jesus in altum, captivam
+duxit captivitatem, accepit dona in hominibus. Qui descendit, ipse est
+qui ascendit super omnes coelos ut impleret omnia. Et ipse dedit alios
+apostolos, alios prophetas, alios evangelistas, alios pastores et
+magistros in perfectionem sanctorum_.
+
+[7. _Aperti sunt coeli_. Non sufficit unum coelum aperiri: aperiuntur
+plurimi, ut descendant non ab uno, sed ab omnibus coelis angeli ad eos
+qui salvandi sunt. Angeli qui ascendebant et descendebant super Filium
+hominis, et accesserunt as eum, et ministrabant ei. Descenderunt autem
+angeli, quia prior descenderat Christus, metuentes descendere priusquam
+Dominus virtutum omnium rerumque præciperet. Quando autem viderunt
+principem militiæ coelestis in terrestribus locis commorari, tunc per
+apertam viam ingressi sunt sequentes Dominum suum, et parentes voluntati
+ejus qui distribuit eos custodes credentium nomini suo. Tu heri sub
+dæmonio eras, hodie sub angelo. _Nolite_, inquit Dominus, _contemnere
+unum de minimis istis_ qui sunt in ecclesia. _Amen enim dico vobis, quia
+angeli eorum per omnia vident faciem Patris qui est in coelis_.
+Obsequuntur saluti tuæ angeli, concessi sunt ad ministerium Filii Dei,
+et dicuntinter se: si ille descendit, et descendit in corpus; si mortali
+indutus est carne, et sustinuit crucem, et pro hominibus mortuus est,
+quit nos quiescimus? quid parcimus nobis? Eja omnes angeli descendamus e
+coelo. Ideo et multitudo militiæ coelestis erat laudantium et
+glorificantium Deum, quando natus est Christus. Omnia angelis plena
+sunt: veni, angeli, suscipe sermone conversum ab errore pristino, a
+doctrina dæmoniorum, ab iniquitate in altum loquente: et suscipiens eum
+quasi medicus bonus confove atque institue, parvulus est, hodie nascitur
+senex repuerascens: et suscipe tribuens ei baptismum secundæ
+regenerationis, et advoca tibi alios socios ministerii tui, ut concti
+pariter eos qui aliquando decepti sunt, erudiatis ad fidem. _Gaudium
+enim est majus in coelis super unum peccatorem poenitentiam agentem,
+quam supra nonaginta novem justos quibus non opus est poenitentia_.
+Exultat omnis creatura, collætatur et applaudit his qui salvandi sunt.
+Nam _expectatio creaturæ revelationem filiorum Dei expectat_. Et licet
+nolint ii qui scripturas apostolicas interpolaverunt istiusmodi sermones
+inesse libris eorum quibus possit Creator Christus approbari, expectat
+tamen omnis creatura filios Dei, quando liberentur a delicto, quando
+auferentur de Zabuli manu, quando regenerentur a Christo. Verum jam
+tempus est, ut de præsenti loco aliqua tangamus. Vidit Propheta non
+visionem, sed visiones Dei. {404} Quare non vidat unam, sed plurimas
+visiones? Audi Dominum pollicentem atque dicentem: _Ego visiones
+multiplicavi_. 8. _Quinta mensis_. Hic annus quinta captivitatis regis
+Joachim. Trigesimo anno ætatis Ezekielis, et quinto captivitatis
+Joachim, Propheta mittiur ad Judæos. Non despexit clementissimus pater,
+nec longo tempore incommonitum populum dereliquit. Quintus est annus.
+Quantum temporis intercessit? Quinque anni interfluxerunt ex quo captivi
+serviunt.]
+
+Statim descendit Spiritus Sanctus,--aperuit coelos, ut hi qui
+captivitatis jugo premebantur, viderent ea quæ videbantur a Propheta.
+Dicente quippe eo, _Et aperti sunt coeli_, quodam modo et ipsi
+intuebantur oculis cordis quæ ille etiam oculis carnis aspexerat.--Vol.
+iii. p. 358.
+
+Note.--Page 165.
+
+In a note on the Epistle of St. Cyprian to his brother, reference was
+made to the Appendix for a closer comparison of Cyprian's original
+letter with the modern translation of the passage under consideration.
+By placing the two versions in parallel columns side by side, we shall
+immediately see, that the mode of citing the testimony of St. Cyprian
+adopted in Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, from the compilation of Messrs.
+Berington and Kirk, is rather to substitute his own comment and
+inference, than to allow the witness to speak for himself in his own
+words. The whole paragraph, as it appears in Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, is
+this:--
+
+"St. Cyprian in the same century: 'Let us be mindful of one another in
+our prayers; with one mind and with one heart, in this world and in the
+next, let us always pray with mutual charity relieving our sufferings
+and afflictions. And may the charity of him, who, by the divine favour,
+shall first depart hence, still persevere before the Lord; may his
+prayer, for our brethren and sisters, not cease.' Therefore, after
+having departed this life, the same offices of charity are to continue,
+by praying for those who remain on earth." [Lect. xiii. vol. ii. p. 107,
+and Berington and Kirk, p. 430.]
+
+_St. Cyprian's words_. _Epist._ lvii. _p._ 96.
+
+_Translation adopted by Dr. Wiseman from Berington and Kirk._
+
+
+1. Memories nostri invicem simus,
+
+1. Let us be mindful of one
+another IN OUR PRAYERS; {405}
+
+2. Concordes atque unanimes, 2. With one mind and with
+ one heart.
+
+3. Utrobique. 3. In this world and in the next,
+
+4. PRO NOBIS semper oremus, 4. Let us always pray,
+
+5. Pressuras et angustias mutua 5. With mutual charity RELIEVING out
+caritate relevemus, sufferings and afflictions.
+
+6. Et si quis istinc nostrum 6. And may the CHARITY OF HIM,
+prior divinæ dignationis celeritate who, by the divine facour, shall
+præcesserit, perseveret apud Dominum first depart hence, still persevere
+NOSTRA DILECTIO, before the Lord;
+
+7. Pro fratribus et sororibus 7. May HIS prayer, for our brethren
+nostris apud misericordiam patris and sisters, not cease.
+non cesset oratio.
+
+In this translation, by inserting the words, _in our prayers_, which are
+not in the original in the first clause; by rendering the adverb
+_utrobique_, IN THIS WORLD AND IN THE NEXT, in the third clause; by
+omitting the words _pro nobis, for each other_, which are in the
+original, in the fourth clause; by changing in the fifth the verb
+_relevemus, let us relieve_, implying another branch of their mutual
+kindness, into the participle _relieving_, which may imply, that the
+relief alluded to was also to be conveyed by the medium of their
+prayers; by substituting _the charity of him_, in place of _nostra
+dilectio, our charity_, in the sixth; and by inserting the word _his_,
+which is not in the original, before _prayer_, where the grammar of the
+sentence requires _our_, in the seventh clause;--by these means the
+translator makes Cyprian express a sentiment far removed from what the
+words of Cyprian, in their plain and natural sense, convey. It must,
+however, be borne in mind, as we have shown in our examination of the
+passage, that the sentiment of Cyprian, even as it is thus unduly
+extracted from his words, would not in the remotest degree countenance
+the invocation of saints. It would do no more than imply his belief,
+that the faithful departed may take an interest in the welfare of their
+surviving friends on earth, and promote that welfare by their prayers; a
+point which, in the preface, is mentioned as one of those topics, the
+discussion of which would be avoided in this inquiry, as quite distinct
+from the invocation of saints. {406}
+
+Note.--Page 176.
+
+An extract from Eusebius, unnoticed in the text of this work, has
+recently been cited as conveying his testimony in favour of the
+invocation of saints. I have judged it better to defer the consideration
+of it to the appendix. It has been cited in these terms: "In the fourth
+century Eusebius of Cæsarea thus writes: 'May we be found worthy by the
+prayers and intercessions of all the saints.'" [Dr. Wiseman's Lectures,
+vol. ii. p. 107. Lect. xiii. Berington and Kirk, p. 431.] To form a just
+estimate of this alleged testimony, it is requisite that we have before
+us not only that incomplete clause, but the whole passage purporting to
+contain, in these words, the closing sentences of a commentary on
+Isaiah: [Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1707. Dr. Wiseman's reference is
+"Com. in Isai. Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1706."]
+
+"'And they shall be for a spectacle to all flesh.' To what flesh?
+Altogether to that which shall be somewhere punished? Nay, to that which
+shall of the heavenly vision be deemed worthy, concerning which it was
+said before, All flesh shall come to worship before me, of which may we
+also be deemed worthy by the prayers and intercessions of all the
+saints. Amen."
+
+In examining this passage I am willing for the present that all its
+clauses should be accepted as the genuine words of Eusebius, and
+accepted too in the meaning attached to them by those who have cited
+them. And to what do they amount? If these are indeed his expressions,
+Eusebius believed that the saints departed can forward our spiritual
+welfare by their prayers and ministering offices; and he uttered his
+desire that we might thus be benefited. Now whether we agree with him or
+not in that belief; whether we consider the faithful departed as able to
+take an interest in our welfare and to promote it, or regard such an
+opinion as without foundation in the word of God and in primitive
+doctrine; the belief implied and the wish expressed here by Eusebius,
+are widely indeed removed from the act of suppliantly invoking the
+saints departed, and resorting to them with entreaties for their prayers
+and intercessions in our behalf. These two things, although often
+confounded, are far from being equivalent; and by all who would
+investigate with fairness the subject of our inquiry, they must be
+carefully kept distinct. The invocation of saints being the single point
+in question, our business is to ascertain, not what opinions Eusebius
+may have {407} entertained as to the condition, and power, and offices
+of the saints departed, but whether he invoked them; whether he had
+recourse to them with supplications for their prayers, or aid and
+succour. And keeping this closely in view, even if we admit this passage
+to be genuine, and interpret it as those who have cited it wish it to be
+interpreted, we find in it no authority for the invocation of saints. A
+Christian would be no more countenanced by this language of Eusebius in
+suppliantly invoking departed saints, than he would in praying to the
+angels for their help and mediation be countenanced by the terms of the
+prayer in regard to them, addressed by the Anglican Church to God, "O
+everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services of
+angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant, that as thy holy
+angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by THY appointment they may
+succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."
+Whoever petitions them, makes them Gods--Deos qui rogat ille facit.
+
+But whilst, for the sake of the argument, I have admitted this passage
+to be genuine, and correctly translated, and have shown that whether
+genuine or not, and even if it be thus correctly translated, it affects
+not in the least the issue of our inquiry, I do not feel at liberty to
+withhold the acknowledgment of my persuasion that in this concession I
+grant too much. For, in the first place, I am assured, that if the
+passage came from the pen of Eusebius, no one is justified in confining
+the desire and wish contained in it to the intercessions and prayers of
+the saints in heaven; and, secondly, I see reasons for inferring that
+the last clause was framed and attached to this work, not by Eusebius
+himself, but by some editor or scribe.
+
+In support of my first persuasion, I would observe that the very
+language of the writer of these comments on Isaiah and the Psalms
+precludes us from regarding the Saints departed as exclusively
+constituting those "holy ones" by whose intercessions and prayers he
+expresses his desire that our spiritual welfare may be promoted. In this
+very comment on Isaiah (ch. vi. 2. p. 376), when he is speaking of the
+heavenly inhabitants, and illustrates his views by God's dealings
+towards the children of men in this world, he employs this expression:
+"For as among men the Saints of God partake of more excellent graces."
+On the 67th (68th) Ps. v. 34, having interpreted the words, "his
+strength is in the clouds," as referring to the {408} prophets and
+teachers of divine wisdom, under the guidance of the Spirit, pouring
+heavenly truths upon the souls of men as the clouds drop rain on fertile
+lands, he proceeds thus to comment on the expression, "God is wonderful
+among his Saints." [Vol. i. p. 364. The English translation refers the
+word "holy" to places, not persons.] "These Saints are different from
+those before called Apostles and prophets. And who can they be, except
+those who out of all nations are deemed worthy of purity and holiness,
+among whom God is wonderful, giving to them power and strength?" Thus in
+perfect accordance with the language of this writer, the Saints, from
+whose prayers and intercessions he desires to derive spiritual benefits,
+may be the Saints of God on earth--in the same state with those saints
+still living in the flesh, whose prayers St. Paul desired to be offered
+up for himself, that by them a door of utterance to speak the mystery of
+Christ might be opened unto him [Coloss. i. 2; iv. 2, 3.]--and with
+those saints to whom the same Apostle wrote at Philippi: "To all the
+saints in Christ Jesus:" and to whom he sent the greetings of the saints
+who then surrounded him: "ALL the SAINTS salute you." [Phil i. 1; iv.
+22.]
+
+But before the closing words of this paragraph, whatever be its meaning,
+be acknowledged as the genuine and undoubted production of Eusebius, I
+would suggest the careful weighing of some considerations, which appear
+to me to involve serious difficulties.
+
+1. First, through all the voluminous works of Eusebius, I have found in
+no single passage any allusion to the prayers of saints departed, or to
+their ministering offices in our behalf, though numberless openings show
+themselves for the natural introduction of such a subject.
+
+2. Secondly, among all the various works and treatises of Eusebius, I
+have not found one which is closed by any termination of the kind; on
+the contrary, they all end with remarkable suddenness and abruptness,
+precisely as this comment would end, were the sentence under
+consideration removed. Each, indeed, of the books of his Ecclesiastical
+History, is followed by a notice of the close of the book, in some cases
+too that notice involving a religious sentiment: for example, at the
+close of the 10th book we read: "With the help of God, the end of the
+tenth book." But that these are appendages made by an editor or scribe
+is evident in itself, and moreover {409} in many instances is shown by
+such sentences as these, "And this we have found in a certain copy in
+the 8th volume:" "This is in some copies, as if omitted from the 8th
+book." I find no one instance of Eusebius bringing a chapter or a
+treatise to its close by any religious sentiment, or any termination of
+the nature here contemplated.
+
+It is also difficult to conceive that any author, having the flow and
+connexion of the whole passage present to his mind, would himself have
+appended this ejaculation as we now find it. We know that editors and
+scribes often attached a sentiment of their own to the closing words of
+an author. And it seems far more probable, that a scribe not having the
+full drift of the argument mainly before him, but catching the
+expression, "heavenly vision," appended such an ejaculation. That the
+writer himself should introduce such a sentence by the connecting link
+of a relative pronoun feminine, which must of necessity be referred, not
+as the grammatical construction would suggest to the feminine noun
+preceding it,--not to any word expressed or understood in the
+intervening clause preceding it,--not to the last word in the sentence
+even before that intervening clause, nor yet to the principal and
+leading subject immediately under discussion and thrice repeated,--but
+to a noun incidentally introduced, seems, to say the least, strange and
+unnatural. "And they shall be for a spectacle to all flesh. To what
+flesh? Altogether to that which shall be somewhere punished? Nay, to
+that which shall of the heavenly vision be deemed worthy, concerning
+WHICH it was said before, All FLESH shall come to worship before me, of
+which may we also be deemed worthy by the prayers and intercessions of
+all the saints. Amen." But the classical reader will appreciate these
+remarks more satisfactorily by examining them with reference to the
+passage in the original language.
+
+[Greek: Kai esontai eis orasin pasaei sarki. poiai de sarki; ae pantos
+pou taei kolasthaesomenaei; taes de epouraniou theas kataxiothaesomenaei
+peri HAES anotero elegeto aexei pasa sarx tou proskunaesai enopion mou,
+HAES kai haemeis axiotheiaemen euchais kai presbeiais panton ton hagion,
+amaen.]
+
+Note.--Page 181.
+
+ATHANASIUS.
+
+In the text I observed that some Roman Catholic writers of the present
+day had cited the homily there shown to be utterly spurious, {410} as
+the genuine work of St. Athanasius, and as recording his testimony in
+defence of the invocation of Saints. The passage there referred to Dr.
+Wiseman thus introduces, and comments upon.
+
+"St. Athanasius, the most zealous and strenuous supporter that the
+Church ever possessed of the divinity of Jesus Christ, and consequently
+of his infinite superiority over all the saints, thus enthusiastically
+addresses his ever-blessed Mother: 'Hear now, O daughter of David;
+incline thine ear to our prayers. We raise our cry to thee. Remember us,
+O most holy Virgin, and for the feeble eulogiums we give thee, grant us
+great gifts from the treasures of thy graces, thou who art full of
+grace. Hail, Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Queen and
+mother of God, intercede for us.' Mark well," continues Dr. Wiseman,
+"these words; 'grant us great gifts, from the treasures of thy graces;'
+as if he hoped directly to receive them from her. Do Catholics use
+stronger words than these? Or did St. Athanasius think or speak with us,
+or with Protestants?"
+
+In answer to these questions I reply with sure and certain confidence,
+first, that the genuine words of St. Athanasius himself prove him to
+have spoken and thought with the Anglican Church, and not with the Roman
+Church on the invocation of saints and angels, and the blessed Virgin
+Mary; and secondly, that whatever words Roman Catholics use, whether
+stronger or not than these, these words on which the above questions are
+put, never came forth from the pen of St. Athanasius. Their spuriousness
+is not a question of doubt or difficulty. It has been shown in the text
+that the whole homily has been for ages utterly repudiated, as a work
+falsely attributed to St. Athanasius. It is indeed very disheartening to
+those, whose object is the discovery and the establishment of the truth,
+to find works cited in evidence as the genuine productions of primitive
+Christian teachers, which have been so long ago, and so repeatedly, and
+that not by members of another communion, but by the most learned men of
+the Church of Rome, adjudged to be spurious. I do not mean that I think
+it not fully competent for a writer of the present day to call in
+question, and overrule and set aside the decisions of former editors, as
+to the genuine or the spurious character of any work. On the contrary I
+am persuaded that a field is open in that department of theology, which
+would richly repay all the time and labour and expense, which persons
+well qualified for the task could bestow upon its culture. What I lament
+is this, that after a work has been deliberately condemned as
+unquestionably {411} spurious, by competent and accredited judges for
+two centuries and a half at the least, that very work should be now
+cited as genuine and conclusive evidence, without any the most distant
+allusion to the judgment which had condemned it, or even to any
+suspicion of its being a forgery. In this instance, also, Dr. Wiseman
+has implicitly followed the compilation of Messrs. Berington and Kirk.
+This is evident, because the extract, as it stands word for word the
+same in his Lectures and their compilation, is not found as one passage
+in the spurious homily, but is made up of sentences selected from
+different clauses, and put together so as to make one paragraph. It is
+worthy of notice, that in quoting their authority, both Dr. Wiseman, and
+those whom he follows, refer us to the very volume in which the
+Benedictine editors declare that there was no learned man, who did not
+pronounce the work to be spurious; and in which also they quote at
+length the letter of Baronius which had proved it to be a forgery. [Dr.
+Wiseman's Lectures, vol. ii. p. 108, from Berington and Kirk, p. 430,
+431.]
+
+Note.--Page 231. (Decree of the Council of Trent.) [Canones et Decreta
+Sacros. OEcumen. et Genera. Concilii Tridentini, &c. Rom. fol. A.D.
+1564.]
+
+Mandat sancta Synodus omnibus Episcopis, et ceteris docendi munus
+curamque sustinentibus, ut juxta Catholicæ, et Apostolicæ Ecclesiæ usum,
+a primævis Christianæ religionis temporibus receptum, sanctorumque
+Patrum consensionem, et sacrorum Conciliorum decreta, inprimis de
+Sanctorum intercessione, invocatione, Reliquiarum honore, et legitimo
+imaginum usu, fideles diligenter instruant, docentes eos, Sanctos, una
+cum Christo regnantes, orationes suas pro hominibus Deo offerre; bonum
+atque utile esse suppliciter eos invocare; et ob beneficia impetranda a
+Deo per Filium ejus Jesum Christum, Dominum nostrum, qui solus noster
+Redemptor et Salvator est, ad eorum orationes, opem, auxiliumque
+confugere: illos vero, qui negant sanctos æternâ felicitate in coelo
+fruentes, invocandos esse; aut qui asserunt, vel illos pro hominibus non
+orare, vel eorum, ut pro nobis etiam singulis orent, invocationem esse
+idololatriam, vel pugnare cum verbo Dei, adversarique honori unius
+Mediatoris Dei et hominum, Jesu Christi, vel stultum esse, in coelo
+regnantibus voce, vel mente supplicare, impie sentire. Sanctorum quoque
+Martyrum, et aliorum cum Christo viventium Sancta corpora, {412} quæ
+viva membra fuerunt Christi, et templum Spiritus Sancti, ab ipso ad
+æternam vitam suscitanda et glorificanda, a fidelibus veneranda esse;
+per quæ multa beneficia a Deo hominibus præstantur: ita ut affirmantes,
+Sanctorum Reliquiis venerationem, atque honorem non deberi; vel eas,
+aliaque sacra monumenta a fidelibus inutiliter honorari; atque eorum
+opis impetrandæ causa sanctorum memorias frustra frequentari; omnino
+damnandos esse, prout jampridem eos damnavit, et nunc etiam damnat
+Ecclesia. [De Invocatione, Veneratione, et Reliquiis Sanctorum, et
+Sacris Imaginibus, p. 202.]
+
+Note.--Pages 369 and 390.
+
+In a prefatory epistle, addressed to the "Chaplains, Wardens, and
+Brethren of the Holy Catholic Gild," in Huddersfield, Dr. Wiseman (p. 4)
+expresses himself thus: "Yesterday I laid the badge of your association
+at the feet of the sovereign pontiff, and it was most condescendingly
+and graciously received. But this is not all. As I had foretold, I found
+His Holiness fully informed of your establishment and public
+manifestation; and I had the satisfaction of hearing him express his
+WISH THAT SIMILAR INSTITUTIONS SHOULD REVIVE ALL OVER THE COUNTRY."
+
+Towards the close of the sermon, to which this preface is prefixed, and
+which was preached at St. Patrick's Chapel, Huddersfield, Sept. 26th,
+1839, and was printed at York in the present year [A.D. 1840], the
+preacher draws the comparison, referred to in page 370 of this work,
+between England and the continent, and between England as it is, and
+England as it once was, and as, in his view, it ought to be again. After
+describing the scenes which you may witness in Roman Catholic countries,
+"where you might see the poor and the afflicted crowding round some
+altar, where their pious confidence or experience of past favours leads
+them to hope that their prayers will best be heard through the
+intercession of our dear Lady," he thus proceeds: "Oh that the time had
+come, when a similar expression of our devout feelings towards her
+should publicly be made, and all should unite to show her that honour,
+that reverence, and love which she deserves from all Christians, and
+which has so long been denied her amongst us. There was a time when
+England was second to {413} no other country upon earth in the discharge
+of this holy duty; and it will be only PART OF THE RESTORATION OF OUR
+GOOD AND GLORIOUS DAYS OF OLD to revive to the utmost this part of
+ancient piety. Therefore do I feel sincere joy at witnessing the
+establishment of this excellent brotherhood, and its public
+manifestation in this town this day, both as a means of encouraging
+devotion and virtue, and as a return to one of the venerable
+institutions of our forefathers. Enter then fully into its spirit."
+
+["A Sermon delivered at St. Patrick's, Huddersfield, Sept. 26th, 1839,
+on occasion of the Holy Catholic Gild there established, by the Rev. N.
+Wiseman, D.D., Professor in the University of Rome. York, 1840," p. 22,
+23. The first quotation made in p. 390, is from this Sermon.]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Primitive Christian Worship, by James Endell Tyler
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Primitive Christian Worship, by James Endell Tyler
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Primitive Christian Worship
+ Or, The Evidence Of Holy Scripture And The Church, Against The
+ Invocation Of Saints And Angels, And The Blessed Virgin Mary.
+
+
+Author: James Endell Tyler
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2004 [EBook #14072]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRIMITIVE CHRISTIAN WORSHIP ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David King, The Million Book Project and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>PRIMITIVE CHRISTIAN WORSHIP</h1>
+<h2>OR, THE EVIDENCE OF HOLY SCRIPTURE AND THE CHURCH, AGAINST THE
+INVOCATION OF SAINTS AND ANGELS, AND THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY.</h2>
+<h2>BY J. ENDELL TYLER, B.D.</h2>
+<h3>RECTOR OF ST. GILES-IN-THE-FIELDS, AND CANON RESIDENTIARY OF
+ST. PAUL'S.</h3>
+<hr />
+<center>Speaking the truth in love.&mdash;EPH. iv. 15</center>
+<center>Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.&mdash;1
+THESS. v. 21.</center>
+<h3>SECOND EDITION</h3>
+<h3>LONDON</h3>
+<h3>1847.</h3>
+<hr />
+<center>TO</center>
+<center>THE ONE</center>
+<center>HOLY, CATHOLIC, AND APOSTOLIC CHURCH,</center>
+<center>AS A TRIBUTE OF VENERATION AND LOVE,</center>
+<center>THIS WORK IS DEDICATED,</center>
+<center>BY HER DEVOTED SERVANT AND SON.</center>
+<h3>Nov. 25, 1840.</h3>
+<hr />
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+<p>Members of the Church of Rome, and members of the Church of
+England, have too long entertained towards each other feelings of
+hostility. Instead of being drawn together as brethren by the cords
+of that one faith which all Catholics hold dear, their sentiments
+of sympathy and affection have been absorbed by the abhorrence with
+which each body has regarded the characteristic tenets of its
+adversary; whilst the terms "heretic" on the one side, and
+"idolater" on the opposite, have rendered any attempt to bring
+about a free and friendly discussion of each other's views almost
+hopeless.</p>
+<p>Every Christian must wish that such animosities, always
+ill-becoming the servants and children of the God of love, should
+cease for ever. Truth indeed must never be sacrificed to secure
+peace; nor must we be tempted by the seductiveness of a liberality,
+falsely so called, to soften down and make light of those
+differences which keep the Churches of England and Rome asunder.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagepreface5" id=
+"pagepreface5"></a>{Pref 5}</span> But surely the points at issue
+may be examined without exasperation and rancour; and the results
+of inquiries carried on with a singleness of mind, in search only
+for the truth, may be offered on the one side without insult or
+offence, and should be received and examined without contempt and
+scorn on the other.</p>
+<p>The writer of this address is not one in whom early associations
+would foster sentiments of evil will against members of the Church
+of Rome; or encourage any feeling, incompatible with regard and
+kindness, towards the conscientious defenders of her creed. From
+his boyhood he has lived on terms of friendly intercourse and
+intimacy with individuals among her laity and of her priesthood. In
+his theological pursuits, he has often studied her ritual,
+consulted her commentators, and perused the homilies of her
+divines; and, withal, he has mourned over her errors and misdoings,
+as he would have sighed over the faults of a friend, who, with many
+good qualities still to endear him, had unhappily swerved from the
+straight path of rectitude and integrity.</p>
+<p>In preparing these pages, the author is not conscious of having
+been influenced by any motive in the least degree inconsistent with
+sentiments of charity and respect; at all events, he would hope
+that no single expression may have escaped from his pen tending to
+hurt unnecessarily the feelings of any sincere Christian. He has
+been prompted by a hope that he may perhaps <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pagepreface6" id="pagepreface6"></a>{Pref
+6}</span> induce some individuals to investigate with candour, and
+freedom, and with a genuine desire of arriving at the truth, the
+subjects here discussed; and that whilst some, even of those who
+may have hitherto acquiesced in erroneous doctrines and practices,
+may be convinced of their departure from Christian verity; others,
+if tempted to desert the straight path of primitive worship, may be
+somewhat strengthened and armed by the views presented to them
+here, against the captivating allurements of religious error.</p>
+<p>Whether the present work may, by the Divine favour, be made in
+some degree instrumental in forwarding these results, or in
+effecting any good, the author presumes not to anticipate; but he
+will hope for the best. He believes that the honest pursuit of the
+truth, undertaken with an humble zeal for God's glory, and in
+dependence on his guidance and light, is often made successful
+beyond our own sanguine expectations.</p>
+<p>With these views the following pages are offered, as the result
+of an inquiry into the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of
+Saints and Angels, and of the Blessed Virgin Mary.</p>
+<p>To prevent misconception as to the nature of this work, the
+author would observe, that since the single subject here proposed
+to be investigated is, "The Invocation of Saints and Angels and the
+Blessed Virgin Mary," he has scrupulously avoided the discussion of
+many important and interesting questions usually considered
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagepreface7" id=
+"pagepreface7"></a>{Pref 7}</span> to be connected with it. He has
+not, for example, discussed the practice of praying for the dead;
+he has investigated no theory relating to the soul's intermediate
+state between our dissolution and the final judgment; he has
+canvassed no opinion as to any power in the saints and the faithful
+departed to succour either by their prayers or by any other
+offices, those who are still on earth, and on their way to God.
+From these and such like topics he has abstained, not because he
+thinks lightly of their importance, nor because his own mind is
+perplexed by doubts concerning them; but because the introduction
+of such points would tend to distract the thoughts from the
+exclusive contemplation of the one distinct question to be
+investigated.</p>
+<p>He is also induced to apprise the reader, that in his work, as
+he originally prepared it, a far wider field, even on the single
+subject of the present inquiry, was contemplated than this volume
+now embraces. His intention was to present an historical survey of
+the doctrine and practice of the invocation of Saints and Angels,
+and the Virgin, tracing it from the first intimation of any thing
+of the kind through its various progressive stages, till it had
+reached its widest prevalence in Christendom. When, however, he had
+arranged and filled up the results of the inquiries which he made
+into the sentiments and habits of those later writers of the
+Church, whose works he considered it necessary to examine with this
+specific object in view, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pagepreface8" id="pagepreface8"></a>{Pref 8}</span> he found that
+the bulk of the work would be swollen far beyond the limits which
+he had prescribed to himself; he felt also that the protracted
+investigation would materially interfere with the solution of that
+one independent question which he trusts now is kept unmixed with
+any other. He has, consequently, in the present address limited the
+range of his researches on the nature of Primitive Christian
+Worship, to the writers of the Church Catholic who lived before the
+Nicene Council, or were members of it.</p>
+<p>In one department, however, he has been under the necessity of
+making, to a certain extent, an exception to this rule. Having
+found no allusion to the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin,
+on which much of the religious worship now paid to her seems to be
+founded, in any work written before the middle of the fifth
+century, he has been induced, in his examination of the grounds on
+which that doctrine professes to be built, to cite authors who
+flourished subsequently to the Nicene Council.</p>
+<p>The author would also mention, that although in substance he has
+prepared this work for the examination of all Christians equally,
+and trusts that it will be found not less interesting or profitable
+to the members of his own Church than to any other, yet he has
+throughout adopted the form of an address to his Roman Catholic
+countrymen. Such a mode of conveying his sentiments he considered
+to be less controversial, while the facts and the arguments would
+remain the same. His object <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pagepreface9" id="pagepreface9"></a>{Pref 9}</span> is not to
+condemn, but to convince: not to hold up to obloquy those who are
+in error, but, as far as he may be allowed, to diminish an evil
+where it already exists, and to check its further prevalence.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagepreface10" id=
+"pagepreface10"></a>{Pref 10}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<p><a href="#chap1.1">PART I.&mdash;CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+<p>Introduction&mdash;The duty of examining the grounds of our
+Faith&mdash;Principles of conducting that examination&mdash;Errors
+to be avoided&mdash;Proposed plan of the present work</p>
+<p><a href="#chap1-2">CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect1-2-1">1. Evidence of Holy Scripture, how
+to be ascertained</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-2-2">2. Direct Evidence of the Old
+Testament</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-2-3">3. Evidence of the Old Testament,
+continued</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-2-4">4. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; New Testament</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap1-3">CHAPTER III.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect1-3-1">1. Evidence of Primitive
+Writers</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-3-2">2. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Apostolic
+Fathers</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap1-4">CHAPTER IV.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect1-4-1">1. Evidence of Justin
+Martyr</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-2">2. Evidence of Iren&aelig;us</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-3">3. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Clement of
+Alexandria</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-4">4. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Tertullian</a><br />
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Methodius<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-5">5. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Origen</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-6">6. Supplementary Section on Origen</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-7">7. Evidence of St. Cyprian</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-8">8. Evidence of Lactantius</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-9">9. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Eusebius</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-10">10. Apostolical Canons and
+Constitutions</a><br />
+<a href="#sect1-4-11">11. Evidence of St. Athanasius</a><br />
+See also Appendix</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagepreface11" id=
+"pagepreface11"></a>{Pref 11}</span>
+<p><a href="#chap2-1">PART II.&mdash;CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+<p>State of Worship at the time of the Reformation</p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect2-1-1">1. "Hours of the Virgin"</a><br />
+<a href="#sect2-1-2">2. Service of Thomas Becket</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap2-2">CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+<p>Council of Trent See also Appendix</p>
+<p><a href="#chap2-3">CHAPTER III.</a></p>
+<p>Present Service in the Church of Rome</p>
+<p>PART III.</p>
+<p>WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN MARY.</p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-1">CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect3-1-1">1. Introductory Remarks</a><br />
+<a href="#sect3-1-2">2. Evidence of Holy Scripture</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-2">CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+<p>Evidence of Primitive Writers</p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-3">CHAPTER III.</a></p>
+<p>Assumption of the Virgin Mary</p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-4">CHAPTER IV.</a></p>
+<p>Councils of Constantinople, Ephesus, and Chalcedon</p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-5">CHAPTER V.</a></p>
+<p>&sect; <a href="#sect3-5-1">1. Present authorized Worship of the
+Virgin</a><br />
+<a href="#sect3-5-2">2. Worship of the Virgin, continued</a><br />
+<a href="#sect3-5-3">3. Bonaventura</a><br />
+<a href="#sect3-5-4">4. Biel, Damianus, Bernardinus de Bustis,
+Bernardinus Senensis,&amp;c.</a><br />
+See also Appendix<br />
+<a href="#sect3-5-5">5. Modern Works of Devotion</a><br />
+See also Appendix</p>
+<p><a href="#conclusion">CONCLUSION</a></p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page1" id="page1"></a>{1}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>PART I.</h2>
+<h3><a name="chap1.1" id="chap1.1">CHAPTER I.</a></h3>
+<h4>THE DUTY OF PRIVATE JUDGMENT.</h4>
+<p>Fellow Christians,</p>
+<p>Whilst I invite you to accompany me in a free and full
+investigation of one of those tenets and practices which keep
+asunder the Roman and the Anglican Church, I am conscious in how
+thankless an undertaking I have engaged, and how unwelcome to some
+is the task in which I call upon you to join. Many among the
+celebrated doctors of the Roman Church have taught their disciples
+to acquiesce in a view of their religious obligation widely
+different from the laborious and delicate office of ascertaining
+for themselves the soundness of the principles in which they have
+been brought up. It has been with many accredited teachers a
+favourite maxim, that individuals will most acceptably fulfil their
+duty by abstaining <span class="pagenum"><a name="page2" id=
+"page2"></a>{2}</span> from active and personal inquiries into the
+foundations of their faith; and by giving an implicit credence to
+whatever the Roman Church pronounces to be the truth<a id=
+"footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href=
+"#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>. Should this book fall into the hands
+of any who have adopted that maxim for the rule of their own
+conduct as believers, its pages will of course afford them no help;
+nor can they take any interest in our pursuit, or its results.
+Whilst, however, I am aware, that until the previous question
+(involving the grounds on which the Church of Rome builds her claim
+to be the sole, exclusive, and infallible teacher of Christians in
+all the doctrines of religion,) shall have been solved, many
+members of her body would throw aside, as preposterous, any
+treatise which professed to review the soundness of her
+instructions; I have been at the same time assured, that with many
+of her communion the case is far otherwise; and that instead of
+their being averse to all investigation, a calm, candid, and
+friendly, but still a free and unreserved inquiry into the disputed
+articles of their creed, is an object of their sincere desire. On
+this ground I trust some preliminary reflections upon the duty of
+proving all things, with a view of holding the more fast
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id="page3"></a>{3}</span> and
+sure what is good, may be considered as neither superfluous nor out
+of place.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote1" name=
+"footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+<p>It is sometimes curious to observe the language in which the
+teachers and doctors themselves profess their entire, unlimited,
+and implicit submission of all their doctrines, even in the most
+minute particulars, to the judgment and will of the authorities of
+Rome. Instances are of very frequent occurrence. Thus Joannes de
+Carthagena, a very voluminous writer of homilies, closes different
+parts of his work in these words, "These and all mine I willingly
+subject to the judgment of the Catholic Roman Church, ready, if
+there be written any thing in any way in the very least point
+contrary to her doctrine, to correct, amend, erase, and utterly
+abolish it." Hom. Cath. De Sacris Arcanis Deipar&aelig; et Josephi.
+Paris, 1615. page 921.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>But just as it would belong to another and a separate province
+to examine, at such length as its importance demands, the claims of
+the Church of Rome to be acknowledged as that universal interpreter
+of the word and will of God, from whose decisions there is no
+appeal; so would it evidently be incompatible with the nature of
+the present address, to dwell in any way corresponding with the
+magnitude and delicacy of the subject, on the duty, the
+responsibility, and the privilege of private judgment; on the
+dangers to which an unchastened exercise of it may expose both an
+individual, and the cause of Christian truth; or on the rules which
+sound wisdom and the analogy of faith may prescribe to us in the
+government of ourselves with respect to it. My remarks, therefore,
+on this subject will be as few and brief as I believe to be
+consistent with an acknowledgment of the principles upon which this
+work has been conducted.</p>
+<p>The foundation, then, on which, to be safe and beneficial, the
+duty of private judgment, as we maintain, must be built, is very
+far indeed removed from that common and mischievous notion of it
+which would encourage us to draw immediate and crude deductions
+from Holy Scripture, subject only to the control and the colouring
+of our own minds, responsible for nothing further than our own
+consciousness of an honest intention. Whilst we claim a release
+from that degrading yoke which neither are we nor were our fathers
+able to bear, we deprecate for ourselves and for our
+fellow-believers that licentiousness which in doctrine and practice
+tempts a man to follow merely what is right in his own eyes,
+uninfluenced by the example, the precepts, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page4" id="page4"></a>{4}</span> and the
+authority of others, and owning no submissive allegiance to those
+laws which the wise and good have established for the benefit of
+the whole body. The freedom which we ask for ourselves, and desire
+to see imparted to all, is a rational liberty, tending to the good,
+not operating to the bane of its possessors; ministering to the
+general welfare, not to disorder and confusion. In the enjoyment of
+this liberty, or rather in the discharge of the duties and trusts
+which this liberty brings with it, we feel ourselves under an
+obligation to examine the foundations of our faith, to the very
+best of our abilities, according to our opportunities, and with the
+most faithful use of all the means afforded to us by its divine
+Author and finisher. Among those means, whilst we regard the Holy
+Scriptures as paramount and supreme, we appeal to the witness and
+mind of the Church as secondary and subsidiary; a witness not at
+all competing with Scripture, never to be balanced against it; but
+competing with our own less able and less pure apprehension of
+Scripture. In ascertaining the testimony of this witness, we
+examine the sentiments and practice of the ancient teachers of the
+Church; not as infallible guides, not as uniformly holding all of
+them the same opinions, but as most valuable helps in our
+examination of the evidence of the Church, who is, after all, our
+appointed instructor in the truths of the Gospel,&mdash;fallible in
+her individual members and branches, yet the sure witness and
+keeper of Holy Writ, and our safest guide on earth to the mind and
+will of God. When we have once satisfied ourselves that a doctrine
+is founded on Scripture, we receive it with implicit faith, and
+maintain it as a sacred deposit, entrusted to our keeping, to be
+delivered down whole and entire without our adding <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5"></a>{5}</span> thereto what to
+us may seem needful, or taking away what we may think
+superfluous.</p>
+<p>The state of the Christian thus employed, in acting for himself
+in a work peculiarly his own, is very far removed from the
+condition of one who labours in bondage, without any sense of
+liberty and responsibility, unconscious of the dignity of a free
+and accountable agent, and surrendering himself wholly to the
+control of a task-master. Equally is it distant from the conduct of
+one who indignantly casting off all regard for authority, and all
+deference to the opinions of others, boldly and proudly sets up his
+own will and pleasure as the only standard to which he will submit.
+For the model which we would adopt, as members of the Church, in
+our pursuit of Christian truth, we find a parallel and analogous
+case in a well-principled and well-disciplined son, with his way of
+life before him, exercising a large and liberal discretion in the
+choice of his pursuits; not fettered by peremptory paternal
+mandates, but ever voluntarily referring to those principles of
+moral obligation and of practical wisdom with which his mind has
+been imbued; shaping his course with modest diffidence in himself,
+and habitual deference to others older and wiser than himself, yet
+acting with the firmness and intrepidity of conscious rectitude of
+principle, and integrity of purpose; and under a constant sense of
+his responsibility, as well for his principles as for his
+conduct.</p>
+<p>Against the cogency of these maxims various objections have been
+urged from time to time. We have been told, that the exercise of
+private judgment in matters of religion, tends to foster errors of
+every diversity of character, and leads to heresy, scepticism, and
+infidelity: it is represented as rending the Church of Christ, and
+totally <span class="pagenum"><a name="page6" id=
+"page6"></a>{6}</span> subverting Christian unity, and snapping
+asunder at once the bond of peace. So also it has been often
+maintained, that the same cause robs individual Christians of that
+freedom from all disquietude and perplexity and anxious
+responsibility, that peace of mind, satisfaction, and content,
+which those personally enjoy, who surrender themselves implicitly
+to a guide, whom they believe to be unerring and infallible.</p>
+<p>For a moment let us pause to ascertain the soundness of such
+objections. And here anticipating, for argument's sake, the worst
+result, let us suppose that the exercise of individual inquiry and
+judgment (such as the best teachers in the Anglican Church are wont
+to inculcate) may lead in some cases even to professed infidelity;
+is it right and wise and justifiable to be driven by an abuse of
+God's gifts to denounce the legitimate and faithful employment of
+them? What human faculty&mdash;which among the most precious of the
+Almighty's blessings is not liable to perversion? What
+unquestionable moral duty can be found, which has not been
+transformed by man's waywardness into an instrument of evil? Nay,
+what doctrine of our holy faith has not the wickedness or the folly
+of unworthy men employed as a cloke for unrighteousness, and a
+vehicle for blasphemy? But by a consciousness of this liability in
+all things human, must we be tempted to suppress the truth? to
+disparage those moral duties? or to discountenance the cultivation
+of those gifts and faculties? Rather would not sound philosophy and
+Christian wisdom jointly enforce the necessity of improving the
+gifts zealously, of discharging the moral obligation to the full,
+and of maintaining the doctrine in all its integrity; but guarding
+withal, to the utmost of our power and watchfulness, against the
+abuses to which <span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id=
+"page7"></a>{7}</span> any of these things may be exposed? And we
+may trust in humble but assured confidence, that as it is the duty
+of a rational being, alive to his own responsibility, to inquire
+and judge for himself in things concerning the soul, with the most
+faithful exercise of his abilities and means; so the wise and
+merciful Ruler of our destinies will provide us with a sure way of
+escaping from all evils incident to the discharge of that duty, if,
+in reliance on his blessing, we honestly seek the truth, and
+perseveringly adhere to that way in which He will be our guide.</p>
+<p>It is a question very generally and very reasonably entertained
+among us, whether the implicit submission and unreserved surrender
+of ourselves to any human authority in matters of faith, (though
+whilst it lasts, it of course affords an effectual check to open
+scepticism,) does not ultimately and in very deed prove a far more
+prolific source of disguised infidelity. Doubts repressed as they
+arise, but not solved, silenced but not satisfied, gradually
+accumulate in spite of all external precaution; and at length (like
+streams pent back by some temporary barrier) break forth at once to
+an utter discarding of all authority, and an irrecoverable
+rejection of the Christian faith. From unlimited acquiescence in a
+guide whom our associations have invested with infallibility, the
+step is very short, and frequently taken, to entire apostasy and
+the renunciation of all belief.</p>
+<p>The state of undisturbed tranquillity and repose in one, who has
+divested himself of all responsibility in matters of religious
+belief and practice, enjoying an entire immunity from the anxious
+and painful labour of trying for himself the purity and soundness
+of his faith, is often painted in strong contrast with the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8"></a>{8}</span>
+lamentable condition of those who are driven about by every wind of
+novelty. The condition of such a man may doubtless be far more
+enviable than theirs, who have no settled fixed principles, and who
+wander from creed to creed, and from sect to sect, just as their
+fickle and roving minds suggest some transitory preference. But the
+believer must not be driven by the evils of one extreme to take
+refuge in the opposite. The whirlpool may be the more perilous, but
+the Christian mariner must avoid the rock also, or he will equally
+make shipwreck of his faith. He must with all his skill, and all
+his might, keep to the middle course, shunning that presumptuous
+confidence which scorns all authority, and boldly constitutes
+itself sole judge and legislator; but equally rescuing his mind
+from the thraldom which prostrates his reason, and paralyzes all
+the faculties of his judgment in a matter of indefeasible and awful
+responsibility.</p>
+<p>Here, too, it is questioned, and not without cause, whether the
+satisfaction and comfort so often represented in warm and
+fascinating colours, be really a spiritual blessing; or whether it
+be not a deception and fallacy, frequently ending in lamentable
+perplexity and confusion; like guarantees in secular concerns,
+which as long as they maintain unsuspected credit afford a most
+pleasing and happy security to any one who depends upon them; but
+which, when adverse fortune puts their responsibility to the test,
+may prove utterly worthless, and be traced only by losses and
+disappointments. Such a blind reliance on authority may doubtless
+be more easy and more free from care, than it is to gird up the
+loins of our mind, and engage in toilsome spiritual labour. But
+with a view to our own ultimate safety, wisdom bids us look to our
+foundations in time, and assure ourselves <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9"></a>{9}</span> of them;
+admonishing us that if they are unsound, the spiritual edifice
+reared upon them, however pleasing to the eye, or abounding in
+present enjoyments, will at length fall, and bury our hopes in its
+ruin.</p>
+<p>On these and similar principles, we maintain that it well
+becomes Christians, when the soundness of their faith, and the
+rectitude of their acts of worship, are called in question, "to
+prove all things, and hold fast that which is good." Thus, when the
+unbeliever charges us with credulity in receiving as a divine
+revelation what he scornfully rejects, it behoves us all (every one
+to the extent of his means and opportunities) to possess ourselves
+of the accumulated evidences of our holy faith, so that we may be
+able to give to our own minds, and to those who ask it of us, a
+reason for our hope. The result can assuredly be only the comfort
+of a still more unshaken conviction. Thus, too, when the
+misbeliever charges us with an undue and an unauthorized ascription
+of the Divine attributes to our Redeemer and to our Sanctifier,
+which he would confine to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
+exclusively of the Eternal Son and the Blessed Spirit, it well
+becomes every Catholic Christian to assure himself of the evidence
+borne by the Scriptures to the divinity of the Son and of the Holy
+Ghost, together with the inseparable doctrines of redemption by the
+blood of Christ, and sanctification by the Spirit of grace;
+appealing also in this investigation to the tradition of the
+Church, and the testimony of her individual members from the
+earliest times, as under God his surest and best guides. In both
+these cases, I can say for myself that I have acted upon my own
+principles, and to the very utmost of my faculties have scrutinized
+the foundations <span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id=
+"page10"></a>{10}</span> of my faith, and from each of those
+inquiries and researches I have risen with a satisfaction increased
+far beyond my first anticipations. What I had taken up in my youth
+on authority, I have been long assured of by a moral demonstration,
+which nothing can shake; and I cling to it with an affection,
+which, guarded by God's good providence, nothing in this world can
+dissolve or weaken.</p>
+<p>It is to engage in a similar investigation that I now most
+earnestly but affectionately invite the members of the Church of
+Rome, in order to ascertain for themselves the ground of their
+faith and practice in a matter of vast moment, and which, with
+other points, involves the principle of separation between the
+Roman and Anglican branches of the universal Church. Were the
+subjects of minor importance, or what the ancient writers were wont
+to call "things indifferent," reason and charity would prescribe
+that we should bear with each other, allowing a free and large
+discretion in any body of Christians, and not severing ourselves
+from them because we deemed our views preferable to theirs. In such
+a case we might well walk in the house of God as friends, without
+any interruption of the harmony which should exist between those
+who worship the true God with one heart and one mind, ever striving
+to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. But when the
+points at issue are of so vast moment; when two persons agreeing in
+the general principles of belief in the Gospel and its chief
+characteristic doctrines, yet find it impossible to join
+conscientiously in the same prayer, or the same acts of faith and
+worship, then the necessity is imperative on all who would not be
+parties to the utter breaking up of Christian unity, nor assist in
+propagating error, to make sure of their <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>{11}</span> foundations;
+and satisfy themselves by an honest inquiry and upright judgment,
+that the fault does not rest with them.</p>
+<p>Such appear to me both the doctrine and the practice of the
+INVOCATION OF SAINTS. I have endeavoured to conjecture in what
+light this doctrine and this practice would have presented itself
+to my mind, after a full and free inquiry into the nature and
+history and circumstances of the case, had I been brought up in
+communion with the Church of Rome; the question to be solved being,
+"Could I continue in her communion?" And the result of my inquiry
+is, that I must have either discarded that doctrine at once and for
+ever, or have joined with my lips and my knees in a worship which
+my reason condemned, and from which my heart shrunk. I must have
+either left the communion of Rome, or have continued to offer
+prayers to angels, and the spirits of departed mortals. Unless I
+had resolved at once to shut my eyes upon my own personal
+responsibility, and to surrender myself, mind and reason, soul and
+body, to the sovereign and undisputed control of others, never
+presuming to inquire into the foundation of what the Church of Rome
+taught; I must have sought some purer portion of the Catholic
+Church, in which her members addressed the One Supreme Being
+exclusively, without contemplating any other in the act of
+religious invocation. The distinction invented in comparatively
+late years, of the three kinds of worship; one for God, the second
+for the Virgin Mary, the third for Angels and Saints;&mdash;the
+distinction, too, between praying to a saint to give us good
+things, and praying to that saint to procure them for us at God's
+hand, (or, as the distinction <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page12" id="page12"></a>{12}</span> is sometimes made, into prayer
+direct, absolute, final, sovereign, confined to the Supreme Being
+on the one hand; and prayer oblique, relative, transitory,
+subordinate, offered to saints on the other,) would have appeared
+to me the ingenious and finely-drawn inventions of an advocate, not
+such a sound process of Christian simplicity as the mind could rest
+upon, with an undoubting persuasion that all was right.</p>
+<p>This, however, involves the very point at issue; and I now
+invite you, my Christian Brethren, to join with me, step by step,
+in a review of those several positions which have left on my mind
+the indelible conviction that I could never have passed my life in
+communion with that Church whose articles of fellowship maintained
+the duty of invoking saints and angels; and whose public offices
+were inseparably interwoven with addresses in prayer to other
+beings, than the Holy and undivided Trinity, the one only God.</p>
+<p>In pursuing this inquiry I have thought the most convenient and
+satisfactory division of our work would be&mdash;</p>
+<p>First, to ascertain what inference an unprejudiced study of the
+revealed will of God would lead us to make; both in the times of
+the elder covenant, when "holy men of old spake as they were moved
+by the Holy Ghost," and in that "fulness of time" when God spoke to
+us by his Son.</p>
+<p>Secondly, to examine into the belief and practice of the
+Primitive Church, beginning with the inspired Apostles of our
+Lord.</p>
+<p>Thirdly, to compare the results of those inquiries with the
+tenets and practice of the Church of Rome, with reference to three
+periods; the first immediately <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page13" id="page13"></a>{13}</span> preceding the Reformation; the
+second comprising the Reformation, and the proceedings of the
+Council of Trent; the third embracing the belief and practice of
+the present day.</p>
+<p>In this investigation, I purpose to reserve the worship of the
+Virgin Mary, called by Roman Catholic writers "Hyperdulia," and for
+various reasons the most important and interesting portion of the
+whole inquiry, for separate and distinct examination; except only
+so far as our review of any of the primitive writers may occasion
+some incidental departure from that rule.</p>
+<p>May God guide us to his truth!</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>{14}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap1-2" id="chap1-2">CHAPTER II.</a></h3>
+<h4><a name="sect1-2-1" id="sect1-2-1">SECTION I.</a>&mdash;THE
+EVIDENCE OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.</h4>
+<p>Here, Christian Brethren, bear with me if I briefly, but freely,
+recall to our thoughts on this first entrance upon a review of the
+inspired volume, the principles, and tone of mind, the temper and
+feelings, in a word, the frame both of the understanding and of the
+heart, with which we should study the sacred pages, on whatever
+subject we would try all things, and hold fast what should prove
+itself to be most in accordance with the will of God. Whether we
+would regard the two great parts into which the Holy Scriptures are
+divided, as the Old and the New Covenants; or whether we would
+prefer to call them the Old and the New Testaments, it matters not.
+Although different ideas and associations are suggested by those
+different names, yet, under either view, the same honest and good
+heart, the same patience of investigation, the same upright and
+unprejudiced judgment, the same exercise of our mental faculties,
+and the same enlightened conscience, must be brought to the
+investigation. In the one case we must endeavour to ascertain for
+ourselves the true intent and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page15" id="page15"></a>{15}</span> meaning of the inspired word
+of God, on the very same principles with those on which we would
+interpret a covenant between ourselves, and a person who had made
+it in full and unreserved reliance on our integrity, and on our
+high sense of equity, justice, and honour. In the other case we
+must bring the selfsame principles and feelings to bear on our
+inquiry, as we should apply in the interpretation of the last will
+and testament of a kind father, who with implicit confidence in our
+uprightness and straightforward dealing and affectionate anxiety to
+fulfil his intentions to the very utmost, had assigned to us the
+sacred duty of executor or trustee.</p>
+<p>Under the former supposition, our sincere solicitude would be to
+ascertain the true intent and meaning of the contracting parties,
+not to seek out plausible excuses for departing from it; not to
+cull out and exaggerate beyond their simple and natural bearing,
+such expressions in the deed of agreement, as might seem to justify
+us in adopting the view of the contract most agreeable to our
+present wishes and most favourable to our own interests. Rather it
+would be our fixed and hearty resolution, at whatever cost of time,
+or labour, or pecuniary sacrifice, or personal discomfort, to apply
+to the instrument our unbiassed powers of upright and honest
+interpretation.</p>
+<p>Or adopting the latter analogy, we should sincerely strive to
+ascertain the chief and leading objects of our parent's will; what
+were his intentions generally; what ruling principles seemed to
+pervade his views in framing the testament; and in all cases of
+obscurity and doubt, in every thing approaching an appearance of
+inconsistency, we should refer to that paramount principle as our
+test and guide. We should not for a moment <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>{16}</span> suffer
+ourselves to be tempted to seek for ambiguous expressions, which
+ingenuity might interpret so as to countenance our departure from
+the general drift of our parent's will, in cases where it was at
+variance with our own inclination, and where we could have wished
+that he had made another disposition of his property, or given to
+us a different direction, or trusted us with larger discretion.
+Moreover, in any points of difficulty, we should apply for
+assistance, in solving our doubts, to such persons as were most
+likely to have the power of judging correctly, and whose judgment
+would be least biassed by partiality and prejudice;&mdash;not to
+those whose credit was staked on the maintenance of those
+principles which best accorded with our own inclination. Especially
+if in either case some strong feeling should have been raised and
+spread abroad on any point, we should seek the judgment and counsel
+of those who had been familiar with the testator's intentions, or
+with the views of the covenanting party, before such points had
+become matter of discussion.</p>
+<p>Now only let us act upon these principles in the interpretation
+of THAT COVENANT in which the Almighty has vouchsafed to make
+Himself one of the contracting parties, and man, the creature of
+his hand, is the other: only let us act on these principles in the
+interpretation of THAT TESTAMENT of which the Saviour of the world
+is the Testator; and with God's blessing on our labours (a blessing
+never denied to sincere prayer and faithful exertions) we need not
+fear the result. Any other principle of interpretation will only
+confirm us in our prejudices, and involve us more inextricably in
+error.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>{17}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-2-2" id="sect1-2-2">SECTION II.</a>&mdash;DIRECT
+EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.</h4>
+<p>The first step in our proposed inquiry is to ascertain what
+evidence on the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of Saints
+and Angels can be fairly drawn from the revealed word of God in the
+Old Testament.</p>
+<p>Now, let us suppose that a person of a cultivated and
+enlightened mind, and of a sound and clear judgment, but hitherto a
+stranger to revelation, were required to study the ancient
+Scriptures with the single view of ascertaining what one object
+more than any other, subordinate to the great end of preparing the
+world for the advent of Messiah, seemed to be proposed by the
+wisdom of the Almighty in imparting to mankind that revelation;
+could he fix upon any other point as the one paramount and
+pervading principle with so much reason, as upon this, the
+preservation in the world of a practical belief in the perfect
+unity of God, and the fencing of his worship against the admixture
+of any other, of whatever character or form; The announcement that
+the Creator and Governor of the universe is the sole Giver of every
+temporal and spiritual blessing; the one only Being to whom, his
+rational creatures on earth should pay any religious service
+whatever; the one only Being to whom mortals must seek by prayer
+and invocation for the supply of any of their wants? Through the
+entire volume the inquirer would find that the unity of God is
+announced in every variety of expression; and that the exclusive
+worship <span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id=
+"page18"></a>{18}</span> of HIM alone is insisted upon and guarded
+with the utmost jealousy by assurances, by threats, and by
+promises, as the God who heareth prayer, alone to be called upon,
+alone to be invoked, alone to be adored. So to speak, he would find
+that recourse was had to every expedient for the express purpose of
+protecting God's people from the fatal error of embracing in their
+worship any other being or name whatever; not reserving supreme
+adoration for the Supreme Being, and admitting a sort of secondary
+honour and inferior mode of invocation to his exalted saints and
+servants; but banishing at once and for ever the most distant
+approximation towards religious honour&mdash;the veriest shadow of
+spiritual invocation to any other Being than Jehovah HIMSELF
+ALONE.</p>
+<p>In process of time, the heathen began to deify those mortals who
+had conferred signal benefits on the human race, or had
+distinguished themselves by their power and skill above their
+fellow-countrymen. Male and female divinities were multiplying on
+every side. Together with Jupiter, the fabled father of gods and
+men, worshipped under different names among the various tribes,
+were associated those "gods many and lords many," which ignorance
+and superstition, or policy and craft, had invented; and which
+shared some a greater, some a less portion of popular veneration
+and religious worship. To the people of God, the worshippers of
+Jehovah, it was again and again most solemnly and awfully
+denounced, that no such thing should be. "Thou shalt worship the
+Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve," is a mandate repeated
+in every variety of language, and under every diversity of
+circumstance. In some passages, indeed, together with the most
+clear assurances, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id=
+"page19"></a>{19}</span> that mankind need apply to no other
+dispenser of good, and can want no other as Saviour, advocate, or
+intercessor, that same truth is announced with such superabundance
+of repetition, that in the productions of any human writer the
+style would be chargeable with tautology. In the Bible, this
+repetition only the more forces upon the mind, and fixes there,
+that same principle as an eternal verity never to be questioned;
+never to be dispensed with; never to be diluted or qualified; never
+to be invaded by any service, worship, prayer, invocation, or
+adoration of any other being whatever. Let us take, for example,
+the forty-fifth chapter of Isaiah, in which the principle is most
+strongly and clearly illustrated. "I am the LORD, and there is none
+else: there is no God beside me; I girded thee, though thou hast
+not known me; that they may know from the rising of the sun and
+from the west, that there is none beside me: I am the Lord, and
+there is none else. They shall be ashamed, and also confounded, all
+of them; they shall go to confusion together, that are makers of
+idols. But Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting
+salvation: ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without
+end: I am the Lord, and there is none else. I said not unto the
+seed of Jacob, Seek ye me in vain. They have no knowledge that set
+up the wood of their graven image, and pray unto a god that cannot
+save. There is no god beside me; a just God and a Saviour; there is
+none beside me. Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the
+earth; for I am God, and there is none else."</p>
+<p>But it is needless to multiply these passages; and members of
+the Church of Rome will say, that they themselves acknowledge, as
+fully as members of the Anglican Church can do, that there is but
+one supreme <span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id=
+"page20"></a>{20}</span> God and Lord, to whom alone they intend to
+offer the worship due to God; and that the appeals which they offer
+by way of invocation to saints and angels for their services and
+intercession, do not militate against this principle. But here let
+us ask ourselves these few questions:&mdash;</p>
+<p>First, if it had been intended by the Almighty to forbid any
+religious application, such as is now professedly the invocation of
+saints and angels, to any other being than Himself alone, what
+words could have been employed more stringently prohibitory?</p>
+<p>Secondly, had such an address to saints and angels, as the
+Church of Rome now confessedly makes, been contemplated by our
+heavenly Lawgiver as an exception to the general rule, would not
+some saving clause, some expressions indicative of such an intended
+exception, have been discovered in some page or other of his
+revealed will?</p>
+<p>Thirdly, if such an appeal to the angels of heaven, or to the
+spirits of the just in heaven, had been sanctioned under the elder
+covenant, would not some example, some solitary instance, have been
+recorded of a faithful servant of Jehovah offering such a prayer
+with the Divine approbation?</p>
+<p>Lastly, when such strong and repeated declarations and
+injunctions interspersed through the entire volume of the Old
+Testament, unequivocally show the will of God to be, that no other
+object of religious worship should have place in the heart or on
+the tongue of his own true sons and daughters, can it become a
+faithful child of our Heavenly Father to be seeking for excuses and
+palliations, and to invent distinctions between one kind of worship
+and another?</p>
+<p>God Himself includes all in one universal prohibitory
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>{21}</span>
+mandate, "Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt
+thou serve." So far from according with those general rules for the
+interpretation of the revealed will of God, which we have already
+stated, and from which, in the abstract, probably few would
+dissent, an anxiety to force the word of God into at least an
+acquiescence in the invocation of saints and angels, indicates a
+disposition to comply with his injunctions, wherever they seem to
+clash with our own view, only so far as we cannot avoid compliance;
+and to seek how we may with any show of propriety evade the spirit
+of those commands. Instead of that full, free, and unstinted
+submission of our own inclinations and propensities to the
+Almighty's will wherever we can discover it, which those entertain
+whom the Lord seeketh to worship Him; to look for exceptions and to
+act upon them, bears upon it the stamp of a reserved and grudging
+service. After so many positive warnings, enactments, and
+denunciations, against seeking by prayer the aid of any other being
+whatever, surely a positive command would have been absolutely
+necessary to justify a mortal man in preferring any prayer to any
+being, saint, angel, or archangel, save only the Supreme Deity
+alone. Instead of any such command or even permission appearing,
+not one single word occurs, from the first syllable in the Book of
+Genesis to the last of the prophet Malachi, which could even by
+implication be brought to countenance the practice of approaching
+any created being in prayer.</p>
+<p>But let us now look to the examples on this subject afforded in
+the Old Testament. Many, very many a prayer is recorded of holy
+men, of inspired men, of men, to whose holiness and integrity and
+acceptance <span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id=
+"page22"></a>{22}</span> the Holy Spirit bears witness; yet among
+these prayers there is not found one invocation addressed to saint
+or angel. I will not here anticipate the observations which it will
+be necessary to make in consequence of the extraordinary argument
+which has been devised, to account for the absence of invocations
+to saints before the resurrection of Christ, namely, that before
+that event the saints were not admitted into heaven. Although
+pressed forward with such unhesitating confidence in its validity,
+that argument is so singular in its nature, and so important in its
+consequences, and withal so utterly groundless, as to call for a
+separate examination, on which we will shortly enter: meanwhile, we
+are now inquiring into the matter of fact.</p>
+<p>The whole Book of Psalms is a manual of devotion, consisting
+alternately, or rather intermixedly, of prayers and praises,
+composed some by Moses, some by other inspired Israelites of less
+note, but the greater part by David himself; and what is the force
+and tendency of their example? Words are spoken in collaudation of
+"Moses and Aaron among the saints of the Lord," and of "Samuel
+among such as called upon his name;" and mention is made with
+becoming reverence of the holy angels; but not one word ever falls
+from the pen of the Psalmist, addressed, by way of invocation, to
+saint or angel. In the Roman Ritual supplication is made to Abel
+and Abraham as well as to Michael and all angels. If it is now
+lawful, if it is now the duty of the worshippers of the true God to
+seek his aid through the mediation of those holy men, can we avoid
+asking, Why the inspired patriarchs did not appeal to Abel for his
+mediation? Why did not the inspired David invoke the father of the
+faithful to intercede for him with God? If the departed spirits
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>{23}</span>
+of faithful men may be safely addressed in prayer; if those who in
+their lifetime have, to their fellow-mortals, (who can judge only
+from outward actions, and cannot penetrate the heart,) appeared
+accepted servants and honoured saints of our Creator, may now be
+invoked by an act of religious supplication either to grant us aid,
+or to intercede with God for aid in our behalf, why did not men
+whom God declared to be partakers of his Spirit of truth, offer the
+same supplication to those departed spirits, who, before and after
+their decease, had this testimony from Omniscience itself, that
+they pleased God? Why is no intimation given in the later books of
+the Old Testament that such supplications were offered to Moses, or
+Aaron, or Abraham, or Noah? When wrath was gone out from the
+presence of the Lord, and the plague was begun among the people,
+Aaron took a censer in his hand, and stood between the living and
+the dead, and the plague was stayed. If the soul of Aaron was
+therefore to be regarded as a spirit influential with God, one
+whose intercession could avail, one who ought to be approached in
+prayer, were it only for his intercession, could a stronger motive
+be conceived for suggesting that invocation, than David must have
+felt, when the pestilence was destroying its thousands around him,
+and all his glory and strength, and his very life too, were
+threatened by its resistless ravages? But no! neither Abel, nor
+Abraham, nor Moses, nor Aaron, must be petitioned to intercede with
+God, and to pray that God would stay his hand. To God and God
+alone, for his own mercy's sake, must his afflicted servant turn in
+supplication. We find among his prayers no "Holy Abraham, pray for
+us,"&mdash;"Holy Abel, pray for us." His own Psalm of thanksgiving
+describes full well the object and the nature of his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>{24}</span> prayer:
+"When the waves of death compassed me, the floods of ungodly men
+made me afraid, the sorrows of hell compassed me about, the snares
+of death prevented me; in my distress I called upon the Lord, and
+cried to my God; and He did hear my voice out of his temple, and my
+cry did enter into his ears." [2 Sam. (2 Kings Vulg.) xxii. 5. or
+Ps. xviii.] Abraham, when on earth, prayed God to spare the
+offending-people; but he invoked neither Noah, nor Abel, nor any of
+the faithful departed, to join their intercessions with his own.
+Isaac prayed to God for his son Jacob, but he did not ask the
+mediation of his father Abraham in his behalf; and when Jacob in
+his turn supplicated an especial blessing upon his grandsons
+Ephraim and Manasseh, though he called with gratitude to his mind,
+and expressed with his tongue, the devotedness both of Abraham and
+of Isaac to the Almighty, yet we do not find him appealing to them,
+or invoking their intercession with Jehovah.</p>
+<p>When the conscience-struck Israelites felt that they had exposed
+themselves to the wrath of Almighty God, whose sovereign power, put
+forth at the prayer of Samuel, they then witnessed, distrusting the
+efficacy of their own supplication, and confiding in the
+intercession of that man of God, they implored him to intercede for
+them; and Samuel emphatically responded to their appeal, with an
+assurance of his earnestly undertaking to plead their cause with
+heaven: "And all the people said unto Samuel, Pray for thy servants
+unto the Lord thy God, that we die not. And Samuel said unto the
+people, Fear not.... The Lord will not forsake his people, for his
+great name's <span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id=
+"page25"></a>{25}</span> sake.... Moreover, God forbid that I
+should sin against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you." [1 Sam. (1
+Kings Vulg.) xii. 19.] Samuel is one whom the Holy Spirit numbers
+among those "who called upon God's name;" and when Samuel died, all
+Israel gathered together to lament and to bury him,&mdash;but we
+read of no petition being offered to him to carry on the same
+intercessory office, when he was once removed from them. As long as
+he was entabernacled in the flesh and sojourned on earth with his
+brethren, they besought him to pray for them, to intercede with
+their God and his God for blessings at his hand, (just as among
+ourselves one Christian asks another to pray for him,) but when
+Samuel's body had been buried in peace, and his soul had returned
+to God who gave it, the Bible never records any further application
+to him; we no where read, "Holy Samuel, pray for us."</p>
+<p>Again, what announcement could God Himself make more expressive
+of his acceptance of the persons of any, than He actually and
+repeatedly made to Moses with regard to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob?
+How could He more clearly intimate that if the spirits of the
+faithful departed could exercise intercessory or mediatorial
+influence with Him, those three holy patriarchs would possess such
+power above all others who had ever lived on the earth? "I am the
+God of your fathers; the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God
+of Jacob: and Moses hid his face, for he was afraid to look upon
+God." "Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, The God of
+thy fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of
+Jacob, hath sent me unto you. This is my name for ever, and this is
+my memorial throughout all generations." [Exod. iii. 6. 15.] Did
+Moses in his alarm and dread, when he was afraid <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>{26}</span> to look upon
+God, call upon those holy and accepted servants to aid him in his
+perplexity, and intercede for him and his people with the awful
+Eternal Being on whose majesty he dared not to look? Did he teach
+his people to invoke Abraham? That was far from him. When Moses,
+that saint of the Lord, was himself called hence and was buried,
+(though no mortal man was allowed to know the place of his
+sepulture,) did the surviving faithful pray to him for his help and
+intercession with God? He had wrought so many and great miracles as
+never had been before witnessed on earth; whilst in the tabernacle
+of the flesh he had talked with God as a man talketh with his
+friend; and yet the sacred page records no invocation ever breathed
+to his departed spirit. The same is the result of our inquiry
+throughout.</p>
+<p>I will specify only one more example&mdash;Hezekiah, who
+"trusted in the Lord God of Israel, and clave to the Lord, and
+departed not from following him, but kept his commandments," when
+he and his people were in great peril, addressed his prayer only to
+God. He offered no invocation to holy David to intercede with the
+Almighty for his own Jerusalem; he made his supplication directly
+and exclusively to Jehovah; and, yet, the very answer made to that
+prayer would surely have seemed to justify Hezekiah in seeking holy
+David's mediation, if prayer for the intercession of any departed
+mortal could ever have been sanctioned by Heaven: "Thus saith the
+Lord, the God of David thy father; I have heard thy prayer, I have
+seen thy tears; <i>I</i> will heal thee. I will save this city for
+mine own sake, and for my servant David's sake." [2 Kings (Vulg. 4
+Kings) xix. 15. and xx. 6.] Of what saint in the calendar was ever
+such a thing as this spoken?</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27"></a>{27}</span>
+<p>I have already intimated my intention of referring, with
+somewhat more than a cursory remark, to the position assumed, and
+the argument built upon it by writers in communion with Rome, for
+the purpose of nullifying or escaping from the evidence borne by
+the examples of the Old Testament against the invocation of saints.
+The writers to whom I refer, with Bellarmin at their head, openly
+confess that the pages of the Old Testament afford no instance of
+invocation being offered to the spirits of departed mortals; and
+the reason which they allege is this, No one can be invoked who is
+not admitted to the presence of God in heaven; but before Christ
+went down to hell<a id="footnotetag2" name=
+"footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a> and
+released the spirits from prison, no mortal was admitted into
+heaven; consequently, before the resurrection of Christ the spirit
+of no mortal was invoked. The following are the words of Bellarmin
+at the close of the preface to his "Church Triumphant:"&mdash;"The
+spirits of the patriarchs and prophets before the coming of Christ
+were for this reason not worshipped and invoked, as we now worship
+and invoke the Apostles and martyrs, because they were yet shut up
+and detained in prisons below<a id="footnotetag3" name=
+"footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a>." Again,
+he says, "Because before <span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id=
+"page28"></a>{28}</span> the coming of Christ the saints who died
+did not enter heaven and saw not God, nor could ordinarily know the
+prayers of suppliants, therefore, it was not customary in the Old
+Testament to say, 'Holy Abraham, pray for me,' &amp;c.; but the men
+of that time prayed to God only, and alleged the merits of the
+saints who had already departed, that their own prayers might be
+aided by them."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote2" name=
+"footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+<p>The word Hell, signifying, in Saxon, a hidden-place, altogether
+corresponding in its etymology with "hades," is now used for the
+place of torment called by the Hebrews "Gehennah;" and we must
+perhaps regret that the same Saxon word is employed to signify also
+the unseen region of departed spirits. This circumstance has been
+the source of much difficulty and confusion.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote3" name=
+"footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+<p>"Nam idcirco ante Christi adventum non ita colebantur neque
+invocabantur spiritus patriarcharum atque prophetarum, quemadmodum
+nunc Apostolos et martyres colimus et invocamus, quod illi adhuc
+infernis carceribus clausi detinebantur."&mdash;Ingolstadii, 1601.
+vol. ii. p. 833. "The last edition, enlarged and corrected by the
+Author."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Now let us inquire into this statement thus broadly made, and
+ascertain for ourselves whether the point assumed and the argument
+built upon it can stand the test of examination. Is this argument
+such as ought to satisfy the mind of one, who would humbly but
+honestly follow the apostolic rule, "Prove all things: hold fast
+that which is good?" Is this such an exposition as that the reason
+of a cultivated mind, and the faith of an enlightened Christian,
+can acquiesce in it? Let it be examined neither with prejudice in
+its favour, nor with any undue suspicion of its soundness, but with
+candour and impartiality throughout.</p>
+<p>It is not necessary to dwell at any length on the
+inconsistencies and perplexities involved in this assumed abstract
+theory with regard to the souls of the faithful who died before the
+resurrection of Christ, and which require to be cleared away before
+its advocates can reasonably expect to obtain for it any general
+acceptance among thinking men. I do not wish to contravene the
+theory, far less to substitute another in its stead. On the
+contrary, I am fully content, in company with some of the most
+valuable among Roman Catholic writers, following the example of
+Augustin [Aug. De Pecc. Orig. c. 23. tom. vii. p. 338.&mdash;Quoted
+by De Sacy. 2 Kings (Vulg. 4 Kings) ii.], to leave the subject
+where Scripture has left it. To the arguments <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>{29}</span> alleged, I
+would wish to reply independently of any opinion, as a matter of
+Christian belief, with regard to the place, the condition, and the
+circumstances of the souls of the patriarchs and prophets before
+our blessed Lord's resurrection. It may, nevertheless, materially
+facilitate an inquiry into the soundness of the reasons alleged for
+the total absence of invocation to those souls, if we briefly
+contemplate some of the difficulties which surround this novel
+theory. At all events, such a process will incline us to abstain
+from bold assumptions on a point upon which the Almighty has been
+pleased to throw so little light in his Holy Word, or at least
+avoid all severity of condemnation towards those who may differ
+from our views.</p>
+<p>It is very easy to assert, that all the souls of the faithful
+departed were kept in the prison-house of Hades, and to allege in
+its behalf an obscure passage of St. Peter, to which many of the
+most learned and unprejudiced Christian teachers assign a meaning
+totally unconnected with the subject of departed spirits. But
+surely the case of Enoch's translation from this life to heaven,
+making, as it has been beautifully expressed, but one step from
+earth to glory, which St. Paul, in his Epistle to the Hebrews,
+cites with a most important comment of his own, requires to be well
+and patiently weighed. He was taken from the earth by an immediate
+act of Providence, that he should not see death; and before his
+translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God. Surely the
+case of Elijah too, when we would ascertain the soundness of this
+theory, must not be dismissed summarily from our thoughts, of whom
+the book of eternal truth declares, that Jehovah took him
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>{30}</span>
+in a whirlwind into heaven; his ascent being made visible to mortal
+eyes, as was afterwards the ascension of the blessed Saviour
+Himself. Indeed the accounts of Elijah's translation, and of our
+Lord's ascension, whether in the Septuagint and Greek Testament,
+the Vulgate, or our own authorized version, present a similarity of
+expression very striking and remarkable.</p>
+<p>On this subject we are strongly reminded, first, with what care
+and candour and patience the language of Holy Scripture should be
+weighed, which so positively declares, that Moses and Elijah, both
+in glory, appeared visibly to the Apostles at the transfiguration
+of our blessed Saviour, and conversed with Him on the holy mount:
+"And behold there talked with Him two men, who were Moses and
+Elias, who appeared in glory (in majesty, as the Vulgate renders
+the word), and spake of his decease which He should accomplish at
+Jerusalem;" [Luke ix. 30.]&mdash;and, secondly, how unwise it is to
+dogmatize on such subjects beyond the plain declaration of the
+sacred narrative. Moreover, how very unsatisfactory is the theory
+which we are examining as to the state of the souls of the faithful
+who died before Christ, even the words of Jerome himself prove,
+who, commenting on the transfiguration of the blessed Jesus, is
+unhappily led to represent the Almighty as having summoned Elijah
+to descend from heaven, and Moses to ascend from Hades, to meet our
+Lord in the Mount<a id="footnotetag4" name=
+"footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote4" name=
+"footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+<p>"Elia inde descendente quo conscenderat, et Moyse ab inferis
+resurgente."&mdash;Hieron. in Matt. xvii. 1. Paris, 1706. vol. iv.
+p. 77.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Strange and startling as is this sentiment of Jerome, it is, you
+will observe, utterly irreconcileable with the theory, that the
+reason why the ancient Church did not <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31"></a>{31}</span> pray to the
+saints departed, was because they were not yet in heaven.</p>
+<p>On this point, among Roman Catholic writers themselves, there
+prevails a very great diversity of opinion, arising probably from
+the difficulty which they have experienced in their endeavours to
+make all facts and doctrines square with the present tenets and
+practices of their Church<a id="footnotetag5" name=
+"footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a>. Thus,
+whilst some maintain that Elijah was translated to the terrestrial
+paradise in which Adam had been placed, not enjoying the immediate
+divine presence; others cite the passage as justifying the belief
+that the saints departed pray for us<a id="footnotetag6" name=
+"footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a>. But not
+only are different authors at variance with each other on very many
+points here; the same writer in his zeal is betrayed into great and
+palpable inconsistency. Bellarmin, anxious to enlist the account
+given by our Lord of the rich man and Lazarus, to countenance the
+invocation of saints by the example of the rich man appealing to
+Abraham, maintains that section of Holy Writ to be not a parable,
+but a true history of a matter of fact which took place between two
+real individuals; and of his assertion he adduces this proof, that
+"the Church worships that Lazarus as verily a holy man<a id=
+"footnotetag7" name="footnotetag7"></a><a href=
+"#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a>;" and yet he denies that any of the
+holy men were in heaven before the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page32" id="page32"></a>{32}</span> death of Christ. Either
+Abraham was in heaven in the presence of God, or not; if he was in
+heaven, why did not his descendants invoke his aid? if he was not
+in heaven, the whole argument drawn from the rich man's
+supplication falls to the ground.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote5" name=
+"footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+<p>See De Sacy on 4 Kings i. 1. See also Estius, 1629. p. 168. Pope
+Gregory's Exposition; Rome, 1553. p. 99. Stephen's Bible in loc.
+1557, &amp;c. The Vulgate ed. Antwerp, 1624, cites a note, "Thy
+prayers are stronger than chariots and horsemen."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote6" name=
+"footnote6"></a><b>Footnote 6:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
+<p>Gaspar Sanctius, Antwerp, 1624. p. 1360, considers the fable not
+improbable, that Elijah, living in the terrestrial paradise, wrote
+there the letters to Joram (mentioned 2 Chron. xxi. 12), and sent
+them by angels.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote7" name=
+"footnote7"></a><b>Footnote 7:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag7">(return)</a>
+<p>Colit Lazarum ilium ut vere sanctum hominem.&mdash;Bellarm. De
+Ecd. Triumph, p. 864.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Another very extraordinary inconsistency, arising from the same
+solicitude, forces itself upon our notice, when the same author
+urges a passage in Leviticus [Levit. xix. 13.] to prove, that the
+saints are now admitted at once into the enjoyment of the presence
+of God in heaven, without waiting for the day of final judgment.
+[Bell vol. ii. p. 865.] "God (such are his words) commanded it to
+be written, 'The work of the hireling shall not remain with thee
+till the morning;' therefore, unless God would appear inconsistent
+with Himself, He will not keep back the reward of his saints to the
+end of the world." How strange, that in the same treatise [Ibid. p.
+833.] this author should expressly maintain, that the reward of
+Abel and Abraham, and the holy prophet and lawgiver Moses, the very
+man who was commanded to write that law in Leviticus, was kept
+back,&mdash;the last for a longer period than a thousand years; the
+first well nigh four thousand years.</p>
+<p>I mention these particulars merely to point out how very
+unsatisfactory and unsound is the attempted solution of the
+difficulties which surround on every side the theory of those who
+maintain, that the reason why we have no instance of the righteous
+departed being invoked in the times of the elder covenant is, that
+they were not as yet admitted into heaven, but were kept in prison
+till the resurrection of Christ. I would also observe, even at the
+risk <span class="pagenum"><a name="page33" id=
+"page33"></a>{33}</span> of repetition, that I am here not
+maintaining any opinion as to the appointed abiding-place, the
+condition, and circumstances, the powers of consciousness, volition
+or enjoyment of the departed, before Christ's resurrection; on the
+contrary, I am rather urging the consideration of the great and
+serious caution requisite before we espouse, as an article of
+faith, any opinion which rests on so questionable a foundation, and
+which involves such interminable difficulties.</p>
+<p>But while we need not dwell longer on this immediate point, yet
+there are two considerations which appear to be altogether decisive
+as to the evidence borne against the Invocation of Saints by the
+writers of the Old Testament. If the spirits of the saints departed
+were not invoked before the resurrection of Christ, purely because
+they were not then admitted into heaven; the first consideration I
+would suggest is this: Why did the faithful and inspired servants
+of Jehovah not invoke the angels and archangels who were in heaven?
+The second is this: Why did not the inspired Apostles and faithful
+disciples of our Lord invoke the spirits of those saints after his
+resurrection; that is (according to the theory before us), after
+those saints had been taken by Christ with him into his Father's
+presence? I wish not to anticipate here our inquiry into the
+testimony borne by the writers of the New Testament as to the
+doctrine and practice of the Roman Church in this particular; and I
+will only add, that whatever be the cause of the absence from the
+Old Testament of all worship and invocation of Abel and Abraham,
+whom the Roman Church now invokes, the alleged reason that it was
+because they were not in heaven till after Christ's resurrection,
+is utterly set aside by the conduct of the Apostles and disciples
+of our Lord recorded in the New <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page34" id="page34"></a>{34}</span> Testament, for more than half
+a century after his return to his Father's glory.</p>
+<p>This, however, seems to be the proper place for entertaining the
+first consideration, Why did not the holy men of old, under the
+elder covenant, invoke angels and archangels, as the Roman Church
+now does? Writers, indeed, who have declared themselves the
+defenders of that doctrine and practice, refer us to passages,
+which they cite, as affording examples of the worship of angels;
+and we will not knowingly allow any one of those sections of Holy
+Writ to remain unexamined. We must first endeavour to ascertain the
+testimony borne by the books of the Old Testament: and that
+presents to us such a body of evidence as greatly increases our
+surprise at the perseverance with which the invocation of angels
+has been maintained by any community of men acknowledging the
+inspiration of the sacred volume.</p>
+<p>The inspired writers of the Old Testament, and those to whom
+through their mouth and pen the Divine word was addressed, were as
+fully as ourselves acquainted with the existence of angelic beings.
+They were aware of the station of those angels in the court of
+heaven, of their power as God's ambassadors, and agents for good.
+Either their own eyes had seen the mighty operations of God by the
+hands of those celestial messengers; or their ears had heard their
+fathers tell what HE had done by their instrumentality in times of
+old. Why then did not God's chosen people offer to the angels the
+same worship and invocation which the Church of Rome now addresses
+to them in common with the patriarchs and prophets of the elder
+covenant, and with saints and martyrs under the new? In the
+condition of the holy angels no one ever suggests that <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page35" id="page35"></a>{35}</span> any change,
+affecting the argument, has taken place since the time when man was
+created and made. And as the angels of heaven were in themselves
+the same, equally in the presence of God, and equally able to
+succour men through that long space of four thousand years, which
+intervened between Adam's creation and the birth of HIM who was Son
+of Adam and Son of God, so was man in the same dependent state,
+needing the guidance and protection of a power above his own. Nay,
+surely, if there was in man any difference affecting the argument,
+it would all add weight to the reason against the invocation of
+angels by Christians. The Israelites of old had no clear knowledge,
+as we have, of one great Mediator, who is ever making intercession
+for us; and yet they sought not the mediation and intercession and
+good offices of those superhuman beings, of whose existence and
+power, and employment in works of blessing to man, they had no
+doubt<a id="footnotetag8" name="footnotetag8"></a><a href=
+"#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a>. This is a point of great importance
+to our argument, and I will refer to a few passages in support of
+it.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote8" name=
+"footnote8"></a><b>Footnote 8:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag8">(return)</a>
+<p>A small section indeed of their countrymen in our Saviour's time
+denied the reality of a future state, and the existence of angels
+and spirits; but the sect was of then recent origin, and the
+overwhelming majority believed as their fathers had believed.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>When David, who had, as we know [1 Chron. xxi. 16.], visible
+demonstration afforded him of the existence and ministration of the
+angels, called upon them to unite with his own soul, and with all
+the works of creation through all places of God's dominion, in
+praising their merciful, glorious, and powerful Creator, he thus
+conveys to us the exalted ideas with which he had been filled of
+their nature, their excellence, and their ministration. "The Lord
+hath prepared his throne in the heavens, and his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page36" id="page36"></a>{36}</span> kingdom
+ruleth over all: Bless the Lord, ye his angels that excel in
+strength, that do his commandments, hearkening unto the voice of
+his word. Bless ye the Lord, all ye his hosts, ye ministers of his
+that do his pleasure." [Ps. ciii. 19-21.] David knew moreover that
+one of the offices, in the execution of which the angels do God's
+pleasure, is that of succouring and defending us on earth. For
+example, in one of the psalms used by the Church of Rome at
+complin, and with the rest repeated in the Church of England, and
+prophetic of the Redeemer, David, to whom this psalm is probably to
+be ascribed, declares of the man who had made the Most High his
+refuge and strength, "There shall no evil befall thee, neither
+shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling; for he shall give his
+angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways; they shall
+bear thee up in their hands lest thou dash thy foot against a
+stone." [Ps. xci. 10-12.] And again, with exquisitely beautiful
+imagery, he represents those same blessed servants of heaven as an
+army, as a host of God's spiritual soldiers keeping watch and ward
+over the poorest of the children of men, who would take refuge in
+his mercy: "The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that
+fear him, and delivereth them<a id="footnotetag9" name=
+"footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a>." And yet
+David, the prophet of the Lord, never addresses to these beings,
+high and glorious though they are, one single invocation: he
+neither asks them to assist him, nor to pray for him, nor to pray
+with him in his behalf.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote9" name=
+"footnote9"></a><b>Footnote 9:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag9">(return)</a>
+<p>Ps. xxxiv. 7. (Vulg. xxxiii. 8.) "Immittet angelus Domini in
+circuitu timentium eum, et eripiet eos." In the Vulgate the beauty
+of the figure is lost; which, however, Roman Catholic writers
+restore in their comments. Basil makes a beautiful use of the
+metaphor. See De Sacy in loc.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37"></a>{37}</span>
+<p>Isaiah was admitted by the Holy Spirit to witness in the fulness
+of its glory the court and the throne of heaven; and he heard the
+voices of the seraphim proclaiming their Maker's praise; he
+experienced also personally the effect of their ministration, when
+one of them said, "Lo, this hath touched thy lips, and thine
+iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged." [Isaiah vi. 7.] Still,
+though Isaiah must have regarded this angel as his benefactor under
+God, yet neither to this seraph, nor to any of the host of heaven,
+does he offer one prayer for their good offices, even by their
+intercession. He ever ascribes all to God alone; and never joins
+any other name with His either in supplication or in praise. Let us
+also take the case of Daniel. He acknowledges not only that the
+Lord's omnipotent hand had rescued him from the jaws of the lions,
+but that the deliverance was brought about by the ministration of
+an angel. "My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut the lions'
+mouths, that they have not hurt me." [Dan. vi. 22.] Yet when we
+look through Daniel's prayers, we find no allusion to any of the
+highest angels. He had seen Gabriel before his prayer; he had heard
+the voice and felt the hand of that heavenly messenger who was
+commissioned to reveal to him what should be done in the latter
+end; and immediately after the offering of his prayer, the same
+Gabriel announces himself as one who was come forth to give the
+prophet skill and understanding. And yet neither towards Gabriel,
+nor any other of the angels of God, does one word of invocation
+fall from the lips of Daniel. In the supplications of that holy,
+intrepid, and blessed servant and child of God, we search in vain
+for any thing approaching in spirit to the invocation, "Sancte
+Gabriel, ora pro nobis."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>{38}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-2-3" id="sect1-2-3">SECTION
+III.</a>&mdash;EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT (continued)</h4>
+<p>We must now briefly refer to those passages, by which Roman
+Catholic writers have endeavoured to maintain that religious
+adoration was paid to angels by the faithful sons of God. The two
+principal instances cited are, first, the case of Abraham bowing
+down before three men, whom he recognizes as messengers from
+heaven; and, secondly, the words of Jacob when he gave his
+benediction to his grandsons.</p>
+<p>With regard to the first instance, how very far the prostration
+of Abraham was in itself from implying an act of religious worship,
+being as it was the ordinary mode of paying respect to a fellow
+mortal, is evident from the very words of Scripture. The Hebrew
+word, which we translate by "bowed himself," and which the Vulgate
+unhappily renders "adoravit" ("adored"), is, letter for letter, the
+same in the case of Abraham saluting his three heavenly visitors,
+and in the case of Jacob saluting his brother Esau. The parallelism
+of the two passages is very striking.</p>
+<table summary="Passages">
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>GEN. xviii. 2.</p>
+<p>And he [Abraham] lift up his eyes, and lo! three men stood by
+him; and when he saw them, he ran to meet them from the tent door;
+and <i>bowed himself toward the ground</i>.</p>
+</td>
+<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td>
+<p>GEN. xxxiii. 1 and 3.</p>
+<p>And Jacob lifted up his eyes, and looked, and behold! Esau came
+... And he passed over, and <i>bowed himself to the ground</i>
+seven times until he came near to his brother.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page39" id="page39"></a>{39}</span>
+<p>By rendering the Hebrew word<a id="footnotetag10" name=
+"footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a>, which
+means to "bow or bend oneself," by the word "adoravit," which is
+literally "to pray to," the Latin Vulgate has laid the foundation
+for much unsound and misleading criticism. But suppose the word had
+meant, what it does not mean, an act of solemn religious worship;
+and let it be granted (as I am not only ready to grant, but
+prepared to maintain) that Abraham paid religious adoration at that
+time, what inference can fairly and honestly be drawn from that
+circumstance in favour of the invocation of angels? The ancient
+writers of the Christian Church, and those whom the Church of Rome
+habitually holds in great respect, are full and clear in
+maintaining that the person whom Abraham then addressed, was no
+created being, neither angel nor seraph; but the Angel of the
+Covenant; the Word, the eternal Son of God, Himself God<a id=
+"footnotetag11" name="footnotetag11"></a><a href=
+"#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a>. Before the visible and miraculous
+presence of the God of heaven, who for his own glory and in
+carrying on the work of man's salvation, sometimes deigned so to
+reveal Himself, the patriarchs of old bowed themselves to the
+earth. Can this, with any shadow of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page40" id="page40"></a>{40}</span> reason, be employed to
+sanction the invocation of Michael and all the myriads of angels
+who fill the court of heaven?</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote10" name=
+"footnote10"></a><b>Footnote 10:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag10">(return)</a>
+<p>Not only is the Hebrew word precisely the same, letter for
+letter, and point for point, [Hebrew: shahah], but the Septuagint
+in each case employs the same, [Greek: prosekunaesen]; and the
+Vulgate in each case renders it by the same word, "adoravit." The
+Roman Catholic commentator De Sacy renders it in each case, "se
+prosternavit," which corresponds exactly with our English version.
+The Douay Bible in each case renders it "adored."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote11" name=
+"footnote11"></a><b>Footnote 11:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag11">(return)</a>
+<p>Many early Christian writers may be cited to the same purpose:
+it is enough, however, to refer to Justin Martyr and to Athanasius;
+who are very full and elaborate in maintaining, that the angel here
+mentioned was no created being, but was the Angel of the Covenant,
+God, in the fulness of time manifested in the flesh. The passage
+from Athanasius will be quoted at some length, when we come to
+examine that father's testimony. For Justin Martyr, see Dial. cum
+Tryph. ch. 56, &amp;c. p. 150, &amp;c. (Paris, 1742.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The only other instance to which it will be necessary to call
+your attention, occurs in the forty-eighth chapter of Genesis. The
+passage, however, is so palpably and on the very face of it
+inapplicable, that its examination needs not detain us long. "And
+he [Jacob] blessed Joseph, and said, God, before whom my fathers
+Abraham and Isaac did walk, the God who fed me all my life long
+unto this day, the ANGEL which redeemed me from all evil, bless the
+lads." [Gen. xlviii. 15.] Here the patriarch speaks of God as the
+Angel, and the Angel as God: being the Angel or Messenger of the
+Covenant&mdash;God manifested to man. He speaks not of Michael or
+Gabriel, or archangel or seraph, or any created being; but of the
+Lord Himself, who appeared to him, agreeably to the revelation of
+God Himself recorded in a previous chapter, and thus communicated
+by the patriarch to Rachel and Leah: "And the ANGEL of God spake
+unto me in a dream, saying, Jacob; and I said, Here am I. And he
+said ... <i>I</i> am the GOD of Bethel, where thou anointedst the
+pillar, and vowedst a vow unto me." [Gen. xxxi. 11.] The Angel
+whose blessing he desired for the lads was the God<a id=
+"footnotetag12" name="footnotetag12"></a><a href=
+"#footnote12"><sup>12</sup></a>, to whom he had vowed a vow in
+Bethel, the Lord Himself.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote12" name=
+"footnote12"></a><b>Footnote 12:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag12">(return)</a>
+<p>It may not be superfluous to add, that this is the
+interpretation of the passage adopted by primitive writers, Among
+others see Eusebius Demonstr. Evan. lib. v. ch. 10: who declares
+that the Angel spoken of by Jacob was God the Son.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Independently, however, of this conclusive consideration, if the
+latter member of this sentence had merely expressed a wish, that an
+angel might be employed as <span class="pagenum"><a name="page41"
+id="page41"></a>{41}</span> an instrument of good in behalf of
+Ephraim and Manasseh, I could readily offer such a prayer for a
+blessing on my own children. My prayer would be addressed to the
+angel neither immediately nor transitively, but exclusively to God
+alone, supplicating Him graciously to employ the service of those
+ministering spirits for our good. Such a prayer every Catholic in
+communion with the Church of England is taught and directed to
+offer. Such a prayer is primitive and scriptural; and such is
+offered in the Church on the anniversary of Saint Michael and all
+angels:</p>
+<p>"O Everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the
+services of angels and men in a wonderful order, mercifully grant
+that as Thy holy angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by Thy
+appointment they may succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. Amen."</p>
+<p>Such is the prayer of the Church Catholic, whether of the Roman
+or the Anglican branch; it is in spirit and in truth a Christian
+prayer, fit for faithful mortals to offer on earth to the Lord of
+men and of angels in heaven. Would that the Church of Rome,
+preserving, as she has preserved, this prayer in all its original
+purity, had never been successfully tempted to mingle in the same
+service, supplications, which rob the one only God of his exclusive
+honour and glory, as the God "who heareth prayer;" and to rob
+Christ of his exclusive honour and glory, as our only Mediator and
+Advocate!</p>
+<p>Here, though unwilling, by departing from the order of our
+argument, to anticipate our examination in its place of the Roman
+ritual, I cannot refrain from contrasting this prayer, the genuine
+offspring of Christian faith, with some forms of invocation
+contained in <span class="pagenum"><a name="page42" id=
+"page42"></a>{42}</span> the Roman service on St. Michael's day, in
+which I could not join, and the adoption of which I deeply lament.
+The first is appointed to be said at the part of the Mass called
+"The Secret:" "We offer to Thee, O Lord, the sacrifice of praise,
+humbly beseeching Thee, That by the intervention of the prayers of
+the angels for us, Thou, being appeased, mayest both accept the
+same, and make them profitable for our salvation. Through ..." The
+second is offered at the Post Communion: "Supported [propped up,
+suffulti] by the intercession of Thy blessed archangel Michael, we
+humbly beseech Thee, O Lord, that what with honour we follow<a id=
+"footnotetag13" name="footnotetag13"></a><a href=
+"#footnote13"><sup>13</sup></a>, we may obtain also in mind.
+Through ..."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote13" name=
+"footnote13"></a><b>Footnote 13:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag13">(return)</a>
+<p>I do not understand the exact meaning of these words, which
+however contain no portion of that sentiment, the presence of which
+in this prayer I deplore. The original is this: "Beati archangeli
+tui Michaelis intercessione suffulti, supplices te Domine
+deprecamur, ut quod honore prosequimur, contingamus et in mente.
+Per ..." Probably the general sense is, that what we reverently
+seek we may actually realize.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Still, though here the Christian seems to be taught to rest on a
+broken reed, to support and prop himself up by a staff which must
+bend and break; yet I acknowledge that so much violence is not done
+to my Christian principles, nor do my feelings, as a believer in
+God and his ever-blessed Son, meet with so severe a shock by either
+of these prayers, as by the invocation addressed to the archangel
+himself in the "Gradual" on that same day:</p>
+<p>"O holy Michael, O archangel, defend us in battle, that we
+perish not in the dreadful judgment."</p>
+<p>Christians of the Church of Rome! for one moment meditate, I
+beseech you, on this prayer. It is not addressed to God; in it
+there is no mention made of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page43"
+id="page43"></a>{43}</span> Christ: having called upon the angels,
+and on your own soul in the words of the psalmist, to praise the
+Lord, you address your supplication to Michael himself; not even
+invoking him for his intercession, but imploring of him his
+protection. If it be said, that his intercession is all that is
+meant, with most unfeigned sincerity I request you to judge for
+yourselves, whether any prayer from poor sinful man, putting his
+whole trust in the Lord and imploring his help, could be addressed
+to our God and Saviour more immediate and direct than this? In the
+place of the name of his servant Michael, substitute the highest
+and the holiest name ever uttered in heaven or on earth, and can
+words form a prayer more direct to God? "O Lord God Almighty, O
+Lord Jesus our only Saviour, defend us in battle, that we perish
+not in the dreadful judgment. Hallelujah!"&mdash;Can this be right?
+Were the archangel allowed now, by his Lord and ours, to make his
+voice heard upon earth by Christians offering to him this prayer,
+would he utter any other words, than the angel, his fellow-servant
+and ours, once addressed to Saint John, when he fell down to
+worship before him, "See thou do it not; for I am thy
+fellow-servant: worship God."</p>
+<p>Such then is the evidence borne by the writers of the Old
+Testament. No prayer to angel or beatified spirit occurs from its
+first to its last page. The theory which would have us account for
+the absence of all prayer to the saints before the advent of
+Messiah, by reason of their not having been then admitted into
+their everlasting habitations, and the immediate presence of God
+proves to be utterly groundless. The holy angels were confessedly
+in heaven [Matt. xviii. 10.], beholding the face of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page44" id="page44"></a>{44}</span> God; but no
+invocation was ever addressed to them, by patriarch, or prophet, or
+people, as mediators or intercessors. God, and God alone, the one
+eternal Jehovah, is proclaimed by Himself throughout, and is
+acknowledged throughout to be the only object of any kind of
+spiritual worship; the only Being who heareth prayer, to whom alone
+therefore all mankind should approach with the words and with the
+spirit of invocation. It has been argued by some writers, that in
+the times of the Old Testament, prayer was not offered to God
+through a mediator at all; and that as the one Mediator was not
+then revealed in his person and his offices, the subsidiary
+intercessors could not of course act; and therefore could not be
+invoked by man. The answer to this remark is conclusive. That
+Mediator has been revealed in his person and his offices; and has
+been expressly declared to be the one Mediator between God and man:
+we therefore seek God's covenanted mercies through Him. Those
+subsidiary intercessors have never been revealed; and therefore we
+do not seek their aid. To assure us that it was the mind and will
+of our Heavenly Father that we should approach Him by secondary and
+subsidiary mediators and intercessors, the same clear and
+unquestionable revelation of their persons and their offices as
+mediators would have been required, as He has vouchsafed of the
+mediation of his Son. Had God willed that the faithful should
+approach Him by the intercessions of the saints and martyrs, is it
+conceivable that He would not have given some intimation of his
+will in this respect? If believers in the Gospel were to have
+unnumbered mediators of intercession in heaven, as well as the one
+Mediator of redemption, would not the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page45" id="page45"></a>{45}</span> Gospel
+itself have announced it? Could such declarations as these have
+remained on record without any qualifying or limiting expression,
+"He<a id="footnotetag14" name="footnotetag14"></a><a href=
+"#footnote14"><sup>14</sup></a> is able also to save to the
+uttermost them who come unto God by Him, seeing He ever liveth to
+make intercession for them." "There is one God, and one Mediator
+between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." But this involves the
+question to which the next section must be devoted. All I would
+anticipate here is, that if the irresistible argument from the Old
+Testament is sought to be evaded on the ground that no mediator at
+all was then revealed, we must require a distinct revelation of the
+existence and offices of other mediators and intercessors, before
+we can be justified in applying to them for their intervention in
+our behalf. And the question now is. Are they so revealed?</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote14" name=
+"footnote14"></a><b>Footnote 14:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag14">(return)</a>
+<p>Heb. vii. 25. I Tim. ii. 5.&mdash;Unde et salvare in perpetuum
+potest accedentes per semetipsum ad Deum, semper vivens ad
+interpellandum pro nobis.&mdash;<i>Vulg.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-2-4" id="sect1-2-4">SECTION
+IV.</a>&mdash;EVIDENCE OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.</h4>
+<p>Though such is the evidence borne against the invocation of
+saints and angels by the Old Testament, yet it has been said that
+we are living neither under the patriarchal, nor the Mosaic
+dispensation, but under the Gospel, to whom therefore as Christians
+neither the precepts nor the examples of those ancient times are
+applicable: <span class="pagenum"><a name="page46" id=
+"page46"></a>{46}</span> the injunctions consequently given of old
+to preserve the chosen people from idolatry and paganism, cannot be
+held to prohibit Christians from seeking the aid of those departed
+saints who are now reigning with Christ. But, surely, those
+precepts, and denunciations, and commands, are still most strictly
+applicable, as conveying to us a knowledge of the will of our
+Heavenly Father, that his sons and daughters on earth should
+associate no name, however exalted among the principalities and
+powers in heavenly places, with his own holy name in prayer, and
+spiritual invocation. I am throughout this address supposing myself
+to be speaking to those whose heart's desire is to fulfil the will
+of God in all things; not those who are contented to depart from
+the spirit of that will, whenever they can devise plausible
+arguments to countenance such departure.</p>
+<p>The cases both of precept and example through the Old Testament
+affording so stringent and so universal a rule against the
+association of any name with the name of the Almighty in our
+prayers; before we can conclude that Christians have a liberty
+denied to believers under the former dispensations, we must surely
+produce a declaration to that effect, clear, unequivocal, and
+precisely in point. Nothing short of an enactment, rescinding in
+terms the former prohibitory law, and positively sanctioning
+supplications and prayers to saints and angels, seems capable of
+satisfying any Christian bent on discovering the will of God, and
+resolved to worship Him agreeably to the spirit of that will as it
+has been revealed. But let us read the New Testament from its first
+to its very last word, and we shall find, that the doctrines, the
+precepts, and the examples, the pervading reigning spirit of the
+entire <span class="pagenum"><a name="page47" id=
+"page47"></a>{47}</span> volume, combine in addressing us with
+voices loud and clear. Pray to God Almighty solely in the name and
+for the sake of his dear and only Son Jesus Christ our Lord, and
+offer no prayer, no supplication, no intreaty, to any other being
+or power, saint or angel, though it be only to ask for their
+intercession with the great God. But this involves the whole
+question, and must be sifted thoroughly. Let us then review the
+entire volume with close and minute scrutiny, and ask ourselves, Is
+there a single passage, interpreted to the best of our skill, with
+the aid of those on whose integrity and learning we can rely, which
+directly and unequivocally sanctions any religious invocation of
+whatever kind to any being except God alone? And then let us calmly
+and deliberately resolve this point: In a matter of so vital
+importance, of so immense interest, and of so sacred a character as
+the worship of the Supreme Being, who declares Himself to be a
+jealous God, ought we to suffer any refinements of casuistry to
+entice us from the broad, clear light of revelation? If it were
+God's good pleasure to make exceptions to his rule&mdash;a rule so
+repeatedly, and so positively enacted and enforced&mdash;surely the
+analogy of his gracious dealings with mankind would have taught us
+to look for an announcement of the exceptions in terms equally
+forcible and explicit. Instead, however, of this, we find no single
+act, no single word, nothing which even by implication can be
+forced to sanction any prayer or religious invocation, of whatever
+kind, to any other being save to God alone.</p>
+<p>Let us first look to the language and conduct of our blessed
+Lord, whose prayers to his Father are upon record for our
+instruction and comfort, and whose precepts and example form the
+best rule of a Christian's <span class="pagenum"><a name="page48"
+id="page48"></a>{48}</span> life. So far from repealing the ancient
+law, he repeats in his own person its solemn announcement, "Hear, O
+Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord." [Mark xii. 29.] While the
+same heavenly Teacher commands us with authority, "When thou
+prayest, pray to thy Father which is in secret, and thy Father, who
+seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly." [Matt. vi. 6.] No
+allusion in any word of His do we find to any prayer from a mortal
+on this earth to an angel or saint in heaven. And yet occasions
+were multiplied on which a reference to the invocation of angels
+would have been natural, and apparently called for. He again and
+again places beyond all doubt the reality of their good services
+towards mankind, but it is as God's servants, and at God's bidding;
+not in answer to any supplication or invoking of ours. The parable
+of the rich man and Lazarus has been cited [Bellarmin, p. 895.] to
+bear contrary evidence; but, in the first place, that parable does
+not offer a case in point; in the second place, were it in point,
+it might be fairly and strongly urged against the practice of
+invoking the spirit of any departed mortal, even the father of the
+faithful himself. For what are the circumstances of the parabolic
+representation? A lost spirit in the regions of torment prays to
+Abraham in the regions of the blessed, and the spirit of the
+departed patriarch professes himself to have no power to grant the
+request of the departed and condemned spirit. [Luke xvi. 19.] The
+practice indeed of our Roman Catholic brethren would have been
+exemplified, had our blessed Lord represented the rich man's five
+brethren still on earth as pious men, and as supplicating Abraham
+in heaven to pray for themselves, or to mitigate <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page49" id="page49"></a>{49}</span> their lost
+brother's punishment and his woes. But then it would have afforded
+Christians little encouragement to follow their example, when they
+found Abraham declaring himself unable to aid them in attaining the
+object of their prayer, or in any way to assist them at all.
+Without one single exception, we find our blessed Lord's example,
+precepts, and doctrines to be decidedly against the practice of
+invoking saint or angel; whilst not one solitary act or word of His
+can be cited to countenance or palliate it.</p>
+<p>Next it follows, that we inquire into the conduct and the
+writings of Christ's Apostles and immediate followers, to whom He
+graciously promised that the Holy Spirit should guide them into all
+truth. In the Acts of the Apostles, various instances of prayer
+attract our notice, but not one ejaculation is found there to any
+other being save God alone. Neither angel nor saint is invoked. The
+Apostles prayed for guidance in the government of Christ's infant
+Church, but it was, "Thou, Lord, who knowest the hearts of all
+men." [Acts i. 24.] They prayed for their own acceptance, but it
+was "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." [Acts vii. 59.] They prayed
+for each other, as in behalf of St. Peter when in prison; but we
+are expressly told, that the prayer which was made without ceasing
+by the Church for him was addressed to GOD. [Acts xii. 5.]</p>
+<p>To deliver St. Peter from his chains, an angel was sent on an
+especial mission from heaven; but though St. Peter saw him, and
+heard his voice, and followed him, and knew of a surety that the
+Almighty had employed the ministration of an angel to liberate him
+from his bonds, yet we do not hear thereafter of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>{50}</span> Peter having
+himself prayed to an angel to secure his good offices, and his
+intercession with God, nor has he once indirectly intimated to
+others that such supplications would be of avail, or were even
+allowable. He exhorts his fellow-Christians to pray, "Watch unto
+prayer," but it is because "The eyes of the LORD are over the
+righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers." [1 Pet. iv.
+7; iii. 12.] He Himself prays for them, but it is, that the God of
+all grace might make them perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle
+them. He suggests no invocation of saint or angel to intercede with
+God for them. He bids them cast all their care upon GOD, on the
+assurance that God Himself careth for them.</p>
+<p>Precisely the same result issues from a contemplation of the
+acts and exhortation of St. Paul. He too experienced in his own
+person the comfort of an angel's ministration, bidding him cast off
+all fear when in the extreme of imminent peril. [Acts xxvii. 23,
+24.] Many a prayer of that holy Apostle is upon record; many an
+earnest exhortation to prayer was made by him; we find many a
+declaration relative to his own habits of prayer. But with him God
+and God alone is the object of prayer throughout: by him no saint
+or angel or archangel is alluded to, as one whose intercession
+might be sought by himself or by us. He could speak in glowing
+language of patriarchs, prophets, and angels, but unto none of
+these would he turn. "Be careful for nothing, but in every thing by
+prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be
+made known unto God." [Phil. iv. 6.] And let any one receive, in
+the plain meaning of his words, his prohibitory monition [Col. ii.
+18.], and say, could St. Paul have <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page51" id="page51"></a>{51}</span> uttered these words without
+any qualifying expression, had he worshipped angels by invocation,
+even asking them only to aid him by their prayers. "Let no one
+beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping
+of angels; not holding the Head," which Head he had in the first
+chapter (v. 18) declared to be the dear Son of God, "in whom we
+have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of our
+sins."</p>
+<p>The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews could bring before our
+minds with most fervent uplifting eloquence Abel and Abraham and
+David,&mdash;that goodly fellowship of the prophets, that holy army
+of martyrs; he could speak as though he were an eye-witness of what
+he describes, of the general assembly and church of the first-born,
+whose names are written in heaven. And, surely, had the thought of
+seeking the support or intercession of saint or angel by invocation
+addressed to them, been familiar to him; had the thought even
+occurred to his mind with approbation, he would not have allowed
+such an occasion to pass by, without even alluding to any benefit
+that might arise from our invoking such friends of God. So far from
+that allusion, the utmost which he says at the close of his eulogy
+is this, "These all, having obtained a good report through faith,
+received not the promise; God having provided some better thing for
+us, that they without us should not be made perfect." [Heb. xi. 39,
+40.]</p>
+<p>The beloved Apostle who could look forward in full assurance of
+faith to the day of Christ's second coming, and knew that "when He
+shall appear we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is,"
+has left us this record of his sentiments concerning prayer:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52" id="page52"></a>{52}</span>
+"This is the confidence that we have in HIM, that, if we ask any
+thing according to his will, he heareth us; and if we know that he
+hear us, whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that
+we desired of him." [1 John v. 14, 15.] St. John alludes to no
+intercessor, to no advocate, save only that "Advocate with the
+Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, who is also the propitiation
+for our sins." [1 John ii. 1.] St. John never suggests to us the
+advocacy or intercession of saint or angel; with him God in Christ
+is all in all.</p>
+<p>I will only refer to one more example, that of St. James: the
+instance is equally to the point, and is strongly illustrative of
+the truth. This Apostle is anxious to impress on his
+fellow-Christians a due sense of the efficacy of our intercessions:
+"The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much."
+[James v. 16.] He instances its power with God by the case of
+Elijah, a man so holy, that the Almighty suffered him not to pass
+through the regions of death and the grave, but translated him at
+once from this life to glory: "Elias was a man subject to like
+passions as we are, and he prayed that it might not rain; and it
+rained not on the earth by the space of three years and six months;
+and he prayed again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth
+brought forth her fruit." [James v. 17, 18.] And yet St. James is
+very far from suggesting the lawfulness or efficacy of any
+invocation to the hallowed spirit of this man, to whose prayer the
+elements and natural powers of the sky and the earth had been made
+obedient. He exhorts all men to pray, but it must be to God alone,
+and directly to God, without applying for the intervention of any
+mediators or intercessors from among angels or men. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>{53}</span> "If any of
+you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth liberally to all
+men, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him; but let him ask
+in faith, nothing wavering." [James i. 5, 6.] Like the writer to
+the Hebrews, he would have us come ourselves "boldly" and directly
+"to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace
+to help in time of need."</p>
+<p>Surely, these Apostles, chosen vessels for conveying the truths
+of salvation throughout the world, knew well how the Almighty could
+best be approached by his children on earth; and had the invocation
+of saint or angel found a place in their creed, they would not have
+kept so important a truth from us.</p>
+<p>Before leaving this part of our inquiry, I would propose the
+patient and unprejudiced weighing of the import of two passages in
+the New Testament, often quoted on this subject; one in the Acts of
+the Apostles, the other in the Apocalypse.</p>
+<p>The holy Apostles Barnabas and Paul, by the performance of a
+striking miracle, had excited feelings of religious reverence and
+devotion among the people of Lystra, who prepared to offer
+sacrifice to them as two of their fabled deities. [Acts xiv.
+11-18.] The indignant zeal with which these two holy men rushed
+forward to prevent such an act of impiety, however admirable and
+affecting, does not constitute the chief point for which reference
+is here made to this incident. They were men, still clothed with
+the tabernacle of the flesh, and the weakness of human nature; and
+the priests and people were ready to offer to them the wonted
+victims, the abomination of the heathen. Now, I am fully aware of
+the wide difference, in many <span class="pagenum"><a name="page54"
+id="page54"></a>{54}</span> particulars, between such an act and
+the act of a Christian praying to their spirits after their
+departure hence, and supplicating them to intercede with the true
+God in his behalf: and on this difference Roman Catholic writers
+have maintained the total inapplicability of this incident to the
+present state of things. But, surely, if any such prayer to
+departed saints had been familiar to their minds, instead of
+repelling the religious address of the inhabitants of Lystra at
+once and for ever, they would have altered the tone of their
+remonstrance, and not have suppressed the truth when a good
+opportunity offered itself for imparting it. And, supposing that it
+was part of their commission to announce and explain the invocation
+of saints at all, on what occasion could an explanation of the just
+and proper invocation of angels and saints departed have been more
+appropriate in the Apostles, than when they were denouncing the
+unjustifiable offering of sacrifice to themselves while living? But
+whether the more appropriate place for such an announcement were at
+Lystra, in Corinth, at Athens, or at Rome, it matters not; nor
+whether it would have been more advantageously communicated by
+their oral teaching, or in their epistles. Doubtless, had the
+Apostles, by their example or teaching, sanctioned the invocation
+of saints and angels, in the course of fifty years or more after
+our blessed Saviour's resurrection, it would infallibly have
+appeared in some page or other of the New Testament. Instead of
+this the whole tenor of the Holy Volume breathes in perfect
+accordance with the spirit of the apostolical remonstrance at
+Lystra, to the fullest and utmost extent of its meaning, "We preach
+unto you that ye should turn from these vanities to serve the
+living God."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>{55}</span>
+<p>Of the other instance, it well becomes every Catholic Christian
+to ponder on the weight and cogency. John, the beloved disciple of
+our Lord, when admitted to view with his own eyes and hear with his
+mortal ears the things of heaven, rapt in amazement and awe, fell
+down to worship before the feet of the angel who showed him these
+things. [Rev. xxii. 8, 9.] If the adoration of angels were ever
+justifiable, surely it was then; and what a testimony to the end of
+the world would have been put upon record, had the adoration of an
+angel by the blessed John at such a moment, when he had the
+mysteries and the glories of heaven before him, been received and
+sanctioned. But what is the fact? "Then saith he to me, See thou do
+it not. I am thy fellow-servant, and of thy brethren the prophets,
+and of them who keep the sayings of this book. Worship God." I
+cannot understand the criticism by which the conclusiveness of this
+direct renouncement of all religious adoration and worship is
+attempted to be set aside. To my mind these words, uttered without
+any qualification at such a time, by such a being, to such a man,
+are conclusive beyond gainsaying. The interpretation put upon this
+transaction, and the words in which it is recorded, and the
+inference drawn from them by a series of the best divines, with St.
+Athanasius at their head, presents so entirely the plain
+common-sense view of the case to our minds, that all the subtilty
+of casuists, and all the ingenuity of modern refinements, will
+never be able to substitute any other in its stead. "The angel
+(such are the words of that ancient defender of the true faith), in
+the Apocalypse, forbids John, when desiring to worship him, saying,
+'See thou <span class="pagenum"><a name="page56" id=
+"page56"></a>{56}</span> do it not; I am thy fellow-servant, and of
+thy brethren the prophets, and of them who keep the sayings of this
+book. Worship God.' Therefore, to be the object of worship belongs
+to God only; and this even the angels themselves know: though they
+surpass others in glory, but they are all creatures, and are not
+among objects of worship, but among those who worship the sovereign
+Lord." [Athan. Orat. 2. Cont. Ar. vol. i. p. 491.] To say that St.
+John was too fully illuminated by the Holy Spirit to do, especially
+a second time, what was wrong; and thence to infer that what he did
+was right, is as untenable as to maintain, that St. Peter could
+not, especially thrice, have done wrong in denying our Lord. He did
+wrong, or the angel would not have chided and warned him. And to
+say that the angel here forbade John personally to worship him,
+because he was a fellow-servant and one of the prophets; and thus
+that the prohibition only tended to exalt the prophetic character,
+not to condemn the worship of angels, is proved to be also a
+groundless assumption, from the angel's own words, who reckons
+himself as a fellow-servant with not St. John only, but all those
+also who keep the words of the book of God,&mdash;thus equally
+forbidding every faithful Christian to worship their
+fellow-servants the angels. They are almost the last words in the
+volume of inspired truth, and to me, together with those last
+words, they seem with "the voice of a great multitude, and of many
+waters, and of mighty thunderings," from the very throne itself of
+the Most High, to proclaim to every inhabiter of the earth, Fall
+down before no created being; adore no created being; pray to,
+invoke, call upon no created being, whether saint or angel: worship
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>{57}</span>
+and adore God only; pray to God only. Trust to his mercy; seek no
+other mediator or intercessor than his own only and blessed Son.
+"He who testifieth these things saith, Surely, I come quickly.
+Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ
+be with you all. Amen." [Rev. xxii. 20, 21.]</p>
+<p>Thus the New Testament, so far from mitigating the stringency of
+the former law, so far from countenancing any departure from the
+obligation of that code which limits religious worship to God
+alone, so far from suggesting to us invocation to sainted men, and
+to angels as intercessors with the eternal Giver of all good,
+reiterates the injunction, and declares, that invocation in order
+to be Christian must be addressed to God alone; and that there is
+one and only one Mediator between God and men, the man Jesus
+Christ, who is at the right hand of his Father, a merciful High
+Priest sympathizing with us in our infirmities, ever making
+intercession for us, able to save to the uttermost those who come
+unto God through Him.</p>
+<p>The present seems to be a convenient place for observing, that
+however the distinction is strongly insisted upon, or rather
+implicitly acquiesced in by many, which would admit of a worship or
+service called dulia (the Greek [Greek: douleia]) to saints and
+angels, and would limit the worship or service called latria
+([Greek: latreia]) to the supreme God only, yet that such
+distinction has no ground whatever to rest upon beyond the will and
+the imagination of those who draw it. The two words are used in the
+Septuagint translation of the Old Testament, and in the original
+Greek of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id=
+"page58"></a>{58}</span> New promiscuously, without any such
+distinction whatever. The word which this distinction would limit
+to the supreme worship of the Most High, is used to express the
+bodily service paid by the vanquished to their conquerors, as well
+as the religious service paid by idolaters to their fabled deities,
+and by the true worshippers to the Most High. The word which this
+distinction would reserve for the secondary worship paid to saints
+and angels, is employed to express not only the service paid by man
+to man, but also the service and worship paid to God alone, even
+when mentioned in contradistinction to other worship. It will be
+necessary to establish this by one or two instances; and first as
+to "latria." One single chapter in the Book of Deuteronomy supplies
+us with instances of the word used in the three senses, of service
+to men, service to idols, and service to God, xxviii. 36. 47, 48:
+"Because thou servedst [Greek: elatreusas] not the Lord thy God
+with joyfulness and gladness of heart; Therefore thou shalt serve
+[Greek: latreuseis] thine enemies which the Lord shall send against
+thee in hunger and in thirst and nakedness." "The Lord shall bring
+thee unto a nation which neither thou nor thy fathers have known;
+and there shalt thou serve [Greek: latreuseis] other gods, wood and
+stone." Next as to the word "dulia." The First Book of Samuel
+(called also the First of Kings) alone supplies us with instances
+of this word being used in each of the same three senses of service
+from man to man, from man to idols, and from man to his Maker and
+God. 1 Sam. xvii. 9. "Ye shall be our servants and serve [Greek:
+douleusite haemin] us." xii. 24. "Only fear the Lord, and serve
+[Greek: douleusate] him in truth with all your heart." xxvi. 19.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>{59}</span>
+"They have driven me out from the inheritance of the Lord, saying,
+Go, serve<a id="footnotetag15" name="footnotetag15"></a><a href=
+"#footnote15"><sup>15</sup></a> other gods."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote15" name=
+"footnote15"></a><b>Footnote 15:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag15">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: douleue]. In this case also the Vulgate translates all
+the three passages alike by the same verb, "servire."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is worthy of remark, that the same word "dulia<a id=
+"footnotetag16" name="footnotetag16"></a><a href=
+"#footnote16"><sup>16</sup></a>" is employed, when the Lord by his
+prophet speaks of the most solemn acts of religious worship; not in
+general obedience only, but in the offerings and oblations of their
+holy things. Ezek. xx. 40. "In mine holy mountain, in the mountain
+of the height of Israel, saith the Lord God, there shall all the
+house of Israel, all of them in the land, serve me [Greek:
+douleusousi. Vulg: serviet.]; there will I accept them, and there
+will I require your offerings, and the first-fruits of your
+oblations, with all your holy things." St. Matthew also uses the
+same word when he records the saying of our blessed Lord, "Ye
+cannot serve God and mammon." [Matt. vi. 24.; Greek: douleuein.
+Vulg: servire.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote16" name=
+"footnote16"></a><b>Footnote 16:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag16">(return)</a>
+<p>It is also remarkable that in all these cases, whether the
+Septuagint employs the word "dulia," or "latria," the word in the
+Hebrew is precisely the same, [Hebrew: avad]. That in the fifth
+century the words were synonymous is evident from Theodoret. I.
+319. See Edit. Halle.&mdash;Index.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I will only detain you by one more example, drawn from two
+passages, which seems the more striking because each of the two
+words "dulia" and "latria" is used to imply the true worship of God
+in a person, who was changed from a state of alienation to a state
+of holiness. The first is in St. Paul's 1st Epistle to the
+Thessalonians, i. 9. "How ye turned to God from idols, to serve
+[Greek: douleuein theo zonti] the living and true God." The second
+is in Heb. ix. 14. "How much more shall the blood of Christ, who
+through the eternal Spirit offered himself <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>{60}</span> without spot
+to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve<a id=
+"footnotetag17" name="footnotetag17"></a><a href=
+"#footnote17"><sup>17</sup></a> the living God."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote17" name=
+"footnote17"></a><b>Footnote 17:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag17">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: latoeuein theo zonti.] In each of these two cases the
+Vulgate uses "servire."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The word "hyperdulia," now used to signify the worship proper to
+the Virgin Mary, as being a worship of a more exalted character
+than the worship offered to saints and angels, archangels, and
+cherubim and seraphim, will not require a similar examination. The
+word was invented in later times, and has been used chiefly to
+signify the worship of the Virgin, and is of course found neither
+in the Scriptures, nor in any ancient classical or ecclesiastical
+author.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>{61}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap1-3" id="chap1-3">CHAPTER III.</a></h3>
+<h4><a name="sect1-3-1" id="sect1-3-1">SECTION I.</a>&mdash;THE
+EVIDENCE OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.</h4>
+<p>Before we enter upon the next branch of our proposed inquiry,
+allow me to premise that I am induced to examine into the evidence
+of Christian antiquity not by any misgiving, lest the testimony of
+Scripture might appear defective or doubtful; far less by any
+unworthy notion that God's word needs the additional support of the
+suffrages of man<a id="footnotetag18" name=
+"footnotetag18"></a><a href="#footnote18"><sup>18</sup></a>. On the
+contrary, the voice of God in his revealed word is clear, certain,
+and indisputable, commanding the invocation of Himself alone in
+acts of religious worship, and condemning any such departure from
+that singleness of adoration, as they are <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page62" id="page62"></a>{62}</span> seduced
+into, who invoke saints and angels. And it is a fixed principle in
+our creed, that where God's written word is clear and certain,
+human evidence cannot be weighed against it in the balance of the
+sanctuary. When the Lord hath spoken, well does it become the whole
+earth to be silent before him; when the eternal Judge Himself hath
+decided, the witness of man bears on its very face the stamp of
+incompetency and presumption.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote18" name=
+"footnote18"></a><b>Footnote 18:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag18">(return)</a>
+<p>While some authors seem to go far towards the substitution of
+the fathers for the written word of God, others in their abhorrence
+of that excess have run into the opposite, fancying, as it would
+seem, that they exalt the Divine oracles just in the same
+proportion as they disparage the uninspired writers of the Church.
+The great body of the Church of England adhere to a middle course,
+and adopt that golden mean, which ascribes to the written Word its
+paramount authority, from which is no appeal, and yet honours
+Catholic tradition as the handmaid of the truth.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>For myself I can say (what I have good hope these pages will of
+themselves evince) that no one can value the testimony of Christian
+tradition within its own legitimate sphere more sincerely, or more
+highly, than the individual who is now soliciting your attention to
+the conclusions which he has himself drawn from it. When Scripture
+is silent, or where its meaning is doubtful, Catholic tradition is
+to me a guide, which I feel myself bound to follow with watchful
+care and submissive reverence.</p>
+<p>Now let it be for the present supposed, that instead of the
+oracles of God having spoken, as we believe them to have spoken,
+with a voice clear, strong, and uniform against the doctrine and
+practice of the invocation of saints and angels, their voices had
+been weak, doubtful, and vague; in other words, suppose in this
+case the question had been left by the Holy Scriptures an open
+question, then what evidence would have been deducible from the
+writings of the primitive Church? What testimony do the first years
+and the first ages after the canon of Scripture was closed, bear
+upon this point? And here I would repeat the principle of inquiry,
+proposed above for our adoption in the more important and solemn
+examination of the Holy Volume itself.&mdash;We ought to endeavour
+to ascertain what may <span class="pagenum"><a name="page63" id=
+"page63"></a>{63}</span> fairly and honestly be regarded as the
+real bearing of each author's remains, and not suffer the general
+tone and spirit of a writer to be counterbalanced by single
+expressions, which may be so interpreted as to convey an opposite
+meaning. Rather we should endeavour to reconcile with that general
+spirit and pervading tendency of a writer's sentiments any casual
+expressions which may admit of two acceptations. We adopt this
+principle in our researches into the remains of classical
+antiquity; we adopt the same principle in estimating the testimony
+of a living witness. In the latter case, indeed, the ingenuity of
+the adverse advocate is often exercised in magnifying the
+discrepancies between some minor facts or incidental expressions
+with the broad and leading assertions of the witness, with a view
+to invalidate his testimony altogether, or at least to weaken the
+impression made by it. But then a wise and upright judge, assured
+of the truth of the evidence in the main, and of the integrity of
+the individual, will not suffer unessential, apparent
+inconsistencies to stifle and bury the body of testimony at large,
+but will either extract from the witness what may account for them,
+or show them to be immaterial. Inviting, therefore, your best
+thoughts to this branch of our subject, I ask you to ascertain, by
+a full and candid process of induction, this important and
+interesting point,&mdash;Whether we of the Anglican Church, by
+religiously abstaining from the presentation, in word or in
+thought, of any thing approaching prayer or supplication, entreaty,
+request, or any invocation whatever, to any other being except God
+alone, do or do not tread in the steps of the first Christians, and
+adhere to the very pattern which they set; and whether members of
+the Church of Rome by addressing angel or saint in any form of
+invocation seeking <span class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id=
+"page64"></a>{64}</span> their aid, either by their intercession or
+otherwise, have not unhappily swerved decidedly and far from those
+same footsteps, and departed widely from that pattern?</p>
+<p>In one point of view it might perhaps be preferable to enter at
+once upon our investigation, without previously stating the
+conclusions to which my own inquiries have led; but, on the whole,
+I think it more fair to make that statement, in order, that having
+the inferences already drawn placed before the mind, the inquirer
+may in each case weigh the several items of evidence bearing upon
+them separately, and more justly estimate its whole weight
+collectively at the last.</p>
+<p>After then having examined the passages collected by the most
+celebrated Roman Catholic writers, and after having searched the
+undisputed original works of the primitive writers of the Greek and
+Latin Churches, the conclusion to which I came, and in which every
+day of further inquiry and deliberation confirms me more and more
+in this:&mdash;</p>
+<p>In the first place, negatively, that the Christian writers,
+through the first three centuries and more, never refer to the
+invocation of saints and angels as a practice with which they were
+familiar: that they have not recorded or alluded to any forms of
+invocation of the kind used by themselves or by the Church in their
+days; and that no services of the earliest times contain hymns,
+litanies, or collects to angels, or to the spirits of the faithful
+departed.</p>
+<p>In the second place, positively, that the principles which they
+habitually maintain and advocate are irreconcileable with such a
+practice.</p>
+<p>In tracing the history of the worship of saints and angels, we
+proceed (gradually, indeed, though by no <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>{65}</span> means at all
+periods, and through every stage, with equal rapidity,) from the
+earliest custom established and practised in the Church,&mdash;of
+addressing prayers to Almighty God alone for the sake of the merits
+of his blessed Son, the only Mediator and Intercessor between God
+and man,&mdash;to the lamentable innovation both of praying to God
+for the sake of the merits, and through the mediation of departed
+mortals, and of invoking those mortals themselves as the actual
+dispensers of the spiritual blessings which the suppliant seeks
+from above. It is not only a necessary part of our inquiry for
+ascertaining the very truth of the case; it is also curious and
+painfully interesting, to trace the several steps, one after
+another, beginning with the doctrine maintained by various early
+writers, both Greek and Latin, that the souls of the saints are not
+yet reigning with Christ in heaven, and ending with the anathema of
+the Council of Trent, against all who should maintain that
+doctrine; beginning with prayer and thanksgiving to Almighty God
+alone, and ending with daily prayers both to saints and angels; one
+deviation from the strict line of religious duty, and the pure
+singleness of Christian worship, successively gliding into another,
+till at length the whole of Christendom, with a few remarkable
+exceptions, was seen to acquiesce in public and private devotions,
+which, if proposed, the whole of Christendom would once with
+unanimity have rejected.</p>
+<p>Before I offer to you the result of my inquiries as to the
+progressive stages of degeneracy and innovation in the worship of
+Almighty God, I would premise two considerations:</p>
+<p>First, I would observe, that the soundness of my conclusion on
+the general points at issue does not depend at all on the accuracy
+of the arrangement of those stages <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page66" id="page66"></a>{66}</span> which I have adopted. Should
+any one, for example, think there is evidence that two or more of
+those progressive steps, which I have regarded as consecutive, were
+simultaneous changes, or that any one which I have ranked as
+subsequent took rather the lead in order of time, such an opinion
+would not tend in the least to invalidate my argument; the
+substantial and essential point at issue being this: Is the
+invocation of saints and angels, as now practised in the Church of
+Rome, agreeable to the primitive usage of the earliest
+Christians?</p>
+<p>Secondly, I would observe, that the places and occasions most
+favourable for witnessing and correctly estimating the changes and
+gradual innovations in the worship of those early times, are the
+tombs of the martyrs, and the Churches in which their remains were
+deposited; and at the periods of the annual celebration of their
+martyrdom, or in some instances at what was called their
+translation,&mdash;the removal, that is, of their mortal remains
+from their former resting-place to a church, for the most part
+dedicated to their memory. On these occasions the most
+extraordinary enthusiasm prevailed; sometimes the ardour of the
+worshippers, as St. Chrysostom [St. Chrys. Paris, 1718. Vol. xii.
+p. 330.] tells us, approaching madness. But even at times of less
+excitement, by contemplating, immediately after his death, the acts
+and sufferings of the martyr, and recalling his words, and looks,
+and stedfast bearing, and exhorting each other to picture to
+themselves his holy countenance then fixed on them, his tongue
+addressing them, his sufferings before their eyes, encouraging all
+to follow his example, they began habitually to consider him as
+actually himself one of the faithful assembled round <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>{67}</span> his tomb.
+Hence they believed that he was praying with them as well as for
+them; that he heard their eulogy on his merits, and was pleased
+with the honours paid to his memory: hence they felt sure of his
+goodwill towards them, and his ability, as when on earth, to
+promote their welfare. Hence they proceeded, by a fatal step,
+first, to implore him to give them bodily relief from some present
+sufferings; then invoking him to plead their cause with God, and to
+intercede for the supply of their spiritual wants, and the ultimate
+salvation of their souls; and, lastly, they prayed to him generally
+as himself the dispenser of temporal and spiritual blessings.</p>
+<p>The following then is the order in which the innovations in
+Christian worship seem to have taken place, being chiefly
+introduced at the annual celebrations of the martyrs:&mdash;</p>
+<p>1st. In the first ages confession and prayer and praise were
+offered to the Supreme Being alone, and that for the sake of his
+Son our only Saviour and Advocate: when mention was made of saint
+or martyr, it was to thank God for the graces bestowed on his
+departed holy ones when on earth, and to pray to God for grace that
+we might follow their good examples, and attain, through Christ, to
+the same end and crown of our earthly struggles. This act of
+worship was usually accompanied by a homily setting forth the
+Christian excellences of the saint, and encouraging the survivors
+so to follow him, as he followed Christ.</p>
+<p>2nd. The second stage seems to have been a prayer to Almighty
+God, that He would suffer the supplications and intercessions<a id=
+"footnotetag19" name="footnotetag19"></a><a href=
+"#footnote19"><sup>19</sup></a> of angels and saints to prevail
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>{68}</span>
+with him, and bring down a blessing on their fellow-petitioners on
+earth; the idea having spread among enthusiastic worshippers, as I
+have already observed, that the spirits of the saints were suffered
+to be present around their tombs, and to join with the faithful in
+their addresses to the throne of grace.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote19" name=
+"footnote19"></a><b>Footnote 19:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag19">(return)</a>
+<p>The Greek word [Greek: presbeia], "embassy," employed on such
+occasions, is still used in some eastern Churches in the same
+sense.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>3rd. The third stage seems to have owed its origin to orators
+constantly dwelling upon the excellences of the saints in the
+panegyrics delivered over their remains, representing their
+constancy and Christian virtues as superhuman and divine, and as
+having conferred lasting benefits on the Church. By these benefits
+at first was meant the comfort and encouragement of their good
+example, and the honour procured to the religion of the cross by
+their bearing witness to its truth even unto death; but in process
+of time the habit grew of attaching a sort of mysterious efficacy
+to their merits; hence this third gradation in religious worship,
+namely, prayers to God that "He would hear his suppliants, and
+grant their requests for the sake of his martyred servant, and by
+the efficacy of that martyr's merits."</p>
+<p>4th. Hitherto, unauthorized and objectionable as the two last
+forms of prayer are, still the petitions in each case were directed
+to God alone. The next step swerved lamentably from that principle
+of worship, and the petitioners addressed their requests to angels
+and sainted men in heaven; at first, however, confining their
+petitions to the asking for their prayers and intercessions with
+Almighty God.</p>
+<p>5th. The last stage in this progressive degeneracy of Christian
+worship was to petition the saints and angels, directly and
+immediately themselves, at first for the temporal, and afterwards
+for the spiritual benefits which the petitioners desired to obtain
+from heaven. For it <span class="pagenum"><a name="page69" id=
+"page69"></a>{69}</span> is very curious, but not more curious than
+evident, that the worshippers seem for some time to have petitioned
+their saints for temporal and bodily benefits, before they
+proceeded to ask for spiritual blessings at their hands, or by
+their prayers. (See Basil. Oral. in Mamanta Martyrem.)</p>
+<p>Of these several gradations and stages we find traces in the
+records of Christian antiquity, after superstition and corruption
+had spread through Christian worship, and leavened the whole. Of
+all of them we have lamentable instances in the present ritual of
+the Church of Rome, as we shall see somewhat at large when we reach
+that division of our inquiry. But from the beginning it was not so.
+In the earliest ages we find only the first of these forms of
+worship exemplified, and it is the only form now retained in the
+Anglican Ritual; of which, among other examples, the following
+passage in the prayer for Christ's Church militant on earth
+supplies a beautiful specimen: "We bless Thy holy name for all Thy
+servants departed this life in Thy faith and fear; beseeching Thee
+to give us grace so to follow their good examples, that with them
+we may be partakers of Thy heavenly kingdom: Grant this, O Father,
+for Jesus Christ's sake, our only Mediator and Advocate. Amen."</p>
+<p>We now proceed to examine the invaluable remains of Christian
+antiquity, not for the purpose of testing the accuracy of the above
+catalogue of gradations <i>seriatim</i> and in order of time; but
+to satisfy ourselves on the question, whether the invocation of
+saints and angels prevailed from the first in the Christian Church;
+or whether it was an innovation introduced after pagan superstition
+had begun to mingle its poisonous corruptions with the pure worship
+of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id=
+"page70"></a>{70}</span> Almighty God. And here, I conceive, few
+persons will be disposed to doubt, that if the primitive believers
+were taught by the Apostles to address the saints reigning in
+heaven and the holy angels, and the Virgin Mother of our Lord, with
+adoration and prayers, the earliest Christian records must have
+contained clear and indisputable references to the fact, and that
+undesigned allusions to the custom would inevitably be found
+offering themselves to our notice here and there. I do not mean
+that we should expect to meet with full and explicit statements
+either of the doctrine or the practice of the primitive Church in
+this particular; much less such apologies and elaborate defences of
+the practice as abound to the overflow in later times. But, what is
+more satisfactory in proof of the general and established
+prevalence of any opinions or customs, we should surely find
+expressions incidentally occurring, which implied an habitual
+familiarity with such opinions or customs. In every record, for
+example, of primitive antiquity, from the very earliest of all,
+expressions are constantly meeting us which involve the doctrine of
+the ever-blessed Trinity, the atoning sacrifice of Christ's death,
+the influences of the Holy Spirit; habitual prayer and praise
+offered to the Saviour of the world, as very and eternal God; the
+holy Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper; with other tenets
+and practices of the Apostolic Church. It is impossible to study
+the remains of Christian antiquity without being assured beyond the
+reach of doubt, that such were the doctrines and practice of the
+universal Church from the days of the Apostles. Is the invocation
+of saints and angels and the blessed Virgin to be made an exception
+to this rule? Can it stand this test? The great anxiety and labour
+of Roman Catholic <span class="pagenum"><a name="page71" id=
+"page71"></a>{71}</span> writers to press the authors of every age
+to bear witness on their side in this behalf, proves that in their
+judgment no such exception is admissible. It is clearly beyond
+gainsaying, that if the present doctrine of the Church of Rome,
+with respect to the worship of angels and saints, as propounded by
+the Council of Trent; and if her present practice as set forth in
+her authorized liturgies and devotional services, and professed by
+her popes, bishops, clergy, and people, had been the doctrine and
+practice of the primitive Church, we should have found evident and
+indisputable traces of it in the earliest works of primitive
+antiquity, in the earliest liturgies, and in the forms of prayer
+and exhortations to prayer with which those works abound. It by no
+means follows that if some such allusions were partially
+discoverable, therefore the doctrines and practice must forthwith
+be pronounced to be apostolical; but if no such traces can be
+found, their absence bears witness that neither did those doctrines
+nor that practice exist. If, for example, through the remains of
+the first three centuries we could have discovered no trace of the
+doctrine or practice of holy Baptism and the Eucharist, we must
+have concluded that the doctrine and the practice were the
+offspring of later years. But when we read every where, in those
+remains, exhortations to approach those holy mysteries with a pure
+heart and faith unfeigned; when we find rules prescribed for the
+more orderly administration of the rites; in a word, when we
+perceive throughout as familiar references to these ordinances as
+could be now made by Catholics either of Rome or of England, while
+this would not of itself necessarily prove their divine origin, we
+should with equal plausibility question the existence of Jerusalem
+or Constantinople, or of David or Constantine, as we <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72"></a>{72}</span> should doubt
+the prevalence both of the doctrine and practice of the Church in
+these particulars, even from the Apostles' days.</p>
+<p>With these principles present to our minds, I now invite you to
+accompany me in a review of the testimonies of primitive Christian
+antiquity with regard to supplications and invocations of saints
+and angels, and of the blessed Virgin Mary.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-3-2" id="sect1-3-2">SECTION II</a>&mdash;CENTURY
+I.&mdash;THE EVIDENCE OF THE APOSTOLIC FATHERS.</h4>
+<p>It will be necessary for the satisfaction of all parties, that
+we examine, in the first place, those ancient writings which are
+ascribed to an Apostle, or to fellow-labourers of the Apostles;
+familiarly known as the writings of the Apostolic Fathers. They are
+five in number, Barnabas, Clement, Hermas, Ignatius, and Polycarp.
+Many able writers, as well of the Roman as of the Anglican
+communion, have discussed at large the genuineness of these
+writings; and have come to very different results. Some critics are
+of opposite and extreme opinions, others ranging between them with
+every degree and shade of variation. Some of these works have been
+considered spurious; others have been pronounced genuine; though,
+even these have been thought to be, in many parts, interpolated.
+The question, however, of their genuineness, though deeply
+interesting in itself, will not affect their testimony with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73"></a>{73}</span>
+regard to the subject before us<a id="footnotetag20" name=
+"footnotetag20"></a><a href="#footnote20"><sup>20</sup></a>. They
+were all in existence before the Council of Nic&aelig;a; and we
+shall probably not be wrong in assigning to the first two a date at
+the very lowest computation not less remote than the middle of the
+second century; somewhere, it may be, at the furthest, about one
+hundred years after the death of our Lord. (A.D. 130-150.) With all
+their errors and blemishes and interpolations taken at the worst,
+after every reasonable deduction for defects in matter, taste, and
+style, the writings which are ascribed to the Apostolic Fathers are
+too venerable for their antiquity, too often quoted with reverence
+and affection by some who have been the brightest ornaments of the
+Christian Church, and possess too copious a store of genuine
+evangelical truth, sound principle, primitive simplicity, and pious
+sentiment, to be passed over with neglect by any Catholic
+Christian. The few extracts <span class="pagenum"><a name="page74"
+id="page74"></a>{74}</span> made here will, I am assured, be not
+unacceptable to any one, who holds dear the religion of
+Christ<a id="footnotetag21" name="footnotetag21"></a><a href=
+"#footnote21"><sup>21</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote20" name=
+"footnote20"></a><b>Footnote 20:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag20">(return)</a>
+<p>I do not think it suitable in this address to enter upon the
+difficult field of inquiry, whether all or which of these works
+were the genuine productions of those whose names they bear; and
+whether the Barnabas, Clement, and Hermas to which three of them
+are ascribed, were the Barnabas, Clement, and Hermas of whom
+express mention is made in the pages of Holy Scripture. I have
+determined, in conducting my argument, to affix to them in each
+case the lowest proposed antiquity. The edition of Archbishop Wake,
+(who maintains the highest antiquity for these works, though I have
+not here adopted his translation,) may be consulted with much
+profit.</p>
+<p>Did the question before us relate to the genuineness and dates
+of these works, they could not, with any approach to fairness, be
+all five placed without distinction under the same category. The
+evidence for the genuineness of Clement, Ignatius in the shorter
+copy, and Polycarp, is too valuable to be confounded with that of
+the others, which are indisputably subject to much greater doubt.
+But this question has only an incidental bearing on our present
+inquiry, and will be well spared.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote21" name=
+"footnote21"></a><b>Footnote 21:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag21">(return)</a>
+<p>The edition of the works of these Apostolic Fathers used here is
+that of Cotelerius as revised by Le Clerc, Antwerp, 1698.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr />
+<h4>THE EPISTLE OF ST. BARNABAS.</h4>
+<p>In the work entitled The Catholic Epistle of Barnabas, which was
+written probably by a Jew converted to the Christian faith, about
+the close of the first century, or certainly before the middle of
+the second<a id="footnotetag22" name="footnotetag22"></a><a href=
+"#footnote22"><sup>22</sup></a>, I have searched in vain for any
+thing like the faintest trace of the invocation of saint or angel.
+The writer gives directions on the subject of prayer; he speaks of
+angels as the ministers of God; he speaks of the reward of the
+righteous at the day of judgment; but he suggests not the shadow of
+a supposition, that he either held the doctrine himself which the
+Church of Rome now holds, or was aware of its existence among
+Christians. In his very beautiful but incomplete summary of
+Christian duty [Sect. 18, 19. p. 50, 51, 52.], which he calls "The
+Way of Light," we perceive more than one most natural opening for
+reference to that doctrine, had it been familiar to his mind. In
+the midst indeed of his brief precepts of religious and moral
+obligation, he directs the Christian to seek out every day "the
+persons of the saints," but they are our fellow-believers on earth;
+those saints or holy ones, for administering to whose necessities,
+the Scripture assures us that God will not forget our work and
+labour of love [Heb. vi. 10.]: these the author bids the Christians
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75"></a>{75}</span>
+search out daily, for the purposes of religious intercourse, and of
+encouragement by the word.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote22" name=
+"footnote22"></a><b>Footnote 22:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag22">(return)</a>
+<p>Archbishop Wake considers this Epistle to have been written by
+St. Barnabas to the Jews, soon after the destruction of
+Jerusalem.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The following interesting extracts shall conclude our reference
+to this work:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"There are two ways of doctrine and authority, one of light, the
+other of darkness; and the difference between the two ways is
+great. Over the one are appointed angels of God, conductors of the
+light; over the other, angels of Satan: and the one (God) is Lord
+from everlasting to everlasting; the other (Satan) is ruler of the
+age of iniquity. The way of light is this ... Thou shalt love Him
+that made thee; thou shalt glorify Him that redeemed thee from
+death. Thou shalt be single in heart, and rich in spirit. Thou
+shalt not join thyself to those who are walking in the path of
+death. Thou shalt hate to do what is displeasing to God; thou shalt
+hate all hypocrisy. Thou shalt entertain no evil counsel against
+thy neighbour. Thou shalt not take away thy hand from thy son or
+thy daughter, but shalt teach them the fear of the Lord from their
+youth. Thou shalt communicate with thy neighbour in all things, and
+call not things thine own. Thou shalt not be of a froward tongue,
+for the mouth is the snare of death. To the very utmost of thy
+power keep thy soul chaste. Do not open thine hand to receive, and
+close it against giving. Thou shalt love as the apple of thine eye
+every one who speaketh to thee the word of the Lord. Call to
+remembrance the day of judgment, night and day. Thou shalt search
+out every day the persons of the saints<a id="footnotetag23" name=
+"footnotetag23"></a><a href="#footnote23"><sup>23</sup></a>; both
+meditating by the word, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id=
+"page76"></a>{76}</span> and proceeding to exhort them, and
+anxiously caring to save a soul by the word. Thou shalt preserve
+what thou hast received, neither adding thereto, nor taking
+therefrom. Thou shalt not come with a bad conscience to thy
+prayer."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote23" name=
+"footnote23"></a><b>Footnote 23:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag23">(return)</a>
+<p>There is much obscurity in the phraseology of this passage:
+[Greek: ekzaetaeseis kath hekastaen haemeran ta prosopa ton hagion
+kai dia logou skopion kai poreuomenos eis to parakalesai, kai
+meleton eis sosai psuchaen to logo]. In the corresponding
+exhortation among the Apostolical Constitutions (book vii. ch. 9),
+the expression is, "Thou shalt seek the person ([Greek: prosopon])
+of the saints, that thou mayest find rest (or find refreshment, or
+refresh thyself) ([Greek: in epanapanae tois logois auton]) in
+their words." The author seems evidently to allude to the
+reciprocal advantage derived by Christians from religious
+intercourse.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The closing sentences contain this blessing: "Now God, who is
+the Lord of all the world, give to you wisdom, skill,
+understanding, knowledge of his judgments, with patience. And be ye
+taught of God; seeking what the Lord requires of you, and do it,
+that ye may be saved in the day of judgment.... The Lord of glory
+and of all grace be with your spirit. Amen."</p>
+<hr />
+<h4>THE SHEPHERD OF HERMAS.</h4>
+<p>This work, which derives its title from the circumstance of an
+angelic teacher being represented as a shepherd, is now considered
+by many to have been the production of Hermas, a brother of Pius,
+Bishop of Rome<a id="footnotetag24" name=
+"footnotetag24"></a><a href="#footnote24"><sup>24</sup></a> though
+others are persuaded that the work is of a much earlier date<a id=
+"footnotetag25" name="footnotetag25"></a><a href=
+"#footnote25"><sup>25</sup></a>. The author speaks of guardian
+angels and of evil angels, and he speaks much of prayer; but not
+the faintest hint shows itself throughout the three books, of which
+the work consists, that he had <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page77" id="page77"></a>{77}</span> any idea of prayer being
+addressed to any created being, whether saint or angel. On the
+evidence of this writer I will not detain you much longer than by
+the translation of a passage as it is found in the Greek quotation
+from Hermas, made by Antiochus (Homil. 85), on a point the most
+nearly, of all that I can find, connected with the immediate
+subject of our inquiry. The Latin is found in the second book,
+ninth mandate. It contains sound spiritual advice, of universal
+application.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote24" name=
+"footnote24"></a><b>Footnote 24:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag24">(return)</a>
+<p>Ecclesiastical writers refer the appointment of Pius, as Bishop
+of Rome, to the year 153.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote25" name=
+"footnote25"></a><b>Footnote 25:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag25">(return)</a>
+<p>Archbishop Wake thinks it not improbable that this book was
+written by the same Hermas, of whom mention is made by St.
+Paul.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"Let us then remove from us double-heartedness and
+faint-heartedness, and never at all doubt of supplicating any thing
+from God; saying within ourselves, 'How can I, who have been guilty
+of so many sins against Him, ask of the Lord and receive?' But with
+thine whole heart turn to the Lord, and ask of Him without
+doubting; and thou shalt know his great mercy, that He will not
+forsake thee, but will fulfil the desire of thy soul. For God is
+not as men are, a rememberer of evil, but is Himself one who
+remembers not evil, and is moved with compassion towards his
+creature. Do thou, therefore, cleanse thy heart of doubt, and ask
+of Him, and thou shalt receive thy request. But when thou doubtest,
+thou shalt not receive. For they who doubt towards God are the
+double-hearted, and shall receive nothing whatever of their
+desires. For those who are whole in the faith, ask every thing,
+trusting in the Lord, and they receive because they ask nothing
+doubting. [See St. James i. 6.] And if thou shouldest be tardy in
+receiving, do not doubt in thy mind because thou dost not receive
+soon the request of thy soul. For the cause of the tardiness of thy
+receiving is some trial, or some transgression which thou knowest
+not of. Do thou then <span class="pagenum"><a name="page78" id=
+"page78"></a>{78}</span> not cease to offer the request of thy
+soul, and thou shalt receive it. But if thou grow faint in asking,
+accuse thyself, and not the Giver. For double-heartedness is a
+daughter of the devil, and works much mischief towards the servants
+of God. Do thou, therefore, take to thyself the faith that is
+strong."</p>
+<p>In the twelfth section of the ninth Similitude, in the third
+book, in the midst of much to the same import, and of much, too,
+which is strange and altogether unworthy of the pen from which the
+previous quotation proceeded, he thus writes, as the Latin records
+his words, the Greek of this passage having been lost.</p>
+<p>"These all are messengers to be reverenced for their dignity. By
+these, therefore, as it were by a wall, the Lord is girded round.
+But the gate is the Son of God, who is the only way to God. For no
+one shall enter in to God except by his Son." [Book iii. Simil.
+2.]</p>
+<p>On the subject of prayer, I cannot refrain from referring you to
+a beautiful similitude, illustrative of the powerful and beneficial
+effects of the intercession of Christians for each other. The
+author compares a rich man, abounding in deeds of charity, to a
+vine full of fruit supported by an elm. The elm seems not to bear
+fruit at all; but by supporting the vine, which, without that
+support, would bear no fruit to perfection, it may be said to bear
+fruit itself. So the poor man, who has nothing to give in return
+for the rich man's fruits of charity, beyond the support which his
+prayers and praises ascending to God in his behalf will obtain,
+confers a far more substantial benefit on the rich man than the
+most liberal outpouring of alms from the rich can confer on the
+poor. [Ibid.] Yet the writer, who <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page79" id="page79"></a>{79}</span> had formed such strong notions
+of the benefits mutually obtained by the prayers of Christians for
+each other, says not a word about the intercession of saints and
+angels, nor of our invoking them. He will not suffer us to be
+deterred by any consciousness of our own transgressions from
+approaching God Himself, directly and immediately ourselves; but He
+bids us draw near ourselves to the throne and mercy seat of our
+heavenly Father.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4>ST. CLEMENT, BISHOP OF ROME.</h4>
+<p>It is impossible to read the testimony borne by Eusebius, and
+other most ancient writers, to the character and circumstances of
+Clement, without feeling a deep interest in whatever production of
+his pen may have escaped the ravages of time. "Third from the
+Apostles," says Eusebius, "Clement obtained the bishopric of Rome;
+one who had seen the Apostles and conversed with them, and had
+still the sound of their preaching in his ears, and their tradition
+before his eyes;&mdash;and not he alone, for many others<a id=
+"footnotetag26" name="footnotetag26"></a><a href=
+"#footnote26"><sup>26</sup></a> at that time were still living, who
+had been taught by the Apostles. In the time of this Clement, no
+small schism having arisen among the brethren in Corinth, the
+Church in Rome sent a most important letter to the Corinthians,
+urging them to return to peace, renewing <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>{80}</span> their faith,
+and [reminding them of] the tradition which had been so lately
+received from the Apostles." [Euseb. Eccl. Hist. v. c. 6.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote26" name=
+"footnote26"></a><b>Footnote 26:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag26">(return)</a>
+<p>See St. Paul to the Philippians, iv. 3. "And I entreat thee
+also, true yoke-fellow, help those women which laboured with me in
+the gospel, with Clement also, and with other my fellow-labourers,
+whose names are in the book of life."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Of the many works which have been attributed to Clement, it is
+now generally agreed, that one, and only one, can be safely
+received as genuine, whilst some maintain that even that one is not
+altogether free from interpolations, if not itself spurious<a id=
+"footnotetag27" name="footnotetag27"></a><a href=
+"#footnote27"><sup>27</sup></a>. But though we must believe the
+other works to have been assigned improperly to Clement; yet I have
+not thought it safe to pass them by unexamined, both because some
+of them are held in high estimation by writers of the Church of
+Rome, and especially because whatever pen first composed them, of
+their very great antiquity there can be entertained no reasonable
+doubt. Indeed, the Apostolical Canons, and the Apostolical
+Constitutions, both ascribed to Clement as their author, acting
+under the direction of the Apostolic Council, stand first among the
+records of the Councils received by the Church of Rome.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote27" name=
+"footnote27"></a><b>Footnote 27:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag27">(return)</a>
+<p>Archbishop Wake concludes that this first Epistle was written
+shortly after the end of Nero's persecution, and before A.D.
+70.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To Clement's first Epistle to the Corinthians, now regarded by
+many as the only genuine work of that primitive writer, the date of
+which is considered by many to be about A.D. 90, Jerome bears this
+very interesting testimony in his book on illustrious men:</p>
+<p>"He, Clement, wrote in the person of the Church of Rome, to the
+Church in Corinth, a very useful epistle, which is publicly read in
+some places; in its character agreeing with St. Paul's Epistle to
+the Hebrews, not only in the sense, but even in the words: and
+indeed the resemblance is very striking in each." [Catalogus
+Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum, Jeron., vol. iv, part ii. p. 107,
+edit. Benedict. Paris, 1706.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page81" id="page81"></a>{81}</span>
+<p>It is impossible to read this Epistle of one of the earliest
+bishops of Christ's flock in the proper frame of mind, without
+spiritual edification. A tone of primitive simplicity pervades it,
+which is quite delightful. His witness to the redemption by the
+atoning sacrifice of Christ's death, and to the life-giving
+influences of the Spirit of grace, is clear, repeated, and direct.
+His familiar acquaintance with the ancient Scriptures is very
+remarkable; though we might not always acquiesce in the critical
+accuracy of his application. His reference to the Epistles written
+by St. Paul to the same Church at Corinth that he was then
+addressing, affords one of those unobtrusive and undesigned
+collateral evidences to the Holy Scriptures, which are as abundant
+in the primitive writings, as they are invaluable. No one can read
+this Epistle of Clement, without acquiescing in the expression of
+Jerome, that it is "very admirable."</p>
+<p>Perhaps in the present work the Epistle of Clement becomes even
+more interesting from the circumstance of his having been a bishop
+of the Church founded by the Apostles themselves in the very place
+where that Church exists, to whose members this inquiry is more
+especially addressed. In his writings I have searched diligently
+for every expression which might throw light upon the opinions and
+practice either of the author or of the Church in whose name he
+wrote; of the Church which he addressed, or of the Catholic Church
+at large to which he refers, on the subject of our inquiry. So far,
+however, from any word occurring, which could be brought to bear in
+favour of the adoration of saints and angels, or of any
+supplication to them for their succour or their prayers, the
+peculiar turn and character of his Epistle in many parts seems to
+supply <span class="pagenum"><a name="page82" id=
+"page82"></a>{82}</span> more than negative evidence against the
+prevalence of any such belief or practice. Clement speaks of
+angels; he speaks of the holy men of old, who pleased God, and were
+blessed, and were taken to their reward; he speaks of prayer; he
+urges to prayer; he specifies the object of our prayers; he
+particularizes the subjects of our prayers; but there is not the
+most distant allusion to the saints and angels as persons to whom
+supplications could be addressed. Pray for yourselves (such are the
+sentiments of this holy man); pray for your brethren who have
+fallen from their integrity; pray to God Almighty, for the sake of
+his Son, and your prayer will be heard and granted. Of any other
+intercessor or advocate, angel, saint, or Virgin Mother; of any
+other being to whom the invocations of the faithful should be
+offered, Clement seems to have had no knowledge. Could this have
+been so, if those who received the Gospel from the very
+fountain-head had been accustomed to pray to those holy men who had
+finished their course on earth, and were gone to their reward in
+heaven? Clement invites us to contemplate Enoch, and Abraham, and
+David, and Elijah, and Job, with many of their brethren in faith
+and holiness; he bids us look to them with reverence and gratitude,
+but it is only to imitate their good examples. He tells us to think
+of St. Paul and St. Peter and their brethren in faith and holiness;
+but it is in order to listen to their godly admonitions, and to
+follow them in all pious obedience to the will of our heavenly
+Father, as they followed Christ. I must content myself with a very
+few brief extracts from this Epistle<a id="footnotetag28" name=
+"footnotetag28"></a><a href="#footnote28"><sup>28</sup></a>:</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote28" name=
+"footnote28"></a><b>Footnote 28:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag28">(return)</a>
+<p>I am induced to mention here that two Epistles, ascribed to St.
+Clement, written in Arabic, and now appended to Wetstein's Greek
+Testament (Amsterdam, 1751), are believed by many to be genuine,
+whilst others say they are spurious. At all events they are
+productions of the earliest times. The manuscript was procured at
+Constantinople. I have examined the Latin translation carefully,
+and in some points submitted my doubts to a very learned Syriac
+scholar. The general subject is the conduct of those who have
+professed celibacy, whilst of the invocation of saints no trace
+whatever is to be found. The passages most closely bearing on the
+point before us are to the following effect:</p>
+<p>The writer urges Christians to be careful to maintain good
+works, especially in the cause of charity, visiting the sick and
+afflicted, praying with them, and praying for them, and persevering
+always in prayer; asking and seeking of God in joy and
+watchfulness, without hatred or malice. In the Lord's husbandry, he
+says, it well becomes us to be good workmen, who are like the
+Apostles, imitating the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, who
+are ever anxious for the salvation of men.</p>
+<p>"Therefore (he adds, at the close of the first of these
+Epistles) let us look to and imitate those faithful ones, that we
+may behave ourselves as is meet in the Lord. So shall we serve the
+Lord, and please him, in righteousness and justice without a stain.
+Finally, farewell in the Lord, and rejoice in the Lord, all ye holy
+ones. Peace and joy be with you from God the Father, by Jesus
+Christ our Lord."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83"></a>{83}</span>
+<p>Ch. 21. "Take heed, beloved, lest the many loving-kindnesses of
+the Lord prove our condemnation, if we do not live as is worthy of
+him, nor do with one accord what is good and well-pleasing in his
+sight.... Let us consider how nigh to us he is, and that nothing of
+our thoughts or reasonings is concealed from him. Justice it is
+that we should not become deserters from his will.... Let us
+venerate the Lord Jesus, whose blood was given for us."</p>
+<p>Ch. 29. "Let us then approach him in holiness of soul, lifting
+up holy and undefiled hands towards him; loving our merciful and
+tender Father who hath made us a portion of his elect."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>{84}</span>
+<p>Ch. 36. "This is the way, beloved, in which we find Jesus Christ
+our salvation, the chief-priest of our offerings, our protector,
+and the succourer of our weakness. By him let us look stedfastly to
+the heights of heaven; by him let us behold his most high and
+spotless face: by him the eyes of our heart are opened; by him our
+ignorant and darkened minds shoot forth into his marvellous light;
+by him the Supreme Governor willed that we should taste immortal
+knowledge: who, being the brightness of his magnificence, is so
+much greater than the angels, as he hath by inheritance obtained a
+more excellent name than they."</p>
+<p>Ch. 49. "He who hath love in Christ, let him keep the
+commandments of Christ. Who can tell of the bond of the love of
+God? The greatness of his goodness who can adequately express?...
+Love unites us to God.... By love the Lord took us; by the love
+which he had for us Christ our Lord gave his blood for us by the
+will of God, and his flesh for our flesh, and his life for our
+lives."</p>
+<p>Ch. 56. "Let us pray for those who are in any transgression,
+that meekness and humility may be granted to them; that they may
+submit, not to us, but to the will of God; for thus to them will
+the remembrance towards God and the saints, with mercies, be
+fruitful and perfect<a id="footnotetag29" name=
+"footnotetag29"></a><a href="#footnote29"><sup>29</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote29" name=
+"footnote29"></a><b>Footnote 29:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag29">(return)</a>
+<p>The original is obscure, and has been variously rendered,
+[Greek: outos gar estai autois egkarpos kai teleia hae pros ton
+theon kai tous hagious met oiktirmon mneia.] The Editor refers his
+readers to Rom. xii. 13. "Distributing to the necessity of saints."
+The received translation is this, "Sic enim erit ipsis fructuosa et
+perfecta qu&aelig; est apud Deum et sanctos cum misericordia
+recordatio."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Ch. 58. "The all-seeing God, the Sovereign Ruler <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>{85}</span> of spirits,
+and the Lord of all flesh, who hath chosen the Lord Jesus, and us
+through him, to be a peculiar people; grant to every soul that
+calleth on his glorious and holy name, faith, fear, peace,
+patience, long-suffering, self-control, purity, and temperance, to
+the good pleasure of his name, through our high-priest and
+protector Jesus Christ; through whom to him be glory and majesty,
+dominion and honour, now and for ever and ever, world without end.
+Amen."</p>
+<hr />
+<h4>SAINT IGNATIUS.</h4>
+<p>This martyr to the truth as it is in Jesus sealed that truth
+with his blood about seventy years after the death of our Lord.
+From Antioch in Syria, of which place he was bishop, he was sent to
+the imperial city, Rome; and there he ended his mortal career by a
+death which he had long expected, and which he was prepared to meet
+not only with resignation to the Divine will, but even with joy and
+gladness. His Epistles are written with much of the florid
+colouring of Asiatic eloquence; but they have all the raciness of
+originality, and they glow with that Christian fervour and charity
+which compels us to love him as a father and a friend, a father and
+friend in Christ. The remains of this apostolic father I have
+carefully studied, with the single view of ascertaining whether any
+vestige, however faint, might be traced in him of the invocation of
+saints and angels; but I can find none. Neither here, nor in the
+case of any of the apostolical fathers, whose remains we are
+examining, have I contented myself with merely ascertaining that
+they bear no direct and palpable evidence; I have always
+endeavoured to find, and then thoroughly to sift, any expressions
+which might with <span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id=
+"page86"></a>{86}</span> the slightest plea of justification be
+urged in testimony of primitive belief and practice sanctioning the
+invocation of saints. I find none. Brethren of the Church of Rome,
+search diligently for yourselves; "I speak as to wise men: Judge ye
+what I say."</p>
+<p>The remains of Ignatius offer to us many a passage on which a
+Christian pastor would delight to dwell: but my province here is
+not to recommend his works to the notice of Christians; I am only
+to report the result of my inquiries touching the matter in
+question; and as bearing on that question, the following extracts
+will not be deemed burdensome in this place:&mdash;</p>
+<p>In his Epistle to the Ephesians, exhorting Christians to united
+prayer, he says, "For if the prayer of one or two possesses such
+strength, how much more shall the prayer both of the bishop and of
+the whole Church?" [Page 13. &sect; 5-7.] "For there is one
+physician of a corporeal and a spiritual nature, begotten and not
+begotten; become God in the flesh, true life in death, both from
+Mary and from God; first liable to suffering, and then incapable of
+suffering." [In the majority of the manuscripts the reading is, "in
+an immortal true life."]</p>
+<p>Here we must observe that these Epistles of Ignatius have come
+down to us also in an interpolated form, abounding indeed with
+substitutions and additions, but generally resembling paraphrases
+of the original text. Of the general character of that
+supposititious work, two passages corresponding with our quotations
+from the genuine productions of Ignatius may give a sufficiently
+accurate idea. The first passage above quoted is thus paraphrased:
+"For if the prayer of one or two possesses <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>{87}</span> such
+strength that Christ stands among them, how much more shall the
+prayer both of the bishop and of the whole Church, ascending with
+one voice to God, induce him to grant all their requests made in
+Jesus Christ?" [Page 47. c. 5.] The paraphrase of the second is
+more full: "Our physician is the only true God, ungenerated and
+unapproachable; the Lord of all things, but the Father and
+Generator of the only-begotten Son. We have also as our physician
+our Lord God, Jesus Christ, who was before the world, the
+only-begotten Son and the Word, but also afterwards man of the
+Virgin Mary; 'for the Word was made flesh.' He who was incorporeal,
+now in a body; he who could not suffer, now in a body capable of
+suffering; he who was immortal in a mortal body, life in
+corruption&mdash;in order that he might free our immortal souls
+from death and corruption, and heal them, diseased with ungodliness
+and evil desires as they were." [Page 48. c. 7.]</p>
+<p>It must here be observed, that though these are indisputably not
+the genuine works of Ignatius, but were the productions of a later
+age, yet no trace is to be found in them of the doctrine, or
+practice, of the invocation of saints. In this point of view their
+testimony is nothing more nor less than that of an anonymous
+paraphrast, who certainly had many opportunities of referring to
+that doctrine and practice; but who by his total silence seems to
+have been as ignorant of them as the author himself whose works he
+is paraphrasing.</p>
+<p>To return to his genuine works: In his Epistle to the Magnesians
+we find these expressions: "For as the Lord did nothing without the
+Father, being one with <span class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id=
+"page88"></a>{88}</span> him, neither by himself, nor by his
+Apostles; so neither do ye any thing without the bishop and
+priests, nor attempt to make any thing appear reasonable to
+yourselves individually. But at one place be there one prayer, and
+one supplication, one mind, one hope in love, in blameless
+rejoicing: Jesus Christ is one; than which nothing is better. All,
+then, throng as to one temple, as to one altar, as to one Jesus
+Christ, who proceeded from one Father, and is in one, and returned
+to one." [Page 19. &sect; 7.] Again he says, "Remember me in your
+prayers, that I may attain to God. I am in need of your united
+prayer in God, and of your love."</p>
+<p>In his Epistle to the Trallians, he expresses himself in words
+to which no Anglican Catholic would hesitate to respond: "Ye ought
+to comfort the bishop, to the honour of God, and of Jesus Christ,
+and of the Apostles." [Page 25. &sect; 12.] He speaks in this
+Epistle with humility and reverence of the powers and hosts of
+heaven; but he makes no allusion to any religious worship or
+invocation of them.</p>
+<p>The following extract is from his Epistle to the Philadelphians:
+"My brethren, I am altogether poured forth in love for you; and in
+exceeding joy I make you secure; yet not I, but Jesus Christ, bound
+in whom I am the more afraid, as being already seized<a id=
+"footnotetag30" name="footnotetag30"></a><a href=
+"#footnote30"><sup>30</sup></a>; but your prayer to God will
+perfect me, that I may obtain the lot mercifully assigned to me.
+Betaking myself to the Gospel as to the flesh of Jesus, and to the
+Apostles as the presbytery of the Church; let us also love the
+prophets, because they also have proclaimed the Gospel, and hoped
+in him, and waited for him; in whom also <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>{89}</span> trusting,
+they were saved in the unity of Jesus Christ, being holy ones
+worthy of love and admiration, who have received testimony from
+Jesus Christ, and are numbered together in the Gospel of our common
+hope." [Page 32. &sect; 5.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote30" name=
+"footnote30"></a><b>Footnote 30:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag30">(return)</a>
+<p>This clause is very obscure, and perhaps imperfect.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I am induced to add the paraphrase on this passage also. "My
+brethren, I am very much poured out in loving you, and with
+exceeding joy I make you secure; not I, but by me, Jesus Christ, in
+whom bound I am the more afraid. For I am yet not perfected, but
+your prayer to God will perfect me; so that I may obtain that to
+which I was called, flying to the Gospel as the flesh of Jesus
+Christ, and to the Apostles as the presbytery of the Church. And
+the prophets also I love, as persons who announce Christ, as
+partaking of the same spirit with the Apostles. For just as the
+false prophets and false apostles have drawn one and the same
+wicked and deceitful and seducing spirit, so also the prophets and
+the apostles, one and the same holy spirit, good, leading, true,
+and instructing. For one is the God of the Old and the New
+Testament. One is Mediator between God and man, for the production
+of the creatures endued with reason and perception, and for the
+provision of what is useful, and adapted to them: and one is the
+Comforter who wrought in Moses and the prophets and the apostles.
+All the saints therefore were saved in Christ, hoping in him, and
+waiting for him; and through him they obtained salvation, being
+saints worthy of love and of admiration, having obtained a
+testimony from Jesus Christ in the Gospel of our common hope."
+[Page 81. &sect; 5.]</p>
+<p>In his Epistle to the Romans he speaks to them of his own prayer
+to God, and repeatedly implores them <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page90" id="page90"></a>{90}</span> to pray for him. "Pray to
+Christ for me, that by these instruments [the teeth of the wild
+beasts] I may become a sacrifice of God. I do not, as Peter and
+Paul, command you: they were Apostles, I am a condemned man. They
+were free; but I am still a servant. Yet if I suffer, I shall
+become the freedman of Jesus Christ, and shall rise again free: and
+now in my bonds I learn to covet nothing." [Page 28. &sect; 4.]
+Again he says, "Remember the Church in Syria in your prayers."
+[Page 30. &sect; 9.] He prays for his fellow-labourers in the Lord:
+he implores them to approach the throne of grace with supplications
+for mercy on his own soul. Of prayer to saint or angel he says
+nothing. Of any invocation offered to them by himself or his
+fellow-believers, Ignatius appears entirely ignorant.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4>SAINT POLYCARP.</h4>
+<p>The only remaining name among those, whom the Church has
+reverenced as apostolical fathers, is the venerable Polycarp. He
+suffered martyrdom by fire, at a very advanced age, in Smyrna,
+about one hundred and thirty years after his Saviour's death. Of
+Polycarp, the apostolical bishop of the Catholic Church of Smyrna,
+only one Epistle has survived. It is addressed to the Philippians.
+In it he speaks to his brother Christians of prayer, constant,
+incessant prayer; but the prayer of which he speaks is supplication
+addressed only to God<a id="footnotetag31" name=
+"footnotetag31"></a><a href="#footnote31"><sup>31</sup></a>. He
+marks out for our imitation the good example of St. Paul and the
+other Apostles; assuring us that they had not run in vain,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>{91}</span>
+but were gone to the place prepared for them by the Lord, as the
+reward of their labours. But not one word does he utter bearing
+upon the invocation of saints in prayer; he makes no allusion to
+the Virgin Mary.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote31" name=
+"footnote31"></a><b>Footnote 31:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag31">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: deaesesin aitoumenoi ton pantepoptaen Theon.] Sect
+7.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Before we close our examination of the recorded sentiments of
+the apostolical fathers on the immediate subject of our inquiry, we
+must refer, though briefly, to the Epistle generally received as
+the genuine letter from the Church of Smyrna to the neighbouring
+Churches, narrating the martyrdom of Polycarp. It belongs, perhaps,
+more strictly to this place than to the remains of Eusebius,
+because, together with the sentiments of his contemporaries who
+witnessed his death and dictated the letter, it purports to contain
+the very words of the martyr himself in the last prayer which he
+ever offered upon earth. With some variations from the copy
+generally circulated, this letter is preserved in the works of
+Eusebius. [Euseb. Paris, 1628, dedicated to the Archbishop by
+Franciscus Vigerus.] On the subject of our present research the
+evidence of this letter is not merely negative. So far from
+countenancing any invocation of saint or martyr, it contains a
+remarkable and very interesting passage, the plain common-sense
+rendering of which bears decidedly against all exaltation of
+mortals into objects of religious worship. The letter, however, is
+too well known to need any further preliminary remarks; and we must
+content ourselves with such references and extracts as may appear
+to bear most directly on our subject.</p>
+<p>"The Church of God, which is in Smyrna, to the Church in
+Philomela, and to all the branches [Greek: paroikais] <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92"></a>{92}</span> of the holy
+Catholic Church dwelling in any place, mercy, peace, and love of
+God the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ be multiplied." [Book i.
+Hist. iv. c. xv. p. 163.]</p>
+<p>"The Proconsul, in astonishment, caused it to be proclaimed
+thrice, Polycarp has confessed himself to be a Christian. On this
+they all shouted, that the Proconsul should let a lion loose on
+Polycarp. But the games were over, and that could not be done: they
+then with one accord insisted on his being burnt alive."</p>
+<p>Polycarp, before his death, offered this prayer, or rather
+perhaps we should call it this thanksgiving, to God for his mercy
+in thus deeming him worthy to suffer death for the truth, "Father
+of thy beloved and blessed Son Jesus Christ, by whom we have
+received our knowledge concerning thee, the God of angels and
+power, and of the whole creation, and of the whole family of the
+just, who live before thee; I bless thee because thou hast deemed
+me worthy of this day and this hour to receive my portion among the
+number of the martyrs, in the cup of Christ, to the resurrection
+both of soul and body in the incorruption of the Holy Ghost; among
+whom may I be received before thee this day in a rich and
+acceptable sacrifice, even as thou, the true God, who canst not
+lie, foreshowing and fulfilling, hast beforehand prepared. For
+this, and for all I praise thee, I bless thee; I glorify thee,
+through the eternal high-priest Jesus Christ thy beloved Son,
+through whom to thee, with him in the Holy Ghost, be glory both now
+and for future ages. Amen."</p>
+<p>(I cannot help suggesting a comparison between the prayer of
+this primitive martyr bound to the stake, with the prayer of Thomas
+Becket, of Canterbury, as stated in the ancient services for his
+day, when he was murdered in his own cathedral, to which we shall
+hereafter refer at length. The comparison will impress us with the
+difference between religion and superstition, between the purity of
+primitive Christian worship, and the unhappy corruptions of a
+degenerate age. "To God and the Blessed Mary, and Saint Dionysius,
+and the holy patrons of this Church, I commend myself and the
+Church.")</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>{93}</span>
+<p>After his death, the narrative proceeds, "But the envious
+adversary of the just observed the honour put upon the greatness of
+his testimony, [or of his martyrdom [Greek: to megethos autou taes
+marturias],] and his blameless life from the first, and knowing
+that he was now crowned with immortality, and the prize of
+undoubted victory, resisted, though many of us desired to take his
+body, and have fellowship with his holy flesh. Some then suggested
+to Nicetes, the father of Herod, and brother of Dalce, to entreat
+the governor not to give his body, 'Lest,' said he, 'leaving the
+crucified One they should begin to worship this man [Greek:
+sebein];' and this they said at the suggestion and importunity of
+the Jews, who also watched us when we would take the body from the
+fire. This they did, not knowing that we can never either leave
+Christ, who suffered for the salvation of all who will be saved in
+all the world, or worship any other." [The Paris translation adds
+"ut Deum."] "For him being the Son of God we worship [Greek:
+proskunumen], but the martyrs, as disciples and imitators of our
+Lord, we worthily love<a id="footnotetag32" name=
+"footnotetag32"></a><a href="#footnote32"><sup>32</sup></a>,
+because of their pre-eminent [Greek: anuperblaeton] good-will
+towards their <span class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id=
+"page94"></a>{94}</span> own king and teacher, with whom may we
+become partakers and fellow-disciples."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote32" name=
+"footnote32"></a><b>Footnote 32:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag32">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: axios agapomen]. Ruffinus translates it by "diligimus et
+veneramur," and it is so quoted by Bellarmin.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"The centurion, seeing the determination of the Jews, placed him
+in the midst, and burnt him as their manner is. And thus we
+collecting his bones, more valuable than precious stones, and more
+esteemed than gold, we deposited them where it was meet. There, as
+we are able, collecting ourselves together in rejoicing and
+gladness, the Lord will grant to us to observe the birth-day of his
+martyrdom, for the remembrance of those who have before undergone
+the conflict, and for exercise and preparation of those who are to
+come." [Greek: hos dunaton haemin sunagomenois en agalliasei kai
+chara parexei ho Kurios epitelein taen tou martyriou autou haemeran
+genethlion, eis te ton proaethlaekoton mnaemaen, kai ton mellonton
+askaesin te kai hetoimasian.]</p>
+<p>In this relic of primitive antiquity, we have the prayer of a
+holy martyr, at his last hour, offered to God alone, through Christ
+alone. Here we find no allusion to any other intercessor; no
+commending of the dying Christian's soul to saint or angel. Here
+also we find an explicit declaration, that Christians offered
+religious worship to no one but Christ, whilst they loved the
+martyrs, and kept their names in grateful remembrance, and honoured
+even their ashes when the spirit had fled. Polycarp pleads no other
+merits; he seeks no intercession; he prays for no aid, save only
+his Redeemer's. Here too we find, that the place of a martyr's
+burial was the place which the early Christians loved to frequent;
+but then we are expressly told with what intent they met
+there,&mdash;not, as in later times, to invoke the departed spirit
+of the martyr, but to call to mind, in grateful remembrance, the
+sufferings of those who had already endured the awful struggle; and
+by <span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id=
+"page95"></a>{95}</span> their example to encourage and prepare
+other soldiers of the cross thereafter to fight the good fight of
+faith; assured that they would be more than conquerors through Him
+who loved them.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>We have now examined those works which are regarded by us all,
+whether of the Roman or Anglican Church, as the remains of
+apostolical fathers,&mdash;Christians who, at the very lowest
+calculation, lived close upon the Apostles' time, and who,
+according to the firm conviction of many, had all of them conversed
+with the Apostles, and heard the word of truth from their mouths. I
+do from my heart rejoice with you, that these holy men bear direct,
+clear, and irrefragable testimony to those fundamental truths which
+the Church of Rome and the Church of England both hold
+inviolate&mdash;the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, with its
+essential and inseparable concomitants, the atonement by the blood
+of a crucified Redeemer, and the vivifying and sanctifying
+influences of the Holy Spirit.</p>
+<p>Supposing for a moment no trace of such fundamental doctrines
+could be discovered in these writings, would not the absence of
+such vestige have been urged by those who differ from us, as a
+strong argument that the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity was
+an innovation of a later date; and would not such an argument have
+been urged with reason? How, in plain honesty, can we avoid coming
+to the same conclusion on the subject of the invocation of saints?
+If the doctrine and the practice of praying to saints, or to
+angels, for their succour, or even their intercession, had been
+known <span class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id=
+"page96"></a>{96}</span> and recognised, and approved and acted
+upon by the Apostles, and those who were the very disciples of the
+Apostles, not only deriving the truth from their written works, but
+having heard it from their own living tongue,&mdash;in the nature
+of things would not some plain, palpable, intelligible, and
+unequivocal indications of it have appeared in such writings as
+these; writings in which much is said of prayer, of intercessory
+prayer, of the one object of prayer, of the subjects of prayer, of
+the nature of prayer, the time and place of prayer, the spirit in
+which we are to offer prayer, and the persons for whom we ought to
+pray? Does it accord with common sense, and common experience, with
+what we should expect in other cases, with the analogy of history,
+and the analogy of faith, that we should find a profound and total
+silence on the subject of any prayer or invocation to saints and
+angels, if prayer or invocation of saints and angels had been
+recognised, approved, and practised by the primitive Church?</p>
+<p>At the risk of repetition, or surplusage, I would beg to call
+your attention to one point in this argument. I am far from saying
+that no practice is apostolical which cannot be proved from the
+writings of these apostolical fathers: that would be a fallacy of
+an opposite kind. I ground my inference specifically and directly
+on the fact, that these writers are full, and copious, and
+explicit, and cogent on the nature and duty of prayer and
+supplications, as well for public as for private blessings; and of
+intercessions by one Christian for another, and for the whole race
+of mankind no less than for mercy on himself; and yet though
+openings of every kind palpably offered themselves for a natural
+introduction of the subject, there is in no one single instance any
+reference or allusion to the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page97"
+id="page97"></a>{97}</span> invocation of saint or angel, as a
+practice either approved or even known.</p>
+<p>When indeed I call to mind the general tendency of the natural
+man to multiply to himself the objects of religious worship, and to
+create, by the help of superstition, and the delusive workings of
+the imagination, a variety of unearthly beings whose wrath he must
+appease, or whose favour he may conciliate; when I reflect how
+great is the temptation in unenlightened or fraudulent teachers to
+accommodate the dictates of truth to the prejudices and desires of
+those whom they instruct, my wonder is rather that Christianity was
+so long preserved pure and uncontaminated in this respect, than
+that corruptions should gradually and stealthily have mingled
+themselves with the simplicity of Gospel worship. That tendency is
+plainly evinced by the history of every nation under heaven: Greek
+and Barbarian, Egyptian and Scythian, would have their gods many,
+and their lords many. From one they would look for one good; on
+another they would depend for a different benefit, in mind, body,
+and estate. Some were of the highest grade, and to be worshipped
+with supreme honours; others were of a lower rank, to whom an
+inferior homage was addressed; whilst a third class held a sort of
+middle place, and were approached with reverence as much above the
+least, as it fell short of the greatest. In the heathen world you
+will find exact types of the dulia, the hyperdulia, and the latria,
+with which unhappily the practical theology of modern Christian
+Rome is burdened. Indeed, my wonder is, that under the Christian
+dispensation, when the household and local gods, the heathen's
+tutelary deities, and the genii, had been dislodged by the light of
+the Gospel, saints and angels had not at a much <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>{98}</span> earlier
+period been forced by superstition to occupy their room.</p>
+<p>We shall be led to refer to some passages in the earliest
+Christian writers, especially in Origen, which bear immediately on
+this point, representing in strong but true colours the futility of
+deeming a multitude of inferior divinities necessary for the
+dispensation of benefits throughout the universe, whose good
+offices we must secure by acts of attention and worship. I
+anticipate the circumstance in this place merely to show that the
+tendency of the human mind, clinging to a variety of preternatural
+protectors and benefactors, was among the obstacles with which the
+first preachers of the Gospel had to struggle. In the proper place
+I shall beg you to observe how hardly possible it would have been
+for those early Christian writers, to whom I have referred above,
+to express themselves in so strong, so sweeping, and so unqualified
+a manner, had the practice of applying by invocation to saints and
+angels then been prevalent among the disciples of the Cross.</p>
+<p>We may, I believe, safely conclude, that in these primitive
+writings, which are called the works of the Apostolical Fathers,
+there is no intimation that the present belief and practice of the
+Church of Rome were received, or even known by Christians. The
+evidence is all the other way. Indeed, Bellarmin, though he appeals
+to these remains for other purposes, and boldly asserts that "all
+the fathers, Greek and Latin, with unanimous consent, sanction and
+teach the adoration of saints and angels," yet does not refer to a
+single passage in any one of these remains for establishing this
+point. He cites a clause from the spurious work strangely ascribed
+to Dionysius the Areopagite, which was the forged production, as
+the learned are all <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" id=
+"page99"></a>{99}</span> agreed, of some centuries later; and he
+cites a pious sentiment of Ignatius, expressing his hope that by
+martyrdom he might go to Christ, and thence he infers that Ignatius
+believed in the immediate transfer of the soul from this life to
+glory and happiness in heaven, though Ignatius refers there
+distinctly to the resurrection. [Epist. ad Rom. c. iv. See above,
+p. 90.] But Bellarmin cites no passage whatever from these remains
+to countenance the doctrine and practice of the adoration of saints
+and angels.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id=
+"page100"></a>{100}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap1-4" id="chap1-4">CHAPTER IV.</a></h3>
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-1" id="sect1-4-1">SECTION I.</a>&mdash;THE
+EVIDENCE OF JUSTIN MARTYR.</h4>
+<p>Justin, who flourished about the year 150, was trained from his
+early youth in all the learning of Greece and of Egypt. He was born
+in Palestine, of heathen parents; and after a patient examination
+of the evidences of Christianity, and a close comparison of them
+with the systems of philosophy with which he had long been
+familiar, he became a disciple of the Cross. In those systems he
+found nothing solid, or satisfactory; nothing on which his mind
+could rest. In the Gospel he gained all that his soul yearned for,
+as a being destined for immortal life, conscious of that destiny,
+and longing for its accomplishment. His understanding was
+convinced, and his heart was touched; and regardless of every
+worldly consideration, and devoted to the cause of truth, he openly
+embraced Christianity; and before kings and people, Jews and
+Gentiles, he pleaded the religion of the crucified One with
+unquenchable zeal and astonishing power. The evidence of such a man
+on any doctrine <span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id=
+"page101"></a>{101}</span> connected with our Christian faith must
+be looked to with great interest.</p>
+<p>In the volumes which contain Justin's works we find "Books of
+Questions," in which many inquiries, doubts, and objections, as
+well of Jews as of Gentiles, are stated and answered. It is agreed
+on all sides that these are not the genuine productions of Justin,
+but the work of a later hand. Bellarmin appeals to them,
+acknowledging at the same time their less remote origin. The
+evidence, indeed, appears very strong, which would lead us to
+regard them as the composition of a Syrian Christian, and assign to
+them the date of the fifth century; and as offering indications of
+the opinions of Christians at the time of their being put together,
+they are certainly interesting documents. When fairly quoted, the
+passages alleged in defence of the invocation of saints, so far
+from countenancing the practice, assail irresistibly that
+principle, which, with other writers, Bellarmin himself confesses
+to be the foundation of that doctrine. For these Books of Questions
+assert that the souls of the faithful are not yet in glory with
+God, but are reserved in a separate state, apart from the wicked,
+awaiting the great day of final and universal doom. In answer to
+Question 60, the author distinctly says:&mdash;"Before the
+resurrection the recompense is not made for the things done in this
+life by each individual." [Qu&aelig;stiones et Responsiones ad
+Orthodoxos, p. 464.]</p>
+<p>In reply to the 75th Question, inquiring into the condition of
+man after death, this very remarkable answer is
+returned:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"The same relative condition which souls have with the body now,
+they have not after the departure from the body. For here all the
+circumstances of the union <span class="pagenum"><a name="page102"
+id="page102"></a>{102}</span> are in common to the just and the
+unjust, and no difference is in them in this respect,&mdash;as to
+be born and to die, to be in health and to be in sickness, to be
+rich and to be poor, and the other points of this nature. But after
+the departure from the body, forthwith takes place the distinction
+of the just and the unjust: for they are conducted by the angels to
+places corresponding with their deserts: the souls of the just to
+paradise, where is the company and the sight of angels and
+archangels, and also, by vision, of the Saviour Christ, according
+to what is said, 'Being absent from the body, and present with the
+Lord;' and the souls of the unjust to the places in hades,
+according to what is said of Nebucodonosor king of Babylon, 'Hades
+from beneath hath been embittered, meeting thee.'&mdash;And in the
+places corresponding with their deserts they are kept in ward unto
+the day of the resurrection and of retribution." [Page 469.]</p>
+<p>I much regret to observe that Bellarmin omits to quote the
+latter part of this passage, stopping short with an "&amp;c." at
+the words <i>hades</i>, or <i>inferorum loca</i>, although the
+whole of the writer's testimony in it turns upon the very last
+clause. [Bellarmin, c. iv. p. 851. "Improborum autem ad inferorum
+loca."]</p>
+<p>The next question (76) runs thus: "If the retribution of our
+deeds does not take place before the resurrection, what advantage
+accrued to the thief that his soul was introduced into paradise;
+especially since paradise is an object of sense, and the substance
+of the soul is not an object of sense?</p>
+<p>"Answer. It was an advantage to the thief entering into paradise
+to learn by fact the benefits of the faith by which he was deemed
+worthy of the assembly of the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page103" id="page103"></a>{103}</span> saints, in which he is kept
+till the day of judgment and restitution; and he has the perception
+of paradise by that which is called intellectual perception, by
+which souls see both themselves and the things under them, and
+moreover also the angels and demons. For a soul doth not perceive
+or see a soul, nor an angel an angel, nor a demon a demon; except
+that according to the said intellectual perception they see both
+themselves and each other, and moreover also all corporeal
+objects." [Page 470.]</p>
+<p>On this same point I must here subjoin a passage from one of
+Justin's own undisputed works. In his Dialogue with Trypho the Jew,
+sect. 5, he says, "Nevertheless I do not say that souls all die;
+for that were in truth a boon to the wicked. But what? That the
+souls of the pious remain somewhere in a better place, and the
+unjust and wicked in a worse, waiting for the time of judgment,
+when it shall be: thus the one appearing worthy of God do not die
+any more; and the others are punished as long as God wills them
+both to exist and to be punished." [Page 107.]</p>
+<p>Not only so; Justin classes among renouncers of the faith those
+who maintain the doctrine which is now acknowledged to be the
+doctrine of the Church of Rome, and to be indispensable as the
+groundwork of the adoration of saints. In his Trypho, sect. 80, he
+states his sentiment thus strongly: "If you should meet with any
+persons called Christians, who confess not this, but dare to
+blaspheme the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of
+Jacob, and say there is no resurrection of the dead ([Greek:
+nekron]), but that their souls, at the very time of their death,
+are taken up into heaven; do not regard them as Christians." [Page
+178.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id=
+"page104"></a>{104}</span>
+<p>This, according to Bellarmin's own principle, is fatal evidence:
+if the redeemed and the saints departed are not in glory with God
+already, they cannot intercede with him for men. On the subject,
+however, of worship and prayer, Justin Martyr has left us some
+testimonies as to the primitive practice, full of interest in
+themselves, independently of their bearing on the points at issue.
+At the same time I am not aware of a single expression which can be
+so construed as to imply the doctrine or practice among Christians
+of invoking the souls of the faithful. He speaks of public and
+private prayer; he offers prayer, but the prayer of which he
+speaks, and the prayer which he offers are to God alone; and he
+alludes to no advocate or intercessor in heaven, except only the
+eternal Son of God himself. In his first Apologia (or Defence
+addressed to the Emperor Antoninus Pius) he thus describes the
+proceedings at the baptism of a convert:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Now, we will explain to you how we dedicate ourselves to God,
+being made new by Christ.... As many as are persuaded, and believe
+the things which by us are taught and declared to be true, and who
+promise that they can so live, are taught to pray and implore, with
+fasting, forgiveness of God for their former sins, we ourselves
+joining with them in fasting and prayer; and then they are taken by
+us to a place where there is water, and by the same manner of
+regeneration as we ourselves were regenerated, they are
+regenerated; for they undergo this washing in the water in the name
+of God the Father and Lord of all, and of our Saviour Jesus Christ,
+and of the Holy Ghost." [Apol. i. sect 61, page 79.]</p>
+<p>The following is his description of the Christian <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>{105}</span>
+Eucharist, subsequently to the baptism of a convert: "Afterwards we
+conduct him to those who are called brethren, where they are
+assembled together to offer earnestly our united prayers for
+ourselves and for the enlightened one [the newly baptized convert],
+and for all others every where, that we, having learned the truth,
+may be thought worthy to be found in our deeds good livers, and
+keepers of the commandments, that we may be saved with the
+everlasting salvation. Having ceased from prayers, we salute each
+other with a kiss; and then bread is brought to him who presides
+over the brethren, and a cup of water and wine; and he taking it,
+sends up prayer and praise to the Father of all, through the name
+of the Son and the Holy Spirit; and offers much thanksgiving for
+our being thought by him worthy of these things. When he has
+finished the prayers and thanksgivings, all the people present
+respond, saying, 'Amen.' Now, Amen in the Hebrew tongue means, 'So
+be it.' And when the presider has given thanks, and all the people
+have responded, those who are called Deacons among us give to every
+one present to partake of the bread and wine and water that has
+been blessed, and take some away for those who were not present."
+[Sect. 65. p. 82.]</p>
+<p>The following is Justin's account of their worship on the Lord's
+day: "In all our oblations we bless the Creator of all things,
+through his Son Jesus Christ, and through the Holy Spirit. And upon
+the day called Sunday, there is an assembly of all who dwell in the
+several cities or in the country, in one place where the records of
+the apostles, or the writings of the prophets are read, as time
+allows. When the reader has ceased, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page106" id="page106"></a>{106}</span> the presider makes a
+discourse for the edification of the people, and to animate them to
+the practice of such excellent things [or the imitation of such
+excellent persons]. At the conclusion we all rise up together and
+pray; and, as we have said, when we have ceased from prayer, the
+bread and wine and water are brought forward, and the presider
+sends up prayer and thanksgiving alike, to the utmost of his power.
+And the people respond, saying, Amen. And then is made to each the
+distribution and participation of the consecrated elements ([Greek:
+eucharistauthenton]). And of those who have the means and will,
+each according to his disposition gives what he will; and the
+collected sum is deposited with the presider, and he aids the
+orphans and widows, and those who through sickness or other cause
+are in need, and those in bonds, and strangers; and, in a word, he
+becomes the reliever of all who are in want." [Sect. 67. p.
+83.]</p>
+<hr />
+<p>In Justin Martyr I am unable to find even a single vestige of
+the invocation of Saints. With regard to Angels, however, there is
+a very celebrated passage, to which Bellarmin and others appeal, as
+conclusive evidence that the worship of them prevailed among
+Christians in his time, and was professed by Justin himself.</p>
+<p>Justin, in his first Apology, having stated that the Christians
+could never be induced to worship the demons, whom the heathen
+worshipped and invoked, proceeds thus<a id="footnotetag33" name=
+"footnotetag33"></a><a href="#footnote33"><sup>33</sup></a>:
+"Whence also we are called Atheists, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page107" id="page107"></a>{107}</span> [men without God]; and we
+confess that with regard to such supposed gods we are atheists, but
+not so with regard to the most true God, the Father of justice and
+temperance, and of the other virtues without any mixture of evil.
+But both HIM and the SON, who came from Him, and taught these
+things to us, and THE HOST OF THE OTHER GOOD ANGELS ACCOMPANYING
+AND MADE LIKE, and THE PROPHETIC SPIRIT, we reverence and worship,
+honouring them in reason and truth; and without grudging,
+delivering the doctrine to every one who is willing to learn as we
+were taught." [Page 47.] Governing the words "the host of the other
+good angels," as much as the words "Him" and "His Son," and "the
+prophetic Spirit," by the verbs "we reverence and worship,"
+Bellarmin and others<a id="footnotetag34" name=
+"footnotetag34"></a><a href="#footnote34"><sup>34</sup></a>
+maintain, that Justin bears testimony in this passage to the
+worship of angels. That this cannot be the true interpretation of
+Justin's words will be acknowledged, I think, by every Catholic,
+whether Anglican or Roman, when he contemplates it in all its naked
+plainness; all will revolt from it as impious and contrary to the
+principles professed by the most celebrated and honoured among
+Roman Catholic writers. This interpretation of the passage, when
+analysed, implies the awful thought, that we Christians pay to the
+host of angels, God's ministers and our own fellow-servants, the
+same reverence, worship, and honour which we pay to the supreme
+Father, and his ever-blessed Son, and the Holy Spirit, without any
+difference or inequality. No principles of interpretation can avoid
+that inference.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote33" name=
+"footnote33"></a><b>Footnote 33:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag33">(return)</a>
+<p>The genuineness of this passage has been doubted. But I see no
+ground for suspicion that it is spurious. It is found in the
+manuscripts of Justin's works; of which the most ancient perhaps
+are in the King's Library in Paris. I examined one there of a
+remote date.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote34" name=
+"footnote34"></a><b>Footnote 34:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag34">(return)</a>
+<p>The Benedictine Editor puts this note in the margin, "Justin
+teaches that angels following the Son are worshipped by
+Christians."&mdash;Preface, p. xxi.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id=
+"page108"></a>{108}</span>
+<p>"Him the most true Father of righteousness we reverence and
+worship, honouring him in reason and truth."</p>
+<p>"The Son who came from him, and taught us these things, we
+reverence and worship, honouring him in reason and truth."</p>
+<p>"The army of the other good angels accompanying and assimilated,
+we reverence and worship, honouring them in reason and truth."</p>
+<p>"The Prophetic Spirit we reverence and worship, honouring him in
+reason and truth."</p>
+<p>Is it possible to conceive that any Christian would thus ascribe
+the same religious worship to a host of God's creatures, which he
+would ascribe to God, as GOD? "We are accused," said Justin, "of
+being atheists, of having no God. How can this be? We do not
+worship your false gods, but we have our own most true God. We are
+not without a God. We have the Father, and the Son, and the Good
+Angels, and the Holy Spirit." If Justin meant that they honoured
+the good angels, but not as GOD, that would be no answer to those
+who called the Christians atheists. The charge was, that "they had
+no God." The answer is, "We have a God;" and then Justin describes
+the God of Christians. Can the army of angels be included in that
+description? If they are, then they are made to share in the
+adoration, worship, homage, and reverence of the one only God Most
+High; if they are not, then Justin does not answer the
+objectors<a id="footnotetag35" name="footnotetag35"></a><a href=
+"#footnote35"><sup>35</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote35" name=
+"footnote35"></a><b>Footnote 35:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag35">(return)</a>
+<p>And surely if Justin had intended to represent the holy angels
+as objects of religious worship, he would not so violently have
+thrust the mention of them among the Persons of the ever-blessed
+Trinity, assigning to them a place between the second and third
+Persons of the eternal hypostatic union.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id=
+"page109"></a>{109}</span>
+<p>To evade this charge of impiety, some writers (among others, M.
+Maran, the Benedictine editor of Justin,) have attempted to draw a
+distinction between the two verbs in this passage, alleging that
+the lower degree of reverence expressed by the latter applies to
+the angels; whilst the former verb, implying the higher degree of
+worship, alone relates to the Godhead. But this distinction rests
+on a false assumption; the two words being used equally to convey
+the idea, of the highest religious worship<a id="footnotetag36"
+name="footnotetag36"></a><a href=
+"#footnote36"><sup>36</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote36" name=
+"footnote36"></a><b>Footnote 36:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag36">(return)</a>
+<p>For example, the first word ([Greek: sebometha]), "we
+reverence," is used to mean the whole of religious worship, as well
+with regard to the true God, as with reference to Diana [Acts
+xviii. 7. 13; xix. 27.]; whilst the second word ([Greek:
+proskunoumen]), "we worship," is constantly employed in the same
+sense of divine worship, throughout the Septuagint [Exod. xxxiv.
+14. Ps. xciv. (xcv.) 6. I Sam. (1 Kings) xv. 25. 2 Kings (4 Kings)
+xvii. 36. Heb. i. 6.], (with which Justin was most familiar,) and
+is used in the Epistle to the Hebrews to signify the worship due
+from the angels themselves to God, "Let all the angels of God
+worship him." The very same word is also soon after employed by
+Justin himself (sect. xvi. p. 53) to mean the whole entire worship
+of the Most High God: "That we ought to worship ([Greek:
+proskumein]) God alone, Christ thus proves," &amp;c. Moreover, the
+word which Justin uses at the close of the sentence, "honouring
+them" ([Greek: timontes]), is the identical word four times
+employed by St. John [John v. 23.], in the same verse, to record
+our Saviour's saying, "That all men might honour the Son, even as
+they honour the Father; he that honoureth not the Son, honoureth
+not the Father, who hath sent him."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>But in determining the true meaning of an obscure passage,
+grammatically susceptible of different acceptations, the author
+himself is often his own best interpreter. If he has expressed in
+another place the same leading sentiment, yet without the same
+obscurity, and free from all doubt, the light borrowed from that
+passage <span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id=
+"page110"></a>{110}</span> will frequently fix the sense of the
+ambiguous expression, and establish the author's consistency. On
+this acknowledged principle of criticism, I would call your
+attention to a passage in the very same treatise of Justin, a few
+pages further on, in which he again defends the Christians against
+the same charge of being atheists, and on the self-same ground,
+"that they worship the Father who is maker of all; secondly, the
+Son proceeding from Him; and thirdly, the Holy Spirit." In both
+cases he refers to the same attributes of the Son as the teacher of
+Christian truth, and of the Holy Ghost, as the Prophetic Spirit.
+His language throughout the two passages is remarkably similar, and
+in the expressions on the true meaning of which we have already
+dwelt, it is most strikingly identical; but by omitting all
+allusion to the angels after the Son, his own words proving that
+the introduction of them could have no place there, (for he
+specifies that the third in order was the Holy Spirit,) Justin has
+left us a comment on the passage under consideration conclusive as
+to the object of religious worship in his creed. The whole passage
+is well worth the attention of the reader. The following extracts
+are the only parts necessary for our present purpose:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Who of sound mind will not confess that we are not Atheists,
+reverencing as we do the Maker of the Universe.... and Him, who
+taught us these things, and who was born for this purpose, Jesus
+Christ, crucified under Pontius Pilate.... instructed, as we are,
+that He is the Son of the True God, and holding Him in the second
+place; and the Prophetic Spirit in the third order, we with reason
+honour." [Sect. xiii. p. 50.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id=
+"page111"></a>{111}</span>
+<p>The impiety apparently inseparable from Bellarmin's
+interpretation has induced many, even among Roman Catholic writers,
+to discard that acceptation altogether, and to substitute others,
+which, though involving no grammatical inaccuracy, are still not
+free from difficulty.<a id="footnotetag37" name=
+"footnotetag37"></a><a href="#footnote37"><sup>37</sup></a> After
+weighing the passage with all the means in my power, and after
+testing the various interpretations offered by writers, whether of
+the Church of Rome or not, by the sentiments of Justin himself, and
+others of the same early age, I am fully persuaded that the
+following is the only true rendering of Justin's words:</p>
+<p>"Honouring in reason and truth, we reverence and worship HIM,
+the Father of Righteousness, and the Son (who proceeded from Him,
+and instructed in these things both ourselves and the host of the
+other good angels following Him and being made like unto Him), and
+the Prophetic Spirit."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote37" name=
+"footnote37"></a><b>Footnote 37:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag37">(return)</a>
+<p>Le Nourry (Apparatus ad Bibliothecam Maximam Veterum Patrum.
+Paris, 1697. vol. ii. p. 305), himself a Benedictine, rejects
+Bellarmin's and his brother Benedictine Maran's interpretation, and
+conceives Justin to mean, that the Son of God not only taught us
+those truths to which he was referring, with regard to the being
+and attributes of God, but also taught us that there were hosts of
+spiritual beings, called Angels; good beings, opposed to the demons
+of paganism. Bishop Kaye, in his excellent work on Justin Martyr,
+which the reader will do well to consult (p. 53), tells us he was
+sometimes inclined to think that Justin referred to the host of
+good angels who should surround the Son of God when he should come
+to judge the world. The view adopted by myself here was recommended
+by Grabe and by Langus, called The Interpreter of Justin; whilst
+Petavius, a Jesuit, though he does not adopt it, yet acknowledges
+that the Greek admits of our interpretation. Any one who would
+pursue the subject further may with advantage consult the preface
+to the Benedictine edition referred to in this work. Lumper Hist.
+Part ii. p. 225. August&aelig; Vindelicorum, 1784. Petavius,
+Theologicorum Dogmatum tom. vi. p. 298. lib. xv. c. v. s. 5.
+Antwerp, 1700.</p>
+<p>The whole passage is thus rendered by Langus (as read in
+Lumper), "Verum hunc ipsum, et qui ab eo venit, atque ista nos et
+aliorum obsequentium ex&aelig;quatorumque ad ejus voluntatem
+bonorum Angelorum exercitura docuit, Filium, et Spiritum ejus
+propheticum, colimus et adoramus."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This interpretation is strongly confirmed by the professed
+sentiments both of Justin and of his contemporaries, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>{112}</span> with
+regard to the Son of God and the holy angels.</p>
+<p>It was a principle generally received among the early
+Christians, that whatever the Almighty did, either by creation or
+by the communication of his will, on earth or in heaven, was done
+by the Eternal Word. It was God the Son, the Logos, who created the
+angels<a id="footnotetag38" name="footnotetag38"></a><a href=
+"#footnote38"><sup>38</sup></a>, as well as ourselves; it was He
+who spoke to Moses, to Abraham, and to Lot; and it was He who
+conveyed the Supreme will, and the knowledge of the only true God,
+to the inhabitants of the world of spirits. Agreeably to this
+principle, in the passage under consideration, Justin affirms (not
+that Christians revered and worshipped the angels, but), that God
+the Son, whom Christians worshipped as the eternal Prophet, Angel,
+and Apostle, of the Most High, instructed not only us men on earth,
+but also the host of heavenly angels<a id="footnotetag39" name=
+"footnotetag39"></a><a href="#footnote39"><sup>39</sup></a>, in
+these eternal verities, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id=
+"page113"></a>{113}</span> which embrace God's nature and the duty
+of his creatures. [Trypho, &sect; 141. p. 231.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote38" name=
+"footnote38"></a><b>Footnote 38:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag38">(return)</a>
+<p>Thus Tatian (p. 249 in the same edition of Justin), "Before men
+were prepared, the Word was the Maker of angels."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote39" name=
+"footnote39"></a><b>Footnote 39:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag39">(return)</a>
+<p>"The OTHER good angels." Justin (Apol. i. sect. lxiii. p. 81.)
+reminds us that Christ, the first-begotten of the Father, Himself
+God, was also an Angel (or Messenger), and an Apostle; and here
+Christ, as the Angel of the Covenant and the chief Apostle, is
+represented as instructing THE OTHER ANGELS in the truths of the
+economy of grace, just as he instructed his Apostles on
+earth,&mdash;"As my Father hath sent me, even so send I you."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is evident that Justin himself considered the host of angels
+to be equally with ourselves in a state of probation, requiring
+divine instruction, and partaking of it. It is also evident that
+many of his contemporaries entertained the same views; among
+others, Iren&aelig;us and Origen. [Iren&aelig;us, book ii. c. 30.
+p. 163. Origen, Hom. xxxii. in Joann. &sect; 10. vol. iv. p. 430.]
+I will not swell this dissertation by quoting the passages at
+length; though the passages referred to in the margin will well
+repay any one's careful examination. But I cannot refrain from
+extracting the words in which each of those writers confirms the
+view here taken of Justin's sentiments.</p>
+<p>Iren&aelig;us, for example, says distinctly, "The Son ever,
+anciently and from the beginning co-existing with the Father,
+always reveals the Father both to angels and archangels, and
+powers, and excellencies, and to all to whom God wishes to make a
+revelation<a id="footnotetag40" name="footnotetag40"></a><a href=
+"#footnote40"><sup>40</sup></a>." And not less distinctly does
+Origen assert the same thing,&mdash;"Our Saviour therefore teaches,
+and the Holy Spirit, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id=
+"page114"></a>{114}</span> who spake in the prophets, teaches not
+only men, but also angels and invisible excellencies."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote40" name=
+"footnote40"></a><b>Footnote 40:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag40">(return)</a>
+<p>So far did some of the early Christians include the hosts of
+angels within the covenant of the Gospel, that Ignatius (Epist. ad
+Smyrn. &sect; 6. p. 36.) does not hesitate to pronounce that the
+angels incur the Divine judgment, if they do not receive the
+doctrine of the atonement: "Let no one be deceived. The things in
+heaven, and the glory of angels, and the powers visible and
+invisible, if they do not believe on the blood of Christ&mdash;for
+them is judgment." They seem to have founded their opinion on the
+declaration of St. Paul (Eph. iii. 10): "That now to the
+principalities and powers in heavenly places might be made known
+through the Church the manifold wisdom of God."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I will only add one more ancient authority, in confirmation of
+the view here taken of Justin's words. The passage is from
+Athenagoras<a id="footnotetag41" name="footnotetag41"></a><a href=
+"#footnote41"><sup>41</sup></a> and seems to be the exact
+counterpart of Justin's paragraph.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote41" name=
+"footnote41"></a><b>Footnote 41:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag41">(return)</a>
+<p>Athenagoras presented his defence, in which these words occur,
+to the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, and his son Commodus, in the year
+177.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"Who would not wonder on hearing us called Atheists? we who call
+the Father God, and the Son God, and the Holy Ghost, showing both
+their power in the unity, and their distinction in order. Nor does
+our theology rest here; but we say, moreover, that there is a
+multitude of angels and ministers whom God, the Maker and Creator
+of the world, BY THE WORD PROCEEDING FROM HIM, distributed and
+appointed, both about the elements, and the heavens, and the world,
+and the things therein, and the good order thereof." [Sect. 10. p.
+287. edit. Just. Mart.]</p>
+<p>I have already stated my inability to discover a single word in
+Justin Martyr which could be brought to sanction the invocation of
+saints; but his testimony is far from being merely negative. He
+admonishes us strongly against our looking to any other being for
+help or assistance, than to God only. Even when speaking of those
+who confide in their own strength, and fortune, and other sources
+of good, he says, in perfect unison with the pervading principles
+and associations of his whole mind, as far as we can read them in
+his works, without any modification or any exception in favour of
+saint or angel: "In that Christ <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page115" id="page115"></a>{115}</span> said, 'Thou art my God, go
+not far from me,' He at the same time taught, that all persons
+ought to hope in God, who made all things, and seek for safety and
+health from Him alone" [Trypho, &sect; 102, p. 197.]</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-2" id="sect1-4-2">SECTION
+II.</a>&mdash;IREN&AElig;US.</h4>
+<p>Justin sealed his faith by his blood about the year 165; and
+next to him, in the noble army of martyrs, we must examine the
+evidence of Iren&aelig;us, Bishop of Lyons. Of this writer's works
+a very small proportion survives in the original Greek; but that
+little is such as might well make every scholar and divine lament
+the calamity which theology and literature have sustained by the
+loss of the author's own language. It is not perhaps beyond the
+range of hope that future researches may yet recover at least some
+part of the treasure. Meanwhile we must avail ourselves with
+thankfulness of the nervous though inelegant copy of that original,
+which the Latin translation affords; imperfect and corrupt in many
+parts, as that copy evidently is. This, however, is not the place
+for recommending a study of the remains of Iren&aelig;us; and every
+one at all acquainted with the literature of the early Church,
+knows well how valuable a store of ancient Christian learning is
+preserved even in the wreck of his works.</p>
+<p>On the subject of the invocation of saints, an appeal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id=
+"page116"></a>{116}</span> has been made only to a few passages in
+Iren&aelig;us. With regard, indeed, to one section, I would gladly
+have been spared the duty of commenting upon the unjustifiable mode
+of citing his evidence adopted by Bellarmin. It forces upon our
+notice an example either of such inaccuracy of quotation as would
+shake our confidence in him as an author, or of such
+misrepresentation as must lower him in our estimation as a man of
+integrity.</p>
+<p>Bellarmin asserts, building upon it as the very foundation-stone
+of his argument for the invocation of saints, that the souls of the
+saints are removed immediately on their dissolution by death,
+without waiting for the day of judgment, into the presence of God,
+and the enjoyment of HIM in heaven. This point, he says, must first
+be established; for if they are not already in the presence of God,
+they cannot pray for us, and prayer to them would be preposterous.
+[Bell. lib. i. c. 4. vol. ii. p. 851.] Among the authorities cited
+by him to establish this point is the evidence of Iren&aelig;us
+(book i. c. 2). [See Benedictine ed, Paris, 1710. book i. c. 10. p.
+48.] Bellarmin quotes that passage in these words: "To the just and
+righteous, and to those who keep his commandments, and persevere in
+his love, some indeed from the beginning but some from repentance,
+he giving life CONFERS by way of gift incorruption, and CLOTHES
+them with eternal glory." To the quotation he appends this note
+"Mark '<i>to some</i>' that is, to those who presently after
+baptism die, or who lay down their life for Christ; or finally to
+the perfect is given immediately life and eternal glory; to others
+not, except after repentance, that is, satisfaction made in another
+world<a id="footnotetag42" name="footnotetag42"></a><a href=
+"#footnote42"><sup>42</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote42" name=
+"footnote42"></a><b>Footnote 42:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag42">(return)</a>
+<p>Agreeably to the principles laid down in my preface, I will not
+here allude to the doctrine of purgatory, on which Bellarmin
+considers this passage to bear; nor will I say one word on the
+intermediate state of the soul between death and the resurrection,
+on which I am now showing that the words of Iren&aelig;us cannot at
+all be made to bear.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page117" id=
+"page117"></a>{117}</span>
+<p>Here I am compelled to confess that I never found a more
+palpable misquotation of an author than this. I will readily grant
+that Bellarmin may have quoted from memory, or have borrowed from
+some corrupt version of the passage; and that he has
+unintentionally changed the moods of two verbs from the subjunctive
+to the indicative, and inadvertently changed the entire
+construction and the sense of the passage. But then what becomes of
+his authority as a writer citing testimony?</p>
+<p>Iren&aelig;us in this passage is speaking not of what our Lord
+does now, but what he will do at the last day; he refers only to
+the second coming of Christ to judgment at the final consummation
+of all things, not using a single expression which can be made by
+fair criticism to have any reference whatever to the condition of
+souls on their separation from the body. I have consulted the old
+editions, some at least published before the date of Bellarmin's
+work; the suggestion offering itself to my mind, that perhaps the
+ancient translation was in error, from which he might have quoted.
+But I cannot find that to have been the case. The old Latin version
+of this passage agreeing very closely with the Greek still
+preserved in Epiphanius, and quoted by Roman Catholic writers as
+authentic, conveys this magnificent though brief summary of the
+Christian faith:</p>
+<p>"The Church spread throughout the whole world, even to the ends
+of the earth, received both from the Apostles and their disciples
+that faith which is in one <span class="pagenum"><a name="page118"
+id="page118"></a>{118}</span> God omnipotent, who made heaven and
+earth, the sea, and all things therein, and in one Jesus Christ,
+the Son of God, for our salvation made flesh, and in the Holy
+Ghost, who by the prophets announced the dispensations (of
+God<a id="footnotetag43" name="footnotetag43"></a><a href=
+"#footnote43"><sup>43</sup></a>), and the Advent, and the being
+born of a Virgin, and the suffering, and the resurrection from the
+dead, and the bodily ascension into heaven of the beloved Jesus
+Christ our Lord, and his coming from heaven in the glory of the
+Father for the consummation of all things, and for raising again
+all flesh of the human race, THAT, in order that ([Greek: ina]), to
+Christ Jesus our Lord and God, and Saviour and King, according to
+the good pleasure of the invisible Father, every knee should bow of
+things in heaven and in earth, and under the earth, and that every
+tongue should confess to Him, and that he should execute just
+judgment on all: that he should send the spirits of wickedness, and
+the transgressing and rebel angels, and the impious and unjust, and
+wicked and blaspheming men into eternal fire; but to the just and
+righteous, and to those who keep his commandments, and persevere in
+his love,&mdash;some indeed from the beginning, and some from their
+repentance,&mdash;he granting life, by way of gift, SHOULD CONFER
+incorruption, and SHOULD CLOTHE them with eternal glory."
+[H&aelig;res. xxxi. c. 30.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote43" name=
+"footnote43"></a><b>Footnote 43:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag43">(return)</a>
+<p>The words "of God" are in the Latin, but not in the Greek.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The words, "some from the beginning," "others from their
+repentance," can refer only to the two conditions of believers;
+some of whom have grace to keep the commandments, and persevere in
+the love of God from the beginning of their Christian course,
+whilst others, for a time, transgress and wax cold in love, but by
+repentance, through God's grace, are renewed and <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>{119}</span> restored
+to their former state of obedience and love. On both these classes
+of Christians, according to the faith as here summed up by
+Iren&aelig;us, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, when He comes in
+glory for the consummation of all things, and for the resurrection
+of the dead, will confer glory and immortality. No ingenuity of
+criticism can extract from this passage any allusion to the
+intercession of saints, or to their being with God before the end
+of the world<a id="footnotetag44" name="footnotetag44"></a><a href=
+"#footnote44"><sup>44</sup></a>. But I am not <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>{120}</span> here
+condemning Bellarmin's untenable criticism: what I lament is the
+negligence or the disingenuousness with which he misquotes the
+words of Iren&aelig;us, and makes him say what he never did say. To
+extract from an author's words, correctly reported, a meaning which
+he did not intend to convey, however reprehensible and unworthy a
+follower of truth, is one act of injustice: to report him, whether
+wilfully or carelessly, as using words which he never did use, is
+far worse.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote44" name=
+"footnote44"></a><b>Footnote 44:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag44">(return)</a>
+<p>It will be well to see the words of Bellarmin and those of the
+translation side by side:</p>
+<p>(Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the
+other.)</p>
+<p><i>Bellarmin</i> lib. i. c. iv. p. 851.</p>
+<p>"Quartus Iren&aelig;us, lib. i. c. 2. 'Justis, inquit, et
+&aelig;quis, et pr&aelig;cepta ejus servantibus et in dilectione
+perseverantibus, quibusdam quidem ab initio, quibusdam autem ex
+poenitentia, vitam donans, incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERT, et
+claritatem &aelig;ternam CIRCUMDAT.' Nota '<i>quibusdam</i>,' id
+est, iis qui mox a Baptismo moriuntur, vel qui pro Christo vitam
+ponunt; vel denique perfectis statim donari vitam et claritatem
+&aelig;ternam; aliis non nisi post poenitentiam, id est,
+satisfactionem in futuro s&aelig;culo actam."</p>
+<p><i>Latin Translation</i>.</p>
+<p>"Et de coelis in gloria Patris adventum ejus ad recapitulanda
+universa et resuscitandam omnem carnem humani generis, UT Christo
+Jesu Domino nostro et Deo, et Salvatori, et Regi, secundum placitum
+Patris invisibilis, 'omne genu curvet coelestium, et terrestrium,
+et infernorum, et omnis lingua confiteatur ei,' et judicium justum
+in omnibus faciat; spiritalia quidem nequiti&aelig;, et angelos
+transgresses, atque apostatas factos, et impios et injustos et
+iniquos, et blasphemos homines in &aelig;ternum ignem
+mittat;&mdash;Justis autem et &aelig;quis et pr&aelig;cepta ejus
+servantibus et in dilectione ejus perseverantibus, quibusdam quidem
+ab initio, quibusdam autem ex poenitentia, vitam donans,
+incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERAT, et claritatem &aelig;ternam
+CIRCUMDET."&mdash;Iren&aelig;i liber i. cap. x. p. 48.
+Interpretatio Vetus.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Another expression of Iren&aelig;us is appealed to by Bellarmin,
+and continues to be cited at the present day in defence of the
+invocation of saints; the precise bearing of which upon the subject
+I confess myself unable to see, whilst I am very far from
+understanding the passage from which it is an extract. Bellarmin
+cites the passage not to show that the saints in glory pray for
+us,&mdash;that argument he had dismissed before,&mdash;but to prove
+that they are to be invoked by us. The insulated passage as quoted
+by him is this: "And as she (Eve) was induced to fly from God, so
+she (Mary) was persuaded to obey God, that of the Virgin Eve the
+Virgin Mary might become the advocate." After the quotation he
+says, "What can be clearer?" [Benedict, lib. v. cap. xix. p.
+316.]</p>
+<p>In whatever sense we may suppose Iren&aelig;us to have employed
+the word here translated "advocata," it is difficult to see how the
+circumstance of Mary becoming the advocate of Eve, who lived so
+many generations before her, can bear upon the question, Is it
+lawful and right for us, now dwelling on the earth, to invoke those
+saints whom we believe to be in heaven? I will not dwell on the
+argument urged very cogently by some critics on this passage, that
+the word "advocata," found <span class="pagenum"><a name="page121"
+id="page121"></a>{121}</span> in the Latin version of
+Iren&aelig;us, is the translation of the original word, now lost
+[[Greek: paraklaetos]&mdash;paraclete], which, by the early
+writers, was used for "comforter and consoler," or "restorer;"
+because, as I have above intimated, whatever may have been the word
+employed by Iren&aelig;us, the passage proves nothing as to the
+lawfulness of our praying to the saints. If the angels at God's
+bidding minister unto the heirs of salvation; or further, if they
+plead our cause with God, that would be no reason why we should
+invoke them and pray to them. This distinction between what they
+may do for us, and what we ought to do with regard to them, is an
+essential distinction, and must not be lost sight of. We shall have
+occasion hereafter to refer to it repeatedly, especially in the
+instances of Origen and Cyprian. I will now do no more than copy in
+a note the entire passage from which the sentence now under
+consideration has been extracted, that the reader may judge whether
+on such a passage, the original of which, in whatever words
+Iren&aelig;us may have expressed himself, is utterly lost, any
+reliance can satisfactorily be placed.</p>
+<p>("Manifeste itaque in sua propria venientem Dominum et sua
+propria eum bajulantem conditione qu&aelig; bajulatur ab ipso, et
+recapitulationem ejus qu&aelig; in ligno fuit inobedienti&aelig;
+per eam qu&aelig; in ligno est obedientiam facientem, et
+seductionem illam solutam qua seducta est male illa, qu&aelig; jam
+viro destinata erat virgo Eva, per veritatem evangelizata est bene
+ab angelo jam sub viro virgo Maria. Quemadmodum enim illa per
+angeli sermonem seducta est ut effugeret Deum pr&aelig;varicata
+verbum ejus, ita et h&aelig;c per angelicum sermonem evangelizata
+est ut portaret Deum obediens ejus verbo. Et si ea inobedierat Deo,
+sed h&aelig;c suasa est obedire Deo, uti virginis Ev&aelig; virgo
+Maria fieret advocata. Et quemadmodum astrictum est morti genus
+humanum per virginem, salvatur per virginem, &aelig;qua lance
+disposita virginalis inobedientia per virginalem obedientiam. Adhuc
+enim protoplasti peccatum per correptionem primogeniti emendationem
+accipiens, et serpentis prudentia devicta in columb&aelig;
+simplicitate, vinculis autem illis resolutis, per qu&aelig;
+alligati eramus morti." St. Augustin (Paris, 1690. vol. x. p. 500.)
+refers to the latter part of this passage, as implying the doctrine
+of original sin; but since his quotation does not embrace any
+portion of the clause at present under our consideration, no
+additional light from him is thrown on the meaning of
+Iren&aelig;us.)</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page122" id=
+"page122"></a>{122}</span>
+<p>But passages occur in Iren&aelig;us, which seem to leave doubt,
+that neither in faith nor in practice would he countenance in the
+very lowest degree the adoration of saints and angels, or any
+invocation of them.</p>
+<p>For example, in one part of his works we read, "Nor does it [the
+Church] do any thing by invocations of angels, nor by incantations,
+nor other depraved and curious means, but with cleanliness, purity,
+and openness, directing prayers to the Lord who made all things,
+and calling upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, it exercises
+its powers for the benefit, and not for the seducing, of mankind."
+[Benedictine Ed. lib. ii. c. 32. &sect; 5. p. 166.] It has been
+said that, by angelic invocations, Iren&aelig;us means the
+addresses to evil angels and genii, such as the heathen
+superstitiously made. Be it so; though that is a mere assumption,
+not warranted by the passage or its context. But, surely, had
+Iren&aelig;us known that Christians prayed to angels, as well as to
+their Maker and their Saviour, he would not have used such an
+unguarded expression; he would have cautioned his readers against
+so serious, but so natural, a misapprehension of his meaning.</p>
+<p>With one more reference, we must bring our inquiry into the
+testimony of Iren&aelig;us to a close. The passage occurs in the
+fifth book, chapter 31. [Benedict. lib. v. c. 32. &sect; 2. p,
+331.] The principal and most important, though not the longest,
+part of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page123" id=
+"page123"></a>{123}</span> the passage is happily still found in
+the original Greek, preserved in the "Parallels" of Damascenus. In
+its plain, natural, and unforced sense, this passage is so
+decidedly conclusive on the question at issue, that various
+attempts have been made to explain away its meaning, so as not to
+represent Iren&aelig;us as believing that the souls of departed
+saints, between their death and the day of judgment, exist
+otherwise than in bliss and glory in heaven. But those attempts
+have been altogether unsuccessful. I believe the view here
+presented to us by the plain and obvious sense of the words of
+Iren&aelig;us, is the view at present acquiesced in by a large
+proportion of our fellow-believers. The Anglican Church has made no
+article of faith whatever on the subject. The clause within
+brackets is found both in the Latin and the Greek.</p>
+<p>"Since the Lord<a id="footnotetag45" name=
+"footnotetag45"></a><a href="#footnote45"><sup>45</sup></a> in the
+midst of the shadow of death went where the souls of the dead were,
+and then afterwards rose bodily, and after his resurrection was
+taken up, it is evident that of his disciples also, for whom the
+Lord wrought these things, [the souls go into the unseen<a id=
+"footnotetag46" name="footnotetag46"></a><a href=
+"#footnote46"><sup>46</sup></a> place assigned to them by God, and
+there remain till the resurrection, waiting for the resurrection;
+afterwards receiving again their bodies and rising perfectly
+[[Greek: holoklaeros], perfecte], that is, bodily, even as the Lord
+also rose again, so will they come into the presence of God.]
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page124" id=
+"page124"></a>{124}</span> For no disciple is above his master; but
+every one that is perfect shall be as his master. As, therefore,
+our Master did not immediately flee away and depart, but waited for
+the time of his resurrection appointed by his Father (which is
+evident, even by the case of Jonah); after the third day, rising
+again, he was taken up; so we too must wait for the time of our
+resurrection appointed by God, and fore-announced by the prophets;
+and thus rising again, be taken up, as many as the Lord shall have
+deemed worthy of this."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote45" name=
+"footnote45"></a><b>Footnote 45:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag45">(return)</a>
+<p>Bellarmin, rather than allow the testimony of Iren&aelig;us to
+weigh at all against the doctrine which he is defending, seems
+determined to combat and challenge that father himself. "Non ausus
+est dicere," "He has not dared to say, that the souls go to the
+regions below," &amp;c.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote46" name=
+"footnote46"></a><b>Footnote 46:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag46">(return)</a>
+<p>There is no word in the Greek copy corresponding with the Latin
+"invisibilem."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-3" id="sect1-4-3">SECTION
+III.</a>&mdash;CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA&mdash;ABOUT THE YEAR 180.</h4>
+<p>Contemporary with Iren&aelig;us, and probably less than twenty
+years his junior, was Clement, the celebrated Christian philosopher
+of Alexandria. I am not aware that any Roman Catholic writer has
+appealed to the testimony of Clement in favour of the invocation of
+saints, nor have I found a single passage which the defenders of
+that practice would be likely to quote; and yet there are many
+passages which no one, anxious to trace the Catholic faith, would
+willingly neglect. The tendency of Clement's mind to blend with the
+simplicity of the Gospel of Christ the philosophy in which he so
+fully abounded, renders him far less valuable as a Christian
+teacher; but his evidence as to the matter of fact, is even
+rendered more cogent and pointed by this tendency of his mind. I
+would <span class="pagenum"><a name="page125" id=
+"page125"></a>{125}</span> willingly have transferred to these
+pages whole passages of Clement, but the very nature of my address
+forbids it. Some sentences bearing on the subject immediately
+before us, we must not omit.</p>
+<p>Clement has left on record many of his meditations upon the
+efficacy, the duty, and the blessed comfort of prayer. When he
+speaks of God, and of the Christian in prayer, (for prayer he
+defines to be "communion or intercourse with God,") his language
+becomes often exquisitely beautiful, and sometimes sublime. It is
+impossible by a few detached passages to convey an adequate
+estimate of the original; and yet a few sentences may show that
+Clement is a man whose testimony should not be slighted.</p>
+<p>"Therefore, keeping the whole of our life as a feast every
+where, and on every part persuaded that God is present, we praise
+him as we till our lands; we sing hymns as we are sailing. The
+Christian is persuaded that God hears every thing; not the voice
+only, but the thoughts.... Suppose any one should say, that the
+voice does not reach God, revolving as it does in the air below;
+yet the thoughts of the saints cut not only through the air, but
+the whole world. And the divine power like the light is beforehand
+in seeing through the soul.... He" (the Christian whom he speaks of
+throughout as the man of divine knowledge) "prays for things
+essentially good.</p>
+<p>"Wherefore it best becomes those to pray who have an adequate
+knowledge of God, and possess virtue in accordance with
+Him&mdash;who know what are real goods, and what we should petition
+for, and when, and how in each case. But it is the extreme of
+ignorance to ask <span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id=
+"page126"></a>{126}</span> from those who are not gods as though
+they were gods.... Whence since there is one only good God, both we
+ourselves and the angels supplicate from Him alone, that some good
+things might be given to us, and others might remain with us. In
+this way he (the Christian) is always in a state of purity fit for
+prayer. He prays with angels, as being himself equal with angels;
+and as one who is never beyond the holy protecting guard. And if he
+pray alone he has the whole choir of angels with him." [Stromata,
+lib. vii. &sect; 7. p. 851, &amp;c.; Section xii. p. 879.]</p>
+<p>Clement has alluded to instances alleged by the Greeks of the
+effects of prayer, and he adds, "Our whole Scripture is full of
+instances of God hearing and granting every request according to
+the prayers of the just." [Lib. vi. &sect; iii. p. 753.]</p>
+<p>Having in the same section referred to the opinion of some
+Greeks as to the power of demons over the affairs of mortals, he
+adds, "But they think it matters nothing whether we speak of these
+as gods or as angels, calling the spirits of such 'demons,' and
+teaching that they should be worshipped by men, as having, by
+divine providence, on account of the purity of their lives,
+received authority to be conversant about earthly places, in order
+that they may minister to mortals." [Lib. vi. &sect; iii. p.
+755.]</p>
+<p>Is it possible to suppose that this teacher in Christ's school
+had any idea of a Christian praying to saints or angels? In the
+last passage, the language in which he quotes the errors of heathen
+superstition to refute them, so nearly approaches the language of
+the Church of Rome when speaking of the powers of saints and angels
+to assist the suppliant, that if Clement had entertained
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page127" id=
+"page127"></a>{127}</span> any thought whatever of a Christian
+praying for aid and intercession to saint or angel, he must have
+mentioned it, especially after the previous passage on the
+absurdity and gross ignorance of praying for any good at the hands
+of any other than the one true God.</p>
+<p>In common with his contemporaries, Clement considered the angels
+to be, as we mortals are, in a state requiring all the protection
+and help to be obtained by prayer; he believed that the angels pray
+with us, and carry our prayers to God: but the thought of
+addressing them by invocation does not appear to have occurred to
+his mind. At the close of his P&aelig;dagogus he has left on record
+a form of prayer to God alone very peculiar and interesting. He
+closes it by an ascription of glory to the blessed Trinity. But
+there is no allusion to saint, or angel, or virgin mother.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-4" id="sect1-4-4">SECTION
+IV.</a>&mdash;TERTULLIAN.</h4>
+<p>Tertullian, of Carthage, was a contemporary of Clement of
+Alexandria, and so nearly of the same age, that doubts have
+existed, which of the two should take priority in point of time.
+There is a very wide difference in the character and tone of their
+works, as there was in the frame and constitution of their minds.
+The lenient and liberal views of the erudite and accomplished
+master of the school of Alexandria, stand out in prominent and
+broad contrast with the harsh and austere doctrines of
+Tertullian.</p>
+<p>Tertullian fell into errors of a very serious kind by joining
+himself to the heretic Montanus; still on his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>{128}</span> mind is
+discoverable the working of that spirit which animated the early
+converts of Christianity; and his whole soul seems to have been
+filled with a desire to promote the practical influence of the
+Gospel.</p>
+<p>Jerome, the oracle on such subjects, from whom the Roman
+Catholic Church is unwilling to allow any appeal, expressly tells
+us that Cyprian<a id="footnotetag47" name=
+"footnotetag47"></a><a href="#footnote47"><sup>47</sup></a>, who
+called Tertullian the Master, never passed a single day without
+studying his works; and that after Tertullian had remained a
+presbyter of the Church to middle age, he was driven, by the envy
+and revilings of the members of the Roman Church, to fall from its
+unity, and espouse Montanism. Bellarmin calls him a heretic, and
+says he is the first heretic who denied that the saints went at
+once and forthwith to glory. [Hieron. edit. 1684. tom. i. p.
+183.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote47" name=
+"footnote47"></a><b>Footnote 47:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag47">(return)</a>
+<p>The words of Jerome, who refers to the circumstance more than
+once, are very striking: "I saw one Paulus, who said that he had
+seen the secretary (notarium) of Cyprian at Rome, who used to tell
+him that Cyprian never passed a single day without reading
+Tertullian; and that he often said to him, 'Give me the Master,'
+meaning Tertullian."&mdash;Hieron. vol. iv. part ii. p. 115.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A decided line of distinction is drawn by Roman Catholic writers
+between the works of Tertullian written before he espoused the
+errors of Montanus, and his works written after that unhappy step.
+The former they hold in great estimation, the latter are by many
+considered of far less authority. I do not see how such a
+distinction ought to affect his testimony on the historical point
+immediately before us. If indeed he had held the doctrine of the
+invocation of saints whilst he continued in the full communion of
+the Church, and rejected it afterwards, no honest and sensible
+writer would quote his later opinions against the practice. But we
+are only seeking in his works for evidence of the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>{129}</span> matter of
+fact,&mdash;Is there any proof in the works of Tertullian that the
+invocation of saints formed a part of the doctrine and practice of
+the Catholic Church in his time<a id="footnotetag48" name=
+"footnotetag48"></a><a href="#footnote48"><sup>48</sup></a>? His
+works will be found in the note, arranged under those two heads, as
+nearly as I can ascertain the preponderating sentiments of
+critics<a id="footnotetag49" name="footnotetag49"></a><a href=
+"#footnote49"><sup>49</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote48" name=
+"footnote48"></a><b>Footnote 48:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag48">(return)</a>
+<p>The reader, who may be induced to consult the work of the
+present Bishop of Lincoln, entitled, "The Ecclesiastical History of
+the second and third Centuries, illustrated from the writings of
+Tertullian," will there find, in the examination and application of
+Tertullian's remains, the union of sound judgment, diligence in
+research, clearness of perception, acuteness in discovery, and
+great erudition mingled with charity.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote49" name=
+"footnote49"></a><b>Footnote 49:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag49">(return)</a>
+<p>Works of Tertullian before he became a Montanist:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Adversus Jud&aelig;os.</p>
+<p>The Tract ad Martyres.</p>
+<p>The two Books ad Nationes.</p>
+<p>The Apology, and the Tract de Pr&aelig;scriptione
+H&aelig;reticorum.</p>
+<p>The Tract de Testimonio Anim&aelig;.</p>
+<p>The Tracts de Patientia, de Oratione, de Baptismo, de
+Poenitentia.</p>
+<p>The two books ad Uxorem.</p>
+<p>Works written after he espoused Montanism:&mdash;</p>
+<p>The Tracts de Spectaculis and de Idololatria, though others say
+these should be ranked among the first class.</p>
+<p>The Tracts de Corona, and de Fuga in persecutione, Scorpiace,
+and ad Scapulam.</p>
+<p>The Tracts de Exhortatione Castitatis, de Monogamia, de
+Pudicitia, de Jejuniis, de Virginibus Velandis, de Pallio, the five
+books against Marcion, the Tracts adversus Valentinianos, de Carne
+Christi, de Resurrectione Carnis, adversus Hermogenem, de Anima,
+adversus Praxeam, de Cultu Foeminarum.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I will detain you only by a very few quotations from this
+father.</p>
+<p>In his Apology, sect. 30, we read this very remarkable passage,
+"We invoke the eternal God, the true God, the living God, for the
+safety of the emperor.... <span class="pagenum"><a name="page130"
+id="page130"></a>{130}</span> Thither (heavenward) looking up, with
+hands extended, because they are innocent; with our head bare,
+because we are not ashamed; in fine, without a prompter, because it
+is from the heart; we Christians pray for all rulers a long life, a
+secure government, a safe home, brave armies, a faithful senate, a
+good people, a quiet world.... For these things I cannot ask in
+prayer from any other except Him from whom I know that I shall
+obtain; because both He is the one who alone grants, and I am the
+one whom it behoveth to obtain by prayer;&mdash;his servant, who
+looks to him alone, who for the sake of his religion am put to
+death, who offer to him a rich and a greater victim, which He has
+commanded; prayer from a chaste frame, from a harmless soul, from a
+holy spirit.... So, let hoofs dig into us, thus stretched forward
+to God, let crosses suspend us, let fires embrace us, let swords
+sever our necks from the body, let beasts rush upon us,&mdash;the
+very frame of mind of a praying Christian is prepared for every
+torment. This do, ye good presidents; tear ye away the soul that is
+praying for the emperor." [Page 27.]</p>
+<p>In the opening of his reflections on the Lord's Prayer, he
+says,&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Let us consider therefore, beloved, in the first place, the
+heavenly wisdom in the precept of praying in secret, by which he
+required, in a man, faith to believe that both the sight and the
+hearing of the Omnipotent God is present under our roofs and in our
+secret places; and desired the lowliness of faith, that to Him
+alone, whom he believed to hear and to see every where, he would
+offer his worship." [Page 129.]</p>
+<p>The only other reference which I will make, is to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page131" id="page131"></a>{131}</span> the
+solemn declaration of Tertullian's Creed; the last clause of which,
+though in perfect accordance with the sentiments of his
+contemporaries, seems to have been regarded with hostile eyes by
+modern writers of the Church of Rome, because it decidedly bids us
+look to the day of judgment for the saints being taken to the
+enjoyment of heaven; and consequently implies that they cannot be
+properly invoked now.</p>
+<p>"To profess now what we defend: By the rule of our faith we
+believe that God is altogether one, and no other than the Creator
+of the world, who produced all things out of nothing by his Word
+first of all sent down. That that Word, called his Son, was
+variously seen by the patriarchs in the name of God; was always
+heard in the prophets; at length, borne by the spirit and power of
+God the Father into the Virgin Mary, was made flesh in her womb,
+was born of her, and was Jesus Christ. Afterwards He preached a new
+law and a new promise of the kingdom of heaven; wrought miracles,
+was crucified, rose again the third day, and, being taken up into
+heaven, sat on the right hand of the Father; and He sent in his own
+stead the power of the Holy Ghost, to guide believers; that He
+shall come with glory to take the saints to the enjoyment of
+eternal life and the heavenly promises, and to condemn the impious
+to eternal fire, making a reviving of both classes with the
+restoration of the body." [De Pr&aelig;scriptione
+H&aelig;reticorum, &sect; 13. p. 206.]</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Some notice must here be taken of METHODIUS, a pious Christian,
+of the third century. A work (Methodius, Gl. Combes. Paris, 1644)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id=
+"page132"></a>{132}</span> formerly attributed to him has been
+quoted in proof of the early invocation of saints; but the work,
+among many others, has been long ago allowed by the best Roman
+Catholic critics to be the production of a later age. (Fabricius,
+vol. vii. p. 268, and vol. x. p. 241.) Many homilies, purporting to
+have been delivered on the festival of our Lord's presentation in
+the temple, at so early a period, must be received as the works of
+a later age, because that feast began to be observed in the Church
+so late as the fifteenth year of Justinian, in the sixth century.
+Evidently, moreover, the theological language of the homily is of a
+period long subsequent to the date assigned to Methodius. In
+speaking of our blessed Saviour, for example, he employs
+expressions to guard against the Arian heresy, and makes extracts
+apparently from the Nicene creed, "God of himself, and not by
+grace," "Very God of very God, very light of very light, who for us
+men and our salvation, &amp;c." The general opinion indeed seems to
+be that this, and many other writings formerly ascribed to the
+first Methodius, were written by persons of a subsequent age, who
+either were of the same name or assumed his. Even were the work
+genuine, it would afford just as strong a demonstration that
+Methodius believed that the city of Jerusalem could hear his
+salutation, as that the saints could hear his prayer; for he
+addresses the same "Hail" to Mary, Symeon, and the Holy City alike,
+calling it the "earthly heaven." [Greek: Chairois hae polis, ho
+epigeios ouranos.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id=
+"page133"></a>{133}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-5" id="sect1-4-5">SECTION V.</a>&mdash;THE
+EVIDENCE OF ORIGEN.</h4>
+<p>Jerome informs us that Tertullian, whose remains we have last
+examined, lived to a very advanced age. Long, therefore, before his
+death flourished Origen, one of the most celebrated lights of the
+primitive Church. He was educated a Christian. Indeed his father is
+said to have suffered martyrdom about the year 202. Origen was a
+pupil of Clement of Alexandria. His virtues and his labours have
+called forth the admiration of all ages; and though he cannot be
+implicitly followed as a teacher, what still remains of his works
+will be delivered down as a rich treasure to succeeding times. He
+was a most voluminous writer; and Jerome asked the members of his
+church, "Who is there among us that can read as many books as
+Origen has composed?" [Vol. iv. epist. xli. p. 346.] A large
+proportion of his works are lost; and of those which remain, few
+are preserved in the original Greek. We are often obliged to study
+Origen through the medium of a translation, the accuracy of which
+we have no means of verifying. A difficult and delicate duty also
+devolves upon the theological student to determine which of the
+works attributed to Origen are genuine and which are spurious; and
+what parts, moreover, of the works received on the whole as genuine
+came from his pen. Of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page134" id=
+"page134"></a>{134}</span> the spurious works, some are so palpably
+written in a much later age, and by authors of different religious
+views, that no one, after weighing the evidence, can be at a loss
+what decision to make concerning them; in the case of others,
+claims and objections may appear to be more evenly balanced. I
+trust on the one hand to refer to no works for Origen's testimony
+which are not confessedly his, nor on the other to exclude any
+passage which is not decidedly spurious; whilst in one particular
+case more immediately connected with our subject, I am induced to
+enter further in detail into a critical examination of the
+genuineness and value of a passage than the character of this work
+generally requires. The great importance attached to the testimony
+of that passage by some defenders of the worship paid to angels,
+may be admitted to justify the fulness of the criticism. Lest,
+however, its insertion in the body of the work might seem
+inconveniently to interfere with the reader's progress in our
+argument, I have thought it best to include it in a supplementary
+section at the close of our inquiry into the evidence of
+Origen.</p>
+<p>Coccius, in his elaborate work, quotes the two following
+passages as Origen's, without expressing any hesitation or doubt
+respecting their genuineness, in which he is followed by writers of
+the present day. The passages are alleged in proof that Origen held
+and put in practice the doctrine of the invocation of saints; and
+they form the first quotations made by Coccius under the section
+headed by this title: "That the saints are to be invoked, proved by
+the testimony of the Greek Fathers."</p>
+<p>The first passage is couched in these words: "I will
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id=
+"page135"></a>{135}</span> begin to throw myself upon my knees, and
+pray to all the saints to come to my aid; for I do not dare, in
+consequence of my excess of wickedness, to call upon God. O Saints
+of God, you I pray with weeping full of grief, that ye would
+propitiate his mercies for me miserable. Alas me! Father Abraham,
+pray for me, that I be not driven from thy bosom, which I greatly
+long for, and yet not worthily, because of the greatness of my
+sins."</p>
+<p>Coccius cites this passage as from "Origen in Lament," and it
+has been recently appealed to under the title of "Origen on the
+Lamentations." Here, however, is a very great mistake. Origen's
+work on the Lamentations, called also "Selecta in Threnos," and
+inserted in the Benedictine edition (Vol. iii. p. 321.), is
+entirely a different production from the work which contains the
+above extract. This apocryphal work, on the other hand, does not
+profess to be the comment of Origen on the Lamentations, but the
+Lament or Wailing of Origen himself; or, as it used to be called,
+the Penitence of Origen. (In the Paris edition of 1519 it is called
+"Planctus, seu Lamentum Origenis." Pope Gelasius refers to it as
+"Poenitentia Origenis.") That this work has no pretensions whatever
+to be regarded as Origen's, has been long placed beyond doubt. Even
+in the edition of 1545, this treatise is prefaced by Erasmus in
+these words, "This Lamentation was neither written by Origen nor
+translated by Jerome, but is the fiction of some unlearned man, who
+attempted, under colour of this, to throw disgrace upon Origen."
+[Basil, 1545. vol. i. p. 498.] In the Benedictine edition (Paris,
+1733.) no trace of this work is to be found. They do not admit it
+among the doubtful, or even the spurious works; they do not so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id=
+"page136"></a>{136}</span> much as give room for it in the
+appendix; on the contrary, they drop it altogether as utterly
+unworthy of being any longer preserved. Instead, however, of
+admitting the work itself, these editors have supplied abundant
+reason for its exclusion, by inserting the sentiments of Huetius,
+or Huet, the very learned bishop of Avranches. He tells us, that
+formerly to Origen's work on Principles used to be appended a
+treatise called, the Lament of Origen, the Latin translation of
+which Guido referred to Jerome. After quoting the passage of
+Erasmus (as above cited from the edition of 1545) in proof of its
+having been "neither written by Origen nor translated by Jerome,
+but the fabrication of some unlearned man, who attempted, under
+colour of this, to throw disgrace on Origen, just as they forged a
+letter in Jerome's name, lamenting that he had ever thought with
+Origen," Huet proceeds thus: "And Gelasius in the Roman Council
+writes, 'The book which is called The Repentance of Origen,
+apocryphal.' It is wonderful, therefore, that without any mark of
+its false character, it should be sometimes cited by some
+theologians in evidence. Here we may smile at the supineness of a
+certain heterodox man of the present age, who thought the 'Lament,'
+ascribed to Origen, to be something different from the Book of
+Repentance." [Vol. iv. part ii. p. 326.]</p>
+<p>The Decree here referred to of Pope Gelasius, made in the Roman
+Council, A.D. 494, by that pontiff, in conjunction with seventy
+bishops, contains these strong expressions, before enumerating some
+few of the books then condemned: "Other works written by heretics
+and schismatics, the Catholic and Apostolic Church by <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page137" id="page137"></a>{137}</span> no means
+receives; of them we think it right to subjoin a few which have
+occurred to our memory, and are to be avoided by Catholics." [Conc.
+Labb. vol. iv. p. 1265.] Then follows a list of prohibited works,
+among which we read, "the book called The Repentance of Origen,
+apocryphal," the very book which Huet identifies with the "Lament
+of Origen," still cited as evidence even in the present day. (See
+Appendix A.)</p>
+<p>The second passage cited by Coccius, and also by writers of the
+present time, as Origen's, without any allusion to its spurious and
+apocryphal character, is from the second book of the work called
+Origen on Job. The words cited run thus: "O blessed Job, who art
+living for ever with God, and remainest conqueror in the sight of
+the Lord the King, pray for us wretched, that the mercy of the
+terrible God may protect us in all our afflictions, and deliver us
+from all oppressions of the wicked one; and number us with the
+just, and enrol us among those who are saved, and make us rest with
+them in his kingdom, where for ever with the saints we may magnify
+him."</p>
+<p>This work, like the former, has no claim whatever to be regarded
+as Origen's. It has long been discarded by the learned. Indeed so
+far back as 1545, Erasmus, in his Censura, proved that it was
+written long after the time of Origen by an Arian. (Basil, 1545.
+vol. i. p. 408; and "Censura.") By the Benedictine editors it is
+transferred to an appendix as the Commentary of an anonymous writer
+on Job; and they thus express their judgment as to its being a
+forgery: "The Commentary of an anonymous writer on Job, in previous
+editions, is ascribed to Origen; <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page138" id="page138"></a>{138}</span> but that it is not his,
+Huet proves by unconquerable arguments. This translation is
+assigned to Hilary, the bishop; but although it is clear from
+various proofs of Jerome, that St. Hilary translated the tracts or
+homilies of Origen on Job, yet there is no reason why that man who
+wrote with the highest praise against the Arians, should be
+considered as the translator of this work, which is infected with
+the corruption of Arianism, and which is not Origen's." [Vol. ii.
+p. 894.] Erasmus calls the prologue to this treatise on Job "the
+production of a silly talkative man, neither learned nor
+modest."</p>
+<p>It is impossible not to feel, with regard to these two works,
+the sentiments which, as we have already seen, the Bishop of
+Avranches has so strongly expressed on one. "It is wonderful, that
+they should be sometimes cited in evidence by some theologians,
+without any mark of their being forgeries."</p>
+<p>Proceeding with our examination of the sentiments of Origen, I
+would here premise, that not the smallest doubt can be entertained
+that Origen believed the angels to be ministering spirits, real,
+active, zealous workmen and fellow-labourers with us in the
+momentous and awful business of our eternal salvation. He
+represents the angels as members of the same family with ourselves,
+as worshippers of the same God, as servants of the same master, as
+children of the same father, as disciples of the same heavenly
+teacher, as learners of one and the same heavenly doctrine. He
+contemplates them as members of our Christian congregations, as
+joining with us in prayer to our heavenly Benefactor, as taking
+pleasure when they hear in our <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page139" id="page139"></a>{139}</span> assemblies what is
+agreeable to the will of God, and as being present too not only
+generally in the Christian Church, but also with individual members
+of it<a id="footnotetag50" name="footnotetag50"></a><a href=
+"#footnote50"><sup>50</sup></a>. But does Origen, therefore,
+countenance any invocation of them? Let us appeal to himself.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote50" name=
+"footnote50"></a><b>Footnote 50:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag50">(return)</a>
+<p>One or two references will supply abundant proof of this: "I do
+not doubt that in our congregation angels are present, not only in
+general to the whole Church, but also individually with those of
+whom it is said, 'Their angels do always behold the face of my
+Father who is in heaven.' A twofold Church is here: one of men, the
+other of angels. If we say any thing agreeably to reason and the
+mind of Scripture, the angels rejoice to pray with us." And a
+little above, "Our Saviour, therefore, as well as the Holy Spirit,
+who spoke by the prophets, instructs not only men, but angels and
+invisible powers."&mdash;Hom, xxiii. in Luc. vol. iii. p. 961.</p>
+<p>"Whoever, therefore, confessing his sins, repents, or confesses
+Christ before men in persecutions, is applauded by his brethren.
+For there is joy and gladness to the angels in heaven over one
+sinner that repenteth. By them, therefore, as by brethren (for both
+men and angels are sons of the same Creator and Father) they are
+praised."&mdash;In Genes. Hom. xvii. p. 110.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Celsus accused the Christians of being atheists, godless, men
+without God, because they would not worship those gods many and
+lords many, and those secondary, subordinate, auxiliary, and
+ministering divinities with which the heathen mythology abounded:
+Origen answers, we are not godless, we are not without an object of
+our prayer; we pray to God Almighty alone through the mediation
+only of his Son.</p>
+<p>"We must pray to God alone ([Greek: Mono gar proseukteon to epi
+pasi Theo]), who is over all things; and we must pray also to the
+only-begotten and first-born of every creature, the Word of God;
+and we must implore him as our High Priest to carry our prayer,
+first coming to him, to his God and our <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page140" id="page140"></a>{140}</span> God, to
+his Father and the Father of those who live agreeably to the word
+of God." [Cont. Cels. &sect; 8. c. xxvi. vol. i. p. 761.]</p>
+<p>But Celsus, in this well representing the weakness and failings
+of human nature, still urged on the Christian the necessity, or at
+all events the expediency, of conciliating those intermediate
+beings who executed the will of the Supreme Being, and might haply
+have much left at their own will and discretion to give or to
+withhold; and therefore the desirableness of securing their good
+offices by prayer. To this Origen answers:</p>
+<p>"The one God ([Greek: Hena oun ton epi pasi theon haemin
+exenmenisteon])&mdash;the God who is over all, is to be propitiated
+by us, and to be appeased by prayer; the God who is rendered
+favourable by piety and all virtue. But if he (Celsus) is desirous,
+after the supreme God, to propitiate some others also, let him bear
+in mind, that just as a body in motion is accompanied by the motion
+of its shadow, so also by rendering the supreme God favourable, it
+follows that the person has all his (God's) friends, angels, souls,
+spirits, favourable also; for they sympathize with those who are
+worthy of God's favour; and not only do they become kindly affected
+towards the worthy, but they also join in their work with those who
+desire to worship the supreme God; and they propitiate him, and
+they pray with us, and supplicate with us; so that we boldly say,
+that together with men who on principle prefer the better part, and
+pray to God, ten thousands of holy powers join in prayer UNASKED
+([Greek: aklaetoi])," [UNBIDDEN, UNCALLED upon.] [Cont. Cels. lib.
+viii. &sect; 64. vol. i. p. 789.]</p>
+<p>What an opportunity was here for Origen to have stated, that
+though Christians do not call upon demons and the subordinate
+divinities of heathenism to aid <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page141" id="page141"></a>{141}</span> them, yet that they do call
+upon the ministering spirits, the true holy angels, messengers and
+servants of the most High God! But whilst speaking of them, and
+magnifying the blessings derived to man through their ministry, so
+far from encouraging us to ask them for their good offices, his
+testimony on the contrary is not merely negative; he positively
+asserts that when they assist mankind, it is without any request or
+prayer from man. Could this come from one who invoked angels?</p>
+<p>Another passage, although it adds little to the evidence of the
+above extract, I am unwilling to pass by, because it beautifully
+illustrates by the doctrine and practice of Origen the prayer, the
+only one adopted by the Anglican Church, offered by the Church to
+God for the succour and defence of the holy angels. Speaking of the
+unsatisfactory slippery road which they tread, who either depend
+upon the agency of demons for good, or are distressed by the fear
+of evil from them, Origen adds, "How far better ([Greek: poso
+Beltion]) were it to commit oneself to God who is over all, through
+Him who instructed us in this doctrine, Jesus Christ, and OF HIM to
+ask for every aid from the holy angels and the just, that they may
+rescue us from the earthly demons." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii. &sect;
+60. vol. i. p. 786.]</p>
+<p>In the following passage Origen answers the question of Celsus:
+"If you Christians admit the existence of angels, tell us what you
+consider their nature to be?" [Cont. Cels. lib. v. &sect; 4. p.
+579.]</p>
+<p>"Come," replies Origen, "let us consider these points. Now we
+confessedly say, that the angels are ministering spirits, and sent
+to minister on account of those who are to be heirs of salvation;
+that they ascend, bearing with them the supplications of men into
+the most pure <span class="pagenum"><a name="page142" id=
+"page142"></a>{142}</span> heavenly places of the world; and that
+they again descend from thence, bearing to each in proportion to
+what is appointed by God for them to minister to the well-doers.
+And learning that these are, from their work, called angels
+([Greek: aggeloi], messengers, ministers sent to execute some
+commission), we find them, because they are divine, sometimes
+called even gods in the Holy Scriptures; but not so, as for any
+injunction to be given to us to worship and adore, instead of God,
+those who minister, and bring to us the things of God. For every
+request and prayer, and supplication and thanksgiving, must be sent
+up to Him who is God above all, through the High Priest, who is
+above all angels, even the living Word of God. And we also make our
+requests to the Word, and supplicate Him, and moreover offer our
+prayer to Him; if we can understand the difference between the
+right use and the abuse of prayer. For it is not reasonable for us
+to call upon angels, without receiving a knowledge concerning them
+which is above man. But supposing the knowledge concerning them,
+wonderful and unutterable as it is, had been received; that very
+knowledge describing their nature, and those to whom they are
+respectively assigned, would not give confidence in praying to any
+other than to Him who is sufficient for every thing, God who is
+above all, through our Saviour, the Son of God, who is the word,
+and wisdom, and the truth, and whatsoever else the writings of the
+prophets of God, and the Apostles of Jesus say concerning Him. But
+for the angels of God to be favourable to us, and to do all things
+for us, our disposition towards God is sufficient; we copy them to
+the utmost of human strength, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page143" id="page143"></a>{143}</span> as they copy God. And our
+conception concerning his Son, the Word, according to what is come
+to us, is not opposed to the more clear conception of the holy
+angels concerning Him, but is daily approximating towards it in
+clearness and perspicuity."</p>
+<p>Again, he thus writes: "But Celsus wishes us to dedicate the
+first-fruits unto the demons; but we to Him who said, Let the earth
+bring forth grass, &amp;c. But to whom we give the first-fruits, to
+him we send up also our prayers; having a great High Priest who is
+entered into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God; and this confession
+we hold fast as long as we live, having God favourable unto us, and
+his only-begotten Son being manifested among us, Jesus Christ. But
+if we wish to have a multitude favourable unto us, we learn that
+thousand thousands stand by Him, and ten thousand thousands
+minister unto Him; who, regarding those as kinsfolks and friends
+who imitate their piety to God, work together for the salvation of
+them who call upon God and pray sincerely; appearing also, and
+thinking that they ought to listen to them, and as if upon one
+watchword to go forth for the benefit and salvation of those who
+pray to God, to whom they also pray." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii.
+&sect; 34. (Benedict, p. 766.)]</p>
+<p>After these multiplied declarations of Origen, not only
+confessing that Christians did not pray to the angels, but
+vindicating them from the charge of impiety brought against them by
+their enemies for their neglect of the worship of angels, is it
+possible to regard him as a witness in favour of prayer to
+angels?</p>
+<p>But it has been said that Origen in another passage (Cont. Cels.
+lib. viii. &sect; 13. p. 751.) <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page144" id="page144"></a>{144}</span> plainly implies, that he
+would not be unwilling to discuss the question of some worship
+being due to angels and archangels, provided the idea of that
+worship, and the acts of the worshippers, were first cleared of all
+misapprehension. And I would not that any Catholic, whether in
+communion with the Church of England or of Rome, should make any
+other answer than Origen here gave to Celsus. Let me speak freely
+on this point. I should not respect the memory of Origen as I do,
+had he taught differently. The word which he uses is the Greek word
+"therapeusis," precisely the same word with that which the learned
+in medicine now use to describe the means of healing diseases. It
+is a word of very wide import. It signifies the care which a
+physician takes of his patient; the service paid to a master; the
+attention given to a superior; the affectionate attendance of a
+friend; the allegiance of a subject; the worship of the Supreme
+Being. Origen says, Provided Celsus will specify what kind of
+"therapeusis" he would wish to be paid to those angels and
+archangels whose existence we acknowledge, I am ready to enter upon
+the subject with him. This is all he says. And we of the Anglican
+Church are ready from our hearts to join him. Call it by what name
+we may, we are never backward in acknowledging ourselves bound to
+render it. We pay to the angels and archangels, and all the company
+of heaven, the homage of respect, and veneration, and love. They
+are indeed our fellow-servants; they are, like ourselves, creatures
+of God's hand; but they are exalted far above us in nature and in
+office. By the grace of God, we would daily endeavour to become
+less distant from <span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id=
+"page145"></a>{145}</span> them in purity, in zeal, in obedience.
+Origen here speaks not one word of adoration, of invocation, of
+prayer. He speaks of a feeling and a behaviour, which the Greeks
+called "therapeusis," and which we best render by "respect,
+veneration, and love." Far from us be the thought of lowering the
+holy angels in the eyes of our fellow-creatures; equally far from
+us be the thought of invoking them, of asking them even for their
+prayers. They are holy creatures and holy messengers: we will think
+and speak of them with reverence, and gratitude, and affection; but
+they are creatures and messengers still, and when we think or speak
+of the object of prayer, we think and speak solely and exclusively
+of God.</p>
+<p>With regard to Origen's opinion, as to the invocation of the
+souls of saints departed, a very few words will suffice. He clearly
+records his opinion that the faithful are still waiting for us, and
+that till we all rejoice together, their joy will not be full: he
+leaves among the mysteries not to be solved now the question
+whether the departed can benefit the human race at all; and he has
+added reflections, full of edifying and solemn admonition, which
+would dissuade his fellow-believers from placing their confidence
+in any virtues, or intercessions, or merits of saints, and in any
+thing except the mere mercy of God, through Jesus Christ, and our
+own individual labour in the work of the Lord.</p>
+<p>In his seventh homily on Leviticus, in a passage partly quoted
+by Bellarmin, we read<a id="footnotetag51" name=
+"footnotetag51"></a><a href=
+"#footnote51"><sup>51</sup></a>&mdash;"Not even the Apostles have
+yet received their joy, but even they are waiting, in order that I
+also may become a partaker of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page146" id="page146"></a>{146}</span> their joy. For the saints
+departing hence do not immediately receive all the rewards of their
+deserts; but they wait even for us, though we be delaying and
+dilatory<a id="footnotetag52" name="footnotetag52"></a><a href=
+"#footnote52"><sup>52</sup></a>. For they have not perfect joy as
+long as they grieve for our errors, and mourn for our sins." Then,
+having quoted the Epistle to the Hebrews, he proceeds,&mdash;"You
+see, therefore, that Abraham is yet waiting to obtain those things
+that are perfect; so is Isaac and Jacob; and so all the prophets
+are waiting for us, that they might obtain eternal blessedness with
+us. Wherefore, even this mystery is kept, to the last day of
+delayed judgment."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote51" name=
+"footnote51"></a><b>Footnote 51:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag51">(return)</a>
+<p>Vol. ii. p. 222. Nondum enim receperunt l&aelig;titiam suam, ne
+apostoli quidem, &amp;c. But see Huetius on Origen, lib. ii. q. 11.
+No. 10.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote52" name=
+"footnote52"></a><b>Footnote 52:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag52">(return)</a>
+<p>He thinks it probable, that the saints departed feel an interest
+in the welfare of men on earth. See vol. iv. p. 273.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Modern Roman Catholic writers tell us, that we must consider
+Origen here as only referring to the reunion of the soul with the
+body; but his words cannot be so interpreted. The cause of the
+saints still waiting for their consummation of bliss, is stated to
+be the will of God, that all the faithful should enter upon their
+full enjoyment of blessedness together.</p>
+<p>Again: it may be asked, whether the following passage could have
+come from the pen of one who prayed to the saints, as already
+reigning with Christ in heaven.</p>
+<p>"But now whether the saints who are removed from the body and
+are with Christ, act at all, and labour for us, like the angels who
+minister to our salvation; or whether, again, the wicked removed
+from the body act at all according to the purpose of their own
+mind, like the bad angels, with whom, it is said by Christ, that
+they will be sent into eternal fires;&mdash;let this too be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id=
+"page147"></a>{147}</span> considered among the secret things of
+God, mysteries not to be committed to writing." [Epist. ad Rom.
+lib. ii. (Benedict. vol. iv. p. 479.) "Jam vero si etiam,"
+&amp;c.]</p>
+<p>In a passage found in Origen's Comment on Ezekiel's text,
+"Though Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it, they should deliver
+neither son nor daughter, they should deliver only their own souls
+by their righteousness," [Hom. iii. vol. iii. p. 372.]
+independently of the testimony borne to the point before us, we
+read a very interesting and awakening lesson of general
+application:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"First, let us expound the passage agreeably to its plain sense,
+in consequence of the ignorance of some who maintain the ideas of
+their own mind to be the truth of God, and often say, 'Every one of
+us will be able by his prayers to snatch whomsoever he will from
+hell,' and introduce iniquity to the Lord; not seeing that the
+righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the
+wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him; so that each shall die
+in his own sin, and each live in his own person. My father being a
+martyr profits me nothing, if I shall not live well, and adorn the
+nobleness of my race,&mdash;that is, his testimony and confession,
+by which he was glorified in Christ. It profiteth not the Jews to
+say, 'We were not born of fornication, we have one father, the
+Lord;' and, a little after, 'Abraham is our father.' Whatever they
+may say, whatever they will assume, if they have not the faith of
+Abraham they make their boast in vain; for they will not be saved
+on account of their being children of Abraham. Since, therefore,
+some have formed incorrect notions, we have necessarily brought in
+the plain sense of the passage as to the letter, saying, Noah,
+Daniel, and Job will not rescue sons or daughters; they only will
+be saved. Let no <span class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id=
+"page148"></a>{148}</span> one of us put his trust in a just
+father, a holy mother, chaste brethren. Blessed is the man who hath
+his hope in himself, and in the right way. But to those who place
+confident trust in the saints, we bring forward no improper
+example,&mdash;'Cursed is the man whose hope is in man;' and again,
+'Trust ye not in man.' And this also, 'It is good to trust in the
+Lord rather than in princes<a id="footnotetag53" name=
+"footnotetag53"></a><a href="#footnote53"><sup>53</sup></a>.' If we
+must hope in some object, leaving all others, let us hope in the
+Lord, saying, 'Though a host of men were set against me, yet shall
+not my heart be afraid.'"</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote53" name=
+"footnote53"></a><b>Footnote 53:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag53">(return)</a>
+<p>These observations may perhaps refer more especially to the
+saints still on earth; but they apply to all helpers, save God
+alone.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>He finishes the homily thus: "The righteous see three periods;
+the present, the period of change when the Lord will judge, and
+that which will be after the resurrection,&mdash;that is, the
+eternity of life in heaven in Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and
+dominion for ever and ever. Amen."</p>
+<p>Can this confessor of the Christian faith have ever taught his
+fellow-believers to plead the merits of the saints, or to pray for
+their intercessions? How strongly are the above sentiments
+contrasted with a passage in the third of the spurious homilies
+called In Diversos; the first clause of which is referred to by
+Bellarmin, as containing Origen's approbation of giving honour to
+the saints<a id="footnotetag54" name="footnotetag54"></a><a href=
+"#footnote54"><sup>54</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote54" name=
+"footnote54"></a><b>Footnote 54:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag54">(return)</a>
+<p>I hardly need detain the reader by any proof of the spuriousness
+of this passage; the whole work from which it is taken is rejected
+altogether by the Benedictine editors: "Reliqua ejusmodi spuria
+omittenda censuimus, qualia sunt ... Homili&aelig; in diversos;"
+and they have not allowed a single line of it to appear in their
+volumes, not even in the small character.&mdash;Vol. iv. p. 1.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"The memory of these (the Innocents) is always <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>{149}</span>
+celebrated, as is right, in the Churches. These, therefore, since
+they were unjustly or impiously put to death in peace and rest,
+having suffered much for the name of the Lord, were taken from this
+world, to remain in the eternal Church for ever in Christ. But
+their parents for the merits of their suffering will receive a
+worthy recompense of reward from the just and eternal Lord God."
+Here we have strongly marked indeed the difference between Origen
+himself, and the errors fastened upon him by the design or
+ignorance of subsequent times.</p>
+<p>Were not his testimony a subject of great moment, I should plead
+guilty to having detained my readers too long on Origen; and yet I
+cannot dismiss him without first refreshing our minds with the
+remembrance of some of his beautiful reflections on a Christian's
+prayer. We need not read them with a controversial eye, and they
+may be profitable to us all.</p>
+<p>"I think, then, (says this early teacher in Christ's school)
+that when proceeding to prayer, a Christian will be more readily
+disposed, and be in a better tone for the general work of prayer,
+if he will first tarry a little, and put himself into the right
+frame, casting off every distracting and disturbing thought, and
+with his best endeavour recalling to mind the vastness of HIM to
+whom he is drawing near, and how unholy a thing it is to approach
+him with a carelessness and indifference, and, as it were,
+contempt; laying aside also every thing foreign to the
+subject;&mdash;so to come to prayer as one who stretcheth forth his
+soul first, before his hands; and lifts up his mind first, before
+his eyes, to God; and before he stands up, raising from the ground
+the leading <span class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id=
+"page150"></a>{150}</span> principle of his nature, and lifting
+that up to the Lord of all. So far casting away all remembrance of
+evil towards any of those who may seem to have injured him, as he
+wishes God not to remember evil against him, who has himself been
+guilty, and has trespassed against many of his neighbours, or in
+whatever he is conscious to have done contrary to right reason."
+[De Oratione, vol. i. &sect; 31. p. 267.]</p>
+<p>"Having divided prayer into its several parts" (he continues),
+"I may bring my work to a close. There are then four parts of
+prayer requiring description, which I have found scattered in the
+Scriptures, all of which every one should embody in his
+prayer:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"First, we must offer glory (doxologies) to the best of our
+ability in the opening and commencement of our prayer, to God
+through Christ who is glorified with Him in the Holy Spirit, who is
+praised together. After this each person should offer general
+thanksgivings both for the blessings granted to all, and for those
+which he has individually obtained from God. After the
+thanksgiving, it appears to me right, that becoming, as it were, a
+bitter accuser of his own sins to God, he should petition first of
+all for a remedy to release him from the habit which impels him to
+transgress, and then for remission of the past. And after the
+confession, I think he ought in the fourth place, to add a
+supplication for great and heavenly things, both individual and
+universal, and for his relations and friends. After all, he should
+close his prayer with an ascription of glory to God through Christ
+in the Holy Ghost." [Sect. 33. p. 271.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id=
+"page151"></a>{151}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-6" id="sect1-4-6">SECTION
+VI.</a>&mdash;SUPPLEMENTARY SECTION ON ORIGEN.</h4>
+<p>I have above intimated my intention of reserving for a separate
+section our examination of a passage ascribed to Origen, in which
+he is represented as having invoked an angel to come down from
+heaven, to succour him and his fellow-creatures on earth. The
+passage purports to be part of Origen's comment on the opening
+verse of the prophecy of Ezekiel, "The heavens were opened." After
+the fullest investigation, and patient weighing of the whole
+section, I am fully persuaded, first, that the passage is an
+interpolation, never having come from the pen of Origen; and
+secondly, that, whoever were its author, it can be regarded only as
+an instance of those impassioned apostrophes, which are found in
+great variety in the addresses of ancient Christian orators. But
+since some of the most respected writers of the Church of Rome have
+regarded it as genuine, and deemed it worthy of being cited in
+evidence, I feel it incumbent to state at length, for those readers
+who may desire to enter at once fully into the question, the
+reasons on which my judgment is founded; whilst others, who may
+perhaps consider the discussion of the several points here as too
+great an interruption to the general argument, may for the present
+pass this section, and reserve it for subsequent inquiry.</p>
+<p>It will be, in the first place, necessary to quote the whole
+passage entire, however long; for the mere extract of that portion
+which is cited as Origen's prayer to an <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>{152}</span> angel,
+might leave a false impression as to the real merits of the
+case.</p>
+<p>"The heavens are opened. The heavens were closed, and at the
+coming of Christ they were opened, IN ORDER THAT THEY BEING LAID
+OPEN THE HOLY GHOST MIGHT COME UPON HIM in the appearance of a
+dove. For he could not come to us unless he had first descended on
+one who partook of his own nature. Jesus ascended up on high, he
+led captivity captive, he received gifts for men. He who descended
+is the same who ascended above all heavens, that he might fill all
+things; and he gave some as apostles, some as prophets, some as
+evangelists, some as pastors and masters, for the perfecting of the
+saints." [Vol. iii. p. 358. Hom. i. in Ezek.]</p>
+<p>"[The heavens were opened. It is not enough for one heaven to be
+opened: very many are opened, that not from one, but from all,
+angels may descend to those who are to be saved; angels who
+ascended and descended upon the Son of man, and came to him, and
+ministered to him. Now the angels descended because Christ first
+descended, fearing to descend before the Lord of all powers and
+things commanded. But when they saw the chieftain of the army of
+heaven dwelling in earthly places, then they entered through the
+opened road, following their Lord, and obeying his will, who
+distributes them as guardians of those that believe on his name.
+Thou yesterday wast under a devil, to-day thou art under an angel.
+Do not ye, saith the Lord, despise one of the least of those who
+are in the Church? Verily, I say unto you, that their angels
+through all things see the face of the Father who is in heaven. The
+angels attend on thy salvation; they were granted for the ministry
+of the Son of God, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id=
+"page153"></a>{153}</span> they say among themselves, If he
+descended, and descended into a body, if he is clothed in mortal
+flesh, and endured the cross, and died for man, why are we resting
+idle? Why do we spare ourselves? Haste away! Let all of us angels
+descend from heaven! Thus also was there a multitude of the
+heavenly host praising and blessing God when Christ was born. All
+things are full of angels. COME, ANGEL, take up one who by the word
+is converted from former error, from the doctrine of demons, from
+iniquity speaking on high, and taking him up like a good physician,
+cherish him, and instruct him. He is a little child, to-day he is
+born, an old man again growing young; and undertake him, granting
+him the baptism of the second regeneration; and summon to thyself
+other companions of thy ministry, that you all may together train
+for the faith those who have been sometime deceived. For there is
+greater joy in heaven over one sinner repenting, than over ninety
+and nine just persons who need no repentance. Every creature
+exults, rejoices with, and with applause addresses those who are to
+be saved; for the expectation of the creature waiteth for the
+manifestation of the sons of God. And although those who have
+interpolated the apostolical writings are unwilling that such
+passages should be in their books as may prove Christ to be the
+Creator, yet every creature waiteth for the sons of God when they
+shall be freed from sin, when they shall be taken away from the
+hand of Zabulon<a id="footnotetag55" name=
+"footnotetag55"></a><a href="#footnote55"><sup>55</sup></a>, when
+they shall be regenerated by Christ. But now it is time that we
+touch somewhat on the present place. The Prophet sees not a vision,
+but visions of God. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id=
+"page154"></a>{154}</span> Why did he see not one, but many
+visions? Hear the Lord promising and saying, I have multiplied
+visions. 8. 'The fifth month.' This was the fifth year of the
+captivity of king Joachim. In the thirtieth year of Ezekiel's age,
+and the fifth of the captivity of Joachim, the prophet is sent to
+the Jews. The most merciful Father did not despise the people, nor
+leave them a long time unadmonished. It is the fifth year. How much
+time intervened? Five years elapsed since they were captives in
+bondage.]</p>
+<p>(The portion between brackets is what I regard as an
+interpolation.)</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote55" name=
+"footnote55"></a><b>Footnote 55:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag55">(return)</a>
+<p>This word is frequently used for "Diabolum." Thus in a hymn used
+in the Roman ritual on Michaelmas-day we read, "Michaelem in
+virtute conterentem Zabulum."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"Immediately the Holy Spirit descends. He opened the heavens,
+that they who were oppressed by the yoke of bondage might see those
+things which were seen by the prophet. For when he says, The
+heavens were opened, in some measure they see with the eyes of
+their heart what he had seen even with the eyes of his flesh."</p>
+<p>Now the question is, Can this apostrophe to an angel be admitted
+as evidence that Origen held, and in his own person acted upon the
+doctrine of the Invocation of Angels?</p>
+<p>The nature of the present work precludes us from entering at
+length on the broad question, how far we can with safety regard the
+several writings which now purport to be translations of Origen's
+compositions, as on the whole the works of that early Christian
+writer. A multitude of those works which, until almost the middle
+of the sixteenth century, were circulated as Origen's, have long
+been by common consent excluded from the catalogue of his
+works<a id="footnotetag56" name="footnotetag56"></a><a href=
+"#footnote56"><sup>56</sup></a>. On this subject I <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>{155}</span> would
+refer any one, who desires to enter upon the inquiry, to the
+several prefaces of the Benedictine editors, who point out many
+sources of information, as well from among their friends as from
+those with whom they differ. Our inquiry must be limited within far
+narrower bounds, though I trust our arguments may assist somewhat
+in establishing the principles on which the student may at first
+guide himself in the wider range of investigation.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote56" name=
+"footnote56"></a><b>Footnote 56:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag56">(return)</a>
+<p>See preface to vol. iv. of the Benedictine edition.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We will first look to the external evidence bearing on the
+passage in question, and then to the internal character of the
+passage itself.</p>
+<p>Origen's Commentaries on Ezekiel were divided into no fewer than
+twenty-five volumes, which he is said to have begun in
+C&aelig;sarea of Palestine, and to have finished in Athens. Of
+these only one single fragment remains, namely, part of the
+twenty-first volume<a id="footnotetag57" name=
+"footnotetag57"></a><a href="#footnote57"><sup>57</sup></a>. Jerome
+says that he translated fourteen of Origen's homilies on Ezekiel.
+Of these not one passage in the original language of Origen is
+known to be in existence. We must now, therefore, either receive
+the existing translations generally as Origen's, (whether they are
+Jerome's translations or not,) or we must consider Origen's
+homilies on Ezekiel as altogether lost to us. But supposing that we
+receive these works as containing, on the whole, traditionary
+translations of Origen, the genuineness of any one passage may yet
+become the subject of fair criticism. And whilst some persons
+reject whole masses of them altogether, the history of his works
+cannot but suggest some very perplexing points of suspicion and
+doubt.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote57" name=
+"footnote57"></a><b>Footnote 57:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag57">(return)</a>
+<p>See Benedictine edition, vol. iii. p. 351. and Eusebius, Eccl.
+Hist. lib. vi. c. 6. there referred to.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id=
+"page156"></a>{156}</span>
+<p>The great body of his homilies, Origen probably delivered
+extempore in the early part of his ministry to the Christians of
+C&aelig;sarea. Eusebius tells us, that not before Origen had
+reached his sixtieth year did he sanction the notaries (persons
+well known to history and corresponding to the short-hand
+writers<a id="footnotetag58" name="footnotetag58"></a><a href=
+"#footnote58"><sup>58</sup></a> of the present day) in publishing
+any of his homilies. [Eccles. Hist. lib. vi. c. 36.] But the
+Benedictine editor, De la Rue, conceives that those men might
+surreptitiously and against the preacher's wishes have published
+some of Origen's homilies. Be this as it may. Suppose that the
+homilies on Ezekiel were published by Origen himself, and were
+translated by Jerome himself, our doubts are not removed even by
+that supposition. The same editor in the same preface tells us, "It
+is known to the learned that it was Jerome's habit, in translating
+Greek, sometimes to insert some things of his own<a id=
+"footnotetag59" name="footnotetag59"></a><a href=
+"#footnote59"><sup>59</sup></a>." Not that I for a moment conceive
+the passage under consideration to have come in its Latin dress
+from the pen of Jerome; for my conviction being that it is an
+interpolation of a much later date, I mention the circumstance to
+show, that even when Jerome, with his professed accuracy, is the
+translator, we can in no case feel sure that we are reading the
+exact and precise sentiments of Origen.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote58" name=
+"footnote58"></a><b>Footnote 58:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag58">(return)</a>
+<p>The Latin word "notarius" (notary) does not come so near as our
+own English expression, "short-hand writer," to the Greek word used
+by Eusebius,&mdash;"tachygraphus," "quick-writer." The report of
+Eusebius as to the homilies of Origen having been delivered
+extempore, and taken down by these "quick-writers," is confirmed by
+Pamphilus the martyr, as quoted by Valesius, in the annotations on
+this passage of Eusebius.&mdash;Apol. Orig. lib. i.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote59" name=
+"footnote59"></a><b>Footnote 59:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag59">(return)</a>
+<p>Cui in vertendis Gr&aelig;cis sciunt eruditi solemne esse
+nonnulla interdum de suo inserere.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id=
+"page157"></a>{157}</span>
+<p>Ruffinus, his celebrated contemporary, accused Jerome of many
+inaccuracies in his translations; and yet what were the principles
+of translation adopted by Ruffinus himself, as his own, we are not
+left to infer; for we learn it from his own pen. His voluntary
+acknowledgment in the peroration which he added to Origen's Comment
+on the Epistle of St. Paul to the Romans, strongly and painfully
+exhibits to us how little dependence can safely be placed on such
+translations whenever the original is lost; how utterly
+insufficient and unsatisfactory is any evidence drawn from them, as
+to the real genuine sentiments and expressions of the author.
+Ruffinus informs us, that with regard to many of the various works
+of Origen, he changed the preacher's extemporary addresses, as
+delivered in the Church, into a more explanatory form, "adding,
+supplying, filling up what he thought wanting<a id="footnotetag60"
+name="footnotetag60"></a><a href=
+"#footnote60"><sup>60</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote60" name=
+"footnote60"></a><b>Footnote 60:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag60">(return)</a>
+<p>Dum supplere cupimus ea qu&aelig; ab Origene in auditorio
+Ecclesi&aelig; extempore (non tam explanationis quam
+&aelig;dificationis intentione) perorata sunt.... Si addere quod
+videar, et explere qu&aelig; desunt.&mdash;Orig. vol. iv. p.
+688.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Moreover, he proceeds so far as to tell us<a id="footnotetag61"
+name="footnotetag61"></a><a href="#footnote61"><sup>61</sup></a>
+that his false <span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id=
+"page158"></a>{158}</span> friends had remonstrated with him for
+not publishing the works under his own name, instead of retaining
+Origen's, his changes having been so great; a point, which he was
+far from unwilling to acknowledge. This must appear to every one
+unsatisfactory in the extreme, and to shake one's confidence in any
+evidence drawn from such a source. Indeed, the Benedictine editor,
+with great cause and candour, laments this course of proceeding on
+the part of Ruffinus, as throwing a doubt and uncertainty, and
+suspicion, over all the works so tampered with. "This one thing
+(observes that honest editor) would the learned desire, that
+Ruffinus had spared himself the labour of filling up what he
+thought deficient. For since the Greek text has perished, it can
+scarcely with certainty be distinguished, where Origen himself
+speaks, or where Ruffinus obtrudes his own merchandise upon us."
+This is more than enough to justify our remarks. I must, however,
+refer to the conduct of another editor and translator of Origen, of
+a similar tendency. It unhappily shows the disposition to sacrifice
+every thing to the received opinions of the Church of Rome, rather
+than place the whole evidence of antiquity before the world, and
+abide by the result. How many works this principle, in worse hands,
+may have mutilated, or utterly buried in oblivion, and left to
+perish, it is impossible to conjecture; that the principle is
+unworthy the spirit of Christianity will not now be questioned.
+That editor and translator, in his advertisement on the Commentary
+upon St. John, thus professes the principles which he had adopted:
+"Know, moreover, that I have found nothing in this book which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page159" id=
+"page159"></a>{159}</span> seemed to be inconsistent with the
+decrees of holy Mother Church: for had I found any, I would not
+have translated the book, or would have marked the suspected
+place." [Quoted by the Benedictine, vol. iv. p. viii.] The
+Benedictine proceeds to say, that the writer had not kept his word,
+but had allowed many heterodox passages to escape, whilst he had
+deliberately withdrawn others.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote61" name=
+"footnote61"></a><b>Footnote 61:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag61">(return)</a>
+<p>His words, as indicative of his principles of translation, and
+bearing immediately on the question, as to the degree of authority
+which should be assigned to the remains of Origen, when the
+original is lost, deserve a place here: "I am exposed to a new sort
+of charge at their hands; for thus they address me,&mdash;In your
+writings, since very many parts in them (plurima in eis) are
+considered to be of your own production, give the title of your own
+name, and write, for example, The Books of Explanations of Ruffinus
+on the Epistle to the Romans,&mdash;but the whole of this they
+offer me, not from any love of me, but from hatred to the author.
+But I, who consult my conscience more than my fame, even if I am
+seen to add some things, and to fill up what are wanting, or to
+shorten what are too long, yet I do not think it right to steal the
+title of him, who laid the foundations of the works, and supplied
+the materials for the buildings. Yet, in truth, it may be at the
+option of the reader, when he shall have approved of the work, to
+ascribe the merits to whom he will."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Many works probably, of the earliest ages, have been wholly or
+in part lost to us from the working of the same principle in its
+excess. Rather than perpetuate any sentiments at variance with the
+received doctrines of the Church, it was considered the duty of the
+faithful to let works, in themselves valuable, but containing such
+sentiments, altogether perish, or to exclude the objectionable
+passages.</p>
+<p>I would now invite you to examine the passage itself, and
+determine whether it does not bear within it internal evidence of
+its having been altogether interpolated.</p>
+<p>In the first place, on the words upon which it professes to be a
+comment, the author had already given his comment, and assigned to
+them another meaning. "The heavens were opened," he says: "Before
+the time of Christ the heavens were shut; but at his advent they
+were opened, THAT THE HOLY SPIRIT MIGHT DESCEND FIRST ON HIM;"
+quoting also among others the passage which speaks of Christ taking
+captivity captive. And then after the passage in question, in which
+he assigns a totally different reason for the opening of the
+heavens; without any allusion to the intervening ideas, he carries
+on, and concludes the comment which he had begun,&mdash;in words
+which fit on well with the close of that comment, but which, as
+they stand now at the close of the intervening passage about the
+angels, are abrupt and incoherent&mdash;"Forthwith the Holy Spirit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page160" id=
+"page160"></a>{160}</span> descended;" recurring also again to the
+idea which he had before introduced of Christ benefiting those who
+were in captivity. A passage which affixes to the words commented
+upon, a different interpretation from one already given in the same
+paragraph; and which forces itself abruptly and incoherently in the
+middle of a brief comment, must offer itself to our examination
+under strong grounds of suspicion, that it has been interpolated.
+But when we examine the substance of the passage, its sentiments,
+the ideas conveyed, and the associations suggested, and then think
+of the author to whom it is ascribed, few probably will be disposed
+to regard it as a faithful mirror in which to contemplate the real
+sentiments of Origen.</p>
+<p>How utterly unworthy of the sublime burst of Christian eloquence
+which now delights us in undoubted works of Origen, is this strange
+and degrading fiction! The true Origen THERE represents the tens of
+thousands of angelic spirits ten thousand times told, as ever
+surrounding the throne of God, and ministering for the blessing of
+those in whose behalf God himself wills them to serve. [Vol. i. p.
+767. Contr. Cels. viii. 34.] Here he represents the revelation of
+the holiest of holies as a throwing open of the various divisions
+or compartments of the celestial kingdom for all the angels to
+hasten forth together, from their several places of indolence and
+carelessness and self-indulgence, (for such he represents their
+state to have been,) to visit this earth. Surely such a comment
+would better suit the mythology of the cave and dens of &AElig;olus
+and his imprisoned winds (velut agmine facto qua data porta ruunt)
+than the awfully sublime revelation vouchsafed to the prophet
+Ezekiel. And how unworthy and degrading is that representation of
+the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id=
+"page161"></a>{161}</span> heavenly host, resting inactive, and
+sparing themselves from toil, until they witnessed Christ's descent
+and humiliation; and then when chid and put to shame and rebuke,
+and mutually roused to action by their fellows, coming down to
+visit this earth, and rushing through the opened portals of
+heaven.</p>
+<p>Again, we see how incoherent is the whole section which contains
+the alleged prayer to angels: "Thou wast yesterday under a demon,
+to-day thou art under an angel: the angels minister to thy
+salvation; they are granted for the ministry of the Son of God,
+&amp;c. All things are full of angels. Come, Angel, take up one who
+is converted from his ancient error, &amp;c. And call to thee other
+companions of thy ministry, that all of you alike may train up to
+the faith those who were once deceived." Indeed the passage seems
+to carry within itself its own condemnation so entirely, that what
+we have before alleged, both of internal and external evidence, may
+appear superfluous. Surely the conceit of a preacher of God's word
+addressing an angel, (which of them he thus individually addresses
+does not appear; for he says not "My Angel," as though he were
+appealing to one whom he regarded as his guardian, the view
+gratuitously suggested in the marginal note of the Benedictine
+editor, "the invocation of a guardian angel,") and bidding some one
+angel, as a sort of summoner, to go and call to himself all the
+angels of heaven to come in one body, and instruct those who are in
+error, is, even as a rhetorical apostrophe, as unworthy the mind of
+a Christian philosopher, as it is in the light of a prayer totally
+inconsistent with the plain sentiments of Origen on the very
+subject of angelic invocation. Even had Origen not left us his
+deliberate opinions in works of undoubted genuineness, such a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162" id=
+"page162"></a>{162}</span> strange, incoherent, and childish
+rhapsody could never be relied upon by sober and upright men as a
+precedent sanctioning a Christian's prayer to angels; no one would
+rely upon such evidence in points of far less moment, even were it
+uncontradicted by the same witness.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-7" id="sect1-4-7">SECTION VII.</a>&mdash;ST.
+CYPRIAN.</h4>
+<p>In the middle of the third century, Cyprian [Jerom, vol. iv. p.
+342.], a man of substance and a rhetorician of Carthage, was
+converted to Christianity. He was then fifty years of age; and his
+learning, virtues, and devotedness to the cause which he had
+espoused, very soon raised him to the dignity, the responsibility,
+and, in those days, the great danger, of the Episcopate. (Cyprian
+is said to have been converted about A.D. 246, to have been
+consecrated A.D. 248, and to have suffered martyrdom A.D. 258.)
+Many of his writings of undoubted genuineness are preserved, and
+they have been appealed to in every age as the works of a faithful
+son of the Catholic Church. On the subject of prayer he has written
+very powerfully and affectingly; but I find no expression which can
+by possibility imply that he practised or countenanced the
+invocation of saints and angels. I have carefully examined every
+sentence alleged by its most strenuous defenders, and I cannot
+extract from them one single grain of evidence which can bear the
+test of inquiry. Even did the passages quoted require to be taken
+in the sense affixed to them <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page163" id="page163"></a>{163}</span> by those advocates, they
+prove nothing; they do not bear even remotely upon the subject,
+whilst I am persuaded that to every unprejudiced mind a meaning
+will appear to have been attached to them which the author did not
+intend to convey.</p>
+<p>The first quotation to which our attention is called is from the
+close of his treatise De Habitu Virginum, which contains some very
+edifying reflections. In the last clause of that treatise the
+advocates for the invocation of saints represent Cyprian as
+requesting the virgins to remember him in their prayers at the
+throne of grace when they shall have been taken to heaven. "As we
+have borne the image of Him who is of the earth, let us also bear
+the image of him who is from heaven. This image the virgin-state
+bears,&mdash;integrity bears it, holiness and truth bear it; rules
+of discipline mindful of God bear it, retaining justice with
+religion, firm in the faith, humble in fear, strong to endure all
+things, gentle to receive an injury, readily disposed to pity, with
+one mind and with one heart in brotherly peace. All which ye ought,
+O good virgins, to observe, to love and fulfil; ye who, retired for
+the service of God and Christ, with your greater and better part
+are going before towards the Lord to whom you have devoted
+yourselves. Let those who are advanced in age exercise rule over
+the younger; ye younger, offer to your equals a stimulus; encourage
+yourselves by mutual exhortations; by examples emulous of virtue
+invite each other to glory; remain firm; conduct yourselves
+spiritually; gain the end happily. Only remember us then, when your
+virgin-state shall begin to be honoured." [Tantum mementote tunc
+nostri, cum incipiet in vobis virginitas honorari.&mdash;Page
+180.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page164" id=
+"page164"></a>{164}</span>
+<p>The second instance, from the close of his letter to Cornelius,
+puts before us a beautiful act of friendship and brotherly
+affection worthy of every Christian brother's and friend's
+imitation. But how it can be applied in supporting the cause of the
+invocation of saints, I cannot see. The supporters of that doctrine
+say that Cyprian suggests to his friend, still living on earth,
+that whichever of the two should be first called away, he should
+continue when in heaven to pray for the survivor on earth. Suppose
+it to be so. That has not any approximation to our praying to one
+who is already dead and gone to his reward. But Cyprian surely
+intended to convey a very different meaning, namely this, that the
+two friends should continue to pray, each in his place, mutually
+for each other and for their friends, and relieve each other's
+wants and necessities whilst both survived; and whenever death
+should remove the one from earth to happiness, the survivor should
+not forget their bond of friendship, but should still continue to
+pray to God for their brothers and sisters. The passage translated
+to the letter, runs thus: "Let us be mutually mindful of each
+other, with one mind and one heart. On both sides, let us always
+pray for each other; let us by mutual love relieve each other's
+pressures and distresses; and if either of us from hence, by the
+speed of the Divine favour, go on before the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page165" id="page165"></a>{165}</span> other,
+let our love persevere before the Lord; for our brothers and
+sisters with the Father's mercy let not prayer cease. My desire,
+most dear brother, is that you may always prosper." [Epist. 57.
+Benedict, p. 96.&mdash;Memores nostri invicem simus concordes atque
+unanimes: utrobique pro nobis semper oremus, pressuras et angustias
+mutua caritate relevemus, et si quis istinc nostrum prior
+divin&aelig; dignationis celeritate pr&aelig;cesserit, perseveret
+apud Dominum nostra dilectio; pro fratribus et sororibus nostris
+apud misericordiam Patris non cesset oratio. Opto te, frater
+carissime, semper bene valere.&mdash;This epistle is by some
+editors numbered as the 60th, by others as the 61st, the 7th, and
+the 69th, &amp;c.]</p>
+<p>Whether the above view of this passage be founded in reason or
+not, it matters little to the point at issue. Let both these
+passages be accepted in the sense assigned to them by some Roman
+Catholic writers, yet there is not a shadow of analogy between the
+language and conduct of Cyprian, and the language and conduct of
+those who now invoke saints departed. In each case Cyprian, still
+in the body, was addressing fellow-creatures still sojourning on
+earth. The very utmost which these passages could be forced to
+countenance would be, that the righteous, when in heaven, may be
+mindful in their prayers of their friends, who are still exposed to
+the dangers from which they have themselves finally escaped, and
+who, when both were on earth, requested them to remember the
+survivors in their prayers. But this is a question totally
+different from our addressing them in supplication and prayer; a
+difference which I am most anxious that both myself and my readers
+should keep in mind throughout.</p>
+<p>In the extract from Cyprian's letter, a modern author having
+rendered the single word "utrobique," by the words "in this world
+and the next" I am induced to add a few further observations on the
+passage. (The Latin original and the version here referred to, will
+be placed side by side in the Appendix.) It will, I think, appear
+to most readers on a careful examination of the passage, that the
+expression "utrobique<a id="footnotetag62" name=
+"footnotetag62"></a><a href="#footnote62"><sup>62</sup></a>" "on
+both sides," or "on both parts," whatever be its precise
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id=
+"page166"></a>{166}</span> meaning, so far from referring to "this
+world and the next," must evidently be confined to the condition of
+both parties now in this life, because it stands in direct
+contradistinction to what follows, the supposed case of the death
+of either of the two; and because it applies no less to the mutual
+relief of each other's sufferings and afflictions during their
+joint lives, than to their mutual prayers: it cannot mean that all
+the mutual benefits to be derived from their mutual remembrance of
+each other, were to come solely through the means of their prayers.
+They were doubtless mutually to pray for each other; but, in
+addition to their prayers, they were also to relieve each other's
+pressures and difficulties with mutual love, and that too before
+the event afterwards contemplated, namely, the removal of one of
+them by death.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote62" name=
+"footnote62"></a><b>Footnote 62:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag62">(return)</a>
+<p>Utrobique is rendered by Facciolati [Greek:
+hekaterothi]&mdash;"in utraque parte, utrimque."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Bishop Fell thus comments on the passage: "The sense seems to
+be, When either of us shall die; whether I, who preside at
+Carthage, or you, who are presiding at Rome, shall be the survivor,
+let the prayer to God of him whose lot shall be to remain the
+longest among the living, persevere, and continue." "Meanwhile,"
+continues the Bishop<a id="footnotetag63" name=
+"footnotetag63"></a><a href="#footnote63"><sup>63</sup></a>, "we by
+no means doubt that souls admitted into heaven apply to God, the
+best and greatest of Beings, that he would have compassion on those
+who are dwelling on the earth. But it does not thence follow, that
+prayers should be offered to the saints. THE MAN WHO PETITIONS THEM
+MAKES THEM GODS (Deos qui rogat ille facit)." [Oxford, 1682, p.
+143.] Rigaltius, himself <span class="pagenum"><a name="page167"
+id="page167"></a>{167}</span> a Roman Catholic, doubts whether,
+when Cyprian wrote this letter, he had any idea before his mind of
+saints departed praying for the living. He translates "utrobique"
+very much as I have done, "with reciprocal love, with mutual
+charity." His last observations on this passage are very
+remarkable. After having confessed the sentiments to be worthy of a
+Christian, that the saints pray for us, and having argued that
+Cyprian could not have thought it necessary to ask a saint to
+retain his brotherly kindness in heaven, for he could not be a
+saint if he did not continue to love his brethren, he thus
+concludes: "In truth it is a pious and faithful saying, That of
+those who having already put off mortality are made joint-heirs
+with Christ, and of those who surviving on earth will hereafter be
+joint-heirs with Christ, the Church is one, and is by the Holy
+Spirit so well joined together as not to be torn asunder by the
+dissolution of the body. They pray to God for us, and we praise God
+for them, and thus with mutual affection (utrobique) we always pray
+for each other." [Paris, 1666. p. 92.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote63" name=
+"footnote63"></a><b>Footnote 63:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag63">(return)</a>
+<p>See the note of the Benedictine editors on this passage (p.
+467), in which they refer to the sentiments of Rigaltius, Pamelius,
+and Bishop Fell, whom they call "the most illustrious Bishop of
+Oxford."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I will detain you only by one or two more extracts from Cyprian;
+one forming part of the introduction to his Comment on the Lord's
+Prayer, which is fitted for the edification of Christians in every
+age; the other closing his treatise on Mortality, one of those
+beautiful productions by which, during the plague which raged at
+Carthage in the year 252, he comforted and exhorted the Christians,
+that they might meet death without fear or amazement, in sure and
+certain hope of eternal blessedness in heaven. The sentiments in
+the latter passage will be responded to by every good Catholic,
+whether in communion with the Church of Rome or <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page168" id="page168"></a>{168}</span> with the
+Church of England; whilst in the former we are reminded, that to
+pray as Cyprian prayed, we must address ourselves to God alone in
+the name and trusting to the merits only of his blessed Son.</p>
+<p>"He who caused us to live, taught us also to pray, with that
+kindness evidently by which He deigns to give and confer on us
+every other blessing; that when we speak to the Father in the
+prayer and supplication which his Son taught, we might the more
+readily be heard. He had already foretold, that the hour was coming
+when the true worshippers should worship the Father in spirit and
+in truth; and He fulfilled what He before promised, that we, who
+have received the spirit and truth from his sanctification, may
+from his instruction offer adoration truly and spiritually. For
+what prayer can be more spiritual than that which is given to us by
+Christ, by whom even the Holy Spirit is sent to us? What can be a
+more true prayer with the Father than that which came from the lips
+of the Son, who is Truth? So that to pray otherwise than He taught,
+is not only ignorance, but a fault; since He has himself laid it
+down and said, Ye reject the Commandment of God to establish your
+own traditions. Let us pray then, most beloved brethren, as our
+teacher, God, has instructed us. It is a welcome and friendly
+prayer to petition God from his own, to mount up to his ears by the
+prayer of Christ. Let the Father recognize the words of his Son.
+When we offer a prayer let Him who dwelleth inwardly in our breast,
+Himself be in our voice; and since we have Him as our advocate with
+the Father for our sins, when as sinners we are petitioning for our
+sins let us put forth the words of our Advocate." [De Orat. Dom. p.
+204.]</p>
+<p>"We must consider, (he says at the close of his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>{169}</span> treatise
+on the Mortality [Page 236.],) most beloved brethren, and
+frequently reflect that we have renounced the world, and are
+meanwhile living here as strangers and pilgrims. Let us embrace the
+day which assigns each to his own home ... which restores us to
+paradise and the kingdom of heaven, snatched from hence and
+liberated from the entanglements of the world. What man, when he is
+in a foreign country, would not hasten to return to his native
+land?... We regard paradise as our country.... We have begun
+already to have the patriarchs for our parents. Why do we not
+hasten and run that we may see our country, and salute our parents?
+There a large number of dear ones are waiting for us, of parents,
+brothers, children; a numerous and full crowd are longing for us;
+already secure of their own immortality, and still anxious for our
+safety. To come to the sight and the embrace of these, how great
+will be the mutual joy to them and to us! What a pleasure of the
+kingdom of heaven is there without the fear of dying, and with an
+eternity of living! How consummate and never-ending a happiness!
+There is the glorious company of the apostles; there is the
+assembly of exulting prophets; there is the unnumbered family of
+martyrs crowned for the victory of their struggles and suffering;
+there are virgins triumphing, who, by the power of chastity, have
+subdued the lusts of the flesh and the body; there are the merciful
+recompensed, who with food and bounty to the poor have done the
+works of righteousness, who keeping the Lord's commands have
+transferred their earthly inheritance into heavenly treasures. To
+these, O most dearly beloved brethren, let us hasten with most
+eager longing; <span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id=
+"page170"></a>{170}</span> let us desire that our lot may be to be
+with these speedily; to come speedily to Christ. Let God see this
+to be our thought; let our Lord Christ behold this to be the
+purpose of our mind and faith, who will give more abundant rewards
+of his glory to them, whose desires for himself have been the
+greater."</p>
+<p>Such is the evidence of St. Cyprian.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-8" id="sect1-4-8">SECTION
+VIII.</a>&mdash;LACTANTIUS.</h4>
+<p>Cyprian suffered martyrdom about the year 260. Towards the close
+of this century, and at the beginning of the fourth, flourished
+Lactantius. He was deeply imbued with classical learning and
+philosophy. Before he became a writer (as Jerome informs us [Jerom,
+vol. iv. part ii. p. 119. Paris, 1706]) he taught rhetoric at
+Nicomedia; and afterwards in extreme old age he was the tutor of
+C&aelig;sar Crispus, son of Constantine, in Gaul. Among many other
+writings which Jerome enumerates, he specifies the book, "On the
+Anger of God," as a most beautiful work. Bellarmin, however, speaks
+of him disparagingly, as one who had fallen into many errors, and
+was better versed in Cicero than in the Holy Scriptures. His
+testimony is allowed by the supporters of the adoration of spirits
+and angels to be decidedly against them; they do not refer to a
+single passage likely to aid their cause; and they are chiefly
+anxious to depreciate his evidence. I will call your attention only
+to two passages in his works. The <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page171" id="page171"></a>{171}</span> one is in his first book on
+False Religion: "God hath created ministers, whom we call
+messengers (angels);... but neither are these gods, nor do they
+wish to be called gods, nor to be worshipped, as being those who do
+nothing beyond the command and will of God." [Vol. i. p. 31.]</p>
+<p>The other passage is from his work on a Happy Life: "Nor let any
+one think that souls are judged immediately after death. For all
+are kept in one common place of guard, until the time come when the
+great Judge will institute an inquiry into their deserts. Then
+those whose righteousness shall be approved, will receive the
+reward of immortality; and those whose sins and crimes are laid
+open shall not rise again, but shall be hidden in the same darkness
+with the wicked&mdash;appointed to fixed punishments." [Chap. xxi.
+p. 574.]</p>
+<p>This composition is generally believed to have been written
+about the year 317.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-9" id="sect1-4-9">SECTION
+IX.</a>&mdash;EUSEBIUS.</h4>
+<p>The evidence of Eusebius, on any subject connected with
+primitive faith and practice, cannot be looked to without feelings
+of deep interest. He flourished about the beginning of the fourth
+century, and was Bishop of Caesarea, in Palestine. His testimony
+has always been appealed to in the Catholic Church, as an authority
+not likely to be gainsaid. He was a voluminous writer, and his
+writings were very diversified in their character. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page172" id="page172"></a>{172}</span> Whatever
+be our previous sentiments we cannot too carefully examine the
+remains of this learned man. But in his writings, historical,
+biographical, controversial, or by whatever name they may be
+called, overflowing as they are with learning, philosophical and
+scriptural, I can find no one single passage which countenances the
+decrees of the Council of Trent; not one passage which would
+encourage me to hope that I prayed as the primitive Church was wont
+to pray, if by invocation I requested an angel or a saint to
+procure me any favour, or to pray for me. The testimony of Eusebius
+has a directly contrary tendency.</p>
+<p>Among the authorities quoted by the champions of the invocation
+of saints, I can find only three from Eusebius; and I sincerely
+lament the observations which truth and justice require me to make
+here, in consequence of the manner in which his evidence has been
+cited. The first passage to which I refer is quoted by Bellarmin
+from the history of Eusebius, to prove that the spirit of a holy
+one goes direct from earth to heaven. This passage is not from the
+pen of Eusebius; and if it were, it would not bear on our inquiry.
+The second is quoted by the same author, from the Evangelica
+Pr&aelig;paratio, to prove that the primitive Christians offered
+prayers to the saints. Neither is this from the pen of Eusebius.
+The third Extract, from the account of the martyrdom of Polycarp,
+is intended to prove that the martyrs were worshipped. Even this,
+one of the most beautiful passages in ancient history, as it is
+represented by Bellarmin and others, is interpolated.</p>
+<p>The first passage, which follows a description of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page173" id=
+"page173"></a>{173}</span> martyr Potami&aelig;na's sufferings, is
+thus quoted by Bellarmin: "In this manner the blessed virgin,
+Potamni&aelig;na, emigrated from earth to heaven." [Hoc modo beata
+Virgo emigravit e terris ad coelum. Vol. ii. p. 854.] And such,
+doubtless, is the passage in the translation of Eusebius, ascribed
+to Ruffinus [Basil, 1535. p. 134]; but the original is, "And such a
+struggle was thus accomplished by this celebrated virgin;" ([Greek:
+kai ho men taes aoidimou koraes toioutos kataegoisisto athlos];
+Tale certamen ab hac percelebri et gloriosa virgine confectum
+fait.); and such is the Parisian translation of 1581.</p>
+<p>The second misquotation is far more serious. Bellarmin thus
+quotes Eusebius: "These things we do daily, who honouring the
+soldiers of true religion as the friends of God, approach to their
+respective monuments, and make OUR PRAYERS TO THEM, as holy men, by
+whose intercession to God, we profess to be not a little aided."
+[H&aelig;c nos, inquit, quotidie factitamus qui veras pietatis
+milites ut Dei amicos honorantes, ad monumenta quoque eorum
+accedimus, votaque ipsis facimus tanquam viris sanctis quorum
+intercessione ad Deum non parum juvari profitemur.&mdash;p. 902. He
+quotes it as c. 7.]</p>
+<p>By one who has not by experience become familiar with these
+things it would scarcely be believed, that whilst the readers of
+Bellarmin have been taught to regard these as the words of
+Eusebius, in the original there is no mention whatever made of the
+intercession of the saints; that there is no allusion to prayer to
+them; that there is no admission even of any benefit derived from
+them at all. This quotation Bellarmin makes from the Latin version,
+published in Paris in 1581, or from some common source: it is word
+for word the same. We must either allow him to be ignorant of the
+truth, or to have designedly preferred error. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>{174}</span> The copy
+which I have before me of the "Evangelica Pr&aelig;paratio," in
+Greek and Latin, was printed in 1628, and dedicated by Viger
+Franciscus, a priest of the order of Jesuits, to the Archbishop of
+Paris.</p>
+<p>Eusebius, marking the resemblance in many points between Plato's
+doctrine and the tenets of Christianity, on the reverence which,
+according to Plato, ought to be paid to the good departed, makes
+this observation: "And this corresponds with what takes place on
+the death of those lovers of God, whom you would not be wrong in
+calling the soldiers of the true religion. Whence also it is our
+custom to proceed to their tombs, and AT THEM [the tombs] to make
+our prayers, and to honour their blessed souls, inasmuch as these
+things are with reason done by us." [Greek: kai tauta de armozei
+epi tae ton theophilon teleutae ous stratiotas taes alaethous
+eusebeius ouk an hamartois eipon paralambanesthai othen kai epi tas
+thaekas auton ethos haemin parienai kai tas euchas para tautais
+poieisthai, timan te tas makarias auton psychas, os eulogos kai
+touton uph haemon giguomenon.] This translation agrees to a certain
+extent with the Latin of Viger's edition ("Qu&aelig; quidem in
+hominum Deo carissimorum obitus egregie conveniunt, quos ver&aelig;
+pietatis milites jure appellaris. Nam et eorum sepulchra celebrare
+et preces ibi votaque nuncupare et beatas illorum animas venerari
+consuevimus, idque a nobis merito fieri statuimus"); though the
+translator there has employed words more favourable to the doctrine
+of the saints' adoration, than he could in strictness justify.</p>
+<p>The celebrated letter from the Church of Smyrna (Euseb. Cantab.
+1720. vol. i. p. 163), relating the martyrdom of Polycarp, one of
+the most precious relics of Christian antiquity, has already been
+examined by us, when we were inquiring into the recorded
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id=
+"page175"></a>{175}</span> sentiments of Polycarp; and to our
+reflections in that place we have little to add. The interpolations
+to which we have now referred, are intended to take off the edge of
+the evidence borne by this passage of Eusebius against the
+invocation of saints. First, whereas the Christians of Smyrna are
+recorded by Eusebius to have declared, without any limitation or
+qualification whatever, that they could never worship any
+fellow-mortal however honoured and beloved, the Parisian edition
+limits and qualifies their declaration by interpolating the word
+"as God," implying that they would offer a secondary worship to a
+saint. Again, whereas Eusebius in contrasting the worship paid to
+Christ, with the feelings of the Christians towards a martyr,
+employs only the word "love," Bellarmin, following Ruffinus,
+interpolates the word "veneramur" after "diligimus," a word which
+may be innocently used with reference to the holy saints and
+servants of God, though it is often in ancient writers employed to
+mean the religious worship of man to God. Still how lamentable is
+it to attempt by such tampering with ancient documents to maintain
+a cause, whatever be our feelings with regard to it!</p>
+<p>With two more brief quotations we will close our report of
+Eusebius. They occur in the third chapter of the third book of his
+Demonstratio Evangelica, and give the same view of the feelings and
+sentiments of the primitive Christians towards the holy angels,
+which we have found Origen and all the other fathers to have
+acknowledged.</p>
+<p>"In the doctrine of his word we have learned that there exists,
+after the most high God, certain powers, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page176" id="page176"></a>{176}</span> in their
+nature incorporeal and intellectual, rational and purely virtuous,
+who ([Greek: choreuousas]) keep their station around the sovereign
+King,&mdash;the greater part of whom, by certain dispensations of
+salvation, are sent at the will of the Father even as far as to
+men; whom, indeed, we have been taught to know and to honour,
+according to the measure of their dignity, rendering to God alone,
+the sovereign King, the honour of worship." ([Greek: gnorizein kai
+timain kata to metron taes axias edidachthaemen, mono toi
+pambasilei Theoi taen sebasmion timaen aponemontes]) Again:
+"Knowing the divine, the serving and ministering powers of the
+sovereign God, and honouring them to the extent of propriety; but
+confessing God alone, and Him alone worshipping." ([Greek: theias
+men dynameis hypaeretikas tou pambasileos Theou kai leitourgikas
+eidotes, kai kata to prosaekon timontes monon de Theon
+homologountes, kai monon ekeinon sebontes]) [Demonst. Evang. Paris,
+1628. p. 106.; Pr&aelig;par. Evang. lib. vii. c. 15. p. 237.]</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-10" id="sect1-4-10">SECTION
+X.</a>&mdash;APOSTOLICAL CANONS AND CONSTITUTIONS.</h4>
+<p>The works known by the name of the Apostolical Constitutions and
+Apostolical Canons, though confessedly not the genuine productions
+of the Apostles, or of their age, have been always held in much
+veneration by the Church of Rome. The most learned writers fix
+their date at a period not more remote than the beginning of the
+fourth century. (See Cotelerius; vol. i. p. 194 and 424. Beveridge,
+in the same vol. p. 427. Conc. Gen. Florence, 1759, tom. i. p. 29
+and 254.) I invite the reader <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page177" id="page177"></a>{177}</span> to examine both these
+documents, but especially the Constitutions, and to decide whether
+they do not contain strong and convincing evidence, that the
+invocation of saints was not practised or known in the Church when
+they were written. Minute rules are given for the conducting of
+public worship; forms of prayer are prescribed to be used in the
+Church, by the bishops and clergy, and by the people; forms of
+prayer and of thanksgiving are recommended for the use of the
+faithful in private, in the morning, at night, and at their meals;
+forms, too, there are of creeds and confessions;&mdash;but not one
+single allusion to any religious address to angel or saint; whilst
+occasions most opportune for the introduction of such doctrine and
+practice repeatedly occur, and are uniformly passed by. Again and
+again prayer is directed to be made to the one only living and true
+God, exclusively through the mediation and intercession of the one
+only Saviour Jesus Christ. Honourable mention is made of the saints
+of the Old Testament, and the apostles and martyrs of the New;
+directions are also given for the observance of their festivals
+[Book viii. p. 415]; but not the shadow of a thought appears that
+their good offices could benefit us; much less the most distant
+intimation that Christians might invoke them for their prayers and
+intercessions. There is indeed very much in these early productions
+of the Christian world to interest every Catholic Christian; and
+although a general admiration of the principles for the most part
+pervading them does not involve an entire approbation of them all,
+yet perhaps few would think the time misapplied which they should
+devote to the examination of these documents.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id=
+"page178"></a>{178}</span>
+<p>In book v. c. 6. of the Constitutions, the martyr is represented
+as "trusting in the one only true God and Father, through Jesus
+Christ, the great High Priest, the Redeemer of souls, the Dispenser
+of rewards; to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen." [Cotel. vol.
+i. p. 304.]</p>
+<p>In the same book and in the following chapter we find an
+exceedingly interesting dissertation on the general resurrection,
+but not one word of saint or martyr being beforehand admitted to
+glory; on the contrary, the declaration is distinct, that not the
+martyrs only, but all men will rise. Surely such an opportunity
+would not have been lost of stating the doctrine of martyrs being
+now reigning with Christ, had such been the doctrine of the Church
+at that early period.</p>
+<p>In the eighth chapter is contained an injunction to honour the
+martyrs in these words: "We say that they should be in all honour
+with you, as the blessed James the bishop and our holy
+fellow-minister Stephen were honoured with us. For they are blessed
+by God and honoured by holy men, pure from all blame, never bent
+towards sins, never turned away from good,&mdash;undoubtedly to be
+praised. Of whom David spake, 'Honourable before God is the death
+of his saints;' and Solomon, 'The memory of the just is with
+praise.' Of whom the prophet also said, 'Just men are taken away.'"
+[p. 309.]</p>
+<p>And in book viii. c. 13. we read this exhortation,&mdash;"Let us
+remember the holy martyrs, that we may be counted worthy to be
+partakers of their conflict." [p. 404.]</p>
+<p>Does this sound any thing at all like adoration or invocation?
+The word which is used in the above <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page179" id="page179"></a>{179}</span> passage, <i>honour</i>
+[[Greek: tim&ecirc;] p. 241], is employed when (book ii. c. 28.)
+the respect is prescribed which the laity ought to show to the
+clergy.</p>
+<p>To the very marked silence as to any invocation or honour, to be
+shown to the Virgin Mary, I shall call your attention in our
+separate dissertation on the worship now offered to her.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect1-4-11" id="sect1-4-11">SECTION
+XI.</a>&mdash;SAINT ATHANASIUS.</h4>
+<p>The renowned and undaunted defender of the Catholic faith
+against the errors which in his day threatened to overwhelm
+Gospel-truth, Athanasius (the last of those ante-Nicene writers
+into whose testimony we have instituted this inquiry), was born
+about the year 296, and, after having presided in the Church as
+Bishop for more than forty-six years, died in 373, on the verge of
+his eightieth year. It is impossible for any one interested in the
+question of primitive truth to look upon the belief and practice of
+this Christian champion with indifference. When I first read
+Bellarmin's quotations from Athanasius, in justification of the
+Roman Catholic worship in the adoration of saints, I was made not a
+little anxious to ascertain the accuracy of his allegations. The
+inquiry amply repaid me for my anxiety and the labour of research;
+not merely by proving the unsoundness of Bellarmin's
+representation, but also by directing my thoughts more especially,
+as my acquaintance with his <span class="pagenum"><a name="page180"
+id="page180"></a>{180}</span> works increased, to the true and
+scriptural views taken by Athanasius of the Christian's hope and
+confidence in God alone; the glowing fervour of his piety centering
+only in the Lord; his sure and certain hope in life and in death
+anchored only in the mercies of God, through the merits and
+mediation of Jesus Christ alone.</p>
+<p>Bellarmin, in his appeal to Athanasius as a witness in behalf of
+the invocation of saints, cites two passages; the one of which,
+though appearing in the edition of the Benedictines, amongst the
+works called doubtful, has been adjudged by those editors [Vol. ii.
+p. 110 and 122] to be not genuine; the other is placed by them
+among the confessedly spurious works, and is treated as a
+forgery.</p>
+<p>The first passage is from a treatise called De Virginitate, and
+even were that work the genuine production of Athanasius, would
+make against the religious worship of the saints rather than in its
+favour, for it would show, that the respect which the author
+intended to be paid to them, was precisely the same with what he
+would have us pay to holy men in this life, who might come to visit
+us. "If a just man enter into thine house, thou shalt meet him with
+fear and trembling, and shalt worship before his feet to the
+ground: for thou wilt not worship him, but God who sent him."</p>
+<p>The other passage would have been decisive as to the belief of
+Athanasius, had it come from his pen. "Incline thine ear, O Mary,
+to our prayers, and forget not thy people. We cry to thee. Remember
+us, O Holy Virgin. Intercede for us, O mistress, lady, queen, and
+mother of God." [Vol. ii. p. 390-401.]</p>
+<p>Had Bellarmin been the only writer, or the last who cited this
+passage as the testimony of St. Athanasius, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>{181}</span> it would
+have been enough for us to refer to the judgment of the Benedictine
+editors, who have classed the homily containing these words among
+the spurious works ascribed to Athanasius; or rather we might have
+appealed to Bellarmin himself. For it is very remarkable, that
+though in his anxiety to enlist every able writer to defend the
+cause of the invocation of saints, he has cited this passage in his
+Church Triumphant as containing the words of Athanasius, without
+any allusion to its decided spuriousness, or even to its suspicious
+character; yet when he is pronouncing his judgment on the different
+works assigned to Athanasius, declaring the evidence against this
+treatise to be irresistible, he condemns it as a forgery. [Bellarm.
+de Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis, Cologne, 1617, vol. vii. p.
+50.]</p>
+<p>Since, however, this passage has been cited in different Roman
+Catholic writers of our own time as containing the words of
+Athanasius, and in evidence of his genuine belief and practice, and
+that without an allusion even to any thing doubtful and
+questionable in its character, it becomes necessary to enter more
+in detail into the circumstances under which the passage is offered
+to our notice.</p>
+<p>The passage is found in a homily called The Annunciation of the
+Mother of God. How long this homily has been discarded as spurious,
+or how long its genuineness had been suspected before the time of
+Baronius, I have not discovered; but certainly two centuries and a
+half ago, and repeatedly since, it has been condemned as totally
+and indisputably spurious, and has been excluded from the works of
+Athanasius as a forgery, not by members of the Reformed Church, but
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page182" id=
+"page182"></a>{182}</span> by most zealous and steady adherents to
+the Church of Rome, and the most strenuous defenders of her
+doctrines and practice.</p>
+<p>The Benedictine editors<a id="footnotetag64" name=
+"footnotetag64"></a><a href="#footnote64"><sup>64</sup></a>, who
+published the remains of St. Athanasius in 1698, class the works
+contained in the second volume under two heads, the doubtful and
+the spurious; and the homily under consideration is ranked, without
+hesitation, among the spurious. In the middle of that volume they
+not only declare the work to be unquestionably a forgery, assigning
+the reasons for their decision, but they fortify their judgment by
+quoting at length the letter written by the celebrated Baronius,
+more than a century before, to our countryman, Stapleton. Both
+these documents are very interesting.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote64" name=
+"footnote64"></a><b>Footnote 64:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag64">(return)</a>
+<p>Here I would observe, that though the Benedictine editors differ
+widely from each other in talent, and learning, and candour, yet,
+as a body, they have conferred on Christendom, and on literature,
+benefits for which every impartial and right-minded man will feel
+gratitude. In the works of some of these editors, far more than in
+others, we perceive the same reigning principle&mdash;a principle
+which some will regard as an uncompromising adherence to the faith
+of the Church; but which others can regard only in the light of a
+prejudice, and a rooted habit of viewing all things through the
+eyes of Rome.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Benedictine editors begin their preface thus: "That this
+discourse is spurious, there is NO LEARNED MAN WHO DOES NOT NOW
+ADJUDGE ... The style proves itself more clear than the sun, to be
+different from that of Athanasius. Besides this, very many trifles
+show themselves here unworthy of any sensible man whatever, not to
+say Athanasius ... and a great number of expressions unknown to
+Athanasius ... so that it savours of inferior Greek. And truly his
+subtle disputation <span class="pagenum"><a name="page183" id=
+"page183"></a>{183}</span> on the hypostasis of Christ, and on the
+two natures in Christ, persuades us, that he lived after the
+councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon; of which councils moreover he
+uses the identical words, whereas his dissertation on the two wills
+in Christ seems to argue, that he lived after the spreading of the
+error of the Monothelites. But (continue these Benedictine editors)
+we would add here the dissertation of Baronius on this subject,
+sent to us by our brethren from Rome. That illustrious annotator,
+indeed, having read only the Latin version of Nannius, which is
+clearer than the Greek, did not observe the astonishing perplexity
+of the style<a id="footnotetag65" name="footnotetag65"></a><a href=
+"#footnote65"><sup>65</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote65" name=
+"footnote65"></a><b>Footnote 65:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag65">(return)</a>
+<p>Even in the Bibliotheca Patrum Concionatoria the homily is
+declared to be not the work of Athanasius, but to have been written
+after the sixth general council. "It is evident," say the editors,
+"that it is the monument of a very learned man, though he has his
+own blemishes, on which, for the most part, we have remarked in the
+margin." Paris, 1662. p. 336.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The dissertation which the Benedictine editors append, was
+contained in a letter written by Baronius to Stapleton, in
+consequence of some animadversions which Stapleton had communicated
+to Cardinal Allen on the judgment of Baronius. The letter is dated
+Rome, November, 1592. The judgment of Baronius on the spurious
+character of this homily had been published to the world some time
+previously; for after some preliminary words of kindness and
+respect to his correspondent, Baronius proceeds to say, that when
+he previously published his sentiments on this homily, it was only
+cursorily and by the way, his work then being on another subject.
+Nevertheless he conceived, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page184"
+id="page184"></a>{184}</span> that the little he had then stated
+would be sufficient to show, that the homily was not the production
+of Athanasius, and that all persons of learning, WHO WERE DESIROUS
+OF THE TRUTH, would freely agree with him; nor was he in this
+expectation disappointed; for very many persons expressed their
+agreement with him, congratulating him on separating legitimate
+from spurious children. He then states the arguments which the
+Benedictine editors adopted after him, and which we need not
+repeat. But he also urges this fact, that though Cyril had the
+works of Athanasius in his custody, and though both the disputing
+parties ransacked every place for sentiments of Athanasius
+countenancing their tenets, yet neither at Ephesus nor at Chalcedon
+was this homily quoted, though it must have altogether driven
+Eutyches and Nestorius from the field, so exact are its definitions
+and statements on the points then at issue. Baronius then adds,
+that so far from reversing the judgment which he had before passed
+against the genuineness of this homily, he was compelled in justice
+to declare his conviction, that it could not have been written till
+after the heresy of the Monothelites had been spread abroad. This
+we know would fix its date, at the very earliest, subsequently to
+the commencement of the SEVENTH century, three hundred years after
+Athanasius attended the Council of Nice. Among the last sentiments
+of Baronius in this letter, is one which implies a principle worthy
+of Christian wisdom, and which can never be neglected without
+injury to the cause of truth. "These sentiments concerning
+Athanasius I do not think are affirmed with any detriment to the
+Church; for the Church does not suffer a loss on this account; who
+being the pillar <span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id=
+"page185"></a>{185}</span> and ground of the truth, very far
+shrinks from seeking, like &AElig;sop's Jackdaw, helps and
+ornaments which are not her own: the bare truth shines more
+beautiful in her own naked simplicity." Were this principle acted
+upon uniformly in our discussions on religious points of faith or
+practice, controversy would soon be drawn within far narrower
+limits; and would gradually be softened into a friendly interchange
+of sentiments, and would well-nigh be banished from the world. No
+person does the cause of truth so much injury, as one who attempts
+to support it by arguments which will not bear the test of full and
+enlightened investigation. And however an unsound principle may be
+for a while maintained by unsound arguments, the momentary triumph
+must ultimately end in disappointment.</p>
+<p>Coccius also cites two passages as conveying the evidence of
+Athanasius on this same point; one from the spurious letter
+addressed to Felix, the pope; the other from the treatise to
+Marcellus, on the interpretation of the Psalms. On the former, I
+need not detain you by any observation; it would be fighting with a
+shadow. The latter, which only recognises what I have never
+affirmed or denied here,&mdash;the interest in our welfare taken by
+holy souls departed, and their co-operation with us when we are
+working out our own salvation,&mdash;contains a valuable suggestion
+on the principles of devotion.</p>
+<p>"Let no one, however, set about to adorn these Psalms for the
+sake of effect with words from without, [artificial and secular
+phrases,] nor transpose, nor alter the expressions. But let every
+one inartificially read and repeat what is written, that those holy
+persons who employed themselves in their production, recognising
+their own works, may join with us in prayer; or <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>{186}</span> rather
+that the Holy Spirit, who spake in those holy men, observing the
+words with which his voice inspired them, may assist us. For just
+as much as the life of those holy men is more pure than ours, so
+far are their words preferable to any production of our own."</p>
+<p>But whilst there is not found a single passage in Athanasius to
+give the faintest countenance to the invocation of saints, there
+are various arguments and expressions which go far to demonstrate
+that such a belief and such practices as are now acknowledged and
+insisted upon by the Church of Rome, were neither adopted nor
+sanctioned by him. Had he adopted that belief and practice for his
+own, he would scarcely have spoken, as he repeatedly has, of the
+exclusion of angels and men from any share in the work of man's
+restoration, without any expressions to qualify it, and to protect
+his assertions from being misunderstood. Again, he bids us look to
+the holy men and holy fathers as our examples, in whose footsteps
+we should tread, if we would be safe; but not a hint escapes him
+that they are to be invoked.</p>
+<p>I must detain you by rather a long quotation from this father,
+and will, therefore, now do nothing more than refer you to two
+passages expressive of those sentiments to which I have above
+alluded. In the thirteenth section of his Treatise on the
+Incarnation of the Word of God, he argues, that neither could men
+restore us to the image of God, nor could angels, but the word of
+God, Jesus Christ, &amp;c. [Vol. i. part i. p. 58.] In his Epistle
+to Dracontius, he says, "We ought to conduct ourselves agreeably to
+the principles of the saints and fathers, and to imitate
+them,&mdash;assured that if we <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page187" id="page187"></a>{187}</span> swerve from them, we become
+alienated also from their communion." [Vol. i. part i, p. 265.]</p>
+<p>The passage, however, to which I would invite the reader's
+patient and impartial thoughts, occurs in the third oration against
+the Arians, when he is proving the unity of the Father and the Son,
+from the expression of St. Paul in the eleventh verse of the third
+chapter of his first Epistle to the Thessalonians.</p>
+<p>"Thus then again ([Greek: outo g' oun palin]), when he is
+praying for the Thessalonians, and saying, 'Now our God and Father
+himself and the Lord Jesus Christ direct our way to you,' he
+preserves the unity of the Father and the Son. For he says not 'may
+THEY direct ([Greek: kateuthunoien]),' as though a twofold grace
+were given from Him AND Him, but 'may HE direct ([Greek:
+katenthunai]),' to show that the Father giveth this through the
+Son. For if there was not an unity, and the Word was not the proper
+offspring of the Father's substance, as the eradiation of the
+light, but the Son was distinct in nature from the Father,&mdash;it
+had sufficed for the Father alone to have made the gift, no
+generated being partaking with the Maker in the gifts. But now such
+a giving proves the unity of the Father and the Son. Consequently,
+no one would pray to receive any thing from God AND the angels, or
+from any other created being; nor would any one say 'May God AND
+the angels give it thee;' but from the Father and the Son, because
+of their unity and the oneness of the gift. For whatever is given,
+is given through the Son,&mdash;nor is there any thing which the
+Father works except through the Son; for thus the receiver has the
+gracious favour without fail. But if the patriarch Jacob, blessing
+his descendants Ephraim and Manasseh, said, 'The God who nourished
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id=
+"page188"></a>{188}</span> me from my youth unto this day, the
+Angel who delivered me from all the evils, bless these lads;' he
+does not join one of created beings, and by nature angels, with God
+who created them; nor dismissing Him who nourished him, God, does
+he ask the blessing for his descendants from an angel, but by
+saying 'He who delivered me from all the evils,' he showed that it
+was not one of created angels, but the WORD OF GOD; and joining him
+with the Father, he supplicated him through whom also God delivers
+whom he will. For he used the expression, knowing him who is called
+the Messenger of the great counsel of the Father to be no other
+than the very one who blessed and delivered from evil. For surely
+he did not aspire to be blessed himself by God, and was willing for
+his descendants to be blessed by an angel. But the same whom he
+addressed, saying, I will not let Thee go, except thou bless me
+(and this was God, as he says, 'I saw God face to face'), Him he
+prayed to bless the sons of Joseph. The peculiar office of an angel
+is to minister at the appointment of God; and often he went onwards
+to cast out the Amorite, and is sent to guard the people in the
+way; but these are not the doings of him, but of God, who appointed
+him and sent him,&mdash;whose also it is to deliver whom he will."
+[Vol i. p. 561.]</p>
+<p>"For this cause David addressed no other on the subject of
+deliverance but God Himself. But if it belongs to no other than God
+to bless and deliver, and it was no other who delivered Jacob than
+the Lord Himself, and the patriarch invoked for his descendants Him
+who delivered him, it is evident that he connected no one in his
+prayer except His Word, whom for this reason he called an angel,
+because he alone reveals the Father."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page189" id=
+"page189"></a>{189}</span>
+<p>"But this no one would say of beings produced and created; for
+neither when the Father worketh does any one of the angels, or any
+other of created beings, work the things; for no one of such beings
+is an effective cause, but they themselves belong to things
+produced. The angels then, as it is written, are ministering
+spirits sent to minister; and the gifts given by Him through the
+Word they announce to those who receive them."</p>
+<p>Now if the invocation of angels had been practised by the Church
+at that time, can it be for a moment believed, that a man of such a
+mind as was the mind of Athanasius, a mind strong, clear, logical,
+cultivated with ardent zeal for the doctrines of the Church, and
+fervent piety, would have suffered such passages as these to fall
+from him, without one saving clause in favour of the invocation of
+angels? He tells us in the most unqualified manner, that they act
+merely as ministers; ready indeed, and rejoicing to be employed on
+errands of mercy, but not going one step without the commands of
+the Lord, or doing one thing beyond his word. Had the idea been
+familiar to the mind of Athanasius, of the lawfulness, the duty,
+the privilege, the benefit of invoking them, would he have avoided
+the introduction of some words to prevent his expressions from
+being misunderstood and misapplied, as subsequent writers did long
+before the time when the denial of the doctrine might seem to have
+made such precaution more necessary?</p>
+<p>I close then the catalogue of our witnesses before the Council
+of Nic&aelig;a with the testimony of St. Athanasius; whose genuine
+and acknowledged works afford not one jot or tittle in support of
+the doctrine and practice of the invocation of angels and saints,
+as now insisted upon by the Church of Rome; and the direct
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page190" id=
+"page190"></a>{190}</span> tendency of whose evidence is decidedly
+hostile both to that doctrine and that practice.</p>
+<p>I have seen it observed by some who are satisfied, that the
+records of primitive antiquity do not contain such references to
+the invocation of saints and angels, as we might have expected to
+find had the custom then prevailed, that the earliest Christians
+kept back the doctrine and concealed it, though they held it;
+fearing lest their heathen neighbours should upbraid them with
+being as much polytheists as themselves<a id="footnotetag66" name=
+"footnotetag66"></a><a href="#footnote66"><sup>66</sup></a>. This
+is altogether a gratuitous assumption, directly contrary to
+evidence, and totally inconsistent with their conduct. Had those
+first Christians acted upon such a debasing principle, they would
+have kept back and concealed their worship of the Son and of the
+Holy Ghost, as exposing them to a similar charge. They were
+constantly upbraided with worshipping a crucified <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>{191}</span> mortal;
+but instead of either meeting that charge by denying that they
+worshipped Jesus as their God, or of concealing the worship of Him,
+lest they should expose themselves again to such upbraidings, they
+publicly professed, that He whom the Jews had murdered, they
+believed in as the Son of God, Himself their God. They gloried in
+the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, and did not fear what men
+might do to them, or say of them in consequence. Had they believed
+in the duty of invoking saints and angels, the high principle of
+Christian integrity would not have suffered them to be ashamed to
+confess it, or to practise openly what they believed.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote66" name=
+"footnote66"></a><b>Footnote 66:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag66">(return)</a>
+<p>Bishop Morley, (London, 1683,) in a letter written whilst he was
+in exile at Breda, to J. Ulitius, refers to Cardinal Perron,
+"R&eacute;plique &agrave; la Resp. du Roy de la Grande Bret." p.
+1402 and 4, for this sentiment: "The Fathers do not always speak
+what they think, but conceal their real sentiments, and say that
+which best serves the cause which they sustain, so as to protect it
+against the objections of the gentiles. The Fathers, as much as in
+them lies, and as far as they can, avoid and decline all occasions
+of speaking about the invocation of saints then practised in the
+Church, fearing lest to the gentiles there might appear a sort of
+similarity, although untrue and equivocal, between the worship paid
+to the saints by the Church, and by the Pagans to their false
+divinities; and lest the Pagans might thence seize a handle,
+however unfair, of retorting upon them that custom of the Church."
+Had a member of the Anglican Church thus spoken of the Fathers, and
+thus pleaded in their name guilty of subterfuge and duplicity, he
+would have been immediately charged with irreverence and wanton
+insult, and that with good reason. These sentiments of the Cardinal
+are in p. 982 of the Paris edition of 1620.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id=
+"page192"></a>{192}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>PART II.</h2>
+<h3><a name="chap2-1" id="chap2-1">CHAPTER I.</a></h3>
+<h4>STATE OF WORSHIP AT THE TIME OF THE REFORMATION.</h4>
+<p>One of the points proposed for our inquiry was the state of
+religious worship, with reference to the invocation of saints, at
+the time immediately preceding the reformation. Very far from
+entertaining a wish to fasten upon the Church of Rome now, what
+then deformed religion among us, in any department where that
+Church has practically reformed her services, I would most
+thankfully have found her ritual in a more purified state than it
+is. My more especial object in referring to this period is twofold:
+first, to show, that consistently with Catholic and primitive
+principles, the Catholic Christians of England ought not to have
+continued to participate in the worship which at that time
+prevailed in our country; and, secondly, by that example both to
+illustrate the great danger of allowing ourselves to countenance
+the very first stages of superstition, and also to impress upon our
+minds the duty of checking in its germ any the least deviation from
+the primitive principles of faith and worship; convinced that by
+the general tendency of human nature, one wrong step will, though
+imperceptibly, yet almost inevitably lead to another; and that only
+whilst we adhere with uncompromising steadiness <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page193" id="page193"></a>{193}</span> to the
+Scripture as our foundation, and to the primitive Church, under
+God, as a guide, can we be saved from the danger of making
+shipwreck of our faith.</p>
+<p>On this branch of our subject I propose to do no more than to
+lay before my readers the witness borne to the state of religion in
+England at that time, by two works, which have been in an especial
+manner forced upon my notice. Many other testimonies of a similar
+tendency might readily be adduced; but these will probably appear
+sufficient for the purposes above mentioned; and to dwell longer
+than is necessary on this point would be neither pleasant nor
+profitable.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect2-1-1" id="sect2-1-1">SECTION I.</a></h4>
+<p>The first book to which I shall refer is called The Hours of the
+most blessed Virgin Mary, according to the legitimate use of the
+Church of Salisbury. This book was printed in Paris in the year
+1526. The prayers in this volume relate chiefly to the Virgin: and
+I should, under other circumstances, have reserved all allusion to
+it for our separate inquiry into the faith and practice of the
+Church of Rome with regard to her. But its historical position and
+general character seemed to recommend our reference to it here.
+Without anticipating, therefore, the facts or the arguments, which
+will hereafter be submitted to the reader's consideration on the
+worship of the Virgin, I refer to this work now solely as
+illustrative of the lamentable state of superstition which three
+centuries ago overran our country.</p>
+<p>The volume abounds with forms of prayer to the Virgin, many of
+them prefaced by extraordinary notifications of indulgences
+promised to those who duly utter <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page194" id="page194"></a>{194}</span> the prayers. These
+indulgences are granted by Popes and by Bishops; some on their own
+mere motion, others at the request of influential persons. They
+guarantee remission of punishment for different spaces of time,
+varying from forty days to ninety thousand years; they undertake to
+secure freedom from hell; they promise pardon for deadly sins, and
+for venial sins to the same person for the same act; they assure to
+those who comply with their directions a change of the pain of
+eternal damnation into the pain of purgatory, and the pain of
+purgatory into a free and full pardon.</p>
+<p>It may be said that the Church of Rome is not responsible for
+all these things. But we need not tarry here to discuss the
+question how far it was then competent for a church or nation to
+have any service-book or manual of devotion for the faithful,
+without first obtaining the papal sanction. For clear it is beyond
+all question, that such frightful corruptions as these, of which we
+are now to give instances, were spread throughout the land; that
+such was the religion then imposed on the people of England; and it
+was from such dreadful enormities, that our Reformation, to
+whatever secondary cause that reformation is to be
+attributed&mdash;by the providence of Almighty God rescued us. No
+one laments more than I do, the extremes into which many opponents
+of papal Rome have allowed themselves to run; but no one can feel a
+more anxious desire than myself to preserve our Church and people
+from a return of such spiritual degradation and wretchedness; and
+to keep far from us the most distant approaches of such lamentable
+and ensnaring superstitions. In this feeling moreover I am assured
+that I am joined by many of the most respected and influential
+members of the Roman Catholic Church among us. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>{195}</span> Still
+what has been may be; and it is the bounden duty of all members of
+Christ's Catholic Church, to whatever branch of it they belong, to
+join in guarding his sanctuary against such enemies to the truth as
+it is in HIM.</p>
+<p>At the same time it would not be honest and candid in me, were I
+to abstain from urging those, who, with ourselves, deprecate these
+excesses, to carry their reflections further; and determine whether
+the spirit of the Gospel does not require a total rejection, even
+in its less startling forms, of every departure from the principle
+of invoking God alone; and of looking for acceptance with Him
+solely to the mediation of his Son, without the intervention of any
+other merits. As we regard it, it is not a question of degree; it
+is a question of principle: one degree may be less revolting to our
+sense of right than another, but it is not on that account
+justifiable.</p>
+<p>The following specimens, a few selected from an overabundant
+supply, will justify the several particulars in the summary which I
+have above given:</p>
+<p>1. "The Right Reverend Father in God, Laurence<a id=
+"footnotetag67" name="footnotetag67"></a><a href=
+"#footnote67"><sup>67</sup></a>, Bishop of Assaven, hath granted
+forty days of pardon to all them that devoutly say this prayer in
+the worship of our blessed Lady, being penitent, and truly
+confessed of all their sins. Oratio, 'Gaude Virgo, Mater Christi,'
+&amp;c. Rejoice, Virgin, Mother of Christ. [Fol. 35.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote67" name=
+"footnote67"></a><b>Footnote 67:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag67">(return)</a>
+<p>This was Laurence Child, who, by papal provision, was made
+Bishop of St. Asaph, June 18, 1382. He is called also Penitentiary
+to the Pope. Le Neve, p. 21. Beatson, vol. i. p. 115.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>2. "To all them that be in the state of grace, that daily say
+devoutly this prayer before our blessed Lady of Pity, she will show
+them her blessed visage, and warn them the day and the hour of
+death; and in their last <span class="pagenum"><a name="page196"
+id="page196"></a>{196}</span> end the angels of God shall yield
+their souls to heaven; and<a id="footnotetag68" name=
+"footnotetag68"></a><a href="#footnote68"><sup>68</sup></a> he
+shall obtain five hundred years, and so many Lents of pardon,
+granted by five holy fathers, Popes of Rome. [Fol. 38.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote68" name=
+"footnote68"></a><b>Footnote 68:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag68">(return)</a>
+<p>The language in many of these passages is very imperfect; but I
+have thought it right to copy them verbatim.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>3. "This prayer showed our Lady to a devout person, saying, that
+this golden prayer is the most sweetest and acceptablest to me: and
+in her appearing she had this salutation and prayer written with
+letters of gold in her breast, 'Ave Rosa sine spinis'&mdash;Hail
+Rose without thorns. [Fol. 41.]</p>
+<p>4. "Our holy Father, Sixtus the fourth, pope, hath granted to
+all them that devoutly say this prayer before the image of our Lady
+the sum of XI.M. [eleven thousand] years of pardon. 'Ave
+Sanctissima Maria, Mater Dei, Regina Coeli,' &amp;c. Hail most holy
+Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven. [Fol. 42.]</p>
+<p>5. "Our holy Father, Pope Sixtus, hath granted at the instance
+of the highmost and excellent Princess Elizabeth, late Queen of
+England, and wife to our sovereign liege Lord, King Henry the
+Seventh, (God have mercy on her sweet soul, and on all Christian
+souls,) that every day in the morning, after three tollings of the
+Ave bell, say three times the whole salutation of our Lady Ave
+Maria gratia; that is to say, at 6 the clock in the morning 3 Ave
+Maria, at 12 the clock at noon 3 Ave M., and at 6 the clock at
+even, for every time so doing is granted of the SPIRITUAL TREASURE
+OF HOLY CHURCH 300 days of pardon totiens quotiens; and also our
+holy father, the Archbishop of Canterbury and York, with other nine
+Bishops of this realm, have <span class="pagenum"><a name="page197"
+id="page197"></a>{197}</span> granted 3 times in the day 40 days of
+pardon to all them that be in the state of grace able to receive
+pardon: the which begun the 26th day of March, Anno MCCCCXCII. Anno
+Henrici VII.<a id="footnotetag69" name="footnotetag69"></a><a href=
+"#footnote69"><sup>69</sup></a> And the sum of the indulgence and
+pardon for every Ave Maria VIII hondred days an LX totiens
+quotiens, this prayer shall be said at the tolling of the Ave Bell,
+'Suscipe,' &amp;c. Receive the word, O Virgin Mary, which was sent
+to thee from the Lord by an angel. Hail, Mary, full of grace: the
+Lord with thee, &amp;c. Say this 3 times, &amp;c. [Fol. 42.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote69" name=
+"footnote69"></a><b>Footnote 69:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag69">(return)</a>
+<p>Henry VII. began to reign in 1485.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>6. "This prayer was showed to St. Bernard by the messenger of
+God, saying, that as gold is the most precious of all other metals,
+so exceedeth this prayer all other prayers, and who that devoutly
+sayeth it shall have a singular reward of our blessed Lady, and her
+sweet Son Jesus. 'Ave,' &amp;c. Hail, Mary, most humble handmaid of
+the Trinity, &amp;c. Hail, Mary, most prompt Comforter of the
+living and the dead. Be thou with me in all my tribulations and
+distresses with maternal pity, and at the hour of my death take my
+soul, and offer it to thy most beloved Son Jesus, with all them who
+have commended themselves to our prayers. [Fol. 46.]</p>
+<p>7. "Our holy father, the Pope Bonifacius, hath granted to all
+them that devoutly say this lamentable contemplation of our blessed
+Lady, standing under the Cross weeping, and having compassion with
+her sweet Son Jesus, 7 years of pardon and forty Lents, and also
+Pope John the 22 hath granted three hondred days of pardon. 'Stabat
+Mater dolorosa.' [Fol. 47.]</p>
+<p>8. "To all them that before this image of Pity devoutly say 5
+Pat. Nos., and 5 Aves, and a Credo, piteously beholding these arms
+of Christ's passion, are <span class="pagenum"><a name="page198"
+id="page198"></a>{198}</span> granted XXXII.M.VII hondred, and LV
+(32755) years of pardon; and Sixtus the 4th, Pope of Rome hath made
+the 4 and the 5 prayer, and hath doubled his aforesaid pardon.
+[Fol. 54.]</p>
+<p>9. "Our holy Father the Pope John 22 hath granted to all them
+that devoutly say this prayer, after the elevation of our Lord Jesu
+Christ, 3000 days of pardon for deadly sins. [Fol. 58.]</p>
+<p>10. "This prayer was showed to Saint Augustine by revelation of
+the Holy Ghost, and who that devoutly say this prayer, or hear
+read, or beareth about them, shall not perish in fire or water,
+nother in battle or judgment, and he shall not die of sudden death,
+and no venom shall poison him that day, and what he asketh of God
+he shall obtain if it be to the salvation of his soul; and when thy
+soul shall depart from thy body it shall not enter hell." This
+prayer ends with three invocations of the Cross, thus: "O Cross of
+Christ [cross] save us, O Cross of Christ [cross] protect us, O
+Cross of Christ [cross] defend us. In the name of the [cross]
+Father, [cross] Son, and Holy [cross] Ghost. Amen." [Fol. 62.]</p>
+<p>11. "Our holy Father Pope Innocent III. hath granted to all them
+that say these III prayers following devoutly, remission of all
+their sins confessed and contrite. [Fol. 63.]</p>
+<p>12. "These 3 prayers be written in the Chapel of the Holy Cross,
+in Rome, otherwise called Sacellum Sanct&aelig; Crucis septem
+Romanorum; who that devoutly say them shall obtain X.C.M. [ninety
+thousand] years of pardon for deadly sins granted of our holy
+Father, John 22, Pope of Rome. [Fol. 66.]</p>
+<p>13. "Who that devoutly beholdeth these arms of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>{199}</span> our Lord
+Jesus Christ, shall obtain six thousand years of pardon of our holy
+Father Saint Peter, the first pope of Rome, and of XXX [thirty]
+other popes of the Church of Rome, successors after him; and our
+holy Father, Pope John 22, hath granted unto all them very contrite
+and truly confessed, that say these devout prayers following in the
+commemoration of the bitter passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, 3000
+years of pardon for DEADLY SINS, and other 3000 for venial sins."
+[Fol. 68.]</p>
+<p>I will only add one more instance. The following announcement
+accompanies a prayer of St. Bernard: "Who that devoutly with a
+contrite heart daily say this orison, if he be that day in a state
+of eternal damnation, then this eternal pain shall be changed him
+in temporal pain of purgatory; then if he hath deserved the pain of
+purgatory it shall be forgotten and forgiven through the infinite
+mercy of God."</p>
+<p>It is indeed very melancholy to reflect that our country has
+witnessed the time, when the bread of life had been taken from the
+children, and such husks as these substituted in its stead.
+Accredited ministers of the Roman Catholic Church have lately
+assured us that the pardons and indulgences granted now, relate
+only to the remission of the penances imposed by the Church in this
+life, and presume not to interfere with the province of the Most
+High in the rewards and punishments of the next. But, I repeat it,
+what has been in former days may be again; and whenever Christians
+depart from the doctrine and practice of prayer to God alone,
+through Christ alone, a door is opened to superstitions and abuses
+of every kind; and we cannot too anxiously and too jealously guard
+and fence about, with all our power and skill, the fundamental
+principle, one God and one Mediator.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page200" id=
+"page200"></a>{200}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect2-1-2" id="sect2-1-2">SECTION
+II.</a>&mdash;SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET, ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS
+MARTYRDOM, DEC. 29.</h4>
+<p>The other instance by which I propose to illustrate the state of
+religion in England before the reformation, is the service of
+Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, a canonized saint and
+martyr of the Church of Rome. The interest attaching to so
+remarkable a period in ecclesiastical history, and to an event so
+intimately interwoven with the former state of our native land,
+appears to justify the introduction of the entire service, rather
+than extracts from it, in this place. Whilst it bears throughout
+immediately on the subject of our present inquiry, it supplies us
+at the same time with the strong views entertained by the authors
+of the service, on points which gave rise to great and repeated
+discussion, not only in England, but in various parts also of
+continental Europe, with regard to the moral and spiritual merits
+or demerits of Becket, as a subject of the realm and a Christian
+minister. It is, moreover, only by becoming familiar in all their
+details with some such remains of past times, that we can form any
+adequate idea of the great and deplorable extent to which the
+legends had banished the reading and expounding of Holy Scriptures
+from our churches; and also how much the praises of mortal man had
+encroached upon those hours of public worship, which should be
+devoted to meditations on our Maker, Redeemer, and Sanctifier; to
+the exclusive praises of his holy name; and to supplications
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id=
+"page201"></a>{201}</span> to Him alone for blessings at his hand,
+and for his mercy through Christ.</p>
+<p>There is much obscurity in the few first paragraphs. The
+historical or biographical part begins at Lesson the First, and
+continues throughout, only interspersed with canticles in general
+referring to the incidents in the narrative preceding each.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>THE SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET<a id="footnotetag70" name=
+"footnotetag70"></a><a href="#footnote70"><sup>70</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote70" name=
+"footnote70"></a><b>Footnote 70:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag70">(return)</a>
+<p>The copies which I have chiefly consulted for the purposes of
+the present inquiry, are two large folio manuscripts, in good
+preservation, No. 1512 and No. 2785 of the Harleian MSS. in the
+British Museum. The service commences about the 49th page, B. of
+No. 2785. This MS. is considered to be of a date somewhere about
+1430. The first parts of the service are preserved also in a
+Breviary printed in Paris in 1556, with some variations and
+omissions. There are various other copies in the British Museum, as
+well printed as in manuscript.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Let them without change of vestments and without tapers in their
+hands, proceed to the altar of St. Thomas the Martyr, chanting the
+requiem, the chanter beginning,</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><i>Req.</i> The grain lies buried beneath the straw;</p>
+<p class="i4">The just man is slain by the spear of the wicked;</p>
+<p class="i4">The guardian of the vine falls in the vineyard,</p>
+<p class="i4">The chieftain in the camp, the husbandman in the
+threshing-floor.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Then the prose is said by all who choose, in surplices before
+the altar.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Let the Shepherd sound his trumpet of horn."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Let the choir respond to the chant of the prose after every
+verse, upon the letter [super litteram].</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page202" id=
+"page202"></a>{202}</span>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>That the vineyard of Christ might be free,</p>
+<p>Which he assumed under a robe of flesh,</p>
+<p>He liberated it by the purple cross.</p>
+<p>The adversary, the erring sheep,</p>
+<p>Becomes bloodstained by the slaughter of the shepherd.</p>
+<p>The marble pavements of Christ</p>
+<p>Are wetted, ruddy with sacred gore;</p>
+<p>The martyr presented with the laurel of life.</p>
+<p>Like a grain cleansed from the straw,</p>
+<p>Is translated to the divine garners.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>But whilst the prose is being sung, let the priest incense the
+altar, and then the image of the blessed Thomas the Martyr; and
+afterwards shall be said with an humble voice: Pray for us, Blessed
+Thomas.</p>
+<p><i>The Prayer<a id="footnotetag71" name=
+"footnotetag71"></a><a href="#footnote71"><sup>71</sup></a>.</i> O
+God for whose Church the glorious <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page203" id="page203"></a>{203}</span> high-priest and martyr
+Thomas fell beneath the swords of the wicked, grant, we beseech
+thee, that all who implore his aid may obtain the salutary effect
+of their petition, through Christ.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote71" name=
+"footnote71"></a><b>Footnote 71:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag71">(return)</a>
+<p>This Collect is still preserved in the Roman ritual, and is
+offered on the anniversary of Becket's death. In a very ancient
+pontifical, preserved in the chapter-house of Bangor, and which
+belonged to Anianus, who was Bishop of that see (1268), among the
+"Proper Benedictions for the circuit of the year," are two relating
+to Thomas Becket; one on the anniversary of his death, the other on
+the day of his translation. The former is couched in these words:
+"O God, who hast not without reason mingled the birthday of the
+glorious high-priest, Thomas, with the joys of thy nativity, by the
+intervention of his merits" (ipsius mentis intervenientibus), "make
+these thy servants venerate thy majesty with the reverence of due
+honour. Amen. And as he, according to the rule of a good shepherd,
+gave his life for his sheep, so grant thou to thy faithful ones, to
+fear no tyrannical madness to the prejudice of Catholic truth.
+Amen. We ask that they, by his example, for obedience to the holy
+laws, may learn to despise persons, and by suffering manfully to
+triumph over tyrannical madness. Amen." The latter runs thus: "May
+God, by whose pity the bodies of saints rest in the sabbath of
+peace, turn your hearts to the desire of the resurrection to come.
+Amen. And may he who orders us to bury with honour due the members
+of the saints whose death is precious, by the merits of the
+glorious martyr, Thomas, vouchsafe to raise you from the dust of
+vanity. Amen. Where at length by the power of his benediction ye
+may be clothed with doubled festive robes of body and soul.
+Amen."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The shepherd slain in the midst of the flock,</p>
+<p>Purchased peace at the price of his blood.</p>
+<p>O joyous grief, in mournful gladness!</p>
+<p>The flock breathes when the shepherd is dead;</p>
+<p>The mother wailing, sings for joy in her son,</p>
+<p>Because he lives under the sword a conqueror.</p>
+<p>The solemnities of Thomas the Martyr are come.</p>
+<p>Let the Virgin Mother, the Church, rejoice;</p>
+<p>Thomas being raised to the highest priesthood,</p>
+<p>Is suddenly changed into another man.</p>
+<p>A monk, under [the garb of?] a clerk, secretly clothed with
+haircloth,</p>
+<p>More strong than the flesh subdues the attempts of the
+flesh;</p>
+<p>Whilst the tiller of the Lord's field pulls up the thistles,</p>
+<p>And drives away and banishes the foxes from the vineyard.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>The First Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>Dearest Brethren, celebrating now the birth-day of the martyr
+Thomas, because we have not power to recount his whole life and
+conversation, let our brief discourse run through the manner and
+cause of his passion. The blessed Thomas, therefore, as in the
+office of Chancellor, or Archdeacon, he proved incomparably
+strenuous <span class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id=
+"page204"></a>{204}</span> in the conduct of affairs, so after he
+had undertaken the office of pastor, he became devoted to God
+beyond man's estimation. For, when consecrated, he suddenly is
+changed into another man: he secretly put on the hair shirt, and
+wore also hair drawers down to the knee. And under the respectable
+appearance of the clerical garb, concealing the monk's dress, he
+entirely compelled the flesh to obey the spirit; studying by the
+exercise of every virtue without intermission to please God.
+Knowing, therefore, that he was placed a husbandman in the field of
+the Lord, a shepherd in the fold, he carefully discharged the
+ministry entrusted to him. The rights and dignities of the Church,
+which the public authority had usurped, he deemed it right to
+restore, and to recall to their proper state. Whence a grave
+question on the ecclesiastical law and the customs of the realm,
+having arisen between him and the king of the English, a council
+being convened, those customs were proposed which the king
+pertinaciously required to be confirmed by the signatures as well
+of the archbishop as of his suffragans. The archbishop with
+constancy refused, asserting that in them was manifest the
+subversion of the freedom of the Church. He was in consequence
+treated with immense insults, oppressed with severe losses, and
+provoked with innumerable injuries. At length, being threatened
+with death, (because the case of the Church had not yet become
+fully known, and the persecution seemed to be personal,) he
+determined that he ought to give place to malice. Being driven,
+therefore, into exile, he was honourably received by our lord the
+pope Alexander<a id="footnotetag72" name=
+"footnotetag72"></a><a href="#footnote72"><sup>72</sup></a> at
+Senon, and recommended <span class="pagenum"><a name="page205" id=
+"page205"></a>{205}</span> with especial care to the Monastery of
+Pontinea (Pontigny).</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote72" name=
+"footnote72"></a><b>Footnote 72:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag72">(return)</a>
+<p>Pope Alexander III. was at this time residing as a refugee at
+Sens, having been driven from Italy a few years before by Frederick
+Barbarossa.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Malice, bent on the punishment of Thomas,</p>
+<p>Condemns to banishment the race of Thomas.</p>
+<p>The whole family goes forth together.</p>
+<p>No order, sex, age, or condition</p>
+<p>Here enjoys any privilege.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Lesson the Second.</i></p>
+<p>Meanwhile in England all the revenues of the archbishop are
+confiscated, his estates are laid waste, his possessions are
+plundered, and by the invention of a new kind of punishment, the
+whole kin of Thomas is proscribed together. For all his friends or
+acquaintance, or whoever was connected with him, by whatever title,
+without distinction of state or fortune, dignity or rank, age or
+sex, were alike exiled. For as well the old and decrepit, as
+infants in the cradle and women lying in childbirth, were driven
+into banishment; whilst as many as had reached the years of
+discretion were compelled to swear upon the holy [Gospels]<a id=
+"footnotetag73" name="footnotetag73"></a><a href=
+"#footnote73"><sup>73</sup></a> that immediately on crossing the
+sea they would present themselves to the Archbishop of Canterbury;
+in order that being so oftentimes pierced even by the sword of
+sympathy, he would bend his strength of mind to the king's
+pleasure. But the man of God, putting his hand to deeds of
+fortitude, with constancy bore exile, reproaches, insults, the
+proscription of parents and friends, for the name of Christ; he was
+never, by any injury, at all broken or changed. For so great was
+the firmness of this confessor of Christ, that he seemed to teach
+all his fellow exiles, that every soil is the brave man's
+country.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote73" name=
+"footnote73"></a><b>Footnote 73:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag73">(return)</a>
+<p>Tactis sacrosanctis. It may mean reliques, or other sacred
+things.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page206" id=
+"page206"></a>{206}</span>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thomas put his hands to deeds of fortitude,</p>
+<p>He despised losses, he despised reproaches,</p>
+<p>No injury breaks down Thomas:</p>
+<p>The firmness of Thomas exclaimed to all,</p>
+<p>"Every soil is the brave man's country."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Third Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>The king therefore hearing of his immoveable constancy, having
+directed commendatory letters by some abbots of the Cistertian
+order to the General Chapter, caused him to be driven from
+Pontinea. But the blessed Thomas fearing that, by occasion of his
+right, injury would befal the saints, retired of his own accord.
+Yet before he set out from thence he was comforted by a divine
+revelation: a declaration being made to him from heaven, that he
+should return to his Church with glory, and by the palm of
+martyrdom depart to the Lord. When he was disturbed and sent from
+his retreat at Pontinea, Louis, the most Christian king of the
+French, received him with the greatest honour, and supported him
+most courteously till peace was restored. But even he too was
+often, though in vain, urged not to show any grace of kindness
+towards a traitor to the king of England. The hand of fury
+proceeded further, and a cruelty dreadful for pious ears to hear.
+For whereas the Catholic Church prays even for heretics, and
+schismatics, and faithless Jews, it was forbidden that any one
+should assist him by the supplications of prayer. Exiled, then, for
+six continuous years, afflicted with varied and unnumbered
+injuries, and like a living stone squared by various cuttings and
+pressures for the building of the heavenly edifice, the more he was
+thrust at that he might fall, the more firm and immoveable was he
+enabled to stand. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id=
+"page207"></a>{207}</span> For neither could gold so carefully
+tried be burned away, nor a house, founded on a firm rock, be torn
+down. Neither does he suffer the wolves to rage against the lambs,
+nor the vineyard to pass into a garden of herbs.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The best of men, holy, and renowned is banished,</p>
+<p>Lest the dignity of the Church should yield to the unworthy.</p>
+<p>The estates of the exiled man are the spoil of the
+malignant,</p>
+<p>But when placed in the fire, the fire burns him not.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Fourth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>At length by the exertions, as well of the aforesaid pontiff as
+of the king of the French, many days were appointed for
+re-establishing peace: and because the servant of God would not
+accept of peace, unless with safety to the honour of God, and the
+character of the Church, they departed in discord from each other.
+At length the supreme Pontiff, pitying the desolation of the
+Anglican Church, with difficulty at the last extorted by
+threatening measures, that peace should be restored to the Church.
+The realms indeed rejoiced, that the King had been reconciled to
+the Archbishop, whilst some believed that the affair was carried on
+in good faith, and others formed different conjectures.
+Consequently in the seventh year of his exile the noble pastor
+returned into England, that he might either rescue the sheep of
+Christ from the jaws of the wolves, or sacrifice himself for the
+flock intrusted to his care. He is received by the clergy and the
+people with incalculable joy; all shedding tears, and saying,
+Blessed is he who cometh in the name of the Lord. But after a few
+days he was again afflicted by losses and miseries beyond measure
+and number. Whoever offered to him, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page208" id="page208"></a>{208}</span> or to any one connected
+with him, a cheerful countenance was reckoned a public enemy. In
+all these things his mind was unbroken; but his hand was still
+stretched out for the liberation of the Church. For this he
+incessantly sighed; for this he persevered in watchings, fastings,
+and prayers; to obtain this he ardently desired to sacrifice
+himself.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>From the greatest joy of affairs,</p>
+<p>The greatest wailing is in the Church,</p>
+<p>For the absence of so great a patron.</p>
+<p>But when the miracles return,</p>
+<p>Joy to the people returns.</p>
+<p>The crowd of sick flock together,</p>
+<p>And obtain the grace of benefits.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Fifth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>Now on the fifth day after the birth-day of our Lord, four
+persons of the palace came to Canterbury, men indeed of high birth,
+but famous for their wicked deeds; and having entered, they attack
+the archbishop with reproachful words, provoke him with insults,
+and at length assail him with threats. The man of God modestly
+answered, to every thing, whatever reason required, adding that
+many injuries had been inflicted upon him and the Church of God,
+since the re-establishment of peace, and there was no one to
+correct what was wrong; that he neither could nor would dissemble
+thereafter, so as not to exercise the duties of his function. The
+men, foolish in heart, were disturbed by this, and having loudly
+given utterance to their iniquity they forthwith went out. On their
+retiring, the prelate proceeded to the Church, to offer the evening
+praises to Christ. The mail-clad satellites of Satan followed him
+from behind with drawn swords, a <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page209" id="page209"></a>{209}</span> large band of armed men
+accompanying them. On the monks barring the entrance to the Church,
+the priest of God, destined soon to become a victim of Christ,
+running up re-opened the door to the enemy; "For," said he, "a
+Church must not be barricaded like a castle." As they burst in, and
+some shouted with a voice of phrenzy, "Where is the traitor?"
+others, "Where is the Archbishop?" the fearless confessor of Christ
+went to meet them. When they pressed on to murder him, he said,
+"For myself I cheerfully meet death for the Church of God; but on
+the part of God I charge you to do no hurt to any of
+mine"&mdash;imitating Christ in his passion, when he said, "If ye
+seek me, let these go their way." Then rush the ravening wolves on
+the pious shepherd, degenerate sons on their own father, cruel
+lictors on the victim of Christ, and with fatal swords cut off the
+consecrated crown of his head; and hurling down to the ground the
+Christ [the anointed] of the Lord, in savage manner, horrible to be
+said, scattered the brains with the blood over the pavement.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thus does the straw press down the grain of corn;</p>
+<p>Thus is slain the guard of the vineyard in the vineyard;</p>
+<p>Thus the general in the camp, the shepherd in the fold, the</p>
+<p class="i2">husbandman in the threshing-floor.</p>
+<p>Thus the just, slain by the unjust, has changed his house of</p>
+<p class="i2">clay for a heavenly palace.</p>
+<p>Rachel, weeping, now cease thou to mourn</p>
+<p>That the flower of the world is bruised by the world.</p>
+<p>When the slain Thomas is borne to his funeral,</p>
+<p>A new Abel succeeds to the old.</p>
+<p>The voice of blood, the voice of his scattered brains,</p>
+<p>Fills heaven with a marvellous cry.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page210" id=
+"page210"></a>{210}</span>
+<p><i>Sixth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>But the last words of the martyr, which from the confused
+clamour could scarcely be distinguished, according to the testimony
+of those who stood near, were these,&mdash;"To God, and the blessed
+Mary, and Saint Dionysius, and the holy patrons of this Church, I
+commend myself and the cause of the Church<a id="footnotetag74"
+name="footnotetag74"></a><a href="#footnote74"><sup>74</sup></a>."
+Moreover, in all the torments which this unvanquished champion of
+God endured, he sent forth no cry, he uttered no groan, he opposed
+neither his arm nor his garment to the man who struck him, but held
+his head, which he had bent towards the swords, unmoved till the
+consummation came; prostrated as if for prayer, he fell asleep in
+the Lord. The perpetrators of the crime, returning into the palace
+of the holy prelate, that they might make the passion of the
+servant more fully resemble the passion of his Lord, divided among
+them his garments, the gold and silver and precious vessels, choice
+horses, and whatever of value they could find, allotting what each
+should take. These things therefore the soldiers did. Who, without
+weeping, can relate the rest? So great was the sorrow of all, so
+great the laments of each, that you would think the prophecy were a
+second time fulfilled, "A voice is heard in Rama, lamentation and
+great mourning." Nevertheless the divine mercy, when temptation was
+multiplied, made a way to escape; and by certain visions, giving as
+it were a prelude to the future miracles, [declared that] the
+martyr was thereafter to be glorified by wonders, that joy would
+return after sorrow, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page211" id=
+"page211"></a>{211}</span> and a crowd of sick would obtain the
+grace of benefits.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote74" name=
+"footnote74"></a><b>Footnote 74:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag74">(return)</a>
+<p>I have already suggested a comparison between this prayer and
+the commendatory prayer of the Martyr Polycarp, page 92.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>O Christ Jesus<a id="footnotetag75" name=
+"footnotetag75"></a><a href="#footnote75"><sup>75</sup></a>, BY THE
+WOUNDS OF THOMAS,</p>
+<p>Loosen the sins which bind us;</p>
+<p>Lest the enemy, the world, or the works of the flesh.</p>
+<p>Bear us captive to hell.</p>
+<p>By<a id="footnotetag76" name="footnotetag76"></a><a href=
+"#footnote76"><sup>76</sup></a> THEE, O Thomas ...</p>
+<p>Let the right hand of God embrace us.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The satellites of Satan rushing into the temple</p>
+<p>Perpetrate an unexampled, unheard-of, crime.</p>
+<p>Thomas proceeds to meet their drawn swords:</p>
+<p>He yields not to threats, to swords, nor even to death.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Happy place! Happy Church,</p>
+<p>In which the memory of Thomas lives!</p>
+<p>Happy the land which gave the prelate!</p>
+<p>Happy the land which supported him in exile!</p>
+<p>Happy Father! succour us miserable,</p>
+<p>That we may be happy, and joined with those above!</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote75" name=
+"footnote75"></a><b>Footnote 75:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag75">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Christe Jesu per Thom&aelig; vulnera,</p>
+<p>Qu&aelig; nos ligant relaxa scelera</p>
+<p>Ne captivos ferant ad infera</p>
+<p>Hostis, mundus, vel carnis opera.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote76" name=
+"footnote76"></a><b>Footnote 76:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag76">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Per te, Thoma, post l&aelig;v&aelig; munera</p>
+<p>Amplexetur nos Dei dextera.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Seventh Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>Jesus said unto his disciples, I am the good shepherd. The good
+shepherd layeth down his life for the sheep.</p>
+<p>THE HOMILY OF S. GREGORY, POPE.</p>
+<p>Ye have heard, most dear brethren, from the reading of the
+Gospel, your instruction; ye have heard also <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page212" id="page212"></a>{212}</span> your
+danger. For behold! he who is not from any gift happening to him,
+but who is essentially good, says, I am the good shepherd; and he
+adds the character of the same goodness, which we may imitate,
+saying, The good shepherd layeth down his life for his sheep. He
+did what he taught; he showed what he commanded. The good shepherd
+laid down his life for his sheep; that in our sacrament he might
+change his body and blood, and satisfy, by the nourishment of his
+flesh, the sheep which he had redeemed. Here is shown to us the
+way, concerning the contempt of death, which we should follow; the
+character is placed before us to which we should conform. [In the
+first place, we should of our pity sacrifice our external good for
+his sheep; and at last, if it be necessary, give up our own life
+for the same sheep. From that smallest point we proceed to this
+last and greater. But since the soul by which we live is
+incomparably better than the earthly substance which we outwardly
+possess, who would not give for the sheep his substance, when he
+would give his life for them? And there are some who, whilst they
+love their earthly substance more than the sheep, deservedly lose
+the name of shepherd: of whom it is immediately added, But the
+hireling who is not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not,
+seeth the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep and fleeth. He is
+called not a shepherd, but a hireling, who feeds the Lord's sheep
+not for inward love, but with a view to temporal wages. He is a
+mercenary who seeks indeed the place of shepherd, but seeks not the
+gain of souls.]</p>
+<p>(The sentences between brackets are not in MS. No. 1512.)</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>To Thomas all things yield and are obedient:</p>
+<p>Plagues, diseases, death, and devils,</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page213" id=
+"page213"></a>{213}</span>
+<p>Fire, air, land, and seas.</p>
+<p>Thomas filled the world with glory.</p>
+<p>The world offers obeisance to Thomas<a id="footnotetag77" name=
+"footnotetag77"></a><a href="#footnote77"><sup>77</sup></a>.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote77" name=
+"footnote77"></a><b>Footnote 77:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag77">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thom&aelig; cedunt et parent omnia:</p>
+<p>Pestes, morbi, mors, et d&aelig;monia,</p>
+<p>Ignis, aer, tellus, et maria.</p>
+<p>Thomas mundum replevit gloria.</p>
+<p>Thom&aelig; mundus pr&aelig;stat obsequia.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Eighth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>In good truth, the holy Thomas, the precious champion of God,
+was to be worthily glorified. For if the cause, yea, forasmuch as
+the cause makes the martyr, did ever a title of holy martyrs exist
+more glorious? Contending for the Church, in the Church he
+suffered; in a holy place, at the holy time of the Lord's nativity,
+in the midst of his fellow-priests and the companies of the
+religious: since in the agony of the prelate all the circumstances
+seemed so to concur, as perpetually to illustrate the title of the
+sufferer, and reveal the wickedness of his persecutors, and stain
+their name with never-ending infamy. But so did the divine
+vengeance rage against the persecutors of the martyr, that in a
+short time, being carried away from the midst, they nowhere
+appeared. And some, without confession, or the viaticum, were
+suddenly snatched away; others tearing piecemeal their own fingers
+or tongues; others pining with hunger, and corrupting in their
+whole body, and racked with unheard-of tortures before their death,
+and broken up by paralysis; others bereft of their intellects;
+others expiring with madness;&mdash;left manifest proofs that they
+were suffering the penalty of unjust persecution and premeditated
+murder. Let, therefore, the Virgin Mother, the Church, rejoice that
+the new martyr has borne away the triumph over the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page214" id="page214"></a>{214}</span> enemies.
+Let her rejoice that a new Zacharias has been for her freedom
+sacrificed in the temple. Let her rejoice that a new Abel's blood
+hath cried unto God for her against the men of blood. For the voice
+of his blood shed, the-voice of his brain scattered by the swords
+of those deadly satellites, hath filled heaven at once and the
+world with its far-famed cry.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thomas shines with new miracles;</p>
+<p>He adorns with sight those who had lost their eyes;</p>
+<p>He cleanses those who were stained with the spots of
+leprosy;</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>He looses those that were bound with the bonds of death.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><i>Ninth Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>For at the cry of this blood the earth was moved and trembled.
+Nay, moreover, the powers of the heavens were moved; so that, as if
+for the avenging of innocent blood, nation rose against nation, and
+kingdom against kingdom; nay, a kingdom was divided against itself,
+and terrors from heaven and great signs took place. Yet, from the
+first period of his martyrdom, the martyr began to shine forth with
+miracles, restoring sight to the blind, walking to the lame,
+hearing to the deaf, language to the dumb. Afterwards, cleansing
+the lepers, making the paralytic sound, healing the dropsy, and all
+kinds of incurable diseases; restoring the dead to life; in a
+wonderful manner commanding the devils and all the elements: he
+also put forth his hand to unwonted and unheard-of signs of his own
+power; for persons deprived of their eyes merited by his merits to
+obtain new members. But some <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page215" id="page215"></a>{215}</span> who presumed to disparage
+his miracles, struck on a sudden, were compelled to publish them
+even unwillingly. At length, against all his enemies the martyr so
+far prevailed, that almost every day you might see that to be
+repeated in the servant which is read of the Only-begotten: "They
+who spoke evil of thee shall come unto thee, and adore the traces
+of thy feet." Now the celebrated champion and martyr of God,
+Thomas, suffered in the year from the incarnation of the Lord,
+according to Dionysius, 1171, on the fourth of the kalends of
+January, on the third day of the week, about the eleventh hour,
+that the birth-day of the Lord might be for labour, and his for
+rest; to which rest the same our God and Lord Jesus Christ
+vouchsafe to bring us; who with the Father and the Holy Spirit
+liveth and reigneth God, for ever and ever. Amen.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>O good Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS,</p>
+<p>Forgive us our debts;</p>
+<p>Visit the house, the gate, the grave;</p>
+<p>And raise us from the threefold death.</p>
+<p>What has been lost by act, in mind, or use,</p>
+<p>Restore with thy wonted pity.</p>
+<p class="i4">Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>N.B. This appears to be the end of the first service in honour
+of Thomas Becket<a id="footnotetag78" name=
+"footnotetag78"></a><a href="#footnote78"><sup>78</sup></a>; and at
+this point <span class="pagenum"><a name="page216" id=
+"page216"></a>{216}</span> another service seems to commence, with
+a kind of new heading, "In the commemoration of St. Thomas<a id=
+"footnotetag79" name="footnotetag79"></a><a href=
+"#footnote79"><sup>79</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote78" name=
+"footnote78"></a><b>Footnote 78:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag78">(return)</a>
+<p>All the Lessons between this passage and "In Lauds," are wanting
+in MS. 1512.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote79" name=
+"footnote79"></a><b>Footnote 79:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag79">(return)</a>
+<p>Another Feast was kept in honour of his translation, on the 7th
+of July.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>The First Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>When Archbishop Theobald, of happy memory, in a good old age,
+slept with his fathers, Thomas, archdeacon of the Church of
+Canterbury, is solemnly chosen, in the name of the Holy Trinity, to
+be archbishop and primate of all England, and afterwards is
+consecrated. Then pious minds entertained firm hope and confidence
+in the Lord<a id="footnotetag80" name="footnotetag80"></a><a href=
+"#footnote80"><sup>80</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote80" name=
+"footnote80"></a><b>Footnote 80:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag80">(return)</a>
+<p>There is much of obscurity in the next paragraph. Reference
+seems to be made to his twofold character of a regular and a
+secular clergyman, and to his improved state morally. The Latin is
+this: "Erat autem piis mentibus spes firma et fiducia in Domino,
+quod idem consecratus utriusque hominis, habitu mutato moribus
+melioratus pr&aelig;sideret. Probatissimum siquidem tenebatur sedem
+illam sedem sanctorum esse sanctam recipere aut facere, vel citius
+et facile indignum abicere, quod et in beato Thoma Martyre
+misericorditer impletum est."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Second Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>Therefore the chosen prelate of God being elected, and anointed
+with the sanctifying of the sacred oil, immediately obtained a most
+hallowed thing, and was filled with manifold grace of the Holy
+Spirit. For walking in newness of life, a new man, he was changed
+into another man, all things belonging to whom were changed for the
+better; and with so great grace did he consecrate the commencement
+of his bishopric, that clothing himself with a monk's form
+secretly, he fulfilled the work and merit of a monk.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page217" id=
+"page217"></a>{217}</span>
+<p><i>Third Lesson.</i></p>
+<p>But he, who after the example of the Baptist, with constancy had
+conceived in a perfect heart that the zeal of righteousness should
+be purified, studied also to imitate him in the garb of penitence.
+For casting off the fine linen which hitherto he had been
+accustomed to use, whilst the soft delicacies of kings pleased him,
+he was clothed on his naked body with a most rough hair shirt. He
+added, moreover, hair drawers, that he might the more effectually
+mortify the flesh, and make the spirit live. But these, as also the
+other exercises of his spiritual life, very few indeed being aware
+of it, he removed from the eyes and knowledge of men by superadding
+other garments, because he sought glory not from man, but from God.
+Even then the man of virtue entering upon the justifications of
+God, began to be more complete in abstinence, more frequent in
+watching, longer in prayer, more anxious in preaching. The pastoral
+office intrusted to him by God, he executed with so great
+diligence, as to suffer the rights neither of the clergy nor of the
+Church to be in any degree curtailed.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>There seems here also to be another commencement, for the next
+lesson is called the First.</p>
+<p><i>Lesson First.</i></p>
+<p>So large a grace of compunction was he wont to possess, between
+the secrets of prayer or the solemnities of masses, that with eyes
+trained to weeping he would be wholly dissolved in tears; and in
+the office <span class="pagenum"><a name="page218" id=
+"page218"></a>{218}</span> of the altar his appearance was as
+though he was witnessing the Lord's passion in the flesh. Knowing
+also that mercy softens justice, and that pity hath the promise of
+the life that now is, and of that which is to come, therefore
+towards the poor and the afflicted did he bear the bowels of mercy
+piteously, and was anxious to reach the poor by the blessings of
+his alms.</p>
+<p><i>Lesson Second.</i></p>
+<p>The more humble of those whom a character for religion raised
+high, he made his acquaintance and intimates; and that he might
+learn from them to hunger and thirst after righteousness, he
+enjoyed more frequently their secret conversation. Towards such
+servants and soldiers of Christ this merciful man preferred to be
+liberal and abundant in food and raiment, he who determined in
+himself to be moderate and sparing. For what would he deny to
+Christ, who for Christ was about to shed his blood? He who owed his
+coat or cloak to one who asked it, desired to add, moreover, his
+own flesh. For he knew that the man would never freely give his own
+flesh, who showed himself greedy of any temporal thing.</p>
+<p><i>Lesson Third.</i></p>
+<p>Hitherto the merciful Lord, who maketh poor and enricheth,
+bringeth low and lifteth up, wished to load his servant with
+riches, and exalt him with honours; and afterwards he was pleased
+to try him with adversity. By trying whether he loved Him, He
+proved it the more certainly; but He supplied grace more
+abundantly. For with the temptation He made a way to escape, that
+he might be able to bear it. Therefore, the envious enemy,
+considering that the new prelate <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page219" id="page219"></a>{219}</span> and the new man was
+flourishing with so manifold a grace of virtues, devised to send a
+burning blight of temptation, which might suffocate the germ of his
+merits already put forth. Nor was there any delay. He who severs a
+man from his God, and one friend from his neighbour, sowed
+irreconcileable quarrels between the king and the archbishop.</p>
+<p>Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.</p>
+<p><i>In Lauds.</i></p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>A grain falls and gives birth to an abundance of corn.</p>
+<p>The alabaster-box is broken, and the odour of the</p>
+<p class="i2">ointment is powerful.</p>
+<p>The whole world vies in love to the martyr,</p>
+<p>Whose wonderful signs strike all with astonishment.</p>
+<p>The water for Thomas five times changing colour,</p>
+<p>Once was turned into milk, four times into blood.</p>
+<p>At the shrine<a id="footnotetag81" name=
+"footnotetag81"></a><a href="#footnote81"><sup>81</sup></a> of
+Thomas four times the light</p>
+<p class="i2">came down,</p>
+<p>And to the glory of the saint kindled the wax-tapers.</p>
+<p>DO THOU BY THE BLOOD OF THOMAS, WHICH HE<a id="footnotetag82"
+name="footnotetag82"></a><a href=
+"#footnote82"><sup>82</sup></a></p>
+<p>SHED FOR THEE;</p>
+<p>MAKE US, O CHRIST, ASCEND,</p>
+<p>Whither Thomas has ascended.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Extend<a id="footnotetag83" name="footnotetag83"></a><a href=
+"#footnote83"><sup>83</sup></a> succour to us, O Thomas,</p>
+<p>Guide those who stand,</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page220" id=
+"page220"></a>{220}</span>
+<p>Raise up those who fall,</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Correct our morals, actions, and life;</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>And guide us into the way of peace.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote81" name=
+"footnote81"></a><b>Footnote 81:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag81">(return)</a>
+<p>Ad Thom&aelig; memoriam.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote82" name=
+"footnote82"></a><b>Footnote 82:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag82">(return)</a>
+<p>Tu per Thom&aelig; sanguinem quem pro te impendit, Fac nos,
+Christe, scandere, quo Thomas ascendit.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote83" name=
+"footnote83"></a><b>Footnote 83:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag83">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Opem nobis, O Thoma, porrige,</p>
+<p>Rege stantes, jacentes erige,</p>
+<p>Mores, actus, et vitam corrige,</p>
+<p>Et in pacis nos viam dirige.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Final Anthem.</i></p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Hail, O Thomas, the Rod of Justice;<a id="footnotetag84" name=
+"footnotetag84"></a><a href="#footnote84"><sup>84</sup></a></p>
+<p>The Brightness of the World;</p>
+<p>The Strength of the Church;</p>
+<p>The Love of the People;</p>
+<p>The Delight of the Clergy.</p>
+<p>Hail, glorious Guardian of the Flock;</p>
+<p>Save those who rejoice in thy glory.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote84" name=
+"footnote84"></a><b>Footnote 84:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag84">(return)</a>
+<p>Salve, Thomas, Virga Justiti&aelig;, Mundi Jubar, Robur
+Ecclesi&aelig;, Plebis Amor, Cleri Delicia. Salve Gregis Tutor
+egregie, Salva tu&aelig; gaudentes glori&aelig;.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The end of the service of Thomas of Canterbury.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Now for a few moments only let us meditate on this service. I
+have already referred to the lamentable practice of substituting
+biographical legends for the word of God. And what is the tendency
+of this service? What impression was it likely to make, and to
+leave on minds of ordinary powers and instruction? Must it not, of
+necessity, tend to withdraw them from contemplating Christ, and to
+fix their thoughts on the powers, the glory, the exaltation, the
+merits of a fellow-sinner? It will be said, that they will look
+beyond the martyr, and trace the blessings, here enumerated, to
+Christ, as their primary cause, and will think of the merits of
+Thomas as efficacious only through the merits of their Saviour;
+that in their invocation of Thomas they will implore him only to
+pray for them. But can this be so? Does not the ascription of
+miracles to him <span class="pagenum"><a name="page221" id=
+"page221"></a>{221}</span> and to his power; does not the very form
+of enumerating those miracles tend much to exalt the servant to an
+equality with the Master?</p>
+<p>Whilst Thomas by being thus, in words at least, presented to the
+people as working those miracles by his own power, (for there is
+throughout a lamentable absence of immediate ascription of glory to
+God,) is raised to an equality with Christ our Lord; many passages
+in this service have the tendency also of withdrawing the minds of
+the worshippers from an implicit and exclusive dependence on the
+merits of Christ alone, and of tempting them to admit the merits of
+Thomas to share at least with Christ in the work of grace and
+salvation. Let us place some texts of Scripture and some passages
+of this service side by side.</p>
+<p>[Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the
+other.]</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p><i>Scripture.</i></p>
+<p>But after that the kindness and love of God towards man
+appeared, not by works of righteousness which we have done, but
+according to his mercy he saved us.&mdash;Titus iii. 4, 5.</p>
+<p>He who spared not his own Son, but gave him up for us all, how
+shall he not with him also freely give us all things?&mdash;Rom.
+viii. 32.</p>
+<p>The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin.&mdash;1
+John i. 7.</p>
+<p>One Mediator.&mdash;1 Tim. ii. 5.</p>
+<p>Who also maketh intercession for us.&mdash;Rom. viii. 34.</p>
+<p>He ever liveth to make intercession for them.&mdash;Heb. vii.
+25.</p>
+<p><i>Service of Thomas Becket.</i></p>
+<p>O Christ Jesus, by the wounds of Thomas loosen the sins which
+bind us.</p>
+<p>O blessed Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS, forgive us our debts,
+raise us from the threefold death, and restore what has been lost
+with thy accustomed pity.</p>
+<p>Do thou, O Christ, by the blood of Thomas, which he shed for
+thee, make us ascend whither Thomas has ascended.</p>
+<p>Holy Thomas, pray for us.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And if this service thus seems to mingle the merits of Christ,
+the merits of his blood and of his death, with <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page222" id="page222"></a>{222}</span> the
+merits of a mortal man, the immediate address to that mortal as the
+giver of good things temporal and spiritual, very awfully
+trespasses on that high, exclusive, and incommunicable prerogative
+of the one Lord God Omnipotent, which his Spirit hath proclaimed
+solemnly and repeatedly, and which he has fenced around against all
+invasion with so many warnings and denunciations.</p>
+<table summary="Becket">
+<tr>
+<td><i>Scripture.</i></td>
+<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td><i>Service of Becket</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1. O thou that hearest prayer, unto thee shall all flesh
+come.&mdash; Ps. lxv. [vulg. lxiv.] 2.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>1. For they sake, O Thomas, let the right hand of God embrace
+us.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>By prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your
+requests be made known unto God.&mdash;Phil. iv. 6.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>2. Lord, be thou my helper.&mdash;Ps. xxx. [xxix.] 10.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>2. Send help to us, O Thomas;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>3. Thou shalt guide me by thy counsel.&mdash;Ps. lxxiii.
+[lxxii.] 24.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>3. Guide thou those who stand;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>He, The Holy Spirit, shall guide you into all truth.&mdash;John
+xvi. 13.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>4. The Lord upholdeth all that fall, and raiseth up all those
+that be bowed down.&mdash;Psalm cxlv. [cxliv.] 14.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>4. Raise up those who fall;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>5. Create in me a clean heart, O God.&mdash;Ps. li. [l.]
+10.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>5. Correct our morals, actions and life;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>6. The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord. Though he
+fall, he shall not be utterly cast down, for the Lord upholdeth
+him.&mdash;Ps. xxxvii. [xxxvi.] 23.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>6. And guide us into the way of peace.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>The day-spring from on high hath visited us, to guide our feet
+into the way of peace.&mdash;Luke i. 78, 79.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>And then again, in celebrating the praises of a mortal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page223" id=
+"page223"></a>{223}</span> man, recourse is had to language which
+can fitly be used only in our hymns and praises to the supreme Lord
+of our destinies, the eternal Creator, Redeemer, and Comforter, the
+only wise God our Saviour.</p>
+<table summary="Comparison">
+<tr>
+<td><i>Address to Thomas.</i></td>
+<td></td>
+<td><i>Language of Scripture.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1. Hail, Thomas, Rod of Justice!</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>1. There shall come a rod out of the stem of Jesse. Ye denied
+the Holy One, and the Just&mdash;Isaiah xi. 1. Acts iii. 14.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>2. The brightness of the world.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>2. The brightness of his glory. I am the light of the
+world&mdash;Heb. i. 3. John viii. 12.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>3. The strength of the Church.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>3. I can do all things through Christ, that strengthened me.
+Christ loved the Church, and gave himself for it.&mdash;Phil. iv.
+13. Eph. v. 25.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>4. The love of the people: the delight of the Clergy.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>4. Grace be with all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ in
+sincerity. Delight thyself in the Lord.&mdash;Eph. vi. 24. Ps.
+xxxvii. 4.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>5. Hail, glorious Guardian of the Flock. Save those who rejoice
+in thy glory.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>5. Our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep. Give ear,
+O Shepherd of Israel; come and save us. He that glorieth, let him
+glory in the Lord.&mdash;Heb. xiii. 20. Psalm lxxx. [lxxix.] 1. 1
+Cor. i. 31.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>Can that worship become the disciples of the Gospel and the
+Cross, which addresses such prayers and such praises to the spirit
+of a mortal man? Every prayer, and every form of praise here used
+in honour of Thomas Becket, it would well become Christians to
+offer to the Giver of all good, trusting solely and exclusively to
+the mediation of Christ Jesus our Lord for acceptance; and
+pleading-only the merits of his most precious blood. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page224" id="page224"></a>{224}</span> And yet I
+am bound to confess, that in principle, in spirit, and in fact, I
+can find no substantial difference between this service of Thomas
+of Canterbury, and the service which all in communion with the
+Church of Rome are under an obligation to use even at the present
+hour.</p>
+<p>This point remains next for our inquiry, and we will draw from
+the well-head. I would, however, first suggest the application of a
+general test for ascertaining the real <i>bona-fide</i> nature of
+these prayers and praises. The test I would apply is, to try with
+the change only of the name, substituting the holiest name ever
+named in heaven or in earth for the name of Thomas of
+Canterbury&mdash;whether these prayers and praises should not be
+offered to the Supreme Being alone through the atoning merits of
+his Blessed Son; whether they are not exclusively appropriate to
+HIM.</p>
+<p>To (Thomas/God Almighty) all things bow and are obedient.</p>
+<p>Plagues, diseases, death, and devils, Fire, air, land, and sea.
+(Thomas/The Almighty) fills the world with glory.</p>
+<p>The world offers obeisance to (Thomas/Almighty God).</p>
+<p>(The Martyr Thomas/Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ) began to
+shine forth with miracles [John ii. 11]; restoring sight to the
+blind [Luke vii. 21]; walking to the lame; hearing to the deaf;
+speech to the dumb; cleansing to the lepers [Matt. xi. 5]; making
+the paralytic sound [Matt. iv. 24]; healing the dropsy [Luke xiv.
+4]; and all kinds of incurable diseases [Luke iv. 40]; restoring
+the dead to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page225" id=
+"page225"></a>{225}</span> life [Luke viii. 43. 55]; in a wonderful
+manner commanding the devils [Matt. viii. 16], and all the elements
+[Luke viii. 25]. He put forth his hand to unwonted and unheard-of
+signs of his own power [Mark ii. 12. John ix. 30].</p>
+<p>Do thou, O Lord, by the blood of (Thomas/Christ) cause us to
+ascend whither (Thomas/Christ) has ascended. (O Thomas/O God), send
+help to us. Guide those who stand; raise up those who fall; correct
+our morals, actions, and life; and guide us into the way of
+peace.</p>
+<p>Hail, (Thomas!/Jesus!) Rod of Justice, the Brightness of the
+world, the Strength of the Church, the Love of the people, the
+Delight of the Clergy. Hail, Glorious Guardian of the flock! Save
+Thou those who delight in Thy glory.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>We shall apply this same test to many of the collects and
+prayers used, and of necessity to be used, because they are
+authorized and appointed, even at the present day, in the
+ministrations of the Church of Rome. The impiety in many of those
+instances is not couched in such startling language; but it is not
+the less real. God forbid that we should charge our
+fellow-creatures with idolatry, who declare that they offer divine
+worship to the Supreme Being only; or that we should pronounce any
+professed Christian to have cast off his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page226" id="page226"></a>{226}</span>
+dependence on the merits of Christ alone, who assures us that he
+looks for mercy only through those merits. But I know and feel,
+that according to the standard of Christian truth, and of the pure
+worship of Almighty God, which the Scriptures and primitive
+antiquity compel me to adopt, I should stain my own soul with the
+guilt of idolatry, and with the sin of relying on other merits than
+Christ's, were I myself to offer those prayers.</p>
+<p>That this service excited much disgust among the early
+reformers, we learn from various writers<a id="footnotetag85" name=
+"footnotetag85"></a><a href="#footnote85"><sup>85</sup></a>. On the
+merits of the struggle between Becket and his king; on the question
+of Becket's moral and religious worth, (a question long and often
+discussed among the exercises of the masters of Paris in the full
+assembly of the Sorbonne<a id="footnotetag86" name=
+"footnotetag86"></a><a href="#footnote86"><sup>86</sup></a>,) or on
+the motives which influenced Henry the Eighth, I intend not to say
+one word: those points belong not to our present inquiry. It may
+not, however, be thought irrelevant here to quote a passage
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page227" id=
+"page227"></a>{227}</span> from the ordinance of this latter
+monarch for erasing Becket's service out of the books, and his name
+from the calendar of the saints.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote85" name=
+"footnote85"></a><b>Footnote 85:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag85">(return)</a>
+<p>See Mornay "De la Messe," Saumur, 1604. p. 826. Becon, in his
+"New Year's Gift," London, 1564, p. 183, thus speaks: "What saint
+at any time thought himself so pure, immaculate, and without all
+spot of sin, that he durst presume to die for us, and to avouch his
+death to be an oblation and sacrifice for our lives to God the
+Father, except peradventure we will admit for good payment these
+and such like blasphemies, which were wont full solemnly to be sung
+in the temples unto the great ignominy of the glorious name of God,
+and the dishonour of Christ's most precious blood." Then quoting
+the lines from the service of Thomas Becket, on which we have above
+commented, he adds, "I will let pass many more which are easy to be
+searched and found out." Becon preached and wrote in the reign of
+Henry VIII. and was then persecuted for his religion, as he was
+afterwards in the reign of Mary.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote86" name=
+"footnote86"></a><b>Footnote 86:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag86">(return)</a>
+<p>We are told that forty-eight years after his death, the masters
+of Paris disputed whether Thomas was a condemned sinner, or
+admitted into heaven.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In Henry the Eighth's proclamation, dated Westminster, 16th
+November, in the thirtieth year of his reign, printed by Bertholet,
+is the following very curious passage:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>"ITEM, for as moche as it appereth now clerely, that Thomas
+Becket, sometyme Archbyshop of Canterburie, stubburnly to withstand
+the holsome lawes establyshed agaynste the enormities of the
+clergie, by the kynges highness mooste noble progenitour, kynge
+HENRY the Seconde, for the common welthe, reste, and tranquillitie
+of this realme, of his frowarde mynde fledde the realme into
+Fraunce, and to the bishop of Rome, mayntenour of those enormities,
+to procure the abrogation of the sayd lawes, whereby arose moch
+trouble in this said realme, and that his dethe, which they
+untruely called martyrdome, happened upon a reskewe by him made,
+and that, as it is written, he gave opprobrious wordes to the
+gentyllmen, whiche than counsayled hym to leave his stubbernesse,
+and to avoyde the commocion of the people, rysen up for that
+rescue. And he not only callyd the one of them bawde, but also toke
+Tracy by the bosome, and violently shoke and plucked hym in suche
+maner, that he had almoste overthrowen hym to the pavement of the
+Churche; so that upon this fray one of their company, perceivynge
+the same, strake hym, and so in the thronge Becket was slayne. And
+further that his canonization was made onely by the bysshop of
+Rome, bycause he had ben a champion of maynteyne his usurped
+auctoritie, and a bearer of the iniquitie of the clergie, for these
+and for other great and urgent causes, longe to recyte, the Kynge's
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page228" id=
+"page228"></a>{228}</span> Maiestie, by the advyse of his
+counsayle, hath thought expedient to declare to his lovynge
+subjectes, that notwithstandynge the sayde canonization, there
+appereth nothynge in his lyfe and exteriour conversation, wherby he
+shuld be callyd a sainct, but rather estemed to have ben a rebell
+and traytour to his prynce. Therefore his Grace strayghtly chargeth
+and commandeth that from henseforth the sayde Thomas Becket shall
+not be estemed, named, reputed, nor called a sayncte, but bysshop
+Becket; and that his ymages and pictures, through the hole realme,
+shall be putte downe, and avoyded out of all churches, chapelles,
+and other places; and that from henseforthe, the dayes used to be
+festivall in his name shall not be observed, nor the service,
+office, antiphoners, colletes, and prayers, in his name redde, but
+rased and put out of all the bokes<a id="footnotetag87" name=
+"footnotetag87"></a><a href="#footnote87"><sup>87</sup></a>."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote87" name=
+"footnote87"></a><b>Footnote 87:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag87">(return)</a>
+<p>In the Roman Breviary, adapted to England, several biographical
+lessons are appointed for the Anniversary of "St. Thomas, bishop
+and martyr," interspersed with canticles. In one of these we read,
+"This is truly a martyr, who, for the name of Christ, shed blood;
+who feared not the threats of judges, nor sought the glory of
+earthly dignity. But he reached the heavenly
+kingdom."&mdash;Norwich, 1830. Hiem. p. 251.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id=
+"page229"></a>{229}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap2-2" id="chap2-2">CHAPTER II.</a></h3>
+<h4>COUNCIL OF TRENT.</h4>
+<p>In the process of ascertaining the real state of doctrine and
+practice in the worship of the Church of Rome at the present day,
+we must first gain as clear and accurate a knowledge of the decree
+of the Council of Trent, as its words will enable us to form. Into
+the character of that Council, and of those who constituted it, our
+present investigation does not lead us to inquire. It is now, I
+believe, generally understood, that its decrees are binding on all
+who profess allegiance to the Sovereign Roman Pontiff; and that the
+man would be considered to have renounced the Roman Catholic
+Communion, who should professedly withhold his assent from the
+doctrines there promulgated as vital, or against the oppugners of
+which the Council itself pronounced an anathema.</p>
+<p>Ecclesiastical writers<a id="footnotetag88" name=
+"footnotetag88"></a><a href="#footnote88"><sup>88</sup></a> assure
+us, that the wording of the decrees of that Council was in many
+cases on purpose framed ambiguously and vaguely. The latitude,
+however, of the expressions employed, does not in itself
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page230" id=
+"page230"></a>{230}</span> of necessity imply any of those sinister
+and unworthy motives to which it has been usual with many writers
+to attribute it. In charity, and without any improbable assumption,
+it may be referred to an honest and laudable desire of making the
+terms of communion as wide as might be, with a view of
+comprehending within what was regarded the pale of the Catholic
+Church, the greatest number of those who professed and called
+themselves Christians. Be this as it may, the vagueness and
+uncertainty of the terms employed, compel us in many instances to
+have recourse to the actual practice of the Church of Rome, as the
+best interpreter of doubtful expressions in the articles of that
+Council. The decree which bears on the subject of this volume is
+drawn up in the following words:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote88" name=
+"footnote88"></a><b>Footnote 88:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag88">(return)</a>
+<p>See Mosheim, xvi. Cent. c. i. vol. iv. p. 196. London, 1811.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote>
+<p>"SESSION XXV.<a id="footnotetag89" name=
+"footnotetag89"></a><a href="#footnote89"><sup>89</sup></a></p>
+<p>"On the invocation, veneration, and reliques of saints, and of
+sacred images.</p>
+<p>"The Holy Council commands all bishops and others bearing the
+office and care of instruction, that according to the usage of the
+Catholic and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive times of
+the Christian religion, and the consent of holy fathers, and
+decrees of sacred councils, they in the first place should instruct
+the faithful concerning the intercession and invocation of saints,
+the honour of reliques, and the lawful use of images, teaching
+them, that the SAINTS REIGNING TOGETHER WITH CHRIST, offer their
+own <span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id=
+"page231"></a>{231}</span> prayers for men to God: that it is good
+and profitable SUPPLIANTLY TO INVOKE THEM: and to fly to their
+PRAYERS, HELP, and ASSISTANCE, for obtaining benefits from God, by
+his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer and
+Saviour. But that those who deny that the saints, enjoying
+everlasting happiness in heaven, are to be invoked; or who assert
+either that they do not pray for us; or that the invocation of them
+to pray for us even as individuals is idolatry, or is repugnant to
+the word of God, and is opposed to the honour of the one Mediator
+of God and man, Jesus Christ; or that it is folly, by voice or
+mentally, to supplicate those who reign in heaven, hold impious
+sentiments.</p>
+<p>"That the bodies also of the holy martyrs and others living with
+Christ, which were living members of Christ, and a temple of the
+Holy Ghost to be raised by Him to eternal life, and to be
+glorified, are to be worshipped by the faithful; by means of which
+many benefits are conferred on men by God; so that those who affirm
+that worship and honour are not due to the reliques of the saints,
+or that they and other sacred monuments are unprofitably honoured
+by the faithful; and that the shrines of the saints are frequented
+in vain for the purpose of obtaining their succour, are altogether
+to be condemned, as the Church has long ago condemned them, and now
+also condemns them."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote89" name=
+"footnote89"></a><b>Footnote 89:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag89">(return)</a>
+<p>The Latin, which will be found in the Appendix, is a transcript
+from a printed copy of the Acts of the Council of Trent, preserved
+in the British Museum, to which are annexed the autograph
+signatures of the secretaries (notarii), and their seals.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>An examination of this decree, in comparison with the form and
+language of other decrees of the same Council, forces the remark
+upon us, That the Council does not assert that the practice of
+invoking saints has any foundation in Holy Scripture. The absence
+of all such declaration is the more striking and important, because
+in the very decree immediately preceding this, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page232" id="page232"></a>{232}</span> which
+establishes Purgatory as a doctrine of the Church of Rome, the
+Council declares that doctrine to be drawn from the Holy
+Scriptures. In the present instance the Council proceeds no further
+than to charge with impiety those who maintain the invocation of
+saints to be contrary to the word of God. Many a doctrine or
+practice, not found in Scripture, may nevertheless be not contrary
+to the word of God; but here the Council abstains from affirming
+any thing whatever as to the scriptural origin of the doctrine and
+practice which it authoritatively enforces. In this respect the
+framers of the decree acted with far more caution and wisdom than
+they had shown in wording the decree on Purgatory; and with far
+more caution and wisdom too than they exercised in this decree,
+when they affirmed that the doctrine of the invocation of saints
+was to be taught the people according to the usage of the Catholic
+and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive times of the
+Christian religion, and the consent of the holy fathers. I have
+good hope that these pages have already proved beyond gainsaying,
+that the invocation of saints is a manifest departure from the
+usage of the Primitive Church, and contrary to the testimony of
+"the holy fathers." However, the fact of the Council not having
+professed to trace the doctrine, or its promulgation, to any
+authority of Holy Scripture, is of very serious import, and
+deserves to be well weighed in all its bearings.</p>
+<p>With regard to the condemnatory clauses of this decree, I would
+for myself observe, that I should never have engaged in preparing
+this volume, had I not believed, "that it was neither good nor
+profitable to invoke the saints, or to fly to their prayers, their
+assistance, and succour." I am bound, with this decree <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>{233}</span> before
+me, to pronounce, that it is a vain thing to offer supplications,
+either by the voice or in the mind, to the saints, even if they be
+reigning in heaven; and that it is also in vain for Christians to
+frequent the shrines of the saints for the purpose of obtaining
+their succour.</p>
+<p>I am, moreover, under a deep conviction, that the invocation of
+them is both at variance with the word of God, and contrary to the
+honour of the one Mediator between God and man, Jesus Christ.</p>
+<p>On this last point, indeed, I am aware of an anxious desire
+prevailing on the part of many Roman Catholics, to establish a
+distinction between a mediation of Redemption, and a mediation of
+Intercession: and thus by limiting the mediation of the saints and
+angels to intercession, and reserving the mediation of redemption
+to Christ only, to avoid the setting up of another to share the
+office of Mediator with Him, who is so solemnly declared in
+Scripture to be the one Mediator between God and man. But this
+distinction has no foundation in the revealed will of God; on the
+contrary, it is directly at variance with the words and with the
+spirit of many portions of the sacred volume. There we find the two
+offices of redemption and mediation joined together in Christ. "If
+any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
+Righteous, and He is the propitiation for our sins." [1 John ii. 1,
+2. Heb. ix. 12. vii. 25.] In the Epistle to the Hebrews, the same
+Saviour who is declared "by his own blood to have obtained eternal
+redemption," is announced also as the Mediator of Intercession.
+"Wherefore he is able to save them to the uttermost who come unto
+God through him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for
+them." The <span class="pagenum"><a name="page234" id=
+"page234"></a>{234}</span> redemption wrought by Christ, and the
+intercession still made in our behalf by Christ, are both equally
+declared to us by the most sure warrant of Holy Scripture; of any
+other intercession by saints in glory, by angels, or Virgin, to be
+sought by our suppliant invocations to them, the covenant of God
+speaks not.</p>
+<p>It may be observed, that the enactment of this decree by the
+Council of Trent, has been chiefly lamented by some persons on the
+ground of its presenting the most formidable barrier against any
+reconciliation between the Church of Rome, and those who hold the
+unlawfulness of the invocation of saints. Indeed persons of
+erudition, judgment, piety, and charity, in communion with Rome,
+have not been wanting to express openly their regret, that decrees
+so positive, peremptory, and exclusive, should have been adopted.
+They would have been better satisfied with the terms of communion
+in the Church to which they still adhered, had individuals been
+left to their own responsibility on questions of disputable origin
+and doubtful antiquity, involving rather the subtilty of
+metaphysical disquisitions, than agreeable to the simplicity of
+Gospel truth, and essential Christian doctrine. On this point I
+would content myself with quoting the sentiments of a Roman
+Catholic author. Many of the facts alleged in his interesting
+comments deserve the patient consideration of every Christian. Here
+(observes the commentator on Paoli Sarpi's History of the Council
+of Trent<a id="footnotetag90" name="footnotetag90"></a><a href=
+"#footnote90"><sup>90</sup></a>) the Council makes it a duty to
+pray to saints, though the ancient Church never regarded it as
+necessary. The practice cannot be proved to be introduced into
+public worship <span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id=
+"page235"></a>{235}</span> before the sixth century; and it is
+certain, that in the ancient liturgies and sacramentaries no direct
+invocation is found. Even in our modern missals, being those of our
+ecclesiastical books in which the ancient form has been longest
+retained, scarcely is there a collect [those he means in which
+mention is made of the saints] where the address is not offered
+directly to God, imploring Him to hear the prayers of the saints
+for us; and this is the ancient form of invocation. It is true,
+that in the Breviaries and other ecclesiastical books, direct
+prayers to the saints have been subsequently introduced, as in
+litanies, hymns, and even some collects. But the usage is more
+modern, and cannot be evidence for ancient tradition. For this
+[ancient tradition] only some invocations addressed to saints in
+public harangues are alleged, but which ought to be regarded as
+figures of rhetoric, <i>apostrophes</i>, rather than real
+invocations; though at the same time some fathers laid the
+foundation for such a practice by asserting that one could address
+himself to the saints, and hope for succour from them.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote90" name=
+"footnote90"></a><b>Footnote 90:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag90">(return)</a>
+<p>Histoire du Conc. de Trent, par Fra. Paoli Sarpi, traduit par
+Pierre Fran&ccedil;ois de Courayer. Amsterdam, note 31. 1751. vol.
+iii. p. 182.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We have already alluded to the very great latitude of
+interpretation which the words of this Council admit. The
+expressions indeed are most remarkably elastic; capable of being
+expanded widely enough to justify those of the Church of Rome who
+allow themselves in the practice of asking for aid and assistance,
+temporal and spiritual, to be expected from the saints themselves;
+and at the same time, the words of the decree admit of being so far
+contracted as not in appearance palpably to contradict those who
+allege, that the Church of Rome never addresses a saint with any
+other petition, than purely and simply that the saint would by
+prayer intercede for the worshippers. The words "suppliantly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page236" id=
+"page236"></a>{236}</span> to invoke them," and "to fly to their
+prayers, HELP, and SUCCOUR," are sufficiently comprehensive to
+cover all kinds of prayer for all kinds of benefits, whilst "the
+invocation of them to pray for us even individually," will
+countenance those who would restrict the faithful to an entreaty
+for their prayers only.</p>
+<p>Whatever may be the advantage of this latitude of
+interpretation, in one point of view it must be a subject of
+regret. Complaints had long been made in Christendom, that other
+prayers were offered to the saints, besides those which petitioned
+only for their intercession; and if the Council of Trent had
+intended it to be a rule of universal application, that in whatever
+words the invocations of the saints might be couched, they should
+be taken to mean only requests for their prayers, it may be
+lamented, that no declaration to that effect was given.</p>
+<p>The manner in which writers of the Church of Rome have attempted
+to reconcile the prayers actually offered in her ritual, with the
+principle of invoking the saints only for their prayers, is indeed
+most unsatisfactory. Whilst to some minds the expedient to which
+those writers have had recourse carries with it the stamp of mental
+reservation, and spiritual subterfuge, and moral obliquity; others
+under the influence of the purest charity will regret in it the
+absence of that simplicity, and direct openness in word and deed,
+which we regard as characteristic of the religion of the Gospel;
+and will deprecate its adoption as tending, in many cases
+inevitably, to become a most dangerous snare to the conscience. I
+will here refer only to the profession of that principle as made by
+Bellarmin. Subsequent writers seem to have adopted his sentiments,
+and to have expressed themselves very much in his words.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id=
+"page237"></a>{237}</span>
+<p>Bellarmin unreservedly asserts that Christians are to invoke the
+saints solely and exclusively for their prayers, and not for any
+benefits as from the saints themselves. But then he seems to
+paralyse that declaration by this refinement: "It must nevertheless
+be observed that we have not to do with words, but with the meaning
+of words; for as far as concerns the words, it is lawful to say,
+'Saint Peter, have mercy on me! Save me! Open to me the entrance of
+heaven!' So also, 'Give to me health of body, Give me patience,
+Give me fortitude!' Whilst only we understand 'Save me, and have
+mercy upon me BY PRAYING for me: Give me this and that, BY THY
+PRAYERS AND MERITS.' For thus Gregory of Nazianzen, in his Oratio
+in Cyprianum; and the Universal Church, when in the hymn to the
+Virgin she says,</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Mary, Mother of Grace,</p>
+<p>Mother of Mercy,</p>
+<p>Do thou protect us from the enemy,</p>
+<p>And take us in the hour of death.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>"And in that of the Apostles,</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>'To whose command is subject'</p>
+<p>The health and weakness of all:</p>
+<p>Heal us who are morally diseased;</p>
+<p>Restore us to virtue.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>"And as the Apostle says of himself 'that I might save some,'
+[Rom. xi.] and 'that he might save all,' [I Cor. ix.] not as God,
+but Thy prayer and counsel."</p>
+<p>I wish not to enter upon the question how far this distinction
+is consistent with that openness and straightforward undisguised
+dealing which is alone allowable when we are contending for the
+truth; nor how far the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id=
+"page238"></a>{238}</span> charge of moral obliquity and double
+dealing, often brought against it, can be satisfactorily met. But
+suppose for a moment that we grant (what is not the case) that in
+the metaphysical disquisitions of the experienced casuist such a
+distinction might be maintained, how can we expect it to be
+recognized, and felt, and acted upon by the large body of
+Christians? Abstractedly considered, such an interpretation in a
+religious act of daily recurrence by the mass of unlearned
+believers would, I conceive, appear to reflecting minds most
+improbable, if not utterly impossible. And as to its actual
+<i>bona-fide</i> result in practice, a very brief sojourn in
+countries where the religion of Rome is dominant, will suffice to
+convince us, that such subtilties of the casuist are neither
+received nor understood by the great body of worshippers; and that
+the large majority of them, when they pray to an individual saint
+to deliver them from any evil, or to put them in possession of some
+good, do in very deed look to the saint himself for the fulfilment
+of their wishes. It is a snare to the conscience only too evidently
+successful.</p>
+<p>And I regret to add, that in the errors into which such language
+of their prayers may unhappily betray them, they cannot be
+otherwise than confirmed as well by the recorded sentiments of men
+in past years, whom they have been taught to reverence, as by the
+sentiments which are circulated through the world now, even by what
+they are accustomed to regard as the highest authority on
+earth<a id="footnotetag91" name="footnotetag91"></a><a href=
+"#footnote91"><sup>91</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote91" name=
+"footnote91"></a><b>Footnote 91:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag91">(return)</a>
+<p>See in subsequent parts of this work the references to
+Bonaventura, Bernardin Sen., Bernardin de Bust., &amp;c.; and also
+the encyclical letter of the present (A.D. 1840) reigning
+pontiff.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To this point, however, we must repeatedly revert <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page239" id="page239"></a>{239}</span>
+hereafter; at present, I will only add one further consideration.
+If, as we are now repeatedly told, the utmost sought by the
+invocation of saints is that they would intercede for the
+supplicants; that no more is meant than we of the Anglican Church
+mean when we earnestly entreat our fellow-Christians on earth to
+pray for us,&mdash;why should not the prayers to the saints be
+confined exclusively to that form of words which would convey the
+meaning intended? why should other forms of supplicating them be
+adopted, whose obvious and direct meaning implies a different
+thing? If we request a Christian friend to pray for us, that we may
+be strengthened and supported under a trial and struggle in our
+spiritual warfare, we do not say, "Friend, strengthen me; Friend,
+support me." That entreaty would imply our desire to be, that he
+would visit us himself, and comfort and strengthen us by his own
+kind words and cheering offices of consolation and encouragement.
+To convey our meaning, our words would be, "Pray for me; remember
+me in your supplications to the throne of grace. Implore God, of
+his mercy, to give me the strength and comfort of his Holy Spirit."
+If nothing more is ever intended to be conveyed, than a similar
+request for their prayers, when the saints are "suppliantly
+invoked," in a case of such delicacy, and where there is so much
+danger of words misleading, why have other expressions of every
+variety been employed in the Roman Liturgies, as well as in the
+devotions of individuals, which in words appeal to the saints, not
+for their prayers, but for their own immediate exertion in our
+behalf, their assistance, succour, defence, and
+comfort,&mdash;"Protect us from our enemies&mdash;Heal the diseases
+of our minds&mdash;Release us from our sin&mdash;Receive us at the
+hour of death?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page240" id=
+"page240"></a>{240}</span>
+<p>In the present work, however, were it not for the example and
+warning set us by this still greater departure from Scripture and
+the primitive Church, we need not have dwelt on this immediate
+point; because we maintain that any invocation of saint or angel,
+even if it were confined to a petitioning for their prayers and
+intercessions, is contrary both to God's word and to the faith and
+practice of the primitive, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. We now
+proceed to the next portion of our proposed inquiry,&mdash;the
+present state of Roman Catholic worship, with respect to the
+invocation of saints and angels.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page241" id=
+"page241"></a>{241}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap2-3" id="chap2-3">CHAPTER III.</a></h3>
+<h4>PRESENT SERVICE IN THE CHURCH OF ROME.</h4>
+<p>In submitting to the reader's consideration the actual state of
+Roman Catholic worship at the present hour, I disclaim all desire
+to fasten upon the Church of Rome any of the follies and
+extravagancies of individual superstition. Probably many English
+Roman Catholics have been themselves shocked and scandalized by the
+scenes which their own eyes have witnessed in various parts of
+continental Europe. It would be no less unfair in us to represent
+the excesses of superstition there forced on our notice as the
+genuine legitimate fruits of the religion of Rome, than it would be
+in Roman Catholics to affiliate on the Catholics of the Anglican
+Church the wild theories and revolting tenets of all who assume the
+name of opponents to Rome. Well indeed does it become us of both
+Churches to watch jealously and adversely as against ourselves the
+errors into which our doctrines, if not preserved and guarded in
+their purity and simplicity, might have a tendency to seduce the
+unwary. And whilst I am fully alive to the necessity of us Anglican
+Catholics prescribing to ourselves a <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page242" id="page242"></a>{242}</span> practical application of
+the same rule in various points of faith and discipline, I would
+with all delicacy and respect invite Roman Catholics to do
+likewise. Especially would I entreat them to reflect with more than
+ordinary scrutiny and solicitude on the vast evils into which the
+practice of praying to saints and angels, and of pleading their
+merits at the throne of grace, has a tendency to betray those who
+are unenlightened and off their guard; and unless my eyes and my
+ears and my powers of discernment have altogether often deceived
+and failed me, I must add, actually betrays thousands. Often when I
+have witnessed abroad multitudes of pilgrims prostrate before an
+image of the Virgin, their arms extended, their eyes fixed on her
+countenance, their words in their native language pouring forth her
+praises and imploring her aid, I have asked myself, If this be not
+religious worship, what is? If I could transport myself into the
+midst of pagans in some distant part of the world at the present
+day; or could I have mingled with the crowd of worshippers
+surrounding the image of Minerva in Athens, or of Diana in Ephesus,
+when the servants of the only God called their fellow-creatures
+from such vanities, should I have seen or heard more unequivocal
+proofs that the worshippers were addressing their prayers to the
+idols as representations of their deities? Would any difference
+have appeared in their external worship? When the Ephesians
+worshipped their "great goddess Diana and the image which fell down
+from Jupiter," could their attitude, their eyes, or their words
+more clearly have indicated an assurance in the worshipper, that
+the Spirit of the Deity was especially present in that image, than
+the attitude, the eyes, the words of the pilgrims at Einsiedlin for
+example, are indications of the same <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page243" id="page243"></a>{243}</span> belief and assurance with
+regard to the statue of the Virgin Mary? These thoughts would force
+themselves again and again on my mind; and though since I first
+witnessed such things many years have intervened, chequered with
+various events of life, yet whilst I am writing, the scenes are
+brought again fresh to my remembrance; the same train of thought is
+awakened; and the lapse of time has not in the least diminished the
+estimate then formed of the danger, the awful peril, to which the
+practice of addressing saints and angels in prayer, even in its
+most modified and mitigated form, exposes those who are in
+communion with Rome. I am unwilling to dwell on this point longer,
+or to paint in deeper or more vivid colours the scenes which I have
+witnessed, than the necessity of the case requires. But it would
+have been the fruit of a morbid delicacy rather than of brotherly
+love, had I disguised, in this part of my address, the full extent
+of the awful dread with which I contemplate any approximation to
+prayers, of whatever kind, uttered by the lips or mentally
+conceived, to any spiritual existence in heaven above, save only to
+the one God exclusively. It is indeed a dread suggested by the
+highest and purest feelings of which I believe my frame of mind to
+be susceptible; it is sanctioned and enforced by my reason; and it
+is confirmed and strengthened more and more by every year's
+additional reflection and experience. Ardently as I long and pray
+for Christian unity, I could not join in communion with a Church,
+one of whose fundamental articles accuses of impiety those who deny
+the lawfulness of the invocations of saints.</p>
+<p>But I return from this digression on the peril of idolatry, to
+which as well the theory as the practice of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page244" id="page244"></a>{244}</span> the Roman
+Catholic Church exposes her members; and willingly repeat my
+disclaimer of any wish or intention whatever to fasten and filiate
+upon the Church of Rome the doctrines or the practice of
+individuals, or even of different sections of her communion. Still,
+in the same manner as I have referred to the extravagancies which
+offend us in many parts of Christendom now, I would recall some of
+the excesses into which renowned and approved authors of her
+communion have been betrayed. I seek not to fix on those members of
+the Roman Church who disclaim any participation in such excesses,
+the folly or guilt of others; but when we find many of the most
+celebrated among her sons tempted into such lamentable departures
+from primitive Christian worship, we are naturally led to ascertain
+whether the doctrine be not itself the genuine cause and source of
+the mischief;&mdash;whether the malady be not the immediate and
+natural effect of the tenet and practice operating generally, and
+not to be referred to the idiosyncrasy of the patient. A voice
+seems to address us from every side, when such excesses are
+witnessed, Firmly resist the beginnings of the evil; oppose its
+very commencement; it is not a question of degree, exclude the
+principle itself from your worship; give utterance to no
+invocation; mentally conceive no prayer to any being, save God
+alone; plead no other merits with Him than the merits of his only
+Son. Then, and then only, are you safe. Then, and then only, is
+your prayer catholic, primitive, apostolic, and scriptural.</p>
+<p>The<a id="footnotetag92" name="footnotetag92"></a><a href=
+"#footnote92"><sup>92</sup></a> most satisfactory method of
+conducting this <span class="pagenum"><a name="page245" id=
+"page245"></a>{245}</span> branch of our inquiry seems to be, that
+we should examine the Roman Ritual with reference to those several
+and progressive stages to which I have before generally referred;
+from the mere rhetorical apostrophe to the direct prayer for
+spiritual blessings petitioned for immediately from the person
+addressed. I am neither anxious to establish the progress
+historically, nor do I wish to tie myself down in all cases to the
+exact order of those successive stages, in my present citation of
+testimonies from the Roman Ritual. My anxiety is to give a fair
+view of what is now the real character of Roman Catholic worship,
+rather than to draw fine distinctions. I shall therefore survey
+within the same field of view the two fatal errors by which, as we
+believe, the worship of the Church of Rome is rendered unfit for
+the family of Christ to acknowledge it generally as their own: I
+mean the adoration of saints, and the pleading of their merits at
+the throne of grace, instead of trusting to the alone exclusive
+merits of the one only Mediator Jesus Christ our Lord, and
+addressing God Almighty alone.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote92" name=
+"footnote92"></a><b>Footnote 92:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag92">(return)</a>
+<p>I believe the method best calculated to supply us with the very
+truth is, as I have before observed, to trace the conduct of
+Christians at the shrines of the martyrs, and follow them in their
+successive departures further and further from primitive purity and
+simplicity, on the anniversaries of those servants of God. What was
+hailed there first in the full warmth of admiration and zeal for
+the honour and glory of a national or favourite martyr, crept
+stealthily, and step by step, into the regular and stated services
+of the Church.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I. In the original form of those prayers in which mention was
+made of the saints departed, Christians addressed the Supreme Being
+alone, either in praise for the mercies shown to the saints
+themselves, and to the Church through their means; or else in
+supplication, that the worshippers might have grace to follow their
+example, and profit by their instruction. Such, for instance, is
+the prayer in the Roman ritual<a id="footnotetag93" name=
+"footnotetag93"></a><a href="#footnote93"><sup>93</sup></a> on St.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page246" id=
+"page246"></a>{246}</span> John's day<a id="footnotetag94" name=
+"footnotetag94"></a><a href="#footnote94"><sup>94</sup></a> which
+is evidently the foundation of the beautiful Collect now used in
+the Anglican Church,&mdash;"Merciful Lord, we beseech thee to cast
+thy bright beams of light upon thy Church, that it being
+enlightened by the doctrine of thy Apostle and Evangelist St. John,
+may so walk in the light of thy truth, that it may at length attain
+to the light of everlasting life, through Jesus our Lord. Amen."
+Such too is the close of the Prayer for the whole state of Christ's
+Church militant here on earth, offered in our Anglican
+service,&mdash;"We bless thy holy name for all thy servants
+departed this life in thy faith and fear, beseeching thee to give
+us grace so to follow their good examples, that with them we may be
+partakers of thy heavenly kingdom. Grant this, O Father, for the
+sake of Jesus Christ our only Mediator and Advocate. Amen."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote93" name=
+"footnote93"></a><b>Footnote 93:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag93">(return)</a>
+<p>The references will generally be given to the Roman Breviary as
+edited by F.C. Husenbeth, Norwich, 1830. That work consists of four
+volumes, corresponding with the four quarters of the ecclesiastical
+year&mdash;Winter, Hiem.; Spring, Vern.; Summer,
+<i>&AElig;stiv</i>.; Autumn, Aut.; and the volumes will be
+designated by the corresponding initials, H. V. &AElig;. A.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote94" name=
+"footnote94"></a><b>Footnote 94:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag94">(return)</a>
+<p>"Ecclesiam, tuam, Domine, benignus illustra, ut beati Johannis
+Apostoli tui et evangelist&aelig; illuminata doctrinis, ad dona
+perveniat sempiterna. Per Dominum."&mdash;Husen. H. p. 243.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>II. The second stage supplies examples of a kind of rhetorical
+apostrophe; the speaker addressing one who was departed as though
+he had ears to hear. Were not this the foundation stone on which
+the rest of the edifice seems to have been built, we might have
+passed it by unnoticed. Of this we have an instance in the address
+to the Shepherds on Christmas-day. "Whom have ye seen, ye
+shepherds? Say ye, tell ye, who hath appeared on the earth? Say ye,
+what saw ye? Announce to us the nativity of Christ<a id=
+"footnotetag95" name="footnotetag95"></a><a href=
+"#footnote95"><sup>95</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote95" name=
+"footnote95"></a><b>Footnote 95:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag95">(return)</a>
+<p>Quem vidistis, Pastores? Dicite, Annunciate nobis. In terris
+quis apparuit? Dicite quidnam vidistis? Et annunciate Christi
+nativitatem.&mdash;H. 219.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page247" id=
+"page247"></a>{247}</span>
+<p>Another instance is seen in that beautiful song ascribed to
+Prudentius and used on the day of Holy Innocents:</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Hail! ye flowers of Martyrs." [Salvete flores martyrum. H.
+249.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>It is of the same character with other songs, said to be from
+the same pen, in which the town of Bethlehem is addressed, and even
+the Cross.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"O Thou of mighty cities." [O sola magnarum urbium. H. 306.]</p>
+<p>"Bend thy boughs, thou lofty tree...." [Flecte ramos arbor alta,
+&amp;c. Aut. 344.]</p>
+<p>"Worthy wast thou alone</p>
+<p>To bear the victim of the world."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Thus, on the feast of the exaltation of the Cross, this anthem
+is sung,&mdash;"O blessed Cross, who wast alone worthy to bear the
+King of the heavens and the Lord." [O crux benedicta, qu&aelig;
+sola fuisti digna portare Regem coelorum et Dominum. Alleluia. A.
+345.] Though unhappily, in an anthem on St. Andrew's day, this
+apostrophe becomes painful and distressing, in which not only is
+the cross thus apostrophised, but it is prayed to, as though it had
+ears to hear, and a mind to understand, and power to
+act,&mdash;"Hail, precious Cross! do thou receive the disciple of
+Him who hung upon thee, my master, Christ." [Salve, crux pretiosa
+suscipe discipulum ejus, qui pependit in te, magister meus
+Christus. A. 547.] The Church of Rome, in this instance, gives us a
+vivid example of the ease with which exclamations and apostrophes
+are made the ground-work of invocations. In the legend of the day
+similar, though not the same, words form a part of the salutation,
+which St. Andrew is there said to have addressed <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page248" id="page248"></a>{248}</span> to the
+cross of wood prepared for his own martyrdom, and then bodily
+before his eyes. There are many such addresses to the Cross, in
+various parts of the Roman ritual. (See A. 344.)</p>
+<p>In such apostrophes the whole of the Song of the Three Children
+abounds; and we meet with many such in the early writers.</p>
+<p>III. The third stage supplies instances of prayer to God,
+imploring him to allow the supplication of his saints to be offered
+for us. Of this we find examples in the Collects for St. Andrew's
+Eve and Anniversary, for the feast of St. Anthony, and various
+others.</p>
+<p>"We beseech thee, Almighty God, that he whose feast we are about
+to celebrate may implore thy aid for us," &amp;c. [Qu&aelig;sumus
+omnipotens Deus, ut beatus Andreas Apostolus cujus pr&aelig;venimus
+festivitatem, tuum pro nobis imploret auxilium. A. 545.]</p>
+<p>"That he may be for us a perpetual intercessor." [Ut apud te sit
+pro nobis perpetuus intercessor. A. 551.]</p>
+<p>"We beseech thee, O Lord, let the intercession of the blessed
+Anthony the Abbot commend us, that what we cannot effect by our own
+merits, we may obtain by his patronage [Ejus patrocinio assequamur.
+H. 490.]: through the Lord."</p>
+<p>These prayers I could not offer in faith. I am taught in the
+written word to look for no other intercessor in heaven, than one
+who is eternal and divine, therefore I can need no other. Had God,
+by his revealed word, told me that the intercessions of his
+servants departed should prevail with Him, provided I sought that
+benefit by prayer, I should, without any misgiving, have implored
+Him to receive their <span class="pagenum"><a name="page249" id=
+"page249"></a>{249}</span> prayers in my behalf; but I can find no
+such an intimation in the covenant. In that covenant the word of
+the God of truth and mercy is pledged to receive those, and to
+grant the prayers of those who come to him through his blessed Son.
+In that covenant, I am strictly commanded and most lovingly invited
+to approach boldly the Supreme Giver of all good things myself, and
+to ask in faith nothing wavering, with an assurance that He who
+spared not his own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, will, with
+Him, also freely give us all things. In this assurance I place
+implicit trust; and as long as I have my being in this earthly
+tabernacle, I will, by his gracious permission and help, pray for
+whatever is needful for the soul and the body; I will pray not for
+myself only, but for all, individually and collectively, who are
+near and dear to me, and all who are far from me; for my friends,
+and for those who wish me ill; for my fellow Christians, and for
+those who are walking still in darkness and sin;&mdash;I will pray
+for mercy on all mankind. And I will, as occasion offers, desire
+others among the faithful on earth to pray for me; and will take
+comfort and encouragement and holy hope from the reflection that
+their prayers are presented to God in my behalf, and that they will
+continue to pray for me when my own strength shall fail and the
+hour of my departure shall draw nigh. But for the acceptance of my
+own prayers and of theirs I can depend on no other Mediator in the
+world of spirits, than on HIM, whom his own Word declares to be the
+one Mediator between God and men, who prayed for me when He was on
+earth, who is ever making intercession for me in heaven. I know of
+no other in the unseen world, by whom I can have access to the
+Father; I find no other offered to me, I seek no <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page250" id="page250"></a>{250}</span> other, I
+want no other. I trust my cause,&mdash;the cause of my present
+life, the cause of my soul's eternal happiness,&mdash;to HIM and to
+his intercession. I thank God for the blessing. I am satisfied; and
+in the assurance of the omnipotence of his intercession, and the
+perfect fulness of his mediation, I am happy.</p>
+<p>On this point it were well to compare two prayers both offered
+to God; the one pleading with Him the intercession of the passion
+of his only Son, the other pleading the prayers of a mortal man.
+The first prayer is a collect in Holy Week, the second is a collect
+on St. Gregory's Day.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>We beseech thee, Almighty God, that we who among so many
+adversities from our own infirmity fail, the passion of thy only
+begotten Son interceding for us, may revive. V. 243.</p>
+<p>O God, who hast granted the rewards of eternal blessedness<a id=
+"footnotetag96" name="footnotetag96"></a><a href=
+"#footnote96"><sup>96</sup></a> to the soul of thy servant Gregory,
+mercifully grant that we who are pressed down by the weight of our
+sins, may, by his prayers with Thee, be raised up. V. 480.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote96" name=
+"footnote96"></a><b>Footnote 96:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag96">(return)</a>
+<p>I can never read this, and such passages as this, without asking
+myself, can such an assertion be in accordance with the inspired
+teaching?&mdash;"Judge nothing before the time, until the Lord
+come, who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness,
+and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts: and then shall
+every man have praise of God." I Cor. iv. 5.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>IV. The next form of prayer to which I would invite your serious
+attention, is one from which my judgment and my feelings revolt far
+more decidedly even than from the last-mentioned; and I have the
+most clear denouncement of my conscience, that by offering it I
+should do a wrong to my Saviour, and ungratefully disparage his
+inestimable merits, and the full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice
+and satisfaction of his omnipotent <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page251" id="page251"></a>{251}</span> atonement: I mean those
+prayers, still addressed to God, which supplicate that our present
+and future good may be advanced by the merits of departed mortals,
+that by their merits our sins may be forgiven, and our salvation
+secured; that by their merits our souls may be made fit for
+celestial joys, and be finally admitted into heaven.</p>
+<p>Of these prayers the Roman Breviary contains a great variety of
+examples, some exceeding others very much in their apparent
+forgetfulness and disregard of the merits of the only Saviour, and
+consequently far more shocking to the reason and affections of us
+who hold it a point of conscience to make the merits of Christ
+alone, all in all, exclusive of any other to be joined with them,
+the only ground of our acceptance with God.</p>
+<p>We find an example of this prayer in the collect on the day of
+St. Saturnine. "O God, who grantest us to enjoy the birth-day of
+the blessed Saturnine, thy martyr, grant that we may be aided by
+his merits, through the Lord." [Ejus nos tribue meritis adjuvari
+per Dominum. A. 544.]</p>
+<p>Another example, in which the supplicants plead for deliverance
+from hell, to be obtained by the merits and prayers of the saint
+together, is the Collect for December 6th, the day of St.
+Nicolas.</p>
+<p>"O God, who didst adorn the blessed Pontiff Nicolas with
+unnumbered miracles, grant, we beseech Thee, that by his merits and
+prayers we may be set free from the fires of hell, through,"
+&amp;c. [Ut ejus meritis et precibus &agrave; gehenn&aelig;
+incendiis liberemur. H. 436.]</p>
+<p>Another example, in like manner specifying both the merits and
+intercession of the departed saint, contains <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page252" id="page252"></a>{252}</span>
+expressions very unacceptable to many of those who are accustomed
+to make the Bible their study. It is a prayer to Joseph, the
+espoused husband of the Virgin Mary. Of him mention is made by name
+in the Gospel just before and just after the birth of Christ, as an
+upright, merciful man, to whom God on three several occasions made
+a direct revelation of his will, by the medium of a dream, with
+reference to the incarnate Saviour. Again, on the holy family
+visiting Jerusalem, when our Lord was twelve years of age, Mary,
+his mother, in her remonstrance with her Son, speaks to Him of
+Joseph thus: "Why hast Thou thus dealt with us? Behold thy father
+and I have sought Thee sorrowing." Upon which not one word was
+uttered by our Saviour that would enable us to form an opinion as
+to his own will with regard to Joseph. Our Lord seems purposely to
+have drawn their thoughts from his earthly connexion with them, and
+to have raised their minds to a contemplation of his unearthly, his
+heavenly, and eternal origin. "How is it that ye sought me? Wist ye
+not that I must be about my Father's business?" After this time,
+though the writings of the Holy Book, either historical, doctrinal,
+or prophetic, at the lowest calculation embrace a period of
+fourscore years, no allusion is made to Joseph as a man still
+living, or to his memory as one already dead. And yet he is one of
+those for the benefit of whose intercession the Church of Rome
+teaches her members to pray to God, and from whose merits they are
+taught to hope for succour.</p>
+<p>On the 19th of March the following Collect is offered to the
+Saviour of the world:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"We beseech thee, O Lord, that we may be succoured by the merits
+of the husband of thy most holy mother, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>{253}</span> so that
+what we cannot obtain by our own power, may be granted to us by his
+intercession. Who livest," &amp;c. [V. 486.]</p>
+<p>It is anticipating our instances of the different stages
+observable in the invocation of saints, to quote here direct
+addresses to Joseph himself; still it may be well to bring at once
+to a close our remarks with regard to the worship paid to him. We
+find that in the Litany of the Saints, "St. Joseph, pray for us,"
+is one of the supplications; but on his day (March 19) there are
+three hymns addressed to Joseph, which appear to be full of
+lamentable superstition, assigning, as they do, to him a share at
+least in the work of our salvation, and solemnly stating, as a
+truth, what, whether true or not, depends upon a groundless
+tradition, namely, that our blessed Lord and Mary watched by him at
+his death; ascribing to Joseph also that honour and praise, which
+the Church was wont to offer to God alone. The following are
+extracts from those hymns:</p>
+<p>First hymn. "Thee, Joseph, let the companies of heaven
+celebrate; thee let all the choirs of Christian people resound;
+who, bright in merits, wast joined in chaste covenant with the
+renowned Virgin. Others their pious death consecrates after death;
+and glory awaits those who deserve the palm. Thou alive, equal to
+those above, enjoyest God, more blessed by wondrous lot. O Trinity,
+most High, spare us who pray; grant us to reach heaven [to scale
+the stars] BY THE MERITS OF JOSEPH, that at length we may
+perpetually offer to thee a grateful song." [Te Joseph celebrent
+agmina coelitum. V. 485.]</p>
+<p>Second hymn. "O, Joseph, the glory of those in heaven, and the
+sure hope of our life, and the safeguard <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>{254}</span> of the
+world, benignly ACCEPT THE PRAISES WHICH WE joyfully sing TO
+THEE.... Perpetual praise to the most High Trinity, who granting to
+thee honours on high, give to us, BY THY MERITS, the joys of a
+blessed life." [Coelitum, Joseph, Decus. V. 486.]</p>
+<p>Third hymn. "He whom we, the faithful, worship with joy, whose
+exalted triumphs we celebrate, Joseph, on this day obtained by
+merit the joys of eternal life. O too happy! O too blessed! at
+whose last hour Christ and the Virgin together, with serene
+countenance, stood watching. Hence, conqueror of hell, freed from
+the bands of the flesh, he removes in placid sleep to the
+everlasting seats, and binds his temples with bright chaplets. Him,
+therefore, reigning, let us all importune, that he would be present
+with us, and that he obtaining pardon for our transgressions, would
+assign to us the rewards of peace on high. Be praises to thee, be
+honours to thee, O Trine God, who reignest, and assignest golden
+crowns to thy faithful servant for ever. Amen." [Iste, quem
+l&aelig;ti colimus fideles. V. 490.]</p>
+<p>It is painful to remark, that in these last clauses the very
+same word is employed when the Church of Rome applies to Joseph to
+assign to the faithful the rewards of peace, and when she ascribes
+glory to God for assigning to his faithful servants crowns of gold.
+Indeed these hymns contain many expressions which ought to be
+addressed to the Saviour alone, whose "glory is in the heavens,"
+who is "the hope of us on earth," and "the safeguard of the
+world."</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Under this fourth head I will add only one more specimen. Would
+it were not to be found in the Roman <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page255" id="page255"></a>{255}</span> Liturgies since the Council
+of Trent: God grant it may ere long be wiped out of the book of
+Christian worship! It is a collect in which the Church of Rome
+offers this prayer to God the Son:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"O God, whose right hand raised the blessed Peter when walking
+on the waves, that he sank not; and rescued his fellow-apostle
+Paul, for the third time suffering shipwreck, from the depth of the
+sea; mercifully hear us, and grant that by the merits of both we
+may obtain the glory of eternity." [H. 149.]</p>
+<p>Now suppose for a moment it had been intended in any one prayer
+negatively to exclude the merits of Christ from the great work of
+our eternal salvation, and to limit our hopes of everlasting glory
+to the merits of St. Peter and St. Paul, could that object have
+been more effectually and fully secured than by this prayer? Not
+one word alluding to the redemption which is in Christ can be found
+in this prayer. The sentiment in the first member of the prayer
+refers us to the power exercised by the Son of God, and Son of man,
+when he was intabernacled in our flesh; and the second expression
+teaches us to contemplate the providence of our Almighty Saviour in
+his deeds of beneficence. But no reference, even by allusion, is
+here made to the merits of Christ's death&mdash;none to his merits
+as our great Redeemer; none to his merits as our never-ceasing and
+never-failing Intercessor. We are led to approach the throne of
+grace only with the merits of the two Apostles on our tongue. If
+those who offer it hope for acceptance through THE MEDIATION of
+Jesus Christ, and for the sake of his merits, that hope is neither
+suggested nor fostered by this prayer. The truth, as it is in
+Jesus, would compel us in addressing <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page256" id="page256"></a>{256}</span> Him, the Saviour of the
+world, to think of the merits of neither Peter nor Paul, of neither
+angel nor spirit. Instead of praying to him that we may obtain the
+glories of eternity for their merits, true faith in Christ would
+bid us throw ourselves implicitly on his omnipotent merits alone,
+and implore so great a blessing for his own mercy's sake. If we
+receive the whole truth, can it appear otherwise than a
+disparagement of his perfect and omnipotent merits, to plead with
+Him the merits of one, whom the Saviour himself rebuked with as
+severe a sentence as ever fell from his lips, "Get thee behind me,
+Satan, thou art an offence to me; for thou savourest not the things
+that be of God, but those that be of men;" [Matt. xvi. 23.] and of
+another who after his conversion, when speaking of the salvation
+wrought by Christ, in profound humility confesses himself to be a
+chief of those sinners for whom the Saviour died, "This is a
+faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus
+came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief?" [1 Tim.
+i. 15.] We feel, indeed, a sure and certain hope that these two
+fellow-creatures, once sinners, but by God's grace afterwards
+saints, have found mercy with God, and will live with Christ for
+ever; but to pray for the same mercy at his gracious hands for the
+sake of their merits is repugnant to our first principles of
+Christian faith. When we think of merits, for which to plead for
+mercy, we can think of Christ's, and of Christ's alone.</p>
+<p>V. Our thoughts are next invited to that class of prayers which
+the Church of Rome authorizes and directs to be addressed
+immediately to the Saints themselves. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page257" id="page257"></a>{257}</span> Of these
+there are different kinds, some far more objectionable than others,
+though all are directly at variance with that one single and simple
+principle, to which, as we believe, a disciple of the cross can
+alone safely adhere&mdash;prayer to God, and only to God. The words
+of the Council of Trent are, as we have already observed, very
+comprehensive on this subject. They not only declare it to be a
+good and useful thing supplicantly to invoke the saints reigning
+with Christ: but also for the obtaining of benefits from God,
+through Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer and
+Saviour, to fly to their prayers, HELP, and ASSISTANCE. Whether
+these last words can be interpreted as merely words of surplusage,
+or whether they must be understood to mean that the faithful must
+have recourse to some help and assistance of the saints beyond
+their intercession, is a question to which we need not again
+revert. If it had been intended to embrace other kinds of
+beneficial succour, and other help and assistance, perhaps it would
+be difficult to find words more expressive of such general aid and
+support as a human being might hope to derive, in answer to prayer
+from the Giver of all good. And certainly they are words employed
+by the Church, when addressing prayers directly to God. Be this as
+it may, the public service-books of the Church of Rome
+unquestionably, by no means adhere exclusively to such addresses to
+the saints, as supplicate them to pray for the faithful on earth.
+Many a prayer is couched in language which can be interpreted only
+as conveying a petition to them immediately for their assistance,
+temporal and spiritual.</p>
+<p>But let us calmly review some of the prayers, supplications,
+invocations, or by whatever name religious addresses now offered to
+the saints may be called; and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page258" id="page258"></a>{258}</span> first, we will examine that
+class in which the petitioners ask merely for the intercession of
+the saints.</p>
+<p>We have an example of this class in an invocation addressed to
+St. Ambrose on his day, December 7; the very servant of Christ in
+whose hymns and prayers no address of prayer or invocation to any
+saint or martyr can be found.</p>
+<p>"O thou most excellent teacher, the light of the Holy Church, O
+blessed Ambrose, thou lover of the divine law, deprecate for us [or
+intercede for us with] the Son of God<a id="footnotetag97" name=
+"footnotetag97"></a><a href="#footnote97"><sup>97</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote97" name=
+"footnote97"></a><b>Footnote 97:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag97">(return)</a>
+<p>H. 438. "Deprecare pro nobis Filium Dei." This invocation to
+Ambrose is instantly followed by this prayer to God: "O God, who
+didst assign to thy people the blessed Ambrose as a minister of
+eternal salvation, grant, we beseech Thee, that we may deserve to
+have him as our intercessor in heaven, whom we had as a teacher of
+life on earth."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Church of Rome has wisely availed herself of the pious
+labours of Ambrose, Bishop of Milan; and has introduced into her
+public worship many of the hymns usually ascribed to him. Would she
+had followed his example, and addressed her invocations to no one
+but our Creator, our Redeemer, and our Sanctifier! Could that holy
+man hear the supplications now offered to him, and could be make
+his voice heard in return among those who now invoke him, that
+voice, we believe, would only convey a prohibitory monition like
+that of the Angel to St. John when he fell down before him, See
+thou do it not; I am thy fellow-servant; worship God.</p>
+<p>It is needless to multiply instances of this fifth kind of
+invocation. In the "Litany of the Saints" more than fifty different
+saints are enumerated by name, and are invoked to pray and
+intercede for those who join in <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page259" id="page259"></a>{259}</span> it. Among the persons
+invoked are Raphael [&AElig;. cxcii.], Gervasius, Protasius, and
+Mary Magdalene; whilst in the Litany [&AElig;. cxcvi.] for the
+recommendation of the soul of the sick and dying, the names of
+Abel, and Abraham, are specified.</p>
+<p>Under this head I will call your attention only to one more
+example. Indeed I scarcely know whether this hymn would more
+properly be classed under this head, or reserved for the next;
+since it appears to partake of the nature of each. It supplicates
+the martyr to obtain by his prayers spiritual blessings, and yet
+addresses him as the person who is to grant those blessings. It
+implores him to liberate us by the love of Christ; but so should we
+implore the Father of mercies himself. Still, as the more safe
+course, I would regard it as a prayer to St. Stephen only to
+intercede for us. But it may be well to derive from it a lesson on
+this point; how easily the transition glides from one false step to
+a worse; how infinitely wiser and safer it is to avoid evil in its
+very lowest and least noxious appearance:</p>
+<p>"Martyr of God [or Unconquered Martyr], who, by following the
+only Son of the Father, triumphest over thy conquered enemies, and,
+as conqueror, enjoyest heavenly things; by the office of thy prayer
+wash out our guilt; driving away the contagion of evil; removing
+the weariness of life. The bands of thy hallowed body are already
+loosed; loose thou us from the bands of the world, by the love of
+the Son of God [or by the gift of God Most High]." [H. 237.]</p>
+<p>In the above hymn the words included within brackets are the
+readings adopted in the last English edition of the Roman Breviary;
+and in this place, when we are about to refer to many hymns now in
+use, it may be well to observe, that in the present day we find
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page260" id=
+"page260"></a>{260}</span> various readings in the hymns as they
+are still printed for the use of Roman Catholics in different
+countries. In some instances the changes are curious and striking.
+Grancolas, in his historical commentary on the Roman Breviary
+(Venice, 1734, p. 84), furnishes us with interesting information as
+to the chief cause of this diversity. He tells us that Pope Urban
+VIII., who filled the papal throne from 1623 to 1644, a man well
+versed in literature, especially in Latin poetry, and himself one
+of the distinguished poets of his time, took measures for the
+emendation of the hymns in the Roman Breviary. He was offended by
+the many defects in their metrical composition, and it is said that
+upwards of nine hundred and fifty faults in metre were corrected,
+which gave to Urban occasion to say that the Fathers had begun
+rather than completed the hymns. These, as corrected, he caused to
+be inserted in the Breviary. Grancolas proceeds to tell us that
+many complained of these changes, alleging that the primitive
+simplicity and piety which breathed in the hymns had been
+sacrificed to the niceties of poetry. "Accessit Latinitas, et
+recessit pietas." The verse was neater, but the thought was
+chilled.</p>
+<p>VI. But the Roman Church by no means limits herself to this kind
+of invocation; prayers are addressed to saints, imploring them to
+hear, and, as of themselves, to grant the prayers of the faithful
+on earth, and to release them from the bands of sin, without any
+allusion to prayers to be made by those saints. It grieves me to
+copy out the invocation made to St. Peter on the 18th of January,
+called the anniversary of the Chair of St. Peter at Rome; the words
+of our Blessed Lord himself, and of his beloved and inspired
+Apostle, seem to rise up in judgment against that prayer, and
+condemn it. It <span class="pagenum"><a name="page261" id=
+"page261"></a>{261}</span> will be well to place that hymn
+addressed to St. Peter, side by side with the very word of God, and
+then ask, Can this prayer be safe?</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>1. Now, O good Shepherd, 1. Jesus saith, I am the good merciful
+Peter, Shepherd. John x. 11.</p>
+<p>2. Accept the prayers of us 2. Whatsoever ye shall ask in who
+supplicate, my name, that will I do. That whatsoever ye shall ask
+the Father in my name, he may give it you. John xiv. 13; xv.
+16.</p>
+<p>3. And loose the bands of our 3. The blood of Jesus Christ sins,
+by the power committed to his Son cleanseth us from all sin. thee,
+1 John i. 7.</p>
+<p>4. By which thou shuttest 4. These things saith he that heaven
+against all by a word, is holy, he that is true, he that and
+openest it<a id="footnotetag98" name="footnotetag98"></a><a href=
+"#footnote98"><sup>98</sup></a>. openeth and no man shutteth, and
+shutteth and no man openeth. Rev. iii. 7.</p>
+<p class="i10">I am he that liveth and was dead, and am alive for
+evermore, and have the keys of hell and of death. Rev. i. 18.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote98" name=
+"footnote98"></a><b>Footnote 98:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag98">(return)</a>
+<p>This hymn is variously read. In the edition of Mr. Husenbeth (H.
+497.) it is: "O Peter, blessed shepherd, of thy mercy receive the
+prayers of us who supplicate, and loose by thy word the bands of
+our sins, thou to whom is given the power of opening heaven to the
+earth, and of shutting it when open."&mdash;"Beate pastor, Petre,
+clemens accipe voces precantum, criminumque vincula verbo resolve,
+cui potestas tradita aperire terris coelum, apertum claudere." H.
+497.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Let it not be answered that many a Christian minister is now
+called a good shepherd. Let it not be said that the very words of
+our ordination imply the conveyance of the power of loosing and
+binding, of opening and shutting the gates of heaven. When prayer
+is contemplated, we can think only of One, HIM, who has
+appropriated the title of Good Shepherd to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page262" id="page262"></a>{262}</span> himself.
+And we must see that Peter cannot, by any latitude of
+interpretation, be reckoned now among those to whom the awful duty
+is assigned of binding and loosing upon earth.</p>
+<p>The same unsatisfactory associations must be excited in the mind
+of every one who takes a similar view of Christian worship with
+myself, by the following supplication to various saints on St.
+John's day:</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Let the heaven exult with praises<a id="footnotetag99" name=
+"footnotetag99"></a><a href="#footnote99"><sup>99</sup></a>,</p>
+<p>Let the earth resound with joy;</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page263" id=
+"page263"></a>{263}</span>
+<p>The sacred solemnities sing</p>
+<p>The glory of the Apostles.</p>
+<p>O ye Just Judges of the age,</p>
+<p>And true lights of the world,</p>
+<p>We pray you with the vows of our hearts,</p>
+<p>Hear the prayers of your suppliants.</p>
+<p>Ye who shut the heaven by a word,</p>
+<p>And loose its bars,</p>
+<p>Loose us by command, we beseech you,</p>
+<p>From all our sins.</p>
+<p>Ye to whose word is subject</p>
+<p>The health and weakness of all,</p>
+<p>Cure us who are diseased in morals,</p>
+<p>Restore us to virtues.</p>
+<p>So that when Christ shall come,</p>
+<p>The Judge at the end of the world,</p>
+<p>He may make us partakers</p>
+<p>Of eternal joy.</p>
+<p>To God the Father be Glory,</p>
+<p>And to his only Son,</p>
+<p>With the Spirit the Comforter,</p>
+<p>Now and for ever. Amen<a id="footnotetag100" name=
+"footnotetag100"></a><a href=
+"#footnote100"><sup>100</sup></a>."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote99" name=
+"footnote99"></a><b>Footnote 99:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag99">(return)</a>
+<p>Having inserted in the text a translation of this hymn from a
+copy with which I had been long familiar, I think it right to
+insert here the two forms side by side. They supply an example of
+the changes to which we have already alluded.</p>
+<table summary="Versions">
+<tr>
+<td>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><i>Lille</i>, 1823.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>OLD VERSION.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Exultet coelum laudibus,</p>
+<p>Resultet terra gaudiis,</p>
+<p>Apostolorum gloriam</p>
+<p>Sacra canunt solemnia.</p>
+<p>Vos s&aelig;cli justi judices</p>
+<p>Et vera mundi lamina,</p>
+<p>Votis precamur cordium</p>
+<p>Audite preces supplicum.</p>
+<p>Qui coelum verbo clauditis</p>
+<p>Serasque ejus solvitis,</p>
+<p>Nos a peccatis omnibus</p>
+<p>Solvite jussu, qu&aelig;sumus.</p>
+<p>Quorum pr&aelig;cepto subditur</p>
+<p>Salus et languor omnium,</p>
+<p>Sanate &aelig;gros moribus,</p>
+<p>Nos reddentes virtutibus.</p>
+<p>Ut cum judex advenerit</p>
+<p>Christus in fine s&aelig;culi,</p>
+<p>Nos sempiterni gaudii</p>
+<p>Faciat esse compotes.</p>
+<p>Deo Patri sit gloria,</p>
+<p>Ejusque soli Filio,</p>
+<p>Cum Spiritu paracleto,</p>
+<p>Et nunc et in perpetuum.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Amen.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</td>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><i>Norwich</i>, 1830.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>POPE URBAN'S VERSION.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Exultet orbis gaudiis,</p>
+<p>Coelum resultet laudibus,</p>
+<p>Apostolorum gloriam</p>
+<p>Tellus et astra concinunt.</p>
+<p>Vos s&aelig;culorum judices</p>
+<p>Et vera mundi lumina,</p>
+<p>Votis precamur cordium</p>
+<p>Audite voces supplicum.</p>
+<p>Qui templa coeli clauditis</p>
+<p>Serasque verbo solvitis,</p>
+<p>Nos a reatu noxios</p>
+<p>Solvi jubete qu&aelig;sumus.</p>
+<p>Pr&aelig;cepta quorum protinus</p>
+<p>Languor salusque sentiunt,</p>
+<p>Sanate mentes languidas,</p>
+<p>Augete nos virtutibus.</p>
+<p>Ut cum redibit arbiter</p>
+<p>In fine Christus s&aelig;culi,</p>
+<p>Nos sempiterni gaudii</p>
+<p>Concedat esse compotes.</p>
+<p>Jesu, tibi sit gloria</p>
+<p>Qui natus es de virgine,</p>
+<p>Cum Patre et Almo Spiritu,</p>
+<p>In sempiterna s&aelig;cula.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Amen. (H. 243.)</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote100" name=
+"footnote100"></a><b>Footnote 100:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag100">(return)</a>
+<p>Or as in the present Roman Breviary:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Let the world exult with joy,</p>
+<p>Let the heaven resound with praise;</p>
+<p>The earth and stars sing together</p>
+<p>The glory of the Apostles.</p>
+<p>Ye judges of the ages</p>
+<p>And true lights of the world,</p>
+<p>With the prayers of our hearts we implore,</p>
+<p>Hear the voices of your suppliants.</p>
+<p>Ye who shut the temples of heaven,</p>
+<p>And loose its bars by a word,</p>
+<p>Command ye us, who are guilty,</p>
+<p>To be released from our sins; we pray.</p>
+<p>Ye whose commands forthwith</p>
+<p>Sickness and health feel,</p>
+<p>Heal our languid minds,</p>
+<p>Increase us in virtues,</p>
+<p>That when Christ, the Judge, shall return,</p>
+<p>In the end of the world,</p>
+<p>He may grant us to be partakers</p>
+<p>Of eternal joy.</p>
+<p>Jesus, to thee be glory,</p>
+<p>Who wast born of a virgin,</p>
+<p>With the Father and the Benign Spirit,</p>
+<p>Through eternal ages. Amen.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page264" id=
+"page264"></a>{264}</span>
+<p>Many a pious and humble Catholic of the Roman Communion, I have
+no doubt, would regard these prayers as little more than an
+application to Peter and the rest of the Apostles for absolution,
+and would interpret its several clauses as an acknowledgment only
+of that power, which Christ himself delegated to them of binding
+and loosing sins on earth. But the gulf fixed between these
+prayers, and the lawful use of the power given to Christ's ordained
+ministers on earth, is great indeed. To satisfy the mind of this,
+it is not necessary to enter upon even the confines of the wide
+field of controversy, as to what was really conveyed by Christ to
+his Apostles. I would ask only two questions. Could any of us
+address these same words to one of Christ's ministers on earth? And
+could we address our blessed Saviour himself in stronger or more
+appropriate language, as the Lord of our destinies&mdash;the God
+who heareth prayer&mdash;the Physician of our souls?</p>
+<p>Suppose for example we were celebrating the anniversary of
+Christ's Nativity, of his Resurrection, or his Ascension, what word
+in this hymn, expressive of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page265"
+id="page265"></a>{265}</span> power, and honour, and justice, and
+mercy, would not be appropriate? What word would not apply to Him,
+in most perfect accordance with Scripture language? And can we
+without offence, without doing wrong to his great Name, address the
+same to our fellow-servants, even though we may believe them to be
+with Him in glory?</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Let the heaven exult with praises&mdash;</p>
+<p>Let the earth resound with joy;</p>
+<p>The sacred solemnities sing</p>
+<p>The glory of the Lord.</p>
+<p>O Thou just Judge of the age,</p>
+<p>And true light of the world,</p>
+<p>We pray Thee with the supplications of our hearts</p>
+<p>Hear the prayers of Thy suppliants,</p>
+<p>Thou who shuttest the heavens by a word,</p>
+<p>And loosest its bars.</p>
+<p>Loose us by command, we beseech Thee,</p>
+<p>From all our sins.</p>
+<p>Thou to whose word is subject</p>
+<p>The health and weakness of all,</p>
+<p>Cure us who are diseased in morals,</p>
+<p>Restoring us to virtue.</p>
+<p>So that when Thou shalt come,</p>
+<p>The Judge at the end of the world,</p>
+<p>Thou mayest make us partakers</p>
+<p>Of eternal joy.</p>
+<p>Glory to Thee, O Lord,</p>
+<p>Who wast born of a virgin,</p>
+<p>With the Father and the Holy Spirit,</p>
+<p>For ever and ever. Amen.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Only for a moment let us see how peculiarly all these
+expressions are fitting in a hymn of prayer and praise <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page266" id="page266"></a>{266}</span> to our
+God and Saviour, recalling to our minds the words of inspiration;
+and then again let us put the question to our conscience, Is this
+language fit for us to use to a fellow-creature?</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Let the heaven exult with praises, Let the heavens rejoice, and
+Let the earth resound with joy: let the earth be glad ... (exultet
+is the very word used in the Vulgate translation of the
+Psalm)&mdash;before the Lord, for He cometh to judge the
+earth.&mdash;Ps. xcvi (xcv). 11.</p>
+<p>The holy solemnities sing Ye shall have a song, as in the The
+glory of the Lord. night when a holy solemnity is kept ... And the
+Lord shall cause His glorious voice to be heard. Isa. xxx. 29. Let
+the heaven and earth praise Him. Ps. lxix (lxviii). 34.</p>
+<p>Thou just Judge of mankind, All judgment is committed And true
+light of the world, unto the Son. John v. 22. That was the true
+Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. John i.
+9.</p>
+<p>With the prayers of our hearts we With my whole heart have I
+pray Thee, sought Thee. Ps. cxix (cxviii). Hear the prayers of Thy
+suppliants. 10. Hear my prayer, O God. Ps. lxi (lx). 1. Whom have I
+in heaven but Thee? Ps. lxxiii (lxxii). 25. And this is the
+confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask any thing according
+to His will, He heareth us. 1 John v. 14.</p>
+<p>Thou who shuttest heaven by I have the keys of death and of Thy
+word, hell. These things saith He that And loosest its bars, is
+holy, He that is true: He that hath the key of David. He that
+openeth and no man shutteth, and shutteth and no man <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page267" id="page267"></a>{267}</span> openeth.
+I have set before thee an open door, and no man can shut it. Rev.
+i. 18; iii. 7,8</p>
+<p>Release us by command, we pray Thy sins be forgiven thee. Thee,
+Matt. ix. 22. Bless the Lord, O From all our sins. my soul ... who
+forgiveth all thine iniquities. Ps. ciii. 2. This is your blood of
+the New Testament, which is shed for many for the remission of
+sins. Matt. xxvi. 28. Have mercy upon me, O God ... according to
+the multitude of Thy tender mercies, blot out my transgressions.
+Wash me throughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.
+Ps. li (l).</p>
+<p>Thou to whose word is subject Bless the Lord, O my soul ... The
+health and weakness of all, who healeth all thy diseases. Ps. ciii
+(cii). 2, 3.</p>
+<p>Do Thou heal us who are morally Create in me a clean heart, O
+diseased, God, and renew a right spirit Restoring us to virtue;
+within me. Ps. li. 10 (4.) That when Thou, the Judge, shalt appear
+in the end of the world, Thou mayest grant us to be partakers of
+eternal joy.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This would be a Christian prayer, a primitive prayer, a
+scriptural prayer, a prayer well fitting mortal man to utter by his
+tongue and from his heart, to the God who heareth prayer; and him
+who shall in sincere faith offer such a prayer, Christ will never
+send empty away. But if this prayer, fitted as it seems only to be
+addressed to God, be offered to the soul of a departed
+saint&mdash;I will not talk of blasphemy, and deadly sin, and
+idolatry,&mdash;I will only ask members of the Church of Rome to
+weigh all these things well, one by one. These are not subjects for
+crimination and recrimination.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page268" id=
+"page268"></a>{268}</span>
+<p>We have had far too much of those unholy weapons on both sides.
+Speaking the truth in love, I should be verily guilty of a sin in
+my own conscience were I, with my views of Christian worship, to
+offer this prayer to the soul of a man however holy, however
+blessed, however exalted.</p>
+<p>The next part of our work will be given exclusively to the
+worship of the Blessed Virgin Mary.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page269" id=
+"page269"></a>{269}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>PART III.</h2>
+<h3><a name="chap3-1" id="chap3-1">CHAPTER I.</a></h3>
+<h4><a href="#sect3-1-1" id="sect3-1-1" name="sect3-1-1">SECTION
+I.</a>&mdash;THE VIRGIN MARY.</h4>
+<p>The worship of the blessed Virgin Mary is so highly exalted in
+the Church of Rome, as to require the formation of a new name to
+express its high character. Neither could the Latin language
+provide a word which would give an adequate idea of its excellence,
+nor could any word previously employed by the writers in Greek,
+meet the case satisfactorily. The newly invented term Hyperdulia,
+meaning "a service above others," seems to place the service of the
+Virgin on a footing peculiarly its own, as raised above the worship
+of the saints departed, and of the angels of God, cherubim and
+seraphim, with all the hosts of principalities and powers in
+heavenly places. The service of the Virgin Mary thus appears not
+only to justify, but even to require a separate and distinct
+examination in this volume. The general principles, however, which
+we have already endeavoured to establish and illustrate with regard
+as well to the study of the Holy Scriptures as to the evidence of
+primitive antiquity, are equally applicable here; and with those
+principles present to our minds, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page270" id="page270"></a>{270}</span> we will endeavour now to
+ascertain the truth with regard to the worship of the Virgin as now
+witnessed in the Roman Catholic Church.</p>
+<p>Of the Virgin Mary, think not, brethren of the Church of Rome,
+that a true member of the Anglican branch of the Catholic Church
+will speak disparagingly or irreverently. Were such an one found
+among us, we should say of him, he knows not what spirit he is of.
+Our church, in her Liturgy, her homilies, her articles, in the
+works too of the best and most approved among her divines and
+teachers, ever speaks of Saint Mary, the blessed Virgin, in the
+language of reverence, affection, and gratitude.</p>
+<p>She was a holy virgin and a holy mother. She was highly
+favoured, blessed among women. The Lord was with her, and she was
+the mother of our only Saviour. She was herself blessed, and
+blessed was the fruit of her womb. We delight in the language of
+our ancestors, in which they were used to call her "Mary, the
+Blissful Maid." Should any one of those who profess and call
+themselves Christians and Catholics, entertain a wish to interrupt
+the testimony of every succeeding age, and to interpose a check to
+the fulfilment of her own recorded prophecy, "All generations shall
+call me blessed," certainly the Anglican Catholic Church will never
+acknowledge that wish to be the genuine desire of one of her own
+sons. The Lord hath blessed her; yea, and she shall be blessed.</p>
+<p>But when we are required either to address our supplications to
+her, or else to sever ourselves from the communion of a large
+portion of our fellow-Christians, we have no room for hesitation;
+the case offers us no alternative. Our love of unity must yield to
+our love <span class="pagenum"><a name="page271" id=
+"page271"></a>{271}</span> of truth; we cannot join in that worship
+which in our conscience we believe to be a sin against God. Whether
+we are right or wrong in this matter, God will himself judge: and,
+compared with his acquittal and approval, the severity of man's
+judgment cannot turn us aside from our purpose. But before any one
+pronounces a sentence of condemnation against us, or of approval on
+himself, it well becomes him patiently and dispassionately to weigh
+the evidence; lest his decision may not be consistent with justice
+and truth.</p>
+<p>In addition to what has been already said on the general subject
+of addressing our invocation to any created being&mdash;to any one
+among the principalities and thrones, dominions, powers, angels,
+archangels, and all the hosts of heaven, to any one among the
+saints, martyrs, confessors, and holy men departed hence in the
+Lord&mdash;I would submit to my brethren of the Roman Catholic
+Church some considerations specifically applicable to the case of
+the blessed Virgin, and to the practice of the Church of Rome in
+the religious worship paid to her.</p>
+<p>First, it will be well for us to possess ourselves afresh of
+whatever light is thrown on this subject by the Scriptures
+themselves.</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-1-2" id="sect3-1-2">SECTION
+II.</a>&mdash;EVIDENCE OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.</h4>
+<p>The first intimation given to us that a woman was in the
+providence of God appointed to be the instrument, or channel by
+which the Saviour of mankind should be brought into the world, was
+made immediately after the Fall, and at the very first dawn of the
+day of salvation. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page272" id=
+"page272"></a>{272}</span> I am fully aware how the various
+criticisms on the words in which that first promise of a Saviour is
+couched, have been the well-spring of angry controversy. I will not
+enter upon that field. The authorized English version thus renders
+the passage: "I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and
+between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou
+shalt bruise his heel." [Gen. iii. 15.] The Roman Vulgate, instead
+of the word "it," reads "she." Surely such a point as this should
+be made a subject of calm and enlightened criticism, without warmth
+or heart-burnings on either side. But for our present purpose, it
+matters little what turn that controversy may take. I believe our
+own to be the true rendering: but whether the word dictated here by
+the Holy Spirit to Moses should be so translated as to refer to the
+seed of the woman generally, as in our authorized version, or to
+the male child, the descendant of the woman, as the Septuagint
+renders it, or to the word "woman" itself; and if the latter,
+whether it refer to Eve, the mother of every child of a mortal
+parent, or to Mary, the immediate mother of our Saviour: whatever
+view of that Hebrew word be taken, no Christian can doubt, that
+before the foundations of the world were laid, it was foreordained
+in the counsels of the Eternal Godhead, that the future Messiah,
+the Redeemer of Mankind, should be of the seed of Eve, and in the
+fulness of time be born of a Virgin of the name of Mary, and that
+in the mystery of that incarnation should the serpent's head be
+bruised. I wish not to dwell on this, because it bears but remotely
+and incidentally on the question at issue. I will, therefore, pass
+on, quoting <span class="pagenum"><a name="page273" id=
+"page273"></a>{273}</span> only the words of one of the most
+laborious among Roman Catholic commentators, De Sacy. "The sense is
+the same in the one and in the other, though the expression varies.
+The sense of the Hebrew is, The Son of the Woman, Jesus Christ, Son
+of God, and Son of a Virgin, shall bruise thy head, and by
+establishing the kingdom of God on earth, destroy thine. The sense
+of the Vulgate is, The woman, by whom thou hast conquered man,
+shall bruise thy head, not by herself, but by Jesus Christ." [Vol.
+i. p. 132.]</p>
+<p>The only other passage in which reference appears to be made in
+the Old Testament to the Mother of our Lord, contains that
+celebrated prophecy in the seventh chapter of Isaiah, about which I
+am not aware that any difference exists between the Anglican and
+the Roman Churches. "A Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son, and
+shall call his name Immanuel." [Isaiah vii. 4.]</p>
+<p>I find no passage in the Old Testament which can by any
+inferential application be brought to bear on the question of
+Mary's being a proper object of invocation.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>In the New Testament, mention by name is made of the Virgin Mary
+by St. Matthew, St. Mark, and St. Luke, and by St. John in his
+Gospel, as the Mother of our Lord, but not by name; and by no other
+writer. Neither St. Paul in any one of his many Epistles, though he
+mentions the names of many of our Lord's disciples, nor St. James,
+nor St. Peter, who must often have seen her during our Lord's
+ministry, nor St. Jude, nor St. John in any of his three Epistles,
+or in the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page274" id=
+"page274"></a>{274}</span> Revelation (though, as we learn from his
+own Gospel, she had of especial trust been committed to his
+care)&mdash;no one of these either mentions her as living, or
+alludes to her memory as dead.</p>
+<p>The first occasion on which any reference is made in the New
+Testament to the Virgin Mary is the salutation of the Angel, as
+recorded by St. Luke in the opening chapter of his Gospel. The last
+occasion is when she is mentioned by the same Evangelist, as "Mary
+the Mother of Jesus," in conjunction with his brethren and with the
+Apostles and the women all continuing in prayer and supplication,
+immediately after the ascension of our blessed Lord. Between these
+two occasions the name of Mary occurs under a variety of
+circumstances, on every one of which we shall do well to
+reflect.</p>
+<p>The first occasion, we have already said, is the salutation of
+Mary by the angel, announcing to her that she should be the Mother
+of the Son of God. Surely no daughter of Eve was ever so
+distinguished among women; and well does it become us to cherish
+her memory with affectionate reverence. The words addressed to her
+when on earth by the angel in that announcement, with a little
+variation of expression, are daily addressed to her by the Roman
+Catholic Church, now that she is no longer seen, but is removed to
+the invisible world. "Hail, thou that art highly favoured!" (or as
+the Vulgate reads it, "full of grace") "the Lord is with thee.
+Blessed art thou among women." [Luke i. 28.] On the substitution of
+the expression, "full of grace," for "highly favoured," or, as our
+margin suggests, "graciously accepted, or much graced," I am not
+desirous <span class="pagenum"><a name="page275" id=
+"page275"></a>{275}</span> of troubling you with any lengthened
+remark. I could have wished that since the Greek is different in
+this passage, and in the first chapter of St. John, where the words
+"full of grace" are applied to our Saviour, a similar distinction
+had been observed in the Roman translation. But the variation is
+unessential. The other expression, "Blessed art thou among women,"
+is precisely and identically the same with the ascription of
+blessedness made by an inspired tongue, under the elder covenant,
+to another daughter of Eve. "Blessed above women," or (as both the
+Septuagint and the Vulgate render the word) "Blessed among women
+shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be." [Judges v. 24.] We can
+see no ground in such ascription of blessedness for any posthumous
+adoration of the Virgin Mary.</p>
+<p>The same observation applies with at least equal strictness to
+that affecting interview between Mary and Elizabeth, when,
+enlightened doubtless by an especial revelation, Elizabeth returned
+the salutation of her cousin by addressing her as the Mother of her
+Lord, and hailing her visit as an instance of most welcome and
+condescending kindness, "Whence is this to me, that the mother of
+my Lord should come unto me?" [Luke i. 43.] Members of the Anglican
+Church are taught to refer to this event in Mary's life with
+feelings of delight and gratitude. On this occasion she uttered
+that beautiful hymn, "The Song of the blessed Virgin Mary," which
+our Church has selected for daily use at Evening Prayer. These
+incidents bring before our minds the image of a spotless Virgin,
+humble, pious, obedient, holy: a chosen servant of God&mdash;an
+exalted pattern for her fellow-creatures; but still a
+fellow-creature, and a fellow-servant: <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page276" id="page276"></a>{276}</span> a virgin
+pronounced by an angel blessed on earth. But further than this we
+cannot go. We read of no power, no authority, neither the power and
+influence of intercession, nor the authority or right of command
+being ever, even by implication, committed to her; and we dare not
+of our own minds venture to take for granted a statement of so vast
+magnitude, involving associations so awful. We reverence her memory
+as a blessed woman, the virgin mother of our Lord. We cannot
+supplicate any blessing at her hand; we cannot pray to her for her
+intercession.</p>
+<p>The angel's announcement to Joseph, whether before or after the
+birth of Christ, the visit of the Magi, the flight into Egypt, and
+the return thence, in the record of all of which events by St.
+Matthew the name of Mary occurs, however interesting and important
+in themselves, seem to require no especial attention with reference
+to the immediate subject of our inquiry. To Joseph the angel speaks
+of the blessed Virgin as "Mary thy wife." [Matt. i. 20.] In every
+other instance she is called "The young child's mother," or "His
+mother."</p>
+<p>In relating the circumstances of Christ's birth the Evangelist
+employs no words which seem to invite any particular examination.
+Joseph went up into the city of David to be taxed with Mary his
+espoused wife; and there she brought forth her first-born son, and
+wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger. And the
+shepherds found Mary and Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger.
+And Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her heart.
+[Luke ii. 19.]</p>
+<p>Between the birth of Christ, and the flight into Egypt, St. Luke
+records an event to have happened by no means unimportant&mdash;the
+presentation of Christ in <span class="pagenum"><a name="page277"
+id="page277"></a>{277}</span> the temple. "And when the days of her
+purification according to the law of Moses were accomplished, they
+brought him to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord. And he
+(Simeon) came by the Spirit into the temple; and when the parents
+brought in the child Jesus to do for him after the custom of the
+law, then took he him up in his arms, and blessed God, and said,
+Lord, &amp;c. And Joseph and his mother marvelled at those things
+which were spoken of him. And Simeon blessed them, and said unto
+Mary his mother, Behold, this child is set for the fall and rising
+again of many in Israel; and for a sign that shall be spoken
+against, (yea, a sword shall pierce through thine own soul also)
+that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed." [Luke ii. 28.]
+In this incident it is worthy of remark, that Joseph and Mary are
+both mentioned by name, that they are both called the parents of
+the young child; that both are equally blessed by Simeon; and that
+the good old Israelite, illumined by the spirit of prophecy, when
+he addresses himself immediately to Mary, speaks only of her future
+sorrow, and does not even most remotely or faintly allude to any
+exaltation of her above the other daughters of Abraham. "A sword
+shall pass through thine own soul also," a prophecy, as St.
+Augustine interprets it, accomplished when she witnessed the
+sufferings and death of her Son. (See De Sacy, vol. xxxii. p.
+138.)</p>
+<p>The next occasion on which the name of the Virgin Mary is found
+in Scripture, is the memorable visit of herself, her husband, and
+her Son, to Jerusalem, when he was twelve years old. And the manner
+in which this incident is related by the inspired Evangelist, so
+far from intimating that Mary was destined to be an object of
+worship to the believers in her Son, affords <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page278" id="page278"></a>{278}</span> evidence
+which exhibits strongly a bearing the direct contrary. Here again
+Joseph and Mary are both called his parents: Joseph is once
+mentioned by name, and so is Mary. If the language had been so
+framed as on purpose to take away all distinction of preference or
+superiority, it could not more successfully have effected its
+purpose. But not only so, of the three addresses recorded as having
+been made by our blessed Lord to his beloved mother (and only three
+are recorded in the New Testament), the first occurs during this
+visit to Jerusalem. It was in answer to the remonstrance made by
+Mary, "Son, why hast thou thus dealt with us? Behold, thy father
+and I have sought thee sorrowing." [Luke ii. 48.] "How is it that
+ye sought me? Knew ye not that I must be about my Father's
+business?"&mdash;[or in my Father's house, as some render it.] He
+lifts up their minds from earth to heaven, from his human to his
+eternal origin. He makes no distinction here,&mdash;"Wist YE not."
+Again, I would appeal to any dispassionate person to pronounce,
+whether this reproof, couched in these words, countenances the idea
+that our blessed Lord intended his human mother to receive such
+divine honour from his followers to the end of time as the Church
+of Rome now pays? and whether St. Luke, whose pen wrote this
+account, could have been made cognizant of any such right invested
+in the Virgin?</p>
+<p>The next passage calling for our consideration is that which
+records the first miracle: "And the third day there was a marriage
+in Cana of Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there, and both
+Jesus was called and his disciples to the marriage. And when they
+wanted wine (when the wine failed), the mother of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page279" id="page279"></a>{279}</span> Jesus
+saith unto him, They have no wine. Jesus saith unto her, Woman,
+what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come." [John ii.
+1.]</p>
+<p>I have carefully read the comments on this passage, which
+different writers of the Roman Catholic communion have recommended
+for the adoption of the faithful, and I desire not to make any
+remarks upon them. Let the passage be interpreted in any way which
+enlightened criticism and the analogy of Scripture will sanction,
+and I would ask, after a careful weighing of this incident, the
+facts, and the words in all their bearings, would any unprejudiced
+mind expect that the holy and beloved person, towards whom the meek
+and tender and loving Jesus employed this address, was destined by
+that omniscient and omnipotent Saviour to be an object of those
+religious acts with which, as we shall soon be reminded, the Church
+of Rome now daily approaches her?</p>
+<p>It is pain and grief to me thus to extract and to comment upon
+these passages of Holy Writ. The feelings of affection and of
+reverence approaching awe, with which I hold the memory of that
+blessed Virgin Mother of my Lord, raise in me a sincere repugnance
+against dwelling on this branch of our subject, beyond what the
+cause of the truth as it is in Jesus absolutely requires; and very
+little more of the same irksome task awaits us. You will of course
+expect me to refer to an incident recorded with little variety of
+expression, and with no essential difference, by the first three
+Evangelists. St. Matthew's is the most full account, and is
+this,&mdash;"While he yet talked to the people, behold his mother
+and his brethren stood without desiring to speak with him. Then one
+said unto him, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page280" id=
+"page280"></a>{280}</span> Behold, thy mother and thy brethren
+stand without, desiring to speak with thee. But he answered and
+said unto him that told him, Who is my mother, and who are my
+brethren? And he stretched forth his hand toward his disciples and
+said, Behold my mother and my brethren. For whosoever shall do the
+will of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother and
+sister and mother." [Matt. xii. 46.] Or, as St. Luke expresses
+it,&mdash;"And he answered and said unto them, My mother and my
+brethren are these, who hear the word of God and do it." [Luke
+viii. 21.]</p>
+<p>Humanly speaking, could a more favourable opportunity have
+presented itself to our blessed Lord of referring to his beloved
+mother, in such a manner as to exalt her above her fellow daughters
+of Eve,&mdash;in such a manner too, as that Christians in after
+days, when the Saviour's bodily presence should have been taken
+away from them, and the extraordinary communications of the Spirit
+of truth should have been withdrawn, might have remembered that He
+had spoken these things, and have been countenanced by his words in
+doing her homage? But so far is this from the plain and natural
+tendency of the words of her blessed Son, that, had He of
+acknowledged purpose (and He has condescended to announce to us, in
+another place (John xiii. 19, &amp;c.), the purpose of his words)
+wished to guard his disciples, whilst the world should last,
+against being seduced by any reverence and love which they might
+feel towards Himself into a belief that they ought to exalt his
+mother above all other created beings, and pay her holy worship, we
+know not what words He could have adopted more fitted for that
+purpose. There was nothing in the communication which seemed to
+call for <span class="pagenum"><a name="page281" id=
+"page281"></a>{281}</span> such a remark. A plain message announces
+to Him as a matter of fact one of the most common occurrences of
+daily life. And yet He fixes upon the circumstance as the
+groundwork not only of declaring the close union which it was his
+good pleasure should exist between obedient and true believers and
+Himself, but of cautioning all against any superstitious feelings
+towards those who were nearly allied to Him by the ties of his
+human nature. With reverence I would say, it is as though He
+desired to record his foreknowledge of the errors into which his
+disciples were likely to be seduced, and warned them beforehand to
+shun and resist the temptation. The evidence borne by this passage
+against our offering any religious worship to the Virgin, on the
+ground of her having been the mother of our Lord, seems clear,
+strong, direct, and inevitable. She was the mother of the Redeemer
+of the world, and blessed is she among women; but that very
+Redeemer Himself, with his own lips, assures us that every faithful
+servant of his heavenly Father shall be equally honoured with her,
+and possess all the privileges which so near and dear a
+relationship with Himself might be supposed to convey.&mdash;Who is
+my mother? Or, who are my brethren? Behold my mother and my
+brethren! Whosoever shall do the will of my Father in heaven, the
+same is my brother, and my sister, and my mother.</p>
+<p>No less should we be expected in this place to take notice of
+that most remarkable passage of Holy Scripture, [Luke xi. 27.] in
+which our blessed Lord is recorded under different circumstances to
+have expressed the same sentiments, but in words which will appear
+to many even more strongly indicative of his desire to prevent any
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page282" id=
+"page282"></a>{282}</span> undue exaltation of his mother. "As he
+spake these things, a certain woman of the company lifted up her
+voice and said unto him, Blessed is the womb that bare thee, and
+the paps which thou hast sucked." On the truth or wisdom of that
+exclamation our Lord makes no remark; He refers not to his mother
+at all, not even to assure them (as St. Augustine in after-ages
+taught, see De Sacy, vol. xxxii. p. 35.), that however blessed Mary
+was in her corporeal conception of the Saviour, yet far more
+blessed was she because she had fully borne Him spiritually in her
+heart. He alludes not to his mother except for the purpose of
+instantly drawing the minds of his hearers from contemplating any
+supposed blessedness in her, and of fixing them on the sure and
+greater blessedness of his true, humble, faithful, and obedient
+disciples, to the end of time. "But he said, Yea, rather [or, as
+some prefer, yea, verily, and] blessed are they that hear the word
+of God, and keep it." Again, it must be asked, could such an
+exclamation have been met by such a reply, had our Lord's will been
+to exalt his mother, as she is now exalted by the Church of Rome?
+Rather, we would reverently ask, would He have given this turn to
+such an address, had He not desired to check any such feeling
+towards her?</p>
+<p>That most truly affecting and edifying incident recorded by St.
+John as having taken place whilst Jesus was hanging in his agony on
+the cross, an incident which speaks to every one who has a mind to
+understand and a heart to feel, presents to us the last occasion on
+which the name of the Virgin Mother of our Lord occurs in the
+Gospels. No paraphrase could add force, or clearness, or beauty to
+the simple narrative of the Evangelist; no exposition could bring
+out its parts more prominently or <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page283" id="page283"></a>{283}</span> affectingly. The calmness
+and authority of our blessed Lord, his tenderness and affection,
+his filial love in the very midst of his agony, it is impossible to
+describe with more heart-stirring and heart-soothing pathos than is
+conveyed in the simple language of him whom the Saviour at that
+awful hour addressed, as He committed his mother to him of especial
+trust. But not one syllable falls from the lips of Christ, or from
+the pen of the beloved disciple, who records this act of his
+blessed Master's filial piety, which can by possibility be
+construed to imply, that our blessed Lord intended Mary to be held
+in such honour by his disciples, as would be shown in the offering
+of prayer and praise to her after her dissolution. He who could by
+a word, rather by the mere motion of his will, have bidden the
+whole course of nature and of providence, so to proceed as that all
+its operations should provide for the health and safety, the
+support and comfort of his mother&mdash;He, when He was on the
+cross, and when He was on the point of committing his soul into the
+hands of his Father, leaves her to the care of one whom He loved,
+and whose sincerity and devotedness to Him He had, humanly
+speaking, long experienced. He bids him treat Mary as his own
+mother, He bids Mary look to John as to her own son for support and
+solace: "Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother, and his
+mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene.
+When Jesus, therefore, saw his mother and the disciple standing by
+whom he loved, he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son;
+then saith he to the disciple, Behold thy mother." [John xix. 25.]
+And He added no more. If Christ willed that his beloved mother
+should end her days in peace, removed equally <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page284" id="page284"></a>{284}</span> from want
+and the desolation of widowhood on the one hand, and from splendour
+and notoriety on the other, nothing could be more natural than such
+conduct in such a Being at such a time. But if his purpose was to
+exalt her into an object of religious adoration, that nations
+should kneel before her, and all people do her homage, then the
+words and the conduct of our Lord at this hour seem altogether
+unaccountable: and so would the words of the Evangelist also be,
+"And from that hour that disciple took her unto his own home."</p>
+<p>After this not another word falls from the pen of St. John which
+can be made to bear on the station, the character, the person, or
+circumstances of Mary. After his resurrection our Saviour remained
+on earth forty days before He finally ascended into heaven. Many of
+his interviews and conversations with his disciples during that
+interval are recorded in the Gospel. Every one of the four
+Evangelists relates some act or some saying of our Lord on one or
+more of those occasions. Mention is made by name of Mary Magdalene,
+of Mary [the mother] of Joses, of Mary [the mother] of James, of
+Salome, of Joanna, of Peter, of Cleophas, of the disciple whom
+Jesus loved, at whose house the mother of our Lord then was; of
+Thomas, of Nathanael. The eleven also are mentioned generally. But
+by no one of the Evangelists is reference made at all to Mary the
+mother of our Lord, as having been present at any one of those
+interviews; her name is not alluded to throughout.</p>
+<p>On one solitary occasion subsequently to the ascension of
+Christ, mention is made of Mary his mother, in company with many
+others, and without any further distinction to separate her from
+the rest: "And when <span class="pagenum"><a name="page285" id=
+"page285"></a>{285}</span> they were come in (from having witnessed
+the ascension of our Saviour), they went up into an upper room,
+where abode both Peter, and James, and John, and Andrew, Philip,
+and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew, James the son of Alphaeus, and
+Simon Zelotes, and Judas the brother of James. These all continued
+with one accord in prayer and supplication with the women, and Mary
+the mother of Jesus, and with his brethren." [Acts i. 13.] Not one
+word is said of Mary having been present to witness even the
+ascension of her blessed Son; we read no command of our Lord, no
+wish expressed, no distant intimation to his disciples that they
+should even show to her marks of respect and honour; not an
+allusion is there made to any superiority or distinction and
+preeminence. Sixty years at the least are generally considered to
+be comprehended within the subsequent history of the New Testament
+before the Apocalypse was written; but neither in the narrative,
+nor in the Epistles, nor yet in the prophetic part of the Holy
+Book, is there the most distant allusion to Mary. Of him to whose
+loving care our dying Lord committed his beloved mother of especial
+trust, we hear much. John, we find, putting forth the miraculous
+power of Christ at the Beautiful Gate of the Temple; we find him
+imprisoned and arraigned before the Jewish authorities; but not one
+word is mentioned as to what meanwhile became of Mary. We find John
+confirming the Church in Samaria; we find him an exile in the
+island of Patmos; but no mention is made of Mary. Nay, though we
+have three of his epistles, and the second of them addressed to one
+"whom he loved in the truth," we find neither from the tongue nor
+from the pen of St. John, one single allusion to the mother of our
+Lord alive or dead. And then, whatever may have been the matter
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page286" id=
+"page286"></a>{286}</span> of fact as to St. Paul, neither the many
+letters of that Apostle, nor the numerous biographical incidents
+recorded of him, intimate in the most remote degree that he knew
+any thing whatever concerning her individually. St. Paul does
+indeed refer to the human nature of Christ derived from his human
+mother, and had he been taught by his Lord to entertain towards her
+such sentiments as the Roman Church now professes to entertain, he
+could not have had a more inviting occasion to give utterance to
+them. But instead of thus speaking of the Virgin Mary, he does not
+even mention her name or state at all, but refers only in the most
+general way to her nature and her sex as a daughter of Adam: "But
+when the fulness of time was come, God sent forth his Son, MADE OF
+A WOMAN, made under the law; to redeem them that were under the
+Law, that we might receive the adoption of sons." [Gal. iv. 4.]
+From a time certainly within a few days of our Saviour's ascension
+the Scriptures are totally silent throughout as to Mary, whether in
+life or in death.</p>
+<p>Here we might well proceed to contrast this view which the
+Scriptures of eternal truth give of the blessed Virgin Mary with
+the authorized and appointed worship of that branch of the
+Christian Church which is in communion with Rome. We must first,
+however, here also examine the treasures of Christian antiquity,
+and ascertain what witness the earliest uninspired records bear on
+this immediate point.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page287" id=
+"page287"></a>{287}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap3-2" id="chap3-2">CHAPTER II.</a>&mdash;EVIDENCE
+OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.</h3>
+<p>Closing the inspired volume, and seeking at the fountain-head
+for the evidence of Christian antiquity, what do we find? For
+upwards of three centuries and a half (the limit put to our present
+inquiry) we discover in no author, Christian or heathen, any trace
+whatever of the invocation of the Virgin Mary by Catholic
+Christians. I have examined every passage which I have found
+adduced by writers of the Church of Rome, and have searched for any
+other passages which might appear to deserve consideration as
+bearing favourably on their view of the subject; and the worship of
+the Virgin, such as is now insisted upon by the Council of Trent,
+prescribed by the Roman ritual, and practised in the Church of
+Rome, is proved by such an examination to have had neither name,
+nor place, nor existence among the early Christians. Forgive my
+importunity if I again and again urge you to join us in weighing
+these facts well; and to take your view of them from no advocate on
+the one side or the other. Search the Scriptures for yourselves,
+search the earliest writers for yourselves, and for yourselves
+search with all diligence into the authentic and authorized
+liturgies of your own Church, your missals, and breviaries, and
+formularies. Hearsay evidence, testimony <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page288" id="page288"></a>{288}</span> taken at
+second or third hand, vague rumours and surmises will probably
+expose us, on either side, to error. Let well-sifted genuine
+evidence be brought by an upright and an enlightened mind to bear
+on the point at issue, and let the issue joined be this, Is the
+practice of praying to the Virgin, and praising her, in the
+language of the prayers and praises now used in the prescribed
+formularies of the Roman Church, primitive. Catholic,
+Apostolical?</p>
+<p>I am aware that among those who adhere to the Tridentine
+Confession of faith, there are many on whom this investigation will
+not be allowed to exercise any influence.</p>
+<p>The sentiments of Huet, wherever they are adopted, would operate
+to the total rejection of such inquiries as we are instituting in
+this work. His words on the immaculate conception of the Virgin are
+of far wider application than the immediate occasion on which he
+used them, "That the blessed Mary never conceived any sin in
+herself is in the present day an established principle of the
+Church, and confirmed by the Council of Trent. In which it is our
+duty to acquiesce, rather than in the dicta of the ancients, if any
+seem to think otherwise, among whom must be numbered Origen."
+[Origen's Works, vol. iv. part 2, p. 156.]</p>
+<p>In this address, however, we take for granted that the reader is
+open to conviction, desirous of arriving at the truth, and, with
+that view, ready to examine and sift the evidence of primitive
+antiquity.</p>
+<p>In that investigation our attention is very soon called to the
+remarkable fact, that, whereas in the case of the invocation of
+saints and angels, the defenders of that doctrine and practice
+bring forward a great variety of passages, in which mention is
+supposed to be made of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page289" id=
+"page289"></a>{289}</span> those beings as objects of honour and
+reverential and grateful remembrance, the passages quoted with a
+similar view, as regards the Virgin Mary, are very few indeed:
+whilst the passages which intimate that the early Christians paid
+her no extraordinary honour (certainly not more than we of the
+Anglican Church do now) are innumerable.</p>
+<p>I have thought that it might be satisfactory here to refer to
+each separately of those earliest writers, whose testimony we have
+already examined on the general question of the invocation of
+saints and angels, and, as nearly as may be, in the same order.</p>
+<p>In the former department of our investigation we first
+endeavoured to ascertain the evidence of those five primitive
+writers, who are called the Apostolical Fathers; and, with regard
+to the subject now before us, the result of our inquiry into the
+same works is this:</p>
+<p>1. In the Epistle ascribed to BARNABAS we find no allusion to
+Mary.</p>
+<p>2. The same must be affirmed of the book called The Shepherd of
+HERMAS.</p>
+<p>3. In CLEMENT of Rome, who speaks of the Lord Jesus having
+descended from Abraham according to the flesh, no mention is made
+of that daughter of Abraham of whom he was born.</p>
+<p>4. IGNATIUS in a passage already quoted (Ad Eph. vii. p. 13 and
+16) speaks of Christ both in his divine and human nature as Son of
+God and man, and he mentions the name of Mary, but it is without
+any adjunct or observation whatever, "both of Mary and of God." In
+another place he speaks of her virgin state, and the fruit of her
+womb; and of her having borne our God Jesus the Christ; but he adds
+no <span class="pagenum"><a name="page290" id=
+"page290"></a>{290}</span> more; not even calling her "The
+blessed," or "The Virgin." In the interpolated Epistle to the
+Ephesians, the former passage adds "the Virgin" after "Mary," but
+nothing more.</p>
+<p>5. In the Epistle of POLYCARP we find an admonition to virgins
+(Page 186), how they ought to walk with a spotless and chaste
+conscience, but there is no allusion to the Virgin Mary.</p>
+<p>JUSTIN MARTYR. In this writer I do not find any passage so much
+in point as the following, in which we discover no epithet
+expressive of honour, or dignity, or exaltation, though it refers
+to Mary in her capacity of the Virgin mother of our Lord:&mdash;"He
+therefore calls Himself the Son of Man, either from his birth of a
+virgin, who was of the race of David, and Jacob, and Isaac, and
+Abraham, or because Abraham himself was the father of those persons
+enumerated, from whom Mary drew her origin." [Trypho, &sect; 100.
+p. 195.] And a little below he adds, "For Eve being a virgin and
+incorrupt, having received the word from the serpent, brought forth
+transgression and death; but Mary the Virgin having received faith
+and joy (on the angel Gabriel announcing to her the glad tidings,
+that the Spirit of the Lord should come upon her, and the power of
+the Highest overshadow her) answered, Be it unto me according to
+thy word. And of her was born He of whom we have shown that so many
+Scriptures have been spoken; He by whom God destroys the serpent,
+and angels and men resembling [the serpent]; but works a rescue
+from death for such as repent of evil and believe in Him." One more
+passage will suffice, "And according to the command of God, Joseph,
+taking Him with Mary, went into Egypt." [Trypho, &sect; 102. p.
+196.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page291" id=
+"page291"></a>{291}</span>
+<p>Among those "Questions" to which we have referred under the head
+of Justin Martyr's works, but which are confessedly of a much less
+remote date, probably of the fifth century, an inquiry is made, How
+could Christ be free from blame, who so often set at nought his
+parent? The answer is, that He did not set her at nought; that He
+honoured her in deed, and would not have hurt her by his
+words;&mdash;but then the respondent adds, that Christ chiefly
+honoured Mary in that view of her maternal character, under which
+all who heard the word of God and kept it, were his brothers and
+sisters and mother; and that she surpassed all women in virtue.
+[Qu. 136. p. 500.]</p>
+<p>IREN&AElig;US. To the confused passage relied upon by Bellarmin,
+in which Iren&aelig;us is supposed to represent Mary as the
+advocate of Eve, we have already fully referred (page 120 of this
+work). In that passage there is no allusion to any honour paid, or
+to be paid to her, nor to any invocation of her. In every passage
+to which my attention has been drawn, Iren&aelig;us speaks of the
+mother of our Lord as Mary, or the Virgin, without any adjunct, or
+term of reverence.</p>
+<p>CLEMENT of Alexandria speaks of the Virgin, and refers to an
+opinion relative to her virgin-state, but without one word of
+honour. [Stromat. vii. 16. p. 889.]</p>
+<p>TERTULLIAN<a id="footnotetag101" name=
+"footnotetag101"></a><a href="#footnote101"><sup>101</sup></a>. The
+passages in which this ancient writer refers to the mother of our
+Lord are very far from countenancing the religious worship now paid
+to her by Roman Catholics: "The brothers of the Lord had not
+believed on him, as it is contained in the Gospel published
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page292" id=
+"page292"></a>{292}</span> before Marcion. His mother likewise is
+not shown to have adhered to him; whereas others, Marys and
+Marthas, were frequently in his company." (See Tert. De carne
+Christi, c. 7. (p. 364. De Sacy, 29. 439.)) And he tells us that
+Christ was brought forth by a virgin, who was also about to be
+married once after the birth, that the two titles of sanctity might
+be united in Christ by a mother who was both a virgin and also once
+married<a id="footnotetag102" name="footnotetag102"></a><a href=
+"#footnote102"><sup>102</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote101" name=
+"footnote101"></a><b>Footnote 101:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag101">(return)</a>
+<p>Paris, 1675. De carne Christi, vii. p. 315. De Monogamia, vii.
+p. 529. N.B. Both these treatises were probably written after he
+became a Montanist.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote102" name=
+"footnote102"></a><b>Footnote 102:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag102">(return)</a>
+<p>On the works once ascribed to Methodius, but now pronounced to
+be spurious, see above, p. 131.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>ORIGEN thus speaks: "Announcing to Zacharias the birth of John,
+and to Mary the advent of our Saviour among men." [Comment on John,
+&sect; 24. vol. iv. p. 82.] In his eighth homily on Leviticus, he
+refers to Mary as a pure Virgin. [Vol. ii. p. 228.] In the forged
+work of later times, the writer, speaking of our Saviour, says, "He
+had on earth an immaculate and chaste mother, this much blessed
+Virgin Mary." [Hom. iii. in Diversos.]</p>
+<p>In CYPRIAN we do not find one word expressive of honour or
+reverence towards the Virgin Mary. Nor is her name mentioned in the
+letter of his correspondent Firmilian, Bishop of Cappadocia.</p>
+<p>LACTANTIUS speaks of "a holy virgin" [Vol. i. p. 299.] chosen
+for the work of Christ but not one other word of honour, or tending
+to adoration; though whilst dwelling on the incarnation of the Son
+of God, had he or his fellow-believers paid religious honour to
+her, he could scarcely have avoided all allusion to it.</p>
+<p>EUSEBIUS speaks of the Virgin Mary, but is altogether silent as
+to any religious honour of any kind being due to her. In the
+Oration of the Emperor Constantine (as it is recorded by Eusebius),
+direct mention is made of the "chaste virginity," and of the maid
+who was mother <span class="pagenum"><a name="page293" id=
+"page293"></a>{293}</span> of God, and yet remained a virgin. But
+the object present to the author's mind was so exclusively God
+manifest in the flesh, that he does not throughout even mention the
+name of Mary, or allude to any honour paid or due to her. [Cantab.
+1720. &sect; 11. p. 689. and &sect; 19. p. 703.]</p>
+<p>ATHANASIUS, bent ever on establishing the perfect divinity and
+humanity of Christ, thus speaks: "The general scope of Holy
+Scripture is to make a twofold announcement concerning the Saviour,
+that He was always God, and is a Son; being the Word and the
+brightness and wisdom of the Father, and that He afterwards became
+man for us, taking flesh of the Virgin Mary, who bare God ([Greek:
+taes theotokou])." [Athan. Orat. iii. Cont. Arian. p. 579.]</p>
+<p>The work which we have already examined, called The Apostolical
+Constitutions, compiled probably about the commencement of the
+fourth century, cannot be read without leaving an impression clear
+and powerful on the mind, that no religious honour was paid to the
+Virgin Mary at the time when they were written; certainly not more
+than is now cheerfully paid to her memory by us of the Anglican
+Church. Take, for example, the prayer prescribed to be used on the
+appointment of a Deaconess; the inference from it must be, that
+others with whom the Lord's Spirit had dwelt, were at least held in
+equal honour with Mary: "O Eternal God, Father of our Lord Jesus
+Christ, Maker of male and female, who didst fill with thy Spirit
+Miriam, and Hannah, and Holda, and didst not disdain that thy Son
+should be born of a woman," &amp;c. [Book viii. c. 20.] Thus,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page294" id=
+"page294"></a>{294}</span> too, in another passage, Mary is spoken
+of just as other women who had the gift of prophecy; and of her
+equally and in conjunction with the others it is said, that they
+were not elated by the gift, nor lifted themselves up against the
+men. "But even have women prophesied; in ancient times Miriam, the
+sister of Aaron and Moses; after her Deborah; and afterwards Huldah
+and Judith; one under Josiah, the other under Darius; and the
+mother of the Lord also prophesied, and Elizabeth her kinswoman;
+and Anna; and in our day the daughters of Philip; yet they were not
+lifted up against the men, but observed their own measure.
+Therefore among you also should any man or woman have such a grace,
+let them be humble, that God may take pleasure in them." [Book
+viii. c. 2.]</p>
+<p>In the Apostolical Canons I find no reference to Mary; nor
+indeed any passage bearing on our present inquiry, except the last
+clause of all, containing the benediction. In this passage not only
+is the prayer for spiritual blessings addressed to God alone, but
+it is offered exclusively through the mediation of Christ alone,
+without alluding to intercessions of angels saints, or the Virgin:
+"Now may God, the only unproduced Being, the Creator of all things,
+unite you all by peace in the Holy Ghost; make you perfect unto
+every good work, not to be turned aside, unblameable, not deserving
+reproof; and may He deem you worthy of eternal life with us, by the
+mediation of his beloved Son Jesus Christ our God and Saviour: with
+whom be glory to Him the Sovereign God and Father, in the Holy
+Ghost the Comforter, now and ever, world without end. Amen." [Vol.
+i. p. 450.]</p>
+<p>I have not intentionally omitted any ancient author <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page295" id="page295"></a>{295}</span> falling
+within the limits of our present inquiry, nor have I neglected any
+one passage which I could find bearing testimony to any honour paid
+to the Virgin. The result of my research is, that I have not
+discovered one solitary expression which implies that religious
+invocation and honour, such as is now offered to Mary by the Church
+of Rome, was addressed to her by the members of the primitive
+Catholic Church.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page296" id=
+"page296"></a>{296}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap3-3" id="chap3-3">CHAPTER III.</a>&mdash;THE
+ASSUMPTION OF THE VIRGIN MARY.</h3>
+<p>By the Church of England, two festivals are observed in grateful
+commemoration of two events relating to Mary as the mother of our
+Lord:&mdash;the announcement of the Saviour's birth by the message
+of an angel, called, "The Annunciation of the blessed Virgin Mary,"
+and "The Presentation of Christ in the Temple," called also, "The
+Purification of Saint Mary the Virgin." In the service for the
+first of these solemnities, we are taught to pray that, as we have
+known the incarnation of the Son of God by the message of an angel,
+so by his Cross and Passion we may be brought to the glory of his
+resurrection. In the second, we humbly beseech the Divine Majesty
+that, as his only-begotten Son was presented in the Temple in the
+substance of our flesh, so we may be presented unto Him with pure
+and clean hearts by the same, his Son Jesus Christ our Lord. These
+days are observed to commemorate events declared to us on the most
+sure warrant of Holy Scripture; and these prayers are primitive and
+evangelical. They pray only to God for spiritual blessings through
+his Son. The second prayer was used in the Church <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page297" id="page297"></a>{297}</span> from very
+early times, and is still retained in the Roman Breviary (Hus.
+Brev. Rom. H. 536.); whereas, instead of the first<a id=
+"footnotetag103" name="footnotetag103"></a><a href=
+"#footnote103"><sup>103</sup></a>, we find there unhappily a prayer
+now supplicating that those who offer it, "believing Mary to be
+truly the Mother of God, might be aided by her intercessions with
+Him." [V. 496.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote103" name=
+"footnote103"></a><b>Footnote 103:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag103">(return)</a>
+<p>This collect also is found in the Roman Missal, as a Prayer at
+the Post Communion; though it does not appear in the Breviarium
+Romanum.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the Roman Catholic Church, on the other hand, feasts are
+observed to the honour of the Virgin Mary, in which the Anglican
+Church cannot join; such as the Nativity of the Virgin Mary, and
+the immaculate conception of her by her mother. On the origin and
+nature of these feasts it is not my intention to dwell. I can only
+express my regret, that by appointing a service and a collect
+commemorative of the Conception of the Virgin<a id="footnotetag104"
+name="footnotetag104"></a><a href="#footnote104"><sup>104</sup></a>
+in her mother's womb, and praying that the observance of that
+solemnity may procure the votaries an increase of peace, the Church
+of Rome has given countenance to a superstition, against which at
+its commencement, so late as the 12th century, St. Bernard strongly
+remonstrated, in an epistle to the monks of Lyons; a superstition
+which has been supported and explained by discussions in no way
+profitable to the head or the heart. [Epist. 174. Paris, 1632, p.
+1538.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote104" name=
+"footnote104"></a><b>Footnote 104:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag104">(return)</a>
+<p>Ut quibus beat&aelig; Virginis partus exstitit salutis exordium,
+conceptionis ejus votiva solemnitas pacis tribuat incrementum. H.
+445.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Of all these institutions however in honour of the Virgin, the
+Feast of the ASSUMPTION appears to be as it were the crown and the
+consummation<a id="footnotetag105" name=
+"footnotetag105"></a><a href="#footnote105"><sup>105</sup></a>.
+This festival <span class="pagenum"><a name="page298" id=
+"page298"></a>{298}</span> is kept to celebrate the miraculous
+taking up (assumptio) of the Virgin Mary into heaven. And its
+celebration, in Roman Catholic countries, is observed in a manner
+worthy a cause to which our judgment would give deliberately its
+sanction; in which our feelings would safely and with satisfaction
+rest on the firmness of our faith; from joining in which a truly
+pious mind would have no ground for inward misgiving, nor for the
+aspiration, Would it were founded in truth!</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote105" name=
+"footnote105"></a><b>Footnote 105:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag105">(return)</a>
+<p>"The Assumption of the Virgin Mary is the greatest of all the
+festivals which the Church celebrates in her honour. It is the
+consummation of all the other great mysteries by which her life was
+rendered most wonderful. It is the birthday of her true greatness
+and glory, and the crown of all the virtues of her whole life,
+which we admire single in her other festivals." Alban Butler, vol.
+viii. p. 175.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Before such a solemn office of praise and worship were ever
+admitted among the institutions of the religion of truth, its
+originators and compilers should have built upon sure grounds;
+careful too should they also be who now join in the service, and so
+lend it the countenance of their example; more especially should
+those sift the evidence well, who, by their doctrine and writings,
+uphold, and defend, and advance it; lest they prove at the last to
+love Rome rather than the truth as it is in Jesus. So solemn, so
+marked, a religious service in the temples and at the altar of HIM
+who is the truth, a service so exalted above his fellows, ought
+beyond question to be founded on the most sure warrant of Holy
+Scripture, or at the least on undisputed historical evidence, as to
+the alleged matter of fact on which it is built,&mdash;the certain,
+acknowledged, uninterrupted, and universal testimony of the Church
+Catholic from the very time. They incur a momentous responsibility
+who aid in propagating for religious truths the inventions of
+men<a id="footnotetag106" name="footnotetag106"></a><a href=
+"#footnote106"><sup>106</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote106" name=
+"footnote106"></a><b>Footnote 106:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag106">(return)</a>
+<p>Very different opinions are held by Roman Catholic writers as to
+the antiquity of this feast. All, indeed, maintain that it is of
+very ancient introduction; but whilst some, with Lambecius (lib.
+viii. p. 286), maintain the antiquity of the festival to be so
+remote, that its origin cannot be traced; and thence infer that it
+was instituted by a silent and unrecorded act of the Apostles
+themselves; others (among whom Kollarius, the learned annotator on
+the opinion of Lambecius) acknowledged, that it was introduced by
+an ordinance of the Church, though not at the same time in all
+countries of Christendom. That annotator assigns its introduction
+at Rome to the fourth century; at Constantinople to the sixth; in
+Germany and France to the ninth.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page299" id=
+"page299"></a>{299}</span>
+<p>But what is the real state of the case with regard to the fact
+of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary? It rests (as we shall soon
+see) on no authentic history; it is supported by no primitive
+tradition. I profess my surprise to have been great, when I found
+the most celebrated defenders of the Roman Catholic cause, instead
+of citing such evidence as would bear with it even the appearance
+of probability, appealing to histories written more than a thousand
+years after the alleged event, to forged documents and vague
+rumours. I was willing to doubt the sufficiency of my research;
+till I found its defenders, instead of alleging and establishing by
+evidence what God was by them said to have done, contenting
+themselves with asserting his omnipotence, in proof that the
+doctrine implied no impossibility; dwelling on the fitness and
+reasonableness of his working such a miracle in the honour of her
+who was chosen to be the mother of his eternal Son; and whilst they
+took the fact as granted, substituting for argument glowing and
+fervent descriptions of what might have been the joy in heaven, and
+what ought to be the feelings of mortals on earth.</p>
+<p>At every step of the inquiry into the merits of this case, the
+principle recurs to the mind, that, as men really and in earnest
+looking onward to a life after this, our duty is to ascertain to
+the utmost of our <span class="pagenum"><a name="page300" id=
+"page300"></a>{300}</span> power, not what God could do, not what
+we or others might pronounce it fit that God should do, but what He
+has done; not what would be agreeable to our feelings, were it
+true, but what, whether agreeably or adversely to our feelings or
+wishes, is proved to be true. The very moment a Christian writer
+refers me from evidence to possibilities, I feel that he knows not
+the nature of Christianity; he throws me back from the sure and
+certain hope of the Gospel to the "beautiful fable" of
+Socrates,&mdash;"It were better to be there than here, IF THESE
+THINGS ARE TRUE."</p>
+<p>But let us inquire into the facts of the case.</p>
+<p>First, I would observe that it is by no means agreed among all
+who have written upon the subject, what was the place, or what was
+the time of the Virgin's death. Whilst some have maintained that
+she breathed her last at Ephesus, the large majority assert that
+her departure from this world took place at Jerusalem. And as to
+the time of her death, some have assigned it to the year 48 of the
+Christian era, about the time at which Paul and Barnabas (as we
+read in Holy Scripture) returned to Antioch; whilst others refer it
+to a later date. I am not, however, aware of any supposition which
+fixes it at a period subsequent to that at which the canon of
+Scripture closes. Epiphanius indeed, towards the close of the
+fourth century, reminding us that Scripture is totally and purely
+silent on the subject as well of Mary's death and burial, as of her
+having accompanied St. John in his travels or not, without alluding
+to any tradition as to her assumption, thus sums up his sentiments:
+"I dare to say nothing; but considering it, I observe silence."
+[Epiph. vol. i. p. 1043.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page301" id=
+"page301"></a>{301}</span>
+<p>Should any of my readers have deliberately adopted as the rule
+of their faith the present practice of the Church of Rome, I cannot
+hope that they will take any interest in the following inquiry; but
+I have been assured, by most sensible and well-informed members of
+that Church, that there is a very general desire entertained to
+have this and other questions connected with our subject examined
+without prejudice, and calmly placed before them. To such persons I
+trust this chapter may not appear altogether unworthy of their
+consideration. Those who would turn from it on the principle to
+which we have here alluded, will find themselves very closely
+responding to the sentiments professed by St. Bernard, "Exalt her
+who is exalted above the choirs of angels to the heavenly kingdom.
+These things the Church sings to me of her, and has taught me to
+sing the same to others. For my part, what I have received from it,
+I am secure in holding and delivering; which also, I confess, I am
+not OVER-SCRUPULOUS in admitting. (Quod non scrupulosius fateor
+admiserim.) I have received in truth from the Church that that day
+is to be observed with the highest veneration on which she was
+TAKEN up (assumpta) from this wicked world, and carrying with her
+into heaven feasts of the most celebrated joys<a id=
+"footnotetag107" name="footnotetag107"></a><a href=
+"#footnote107"><sup>107</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote107" name=
+"footnote107"></a><b>Footnote 107:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag107">(return)</a>
+<p>See Lambecius, book viii. p. 286. The letter of St. Bernard is
+addressed to the Canons of Lyons on the Conception of the holy
+Mary. Paris, 1632, p. 1538. His observations in that letter, with a
+view of discountenancing the rising superstition, in juxtaposition
+with these sentiments, are well deserving the serious consideration
+of every one.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Let us then, with the authorized and enjoined service of the
+Church of Rome for the 15th of August before us, examine the
+evidence on which that religious <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page302" id="page302"></a>{302}</span> service, the most solemn
+consummation of all the rest, is founded.</p>
+<p>In the service of the Assumption, more than twice seven times is
+it reiterated in a very brief space, and with slight variations of
+expression, that Mary was taken up into heaven; and that, not on
+any general and indefinite idea of her beatific and glorified
+state, but with reference to one specific single act of divine
+favour, performed at a fixed time, effecting her assumption, as it
+is called, "to-day." [&AElig;s. 595.] "To-day Mary the Virgin
+ascended the heavens. Rejoice, because she is reigning with Christ
+for ever." "Mary the Virgin is taken up into heaven, to the
+ethereal chamber in which the King of kings sits on his starry
+throne." "The holy mother of God hath been exalted above the choirs
+of angels to the heavenly realms." "Come, let us worship the King
+of kings, to whose ethereal heaven the Virgin Mother was taken up
+to-day." And that it is her bodily ascension, her corporeal
+assumption into heaven, and not merely the transit of her
+soul<a id="footnotetag108" name="footnotetag108"></a><a href=
+"#footnote108"><sup>108</sup></a> from mortal life to eternal
+bliss, which the Roman Church maintains and propagates by this
+service, is put beyond doubt by the service itself. In the fourth
+and sixth reading<a id="footnotetag109" name=
+"footnotetag109"></a><a href="#footnote109"><sup>109</sup></a>, or
+lesson, for example, we find these <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page303" id="page303"></a>{303}</span> sentences:&mdash;"She
+returned not into the earth but is seated in the heavenly
+tabernacles." "How could death devour, how could those below
+receive, how could corruption invade, THAT BODY, in which life was
+received? For it a direct, plain, and easy path to heaven was
+prepared."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote108" name=
+"footnote108"></a><b>Footnote 108:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag108">(return)</a>
+<p>Lambecius, indeed (book viii. p. 306), distinctly affirms, that
+one object which the Church had in view was to condemn the HERESY
+of those who maintain that the reception of the Virgin into heaven,
+was the reception of her soul only, and not also of her body. "Ut
+damnet eorum h&aelig;resin qui sanctissim&aelig; Dei genetricis
+rcceptionem in coelum ad animam ipsius tantum, non vero simul etiam
+ad corpus pertinere existimant."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote109" name=
+"footnote109"></a><b>Footnote 109:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag109">(return)</a>
+<p>Non reversa est in terram, sed ... in coelestibus tabernaculis
+collocatum. Quomodo mois devoraret, quomodo inferi susciperent,
+quomodo corruptio invaderit CORPUS ILLUD in quo vita suscepta est?
+Huic recta plana et facilis ad coelum parata est via. &AElig;s.
+603, 604.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Now, on what authority does this doctrine rest? On what
+foundation stone is this religious worship built? The holy
+Scriptures are totally and profoundly silent, as to the time, the
+place, the manner of Mary's death. Once after the ascension of our
+Lord, and that within eight days, we find mentioned the name of
+Mary promiscuously with others; after that, no allusion is made to
+her in life or in death; and no account, as far as I can find,
+places her death too late for mention to have been made of it in
+the Acts of the Apostles. The historian, Nicephorus Callistus,
+refers it to the 5th year of Claudius, that is about A.D. 47: after
+which period, events through more than fifteen years are recorded
+in that book of sacred Scripture.</p>
+<p>But closing the holy volume, what light does primitive antiquity
+enable us to throw on this subject?</p>
+<p>The earliest testimony quoted by the defenders of the doctrine,
+that Mary was at her death taken up bodily into heaven, is a
+supposed entry in the Chronicon of Eusebius, opposite the year of
+our Lord 48. This is cited by Coccius without any remark; and even
+Baronius rests the date of Mary's assumption upon this testimony.
+[Vol. i. 403.] The words referred to are these,&mdash;"Mary the
+Virgin, the mother of Jesus, was taken up into heaven; as some
+write that it had been revealed to them."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page304" id=
+"page304"></a>{304}</span>
+<p>Now, suppose for one moment that this came from the pen of
+Eusebius himself, to what does it amount? A chronologist in the
+fourth century records that some persons, whom he does not name,
+not even stating when they lived, had written down, not what they
+had heard as matter of fact, or received by tradition, but that a
+revelation had been made to them of a fact alleged to have taken
+place nearly three centuries before the time of that writer. But
+instead of this passage deserving the name of Eusebius as its
+author, it is now on all sides acknowledged to be altogether a
+palpable interpolation. Suspicions, one would suppose, must have
+been at a very remote date suggested as to the genuineness of this
+sentence. Many manuscripts, especially the seven in the Vatican,
+were known to contain nothing of the kind; and the Roman Catholic
+editor of the Chronicon at Bordeaux, A.D. 1604, tells us that he
+was restrained from expunging it, only because nothing certain as
+to the assumption of the Virgin could be substituted in its stead.
+[P. 566.] Its spuriousness however can no longer be a question of
+dispute or doubt; it is excluded from the Milan edition of 1818, by
+Angelo Maio and John Zohrab; and no trace of it is to be found in
+the Armenian<a id="footnotetag110" name=
+"footnotetag110"></a><a href="#footnote110"><sup>110</sup></a>
+version, published by the monks of the Armenian convent at Venice,
+in 1818.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote110" name=
+"footnote110"></a><b>Footnote 110:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag110">(return)</a>
+<p>The author visited that convent whilst this edition of the
+Chronicon of Eusebius was going through the press, and can testify
+to the apparent anxiety of the monks to make it worthy of the
+patronage of Christians.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The next authority, to which we are referred, is a letter<a id=
+"footnotetag111" name="footnotetag111"></a><a href=
+"#footnote111"><sup>111</sup></a> said to have been written by
+Sophronius the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page305" id=
+"page305"></a>{305}</span> presbyter, about the commencement of the
+fifth century. The letter used to be ascribed to Jerome; Erasmus
+referred it to Sophronius; but Baronius says it was written "by an
+egregious forger of lies," ("egregius mendaciorum concinnator,")
+who lived after the heresies of Nestorius and Eutyches had been
+condemned. I am not at all anxious to enter upon that point of
+criticism; that the letter is of very ancient origin cannot be
+doubted. This document would lead us to conclude, that so far from
+the tradition regarding the Virgin's assumption being general in
+the Church, it was a point of grave doubt and discussion among the
+faithful, many of whom thought it an act of pious forbearance to
+abstain altogether from pronouncing any opinion on the subject.
+Whoever penned the letter, and whether we look to the sensible and
+pious sentiments contained in it, or to its undisputed antiquity,
+the following extract cannot fail to be interesting<a id=
+"footnotetag112" name="footnotetag112"></a><a href=
+"#footnote112"><sup>112</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote111" name=
+"footnote111"></a><b>Footnote 111:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag111">(return)</a>
+<p>The letter is entitled "Ad Paulam et Eustochium de Assumptione
+B.M. Virginis." It is found in the fifth volume of Jerome's works,
+p. 82. Edit. Jo. Martian.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote112" name=
+"footnote112"></a><b>Footnote 112:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag112">(return)</a>
+<p>Baronius shows great anxiety (Cologne, 1609, vol. i. p. 408) to
+detract from the value of this author's testimony, whoever he was;
+sharply criticising him because he asserts, that the faithful in
+his time still expressed doubts as to the matter of fact of Mary's
+assumption. By assigning, however, to the letter a still later date
+than the works of Sophronius, Baronius adds strength to the
+arguments for the comparatively recent origin of the tradition of
+her assumption. See Fabricius (Hamburgh, 1804), vol. ix. p.
+160.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"Many of our people doubt whether Mary was taken up together
+with her body, or went away, leaving the body. But how, or at what
+time, or by what persons her most holy body was taken hence, or
+whither removed, or whether it rose again, is not known; although
+some will maintain that she is already revived, and is clothed with
+a blessed immortality with Christ in heavenly places, which very
+many affirm also of the blessed <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page306" id="page306"></a>{306}</span> John, the Evangelist, his
+servant, to whom being a virgin, the virgin was intrusted by
+Christ, because in his sepulchre, as it is reported, nothing is
+found but manna, which also is seen to flow forth. Nevertheless
+which of these opinions should be thought the more true we doubt.
+Yet it is better to commit all to God, to whom nothing is
+impossible, than to wish to define rashly<a id="footnotetag113"
+name="footnotetag113"></a><a href="#footnote113"><sup>113</sup></a>
+by our own authority any thing, which we do not approve of....
+Because nothing is impossible with God, we do not deny that
+something of the kind was done with regard to the blessed Virgin
+Mary; although for caution's sake (salva fide) preserving our
+faith, we ought rather with pious desire to think, than
+inconsiderately to define, what without danger may remain unknown."
+This letter, at the earliest, was not written until the beginning
+of the fifth century.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote113" name=
+"footnote113"></a><b>Footnote 113:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag113">(return)</a>
+<p>These last words, stamping the author's own opinion, "Which we
+do not approve of," are left out in the quotation of Coccius.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Subsequent writers were not wanting to fill up what this letter
+declares to have been at its own date unknown, as to the manner and
+time of Mary's assumption, and the persons employed in effecting
+it. The first authority appealed to in defence of the tradition
+relating to the assumption of the Virgin<a id="footnotetag114"
+name="footnotetag114"></a><a href=
+"#footnote114"><sup>114</sup></a>, is usually cited as a well-known
+work written by Euthymius, who was contemporary with Juvenal,
+Archbishop of Jerusalem. And the testimony simply quoted as his,
+offers to us the following account of the miraculous
+transaction<a id="footnotetag115" name=
+"footnotetag115"></a><a href="#footnote115"><sup>115</sup></a>:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote114" name=
+"footnote114"></a><b>Footnote 114:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag114">(return)</a>
+<p>Coccius heads the extract merely with these words: "Euthumius
+Eremita Histori&aelig; Ecclesiastic&aelig;, lib. iii. c. 40;"
+assigning the date A.D. 549.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote115" name=
+"footnote115"></a><b>Footnote 115:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag115">(return)</a>
+<p>This version by Coccius differs in some points from the
+original. Jo. Dam. vol. ii. p. 879.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"It has been above said, that the holy Pulcheria <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page307" id="page307"></a>{307}</span> built
+many churches to Christ at Constantinople. Of these, however, there
+is one which was built in Blachern&aelig;, in the beginning of
+Marcian I's <i>reign</i> of divine memory. These, therefore,
+namely, Marcian and Pulcheria, when they had built a venerable
+temple to the greatly to be celebrated and most holy mother of God
+and ever Virgin Mary, and had decked it with all ornaments, sought
+her most holy body, which had conceived God. And having sent for
+Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, and the bishops of Palestine, who
+were living in the royal city on account of the synod then held at
+Chalcedon, they say to them, 'We hear that there is in Jerusalem
+the first and famous Church of Mary, mother of God and ever Virgin,
+in the garden called Gethsemane, where her body which bore the Life
+was deposited in a coffin. We wish, therefore, her relics to be
+brought here for the protection of this royal city. But Juvenal
+answered, 'In the holy and divinely inspired Scripture, indeed,
+nothing is recorded of the departure of holy Mary, mother of God.
+But from an ancient and most true tradition we have received, that
+at the time of her glorious falling asleep, all the holy Apostles
+who were going through the world for the salvation of the nations,
+in a moment of time borne aloft, came together at Jerusalem. And
+when they were near her, they had a vision of angels, and divine
+melody of the highest powers was heard: and thus with divine and
+more than heavenly glory, she delivered her holy soul into the
+hands of God in an unspeakable manner. But that which had conceived
+God being borne with angelic and apostolic psalmody, with funeral
+rites, was deposited in a coffin in Gethsemane. In this place the
+chorus and singing of the angels continued for three whole days.
+But <span class="pagenum"><a name="page308" id=
+"page308"></a>{308}</span> after three days, on the angelic music
+ceasing, since one of the Apostles had been absent, and came after
+the third day, and wished to adore the body which had conceived
+God, the Apostles, who were present, opened the coffin; but the
+body, pure and every way to be praised, they could not at all find.
+And when they found only those things in which it had been laid out
+and placed there, and were filled with an ineffable fragrancy
+proceeding from those things, they shut the coffin. Being astounded
+at the miraculous mystery, they could form no other thought, but
+that He, who in his own person had vouchsafed to be clothed with
+flesh, and to be made man of the most holy Virgin, and to be born
+in the flesh, God the Word, and Lord of Glory, and who after birth
+had preserved her virginity immaculate, had seen it good after she
+had departed from among the living, to honour her uncontaminated
+and unpolluted body by a translation before the common and
+universal resurrection."</p>
+<p>Such is the passage offered to us in its insulated form, as an
+extract from Euthymius. To be enabled, however, to estimate its
+worth, the inquirer must submit to the labour of considerable
+research. He will not have pursued his investigation far, before he
+will find, that a thick cloud of uncertainty and doubt hangs over
+this page of ecclesiastical history. Not that the evidence alleged
+in support of the reputed miracle can leave us in doubt as to the
+credibility of the tradition; for that tradition can scarcely be
+now countenanced by the most zealous and uncompromising maintainers
+of the assumption of the Virgin. What I would say is, that the
+question as to the genuineness and authenticity of the works by
+which the tradition is said to have been preserved, is far more
+difficult and complicated, than <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page309" id="page309"></a>{309}</span> those writers must have
+believed, who appeal to such testimony without any doubt or
+qualification. The result of my own inquiries I submit to your
+candid acceptance.</p>
+<p>The earliest author in whose reputed writings I have found the
+tradition, is John Damascenus, a monk of Jerusalem, who flourished
+somewhat before the middle of the eighth century. The passage is
+found in the second of three homilies on the "Sleep of the Virgin,"
+a term generally used by the Greeks as an equivalent for the Latin
+word "Assumptio." The original publication of these homilies in
+Greek and Latin is comparatively of a late date. Lambecius, whose
+work is dated 1665, says he was not aware that any one had so
+published them before his time<a id="footnotetag116" name=
+"footnotetag116"></a><a href="#footnote116"><sup>116</sup></a>. But
+not to raise the question of their genuineness, the preacher's
+introduction of this passage into his homily is preceded by a very
+remarkable section, affording a striking example of the manner in
+which Christian orators used to indulge in addresses and appeals
+not only to the spirits of departed men, but even to things which
+never had life. The speaker here in his sermon addresses the tomb
+of Mary, as though it had ears to hear, and an understanding to
+comprehend; and then represents the tomb as having a tongue to
+answer, and as calling forth from the preacher and his congregation
+an address of admiration and reverence. Such apostrophes as these
+cannot be too steadily borne in mind, or too carefully weighed,
+when any argument is sought to be drawn from similar salutations
+offered by ancient Christian orators to saint, or angel, or the
+Virgin.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote116" name=
+"footnote116"></a><b>Footnote 116:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag116">(return)</a>
+<p>Vol. viii. p. 281. Le Quien, who published them in 1712, refers
+to earlier homilies on the Dormitio Virginis. Jo. Damas. Paris,
+1712. vol. ii. p. 857.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page310" id=
+"page310"></a>{310}</span>
+<p>The following are among the expressions in which the preacher,
+in the passage under consideration, addresses the Virgin's tomb:
+"Thou, O Tomb, of holy things most holy (for I will address thee as
+a living being), where is the much desired and much beloved body of
+the mother of God?" [Vol. ii. p. 875.] The answer of the tomb
+begins thus, "Why seek ye her in a tomb, who has been taken up on
+high to the heavenly tabernacles?" In reply to this, the preacher
+first deliberating with his hearers what answer he should make,
+thus addresses the tomb: "Thy grace indeed is never-failing and
+eternal," &amp;c. [P. 881.] By the maintainers of the invocation of
+saints, many a passage far less unequivocal and less cogent than
+this has been adduced to show, that saints and martyrs were invoked
+by primitive worshippers.</p>
+<p>We find John Damascenus thus introducing the passage of
+Euthymius, "Ye see, beloved fathers and brethren, what answer the
+all-glorious tomb makes to us; and that these things are so, in the
+EUTHYMIAC HISTORY, the third book and fortieth chapter, is thus
+written word for word." [P. 877.]</p>
+<p>Lambecius maintains, that the history here quoted by John
+Damascenus was not an ecclesiastical history, written by Euthymius,
+who died in A.D. 472, but a biographical history concerning
+Euthymius himself, written by an ecclesiastic, whom he supposes to
+be Cyril, the monk, who died in A.D. 531. This opinion of Lambecius
+is combated by Cotelerius; the discussion only adding to the
+denseness of the cloud which involves the whole tradition. But
+whether the work quoted had Euthymius for its author or its
+subject, the work itself is lost; and an epitome only of such a
+work has come down to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page311" id=
+"page311"></a>{311}</span> our time. In that abridgment the passage
+quoted by Damascenus is not found.</p>
+<p>The editor of John Damascenus, Le Quien, in his annotations on
+this portion of his work, offers to us some very interesting
+remarks, which bear immediately on the agitated question as to the
+first observance of the feast of the Assumption, as well as on the
+tradition itself. Le Quien infers, from the words of Modestus,
+patriarch of Jerusalem, that scarcely any preachers before him had
+addressed their congregations on the departure of the Virgin out of
+this life; he thinks, moreover, that the Feast of the Assumption
+was at the commencement of the seventh century only recently
+instituted. Though all later writers affirm that the Virgin was
+buried in the valley of Jehoshaphat, in the garden of Gethsemane,
+the same editor says, that this could not have been known to
+Jerome, who passed a great part of his life in Bethlehem, and yet
+observes a total silence on the subject; though in his "Epitaph on
+Paula," [Jerome, Paris, 1706. Vol. iv. p. 670-688, ep. 86.] he
+enumerates all the places in Palestine consecrated by any
+remarkable event. Neither, he adds, could it have been known to
+Epiphanius, who, though he lived long in Palestine, yet declares
+that nothing was known as to the death or burial of the Virgin.
+[Vol. ii, p. 858.]</p>
+<p>Again, in his remarks upon the writings falsely attributed to
+Melito, the same editor says, that since this Pseudo-Melito speaks
+many jejune things of the Virgin Mary, (such for example as at the
+approach of death her exceeding fear of being exposed to the wiles
+of Satan,) he concludes, from that circumstance, that the work was
+written before the Council of Ephesus; alleging this very
+remarkable reason, that "after that <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page312" id="page312"></a>{312}</span> time there BEGAN TO BE
+ENTERTAINED, as was right, not only in the East, but also in the
+West, a far better estimate of the parent of God." [P. 880.]</p>
+<p>Many of the remarks of this editor would appear to savour of
+prejudice had they come from the pen of one who denied the reality
+of the assumption, or oppugned the honour and worship now paid by
+members of the Church of Rome to the Virgin. Nor could the
+suspicion of such prejudice be otherwise than increased by the
+insinuation which the same editor throws out against the honesty of
+Archbishop Juvenal, and on the possibility of his having invented
+the whole story, and so for sinister purposes deceived Marcian and
+Pulcheria; just as he fabricated the writings which he forged for
+the purpose of securing the primacy of Palestine; a crime laid to
+the charge of Juvenal by Leo the Great, in his letter to Maximus,
+Bishop of Antioch. [P. 879. See Leo. vol. i. p. 1215. Epist.
+cxix.]</p>
+<p>It is moreover much to be regretted that in making the extract
+from John Damascenus those who employ it as evidence of primitive
+belief, have not presented it to their readers whole and entire. In
+the present case the system of quoting garbled extracts is
+particularly to be lamented, because the paragraphs omitted in the
+quotation carry in themselves clear proof that Juvenal's answer, as
+it now appears in John Damascenus, could not have been made by
+Juvenal to Marcian and Pulcheria. For in it is quoted from
+Dionysius the Areopagite by name, a passage still found in the
+works ascribed to him; whereas by the judgment of the most learned
+Roman Catholic writers, those spurious works did not make their
+appearance in Christendom till the beginning of the sixth century,
+fifty years after the Council of Chalcedon, to assist at which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page313" id=
+"page313"></a>{313}</span> Juvenal is said to have been present in
+Constantinople when the emperor and empress held the alleged
+conversation with him.</p>
+<p>The remainder of the passage from the history of Euthymius,
+rehearsed in this oration of John Damascenus, is as follows: "There
+were present with the Apostles at that time both the most honoured
+Timothy the Apostle, and first bishop of the Ephesians, and
+Dionysius the Areopagite, himself, as the great Dionysius testifies
+in the laboured words concerning the blessed Hierotheus, himself
+also then being present, to the above-named apostle Timothy, saying
+thus, Since with the inspired hierarchs themselves, when we also as
+thou knowest, and yourself, and many of our holy brethren had come
+together to the sight of the body which gave the principle of life;
+and there was present too James the brother of the Lord ([Greek:
+adelphotheos]), and Peter the chief and the most revered head of
+the apostles ([Greek: theologon]); then it seemed right, after the
+spectacle, that all the hierarchs (as each was able) should sing of
+the boundless goodness of the divine power. After the apostles, as
+you know, he surpassed all the other sacred persons, wholly carried
+away, and altogether in an ecstasy, and feeling an entire sympathy
+with what was sung; and by all by whom he was heard, and seen, and
+known (and he<a id="footnotetag117" name=
+"footnotetag117"></a><a href="#footnote117"><sup>117</sup></a> knew
+it not), he was considered to be an inspired and divine
+hymnologist. And why should I speak to you about the things there
+divinely said, for unless I have even forgotten myself, I know that
+I have often heard from you some portions also of those inspired
+canticles? And the royal personages having heard this, requested of
+Juvenal the archbishop, that the holy coffin, with the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page314" id="page314"></a>{314}</span> clothes
+of the glorious and all-holy Mary, mother of God, sealed up, might
+be sent to them. And this, when sent, they deposited in the
+venerable temple of the Mother of God, built in Blachernae; and
+these things were so."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote117" name=
+"footnote117"></a><b>Footnote 117:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag117">(return)</a>
+<p>This seems confused in the original ([Greek: kai eginosketo, kai
+ouk eginoske]). The whole passage is involved in great
+obscurity.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is a fact no less lamentable than remarkable, that out of the
+lessons appointed by the Church of Rome for the feast of the
+Assumption, to be read to believers assembled in God's house of
+prayer, three of those lessons are selected and taken entirely from
+this very oration of John Damascenus<a id="footnotetag118" name=
+"footnotetag118"></a><a href="#footnote118"><sup>118</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote118" name=
+"footnote118"></a><b>Footnote 118:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag118">(return)</a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The Fourth Lesson begins "Hodie sacra et animata arca."</p>
+<p>The Fifth " " "Hodie virgo immaculata."</p>
+<p>The Sixth " " "Eva qu&aelig; serpentis," &amp;c.&mdash;&AElig;.
+603.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>These contain the passages to which we have before referred as
+fixing the belief of the Church of Rome to be in the CORPOREAL
+assumption of Mary. "Quomodo corruptio invaderet CORPUS ILLUD in
+quo vita suscepta est? [Greek: pos diaphthora tou zoodochon
+katatolmaeseie somatos.]"</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This, then, is the account nearest to the time of the supposed
+event; and yet can any thing be more vague, and by way of
+testimony, more worthless? A writer near the middle of the sixth
+century refers to a conversation, said to have taken place in the
+middle of the fifth century; in this reported conversation at
+Constantinople, the Bishop of Jerusalem is represented to have
+informed the Emperor and Empress of an ancient tradition, which was
+believed, concerning a miraculous event, said to have taken place
+nearly four hundred years before, that the body was taken out of a
+coffin without the knowledge of those who had deposited it there:
+Whilst the primitive and inspired account, recording most minutely
+the journeys and proceedings of some of those very persons, and the
+letters of others, makes no mention at all of any transaction of
+the kind; and of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page315" id=
+"page315"></a>{315}</span> all the intermediate historians and
+ecclesiastical writers not one gives the slightest intimation that
+any rumour of it had reached them<a id="footnotetag119" name=
+"footnotetag119"></a><a href="#footnote119"><sup>119</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote119" name=
+"footnote119"></a><b>Footnote 119:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag119">(return)</a>
+<p>Baronius appears not to have referred to this history of
+Euthymius, but he refers to Nicephorus, and also to a work ascribed
+to Melito, c. 4, 5. Nicephorus, Paris, 1630. vol. i. p. 168. lib.
+ii. c. 21. Baronius also refers to lib. 15. c. 14. This Nicephorus
+was Patriarch of Constantinople. He lived during the reign of our
+Edward the First, or Edward the Second, and cannot, therefore, be
+cited in any sense of the word as an ancient author writing on the
+events of the primitive ages; though the manner in which his
+testimony is appealed to would imply, that he was a man to whose
+authority on early ecclesiastical affairs we were now expected to
+defer.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Another authority to which the writers on the assumption of the
+Virgin appeal, is that of Nicephorus Callistus, who, at the end of
+the thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century,
+dedicated his work to Andronicus Pal&aelig;ologus. The account
+given by Nicephorus is this:</p>
+<p>In the fifth year of Claudius, the Virgin at the age of
+fifty-nine, was made acquainted with her approaching death. Christ
+himself then descended from heaven with a countless multitude of
+angels, to take up the soul of his mother; He summoned his
+disciples by thunder and storm from all parts of the world. The
+Virgin then bade Peter first, and afterwards the rest of the
+Apostles, to come with burning torches<a id="footnotetag120" name=
+"footnotetag120"></a><a href="#footnote120"><sup>120</sup></a>. The
+Apostles surrounded her bed, and "an outpouring of miracles flowed
+forth." The blind beheld the sun, the deaf heard, the lame walked,
+and every disease fled away. The Apostles and others sang, as the
+coffin was borne from Sion to Gethsemane, angels preceding,
+surrounding, and following it. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page316" id="page316"></a>{316}</span> A wonderful thing then took
+place. The Jews were indignant and enraged, and one more
+desperately bold than the rest rushed forward, intending to throw
+down the holy corpse to the ground. Vengeance was not tardy; for
+his hands were cut off from his arms<a id="footnotetag121" name=
+"footnotetag121"></a><a href="#footnote121"><sup>121</sup></a>. The
+procession stopped; and at the command of Peter, on the man
+shedding tears of penitence, his hands were joined on again and
+restored whole. At Gethsemane she was put into a tomb, but her Son
+transferred her to the divine habitation.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote120" name=
+"footnote120"></a><b>Footnote 120:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag120">(return)</a>
+<p>This author here quotes the forged work ascribed to Dionysius
+the Areopagite, to which we have before referred.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote121" name=
+"footnote121"></a><b>Footnote 121:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag121">(return)</a>
+<p>This tradition seems to have been much referred to at a time
+just preceding our Reformation. In a volume called "The Hours of
+the most blessed Mary, according to the legitimate rite of the
+Church of Salisbury," printed in Paris in 1526, from which we have
+made many extracts in the second part of this work, the
+frontispiece gives an exact representation of the story at the
+moment of the Jew's hands being cut off. They are severed at the
+wrist, and are lying on the coffin, on which his arms also are
+resting. In the sky the Virgin appears between the Father and the
+Son, the Holy Dove being seen above her. The same print occurs also
+in another part of the volume.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Nicephorus then refers to Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, as
+the authority on which the tradition was received, that the
+Apostles opened the coffin to enable St. Thomas (the one stated to
+have been absent) to embrace the body; and then he proceeds to
+describe the personal appearance of the Virgin. [Vol. i. p.
+171.]</p>
+<p>I am unwilling to trespass upon the patience of my readers by
+any comment upon such evidence as this. Is it within the verge of
+credibility that had such an event as Mary's assumption taken place
+under the extraordinary circumstances which now invest the
+tradition, or under any circumstances whatever, there would have
+been a total silence respecting it in the Holy Scriptures?
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page317" id=
+"page317"></a>{317}</span> That the writers of the first four
+centuries should never have referred to such a fact? That the first
+writer who alludes to it, should have lived in the middle of the
+fifth century, or later; and that he should have declared in a
+letter to his contemporaries that the subject was one on which many
+doubted; and that he himself would not deny it, not because it
+rested upon probable evidence, but because nothing was impossible
+with God; and that nothing was known as to the time, the manner, or
+the persons concerned, even had the assumption taken place? Can we
+place any confidence in the relation of a writer in the middle of
+the sixth century, as to a tradition of what an archbishop of
+Jerusalem attending the council of Chalcedon, had told the
+sovereigns at Constantinople of a tradition, as to what was said to
+have happened nearly four hundred years before, whilst in the
+"Acts" of that Council, not the faintest trace is found of any
+allusion to the supposed fact or the alleged tradition, though the
+transactions of that Council in many of its most minute
+circumstances are recorded, and though the discussions of that
+Council brought the name and circumstances of the Virgin Mary
+continually before the minds of all who attended it?</p>
+<p>This, however, is a point of too great importance to be
+dismissed summarily; and seems to require us to examine, however
+briefly, into the circumstances of that Council.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page318" id=
+"page318"></a>{318}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap3-4" id="chap3-4">CHAPTER IV.</a>&mdash;COUNCILS
+OF CONSTANTINOPLE, EPHESUS, AND THE GENERAL COUNCIL OF
+CHALCEDON</h3>
+<p>The legend on which the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin
+Mary is founded professes to trace the tradition to Juvenal,
+Archbishop of Jerusalem, when he was sojourning in Constantinople
+for the purpose of attending the General Council of Chalcedon. To
+the Emperor and Empress, who presided at that council, Juvenal is
+said to have communicated the tradition, as received in Palestine,
+of the miraculous taking up of Mary's body into heaven. This
+circumstance seems, as we have already intimated, of itself, to
+require us to examine the records of that Council, with the view of
+ascertaining whether any traces may be found confirmatory of the
+tradition, or otherwise; and since that Council cannot be regarded
+as an insulated assembly, but as a continuation rather or
+resumption of the preceding minor Councils of Constantinople and
+Ephesus, we must briefly refer to the occasion and nature generally
+of that succession of Christian synods. I am not aware that in the
+previous Councils any thing had transpired <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page319" id="page319"></a>{319}</span> which
+could be brought as evidence on the subject of our inquiry. The
+questions which had disturbed the peace of Christendom, and which
+were agitated in these Councils, inseparable from a repeated
+mention of the Virgin Mary's name, afforded an opportunity at every
+turn for an expression of the sentiments of those who composed the
+Councils, and of all connected with them, including the Bishop of
+Rome himself, towards her. It would be altogether foreign from the
+purpose of this address to enter in any way at large upon the
+character and history of those or the preceding Councils, yet a few
+words seem necessary, to enable us to judge of the nature and
+weight of the evidence borne by them on the question immediately
+before us.</p>
+<p>The source of all the disputes which then rent the Church of HIM
+who had bequeathed peace as his last and best gift to his
+followers, was the anxiety to define and explain the nature of the
+great Christian mystery, the Incarnation of the Son of God; a point
+on which it were well for all Christians to follow only so far as
+the Holy Scriptures lead them by the hand. All parties appealed to
+the Nicene Council; though there seems to have been, to say the
+least, much misunderstanding and unnecessary violence and party
+spirit on all sides. The celebrated Eutyches of Constantinople was
+charged with having espoused heterodox doctrine, by maintaining
+that in Christ was only one nature, the incarnate Word. On this
+charge he was accused before a Council held at Constantinople in
+A.D. 448. His doctrine was considered to involve a denial of the
+human nature of the Son of God. The Council condemned him of
+heresy, deposed, and excommunicated him. From this proceeding
+Eutyches appealed to a General Council. A council (the authority of
+which, however, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page320" id=
+"page320"></a>{320}</span> has been solemnly, but with what
+adequate reason we need not stop to examine, repudiated), was
+convened at Ephesus in the following year, by the Emperor
+Theodosius. The proceedings of this assembly were accompanied by
+lamentable unfairness and violence. Eutyches was acquitted, and
+restored by this council<a id="footnotetag122" name=
+"footnotetag122"></a><a href="#footnote122"><sup>122</sup></a>; and
+his accusers were condemned and persecuted; Flavianus, Archbishop
+of Constantinople, who had summoned the preceding council, being
+even scourged and exiled. In his distress that patriarch sought the
+good offices of Leo, Bishop of Rome, who espoused his cause, but
+who failed nevertheless of inducing Theodosius to convene a General
+Council. His successor Marcian, however, consented; and in the year
+451 the Council of Chalcedon was convened, first meeting at Nice,
+and by adjournment being removed to Chalcedon. In this council all
+the proceedings as well of the Council of Constantinople as of
+Ephesus, were rehearsed at length; and from a close examination of
+the proceedings of those three councils, only one inference seems
+deducible, namely, that the invocation and worship of saints and of
+the Virgin Mary had not then obtained that place in the Christian
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page321" id=
+"page321"></a>{321}</span> Church, which the Church of Rome now
+assigns to it; a place, however, which the Church of England, among
+other branches of the Catholic Church, maintains that it has
+usurped, and cannot, without a sacrifice of the only sound
+principle of religious worship, be suffered to retain.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote122" name=
+"footnote122"></a><b>Footnote 122:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag122">(return)</a>
+<p>The sentiments of Eutyches, even as they are recorded by the
+party who charged him with heresy, seem to imply so much of
+soundness in his principles, and of moderation in his maintenance
+of those principles, that one must feel sorrow on finding such a
+man maintaining error at any time. The following is among the
+records of transactions rehearsed at Chalcedon: "He, Eutyches,
+professed that he followed the expositions of the holy and blessed
+Fathers who formed the Councils of Nic&aelig;a and Ephesus, and was
+ready to subscribe to them. But if any where it might chance, as he
+said, that our fathers were deceived and led astray, that as for
+himself he neither accepted nor accused those things, but he only
+on such points investigated the divine Scriptures as more to be
+depended upon [Greek: os bebaioteras]."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The grand question then agitated with too much asperity, and too
+little charity, was, whether by the incarnation our blessed Saviour
+became possessed of two natures, the divine and human. Subordinate
+to this, and necessary for its decision, was involved the question,
+What part of his nature, if any, Christ derived from the Virgin
+Mary? Again and again does this question bring the name, the
+office, the circumstances, and the nature of that holy and blessed
+mother of our Lord before these Councils. The name of Mary is
+continually in the mouth of the accusers, the accused, the judges,
+and the witnesses; and had Christian pastors then entertained the
+same feelings of devotion towards her; had they professed the same
+belief as to her assumption into heaven, and her influence and
+authority in directing the destinies of man, and in protecting the
+Church on earth; had they habitually appealed to her with the same
+prayers for her intercession and good offices, and placed the same
+confidence in her as we find now exhibited in the authorized
+services of the Roman Ritual, it is impossible to conceive that no
+signs, no intimation of such views and feelings, would, either
+directly or incidentally, have shown themselves, somewhere or
+other, among the manifold and protracted proceedings of these
+Councils. I have searched diligently, but I can find no expression
+as to her nature and office, or as to our feelings and conduct
+towards Mary, in which, as a <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page322" id="page322"></a>{322}</span> Catholic of the Anglican
+Church, I should not heartily acquiesce. I can find no sentiment
+implying invocation, or religious worship of any kind, or in any
+degree; I find no allusion to her Assumption.</p>
+<p>Pope Leo, who is frequently in these documents [Vol. v. p.
+1418.] called Archbishop of Rome, in a letter to Julianus, Bishop
+of Cos, speaks of Christ as born of "A Virgin," "The blessed
+Virgin," "The pure, undefiled Virgin;" and in a letter to the
+empress Pulcheria, he calls Mary simply "The Virgin Mary." In his
+celebrated letter to Flavianus, not one iota of which (according to
+the decree of the Roman council under Pope Gelasius) was to be
+questioned by any man on pain of incurring an anathema, Pope Leo
+says that Christ was conceived by the Holy Ghost in the womb of the
+Virgin Mary his mother, who brought him forth with the same virgin
+purity as she had conceived him. Flavianus, Archbishop of
+Constantinople, in his Declaration of faith to the Emperor
+Theodosius, affirms, that Christ was born "of Mary, the
+Virgin&mdash;of the same substance with the Father according to his
+Godhead&mdash;of the same substance with his mother according to
+his manhood." [Vol. vi. p. 539.] He speaks of her afterwards as
+"The holy Virgin."</p>
+<p>There is, indeed, one word used in a quotation from Cyril of
+Alexandria, and adopted in these transactions, which requires a few
+words of especial observation. The word is <i>theotocos</i><a id=
+"footnotetag123" name="footnotetag123"></a><a href=
+"#footnote123"><sup>123</sup></a>, which the Latins were accustomed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page323" id=
+"page323"></a>{323}</span> to transfer into their works,
+substituting only Roman instead of Greek characters, but which
+afterwards the authors of the Church of Rome translated by Deipara,
+and in more recent ages by Dei Mater, Dei Genetrix, Creatoris
+Genetrix, &amp;c. employing those terms not in explanation of the
+twofold nature of Christ's person, as was the case in these
+Councils, but in exaltation of Mary, his Virgin mother. This word
+was adopted by Christians in much earlier times than the Council of
+Chalcedon; but it was employed only to express more strongly the
+Catholic belief in the union of the divine and human nature in Him
+who was Son both of God and man; and by no means for the purpose of
+raising Mary into an object of religious adoration. The sense in
+which it was used was explained in the seventh Act of the Council
+of Constantinople, (repeated at Chalcedon) as given by Cyril of
+Alexandria. "According to this sense of an unconfused union, we
+confess the holy Virgin to be theotocos, because that God the Word
+was made flesh, and became man, and from that very conception
+united with himself the temple received from her."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote123" name=
+"footnote123"></a><b>Footnote 123:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag123">(return)</a>
+<p>[Greek: Theotokos.] To those who would depend upon this word
+<i>theotocos</i> as a proof of the exalted honour in which the
+early Christians held the Virgin, and not as indicative of an
+anxiety to preserve whole and entire the doctrine of the union of
+perfect God and perfect man in Christ, deriving his manhood through
+her, I would suggest the necessity of weighing well that argument
+with this fact before them; that to the Apostle James, called in
+Scripture the Lord's brother, was assigned the name of
+Adelphotheos, or God's brother. This name was given to James, not
+to exalt him above his fellow-apostles, but to declare the faith of
+those who gave it him in the union of the divine and human nature
+of Christ.&mdash;See Joan. Damascenus, Hom. ii. c. 18. In Dormit.
+Virg. vol. ii. p. 881. Le Quien, Paris, 1712. The Latin translation
+renders it Domini frater.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Nothing in our present inquiry turns upon the real <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page324" id="page324"></a>{324}</span> meaning
+of that word <i>theotocos</i>. Some who have been among the
+brightest ornaments of the Anglican Church have adopted the
+translation "mother of God," whilst many others among us believe
+that the original sense would be more correctly conveyed by the
+expression "mother of Him who was God."</p>
+<p>I am induced here to lay side by side, with the second Article
+of our Anglican Church, the Confession of Faith from Cyril, first
+recited at Constantinople, then repeated at Ephesus, and afterwards
+again rehearsed at Chalcedon; in its last clause the expression
+occurs which gave rise to these remarks.</p>
+<table summary="Articles">
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><i>Ancient Confession.</i></p>
+<p>We confess that our Lord Jesus, the Christ, the only begotten
+Son of God, perfect God and perfect man, from a reasonable soul and
+body, begotten from everlasting of the Father according to his
+Godhead, and in these last days, He the same for us and for our
+salvation [was born] of Mary, the Virgin, according to his
+manhood&mdash;of the same substance with the Father according to
+his Godhead, of the same substance with us according to his
+manhood. For of two natures there became an union. Wherefore we
+confess one Christ, one Lord. According to this sense of the
+unconfused union, we confess the holy Virgin to be theotocos,
+because that God the Word was made flesh, and became man, and from
+that very conception united with himself the temple received from
+her.</p>
+<p>[Vol. vi. p. 736.]</p>
+</td>
+<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td>
+<p><i>Second Article of Anglican Church.</i></p>
+<p>The Son, which is the Word of the Father, begotten from
+everlasting of the Father, the very and eternal God, and of one
+substance with the Father, took man's nature in the womb of the
+blessed Virgin, of her substance: so that two whole and perfect
+natures, that is to say, the Godhead and Manhood, were joined
+together in one Person, never to be divided, whereof is one Christ,
+very God, and very man; who truly suffered, was crucified, dead and
+buried, to reconcile his Father to us, and to be a sacrifice, not
+only for original guilt, but also for actual sins of men.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page325" id=
+"page325"></a>{325}</span>
+<p>But there are other points in the course of these important
+proceedings to which I would solicit your especial attention, with
+the view of comparing the sentiments of the Bishop of Rome at that
+day, and also the expressions employed by other Chief Pastors of
+Christ's flock, with the language of the appointed authorized
+services of the Roman Church now, and the sentiments of her
+reigning Pontiff, and of his accredited ministers.</p>
+<p>The circumstances of the Church Catholic, as represented in
+Leo's letter in the fifth century, and the circumstances of the
+Church of Rome, as lamented by the present Pope in 1832<a id=
+"footnotetag124" name="footnotetag124"></a><a href=
+"#footnote124"><sup>124</sup></a>, are in many respects very
+similar. The end desired by Leo and Flavianus, his brother pastor
+and contemporary, Bishop of Constantinople, and by Gregory, now
+Bishop of Rome, is one and the same, namely, the suppression of
+heresy, the prevalence of the truth, and the unity of the Christian
+Church. But how widely and how strikingly different are the
+foundations on which they respectively build their hopes for the
+attainment of that end!</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote124" name=
+"footnote124"></a><b>Footnote 124:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag124">(return)</a>
+<p>"The encyclical letter of our most holy Father, Pope Gregory, by
+divine providence, the sixteenth of that name, to all patriarchs,
+primates, archbishops, and bishops."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The present Roman Pontiff's hopes, and desires, and exhortations
+are thus expressed<a id="footnotetag125" name=
+"footnotetag125"></a><a href=
+"#footnote125"><sup>125</sup></a>:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote125" name=
+"footnote125"></a><b>Footnote 125:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag125">(return)</a>
+<p>This is the translation circulated in the Roman Catholic Annual,
+p. 15, called, The Laity's Directory for the year 1833; on the
+title page of which is this notice: "The Directory for the Church
+Service, printed by Messrs. Keating and Brown, is the only one
+which is published with the authority of the Vicars Apostolic in
+England.&mdash;London, Nov. 12, 1829." Signed "James, Bishop of
+Usula, Vic. Ap. Lond."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"That all may have a successful and happy issue, let us raise
+our eyes to the most blessed Virgin Mary, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page326" id="page326"></a>{326}</span> WHO ALONE
+DESTROYS HERESIES, who is our GREATEST HOPE, yea, the ENTIRE GROUND
+OF OUR HOPE<a id="footnotetag126" name=
+"footnotetag126"></a><a href="#footnote126"><sup>126</sup></a>. May
+she exert her patronage to draw down an efficacious blessing on our
+desires, our plans, and proceedings in the present straitened
+condition of the Lord's flock. We will also implore, in humble
+prayer, from Peter, the prince of the Apostles, and from his
+fellow-Apostle Paul, that you may all stand as a wall to prevent
+any other foundation than what hath been laid; and supported by
+this cheering hope, we have confidence that the author and finisher
+of faith, Jesus Christ, will at last console us all in the
+tribulations which have found us exceedingly."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote126" name=
+"footnote126"></a><b>Footnote 126:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag126">(return)</a>
+<p>On this word there is a note of reference to S. Bern. Serm. de
+Nat. B.M.V. 7.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"To you, venerable brethren, and the flocks committed to your
+care, we most lovingly impart, as auspicious of celestial help, the
+Apostolic Benediction. Given at Rome from St. Mary Major's, August
+15th, the Festival of the Assumption of the same blessed Virgin
+Mary, the year of our Lord 1832, of our Pontificate the
+Second."</p>
+<p>How deplorable a change, how melancholy a degeneracy is here
+evinced from the faith, and hopes, and sentiments of Christian
+bishops in days of old! In the expressed hopes of Leo and
+Flavianus, you will seek in vain for any reference or allusion "to
+the blessed Virgin Mary, as the destroyer of heresies, the greatest
+hope, the entire ground of a Christian's hope;" you will in vain
+seek for any exhortation for the faithful "to raise their eyes to
+her in order to obtain a merciful and happy issue." Equally vain
+would be your search for any "imploring in humble prayer," of Peter
+and Paul, or any even distant allusion to help from them.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page327" id=
+"page327"></a>{327}</span> To God and God alone are the faithful
+exhorted to pray; on God and God alone do those Christians express
+that their hopes rely; God alone they regard as the destroyer of
+heresy, the restorer of peace, and the protector of the Church's
+unity. "Their greatest hope, yea, the entire ground of their hope,"
+the Being to be "implored in humble prayer," is not Mary, nor
+Peter, nor Paul, but God alone, the Creator, the Redeemer, the
+Sanctifier of Mary, and of Peter, and of Paul.</p>
+<p>Thus Flavian writing to Leo says, "Wherefore (in consequence of
+those errors, and heresies, and distractions, which he had
+deplored) we must be sober and watch unto prayer, and draw nigh to
+God." [Vol. v. 1330.] And again, "Thus will the heresy which has
+arisen, and the consequent commotion, be easily destroyed by your
+holy letters with the assistance of God." [Vol. v. 1355.] Thus Leo
+in his turn writing to Julian, Bishop of Cos, utters this truly
+Christian sentiment. "May the mercy of God, as we trust, grant that
+without the loss of any soul, against the darts of the devil the
+sound parts may be entirely preserved, and the wounded parts may be
+healed. May God preserve you safe and sound, most honoured
+brother!" [Vol. v. 1423.] Thus the same Bishop of Rome writing to
+Flavian, expresses his hopes in these words: "Confidently trusting
+that the help of God will be present, so that one who has been
+misled, condemning the vanity of his own thoughts, may be saved.
+May God preserve you in health and strength, most beloved brother!"
+[Vol. v. 1390.]</p>
+<p>I will detain you by only one more reference to these most
+interesting documents. The whole Council of Chalcedon, at the
+conclusion of all, and when the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page328" id="page328"></a>{328}</span> triumph was considered to
+have been secured over Eutyches, and their gratitude was expressed
+that the heresies had been destroyed&mdash;instead of referring to
+Mary as the "sole destroyer of heresies," shout, as if with the
+voice of one man, from every side, "It is God alone who hath done
+this!" [Vol. vii. p. 174.] Neither antecedently did their chief
+pastors exhort them to raise their eyes to Mary, and promise to
+"implore" the blessing they needed, "in humble prayer from Peter
+and Paul." Neither "in the straitened condition of the Lord's
+flock" did they invoke any other than God. And when truth
+prevailed, and the victory was won, whilst they were lavish of
+their grateful thanks to the emperor and his queen, who were
+present and had succoured them; of help from the invisible world
+they make no mention, save only of the Lord's; they had implored
+neither angel, nor saints, nor Virgin to be their protector and
+patron; no angel, nor saint, nor virgin, shared their
+praises;&mdash;God alone was exalted in that day.</p>
+<p>And, let not the answer, ever at hand when reference is thus
+made to the prayers or professions of individuals, whether popes or
+canonized saints, seduce any now from a pursuit of the very truth.
+These, it is said, "are the prayers and professions of individuals,
+it is unfair then to make the Church responsible for them; we
+appeal from them to the Church." But in this case the words of the
+Sovereign Pontiff are in good faith the words of the Church of
+Rome; not because I at all would identify the words of a Pope with
+the Church, but because the prayers of the Church of Rome in her
+authorized solemn services and acts of worship justify <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page329" id="page329"></a>{329}</span> Pope
+Gregory in every sentiment he utters, and every expression he
+employs. Does Gregory bid the faithful lift up their eyes to Mary
+the sole destroyer of heresies? The Roman ritual in the Lesser
+Office of the holy Virgin thus addresses her, "Rejoice, O Mary
+Virgin; thou alone hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world:"
+And again: "Under thy protection we take refuge, holy parent of
+God; despise not thou our prayers in our necessities, but from all
+dangers ever deliver us, O glorious and blessed Virgin." Does
+Gregory assure the faithful that he will implore in humble prayer
+of Peter and Paul? in doing so he is only treading in the very
+footsteps of the Roman Church itself. In an address, which we have
+already quoted (see p. 262), Peter is thus invoked. "Now O good
+shepherd, merciful Peter, accept the prayers of us who supplicate,
+and loose the bands of our sins, by the power committed to thee, by
+which thou shuttest heaven against all by a word, and openest
+it."</p>
+<p>These things are now; but from the beginning it was not so.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page330" id=
+"page330"></a>{330}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="chap3-5" id="chap3-5">CHAPTER V.</a></h3>
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-1" id="sect3-5-1">SECTION I.</a>&mdash;PRESENT
+WORSHIP OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN IN THE AUTHORIZED AND ENJOINED
+SERVICES OF THE CHURCH OF ROME.</h4>
+<p>When from examining the evidence of antiquity we turn to the
+present enjoined services of the Church of Rome, it is impossible
+not to be struck by the fact repeatedly forced upon our notice,
+that whereas the invocation of the Virgin seems to have been
+introduced at a period much later than those addresses to the
+martyrs which have already invited our attention, her worship now
+assumes so much higher a place, and claims so large a share in the
+public worship of the Roman Catholic portions of Christendom above
+martyrs, saints, and angels. The offices of the Virgin present
+instances of all those various and progressive stages of divine
+worship, which we have already exemplified in the case of the
+martyrs, from the first primitive and Christian practice of making
+the anniversary of the Saint a day either of especial praise and
+prayer to God for the mercies of redemption generally, or of
+returning thanks to God for the graces manifested in his holy
+servants now in peace, with prayers for light and strength to
+enable the worshippers to follow them, as they followed
+Christ&mdash;down to the last and worst stage, the consummation
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page331" id=
+"page331"></a>{331}</span> of all, namely, prayer directly to
+saints and angels for protection, succour, and spiritual benefits
+at their hands.</p>
+<p>I. Of the first class is the following collect, retained almost
+word for word in our Anglican service.</p>
+<p><i>On the day of the Purification.</i></p>
+<p>"Almighty and everlasting God, we humbly beseech thy majesty,
+that as thy only begotten Son was this day presented in the temple
+in substance of our flesh, so Thou wouldest cause us to be
+presented unto Thee with purified minds. Through the same."</p>
+<p>(Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, majestatem tuam supplices exoramus,
+ut sicut unigenitus Filius tuus hodierna die cum nostr&aelig;
+carnis substantia est pr&aelig;sentatus, ita nos facias purificatis
+tibi mentibus pr&aelig;sentari. Per eundem Dominum.&mdash;H.
+536.)</p>
+<p>Such a prayer is founded on the facts of revelation, and is
+primitive, catholic, apostolic, and evangelical.</p>
+<p>II. Of the second progressive stage towards the adoration of the
+saints, the offices of the Virgin supply us with various instances;
+the case, namely, of the Christian orator being led by the flow of
+his eloquence to apostrophize the spirit of the Saint, and address
+him as though he were present, witnessing the celebration of his
+day, hearing the panegyrics uttered for his honour, and partaking
+with the congregation in their religious acts of worship.</p>
+<p>"O holy and spotless virginhood; with what praises to extol thee
+I know not: because Him, whom the heavens could not contain, thou
+didst bear in thy bosom. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page332"
+id="page332"></a>{332}</span> Blessed art thou among women, and
+blessed is the fruit of thy womb. Thou art blessed, O Virgin Mary,
+who didst carry the Lord, the Creator of the world. Thou didst give
+birth to Him who made thee, and remainest a virgin for ever. [Beata
+es Virgo Maria, qu&aelig; Dominum portasti Creatorem mundi:
+genuisti qui te fecit, et in &aelig;ternum permanes
+virgo.&mdash;Vern. clxii.] Hail, holy parent, who didst in
+child-birth bring forth the King who ruleth heaven and earth for
+ever and ever. Amen." [Salve sacra parens enixa puerpera regem, qui
+coelum terramque regit in s&aelig;cula s&aelig;culorum.
+Amen.&mdash;Introit. at the mass on the Nativity of the
+Virgin.]</p>
+<p>In apostrophes like these, the members of the Anglican Church
+see nothing in itself harmful, so long as they are kept within due
+bounds. Many of the passages cited from the ancient writers in
+proof of their having espoused the doctrine, and exemplified in
+themselves the practice of invoking saints, are nothing more than
+these glowing addresses. They have been responded to by one of the
+brightest ornaments, and sweetest minstrels of the Anglican Church,
+whose apostrophe at the same time by its own words would guard us
+against the abuses and excesses in which in the Roman Catholic
+Church this practice, followed without restraint and indulged in
+with less and less of caution and soberness, unhappily ended;
+abuses against which also we cannot ourselves now be too constantly
+and carefully on our guard.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Ave Maria! Blessed maid,</p>
+<p>Lily of Eden's fragrant shade,</p>
+<p class="i4">Who can express the love,</p>
+<p>That nurtured thee so pure and sweet;</p>
+<p>Making thy heart a shelter meet</p>
+<p class="i4">For Jesus' holy Dove?</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page333" id=
+"page333"></a>{333}</span>
+<p>Ave Maria! mother blest,</p>
+<p>To whom, caressing and caress'd,</p>
+<p class="i4">Clings the Eternal Child!</p>
+<p>Favour'd beyond archangel's dream,</p>
+<p>When first on thee with tenderest gleam</p>
+<p class="i4">The newborn Saviour smiled.</p>
+<p>Ave Maria! thou whose name,</p>
+<p>ALL BUT ADORING love may claim,</p>
+<p class="i4">Yet may we reach thy shrine;</p>
+<p>For HE, thy Son and Saviour, vows,</p>
+<p>To crown all lowly lofty brows</p>
+<p class="i4">With love and joy like thine.</p>
+<p>Bless'd is the womb that bare Him,&mdash;bless'd</p>
+<p>The bosom where his lips were press'd;</p>
+<p class="i4">But rather bless'd are they</p>
+<p>Who hear his word and keep it well,</p>
+<p>The living homes where Christ shall dwell,</p>
+<p class="i4">And never pass away."</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>J. Keble's Christian Year. "The Annunciation."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Would that no branch of the Church Catholic had ever passed the
+boundary line drawn here so exquisitely by this Anglican Catholic,
+from whose lips or pen no syllable could ever fall in disparagement
+of the holy Virgin, as blessed among women, and the holy mother of
+our Lord. To bring about the re-union of Christians would in that
+case have been a far more hopeful task than it is now.</p>
+<p>III. In the third stage, a prayer was offered to God, that He
+would permit the intercessions of the saints to help us; or the
+prayer contained the expression of a wish,&mdash;a desire not
+addressed either to God or to the saint, merely words expressive of
+the hope of the individual. The following are some of the many
+instances now contained in the Roman Breviary:</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page334" id=
+"page334"></a>{334}</span>
+<p>"May the Virgin of virgins herself intercede for us to the Lord.
+Amen." [Ipsa Virgo virginum intercedat pro nobis ad Dominum.
+Amen.&mdash;Vern. cxlviii.]</p>
+<p>In the Post-communion, on the day of the Assumption, this prayer
+is offered:&mdash;"Partakers of the heavenly table, we implore thy
+clemency, O Lord our God, that we who celebrate the Assumption of
+the mother of God, may, by her intercession, be freed from all
+impending evils. Through," &amp;c. [Mens&aelig; coelestis
+participes effecti imploramus clementiam tuam, Domine Deus noster,
+ut qui Assumptionem Dei Genetricis colimus, a cunctis malis
+imminentibus ejus intercessione liberemur. Per.&mdash;Miss.
+Rom.]</p>
+<p>"We beseech Thee, O Lord, let the glorious intercession of the
+blessed and glorious ever Virgin Mary protect us and bring us to
+life eternal." [Beat&aelig; et glorios&aelig; semper Virginia
+Mari&aelig;, qu&aelig;sumus, Domine, intercessio gloriosa nos
+protegat, et ad vitam producat &aelig;ternam.&mdash;Vern. clv.]</p>
+<p>"Pardon, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the offences of thy servants,
+that we, who cannot please Thee of our own act, may be saved by the
+intercession of the mother of thy Son, our Lord, who liveth with
+Thee." [Famulorum tuorum qu&aelig;sumus, Domine, delictis ignosce,
+ut qui tibi placere de nostris actibus non valemus, Genetricis
+Filii tui, Domini nostri, intercessione salvemur, qui tecum
+vivit.&mdash;Vern. clxix.]</p>
+<p>On the vigil of the Epiphany, this prayer is offered in the
+Post-communion at the mass,&mdash;"Let this communion, O Lord,
+purge us from guilt, and by the intercession of the blessed Virgin,
+mother of God, let it make us partakers of the heavenly cure.
+Through the same." [H&aelig;c nos communio, Domine, purget a
+crimine, et intercedente beata Virgine Dei genetrice coelestis
+remedii faciat esse consortes. Per eundem.&mdash;Miss. Rom.]</p>
+<p>"Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord God, that we thy <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page335" id="page335"></a>{335}</span> servants
+may enjoy perpetual health of body and mind, and be freed from
+present sorrow, and enjoy eternal gladness, by the glorious
+intercession of the blessed Mary, ever Virgin. Through." [Concede
+nos famulos tuos, qu&aelig;sumus, Domine Deus, perpetua mentis et
+corporis sanitate gaudere, et gloriosa beat&aelig; Mari&aelig;
+semper Virginis intercessione a pr&aelig;senti liberari tristitia,
+et &aelig;terna perfrui l&aelig;titia. Per Dominum.&mdash;Vern.
+cxlvi.]</p>
+<p>On the second Sunday after Easter, we find a further and more
+sad departure from the simplicity of Christian worship, in which
+the Church of Rome declares that the offerings made to God at the
+Lord's Supper were made for the honour of the Virgin.&mdash;"Having
+received, O Lord, the helps of our salvation, grant, we beseech
+Thee, that by the patronage of Mary, ever Virgin, we may be every
+where protected; in veneration of whom we make these offerings to
+thy Majesty." [Sumptis, Domine, salutis nostr&aelig; subsidiis, da,
+qu&aelig;sumus, beat&aelig; Mari&aelig; semper Virginis patrociniis
+ubique protegi, <i>in cujus veneratione</i> h&aelig;c tu&aelig;
+obtulimus Majestati.&mdash;Post Commun. Mis. Rom.]</p>
+<p>On the octave of Easter, at the celebration of mass, in the
+Secret, the intercession of the Virgin is made to appear as
+essential a cause of our peace and blessedness as the propitiation
+of Christ; or rather, the two are represented as joint concurrent
+causes; as though the office of the Saviour was confined to
+propitiation, exclusive altogether of intercession, whilst the
+office of intercession was assigned to the Virgin.&mdash;"By thy
+propitiation, O Lord, and by the intercession of the blessed Mary,
+ever Virgin, may this offering be profitable to us for perpetual
+and present prosperity and peace." [Tua, Domine, propitiatione et
+beat&aelig; Maris&aelig; semper Virginis intercessione ad perpetuam
+atque prsesentem h&aelig;c oblatio nobis profecerit prosperitatem
+et pacem.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page336" id=
+"page336"></a>{336}</span>
+<p>IV. A fourth station in this lamentable progress was evidenced
+when Christians at the tombs of martyrs implored, yet still in
+prayer to God, that He would, for the sake of the martyrs, and by
+their merits and good offices, grant to the petitioner some benefit
+temporal or spiritual. Of that practice, we have an example in this
+prayer: "O God, who didst deign to choose the blessed Virgin's womb
+in which to dwell, vouchsafe, we beseech thee, to make us, defended
+by her protection, to take pleasure in her commemoration." [Deus
+qui virginalem aulam beat&aelig; Mari&aelig; in qua habitares
+eligerere dignatus es, da, qu&aelig;sumus, ut sua nos defensione
+munitos jucundos facias su&aelig; interesse
+commemorationi.&mdash;&AElig;st. clvi.]</p>
+<p>"By the Virgin mother, may the Lord grant us health and peace.
+Amen." [Per Virginem Matrem concedat nobis Dominus salutem et
+pacem. Amen.&mdash;Vern. cxliii.]</p>
+<p>"By the prayers and merits of the blessed Mary, ever Virgin, and
+of all saints, may the Lord bring us to the kingdom of heaven."
+[Precibus et meritis beat&aelig; Mari&aelig; Virginis et omnium
+sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad regna coelorum.&mdash;Vern.
+cxlvii.]</p>
+<p>"May the Virgin Mary bless us, together with a pious offspring."
+[Nos cum prole pia benedicat Virgo Maria.&mdash;Vern. cxlvii.]</p>
+<p>V. The fifth grade involves a still more melancholy departure
+from Christian truth and primitive simplicity, when the prayer is
+no longer addressed to God, but is offered to the Virgin, imploring
+her to intercede with God for the supplicants, yet still asking
+nothing but her prayers.</p>
+<p>"Blessed mother, Virgin undefiled, glorious Queen of the world,
+intercede for us with the Lord." [Beata Mater, et intacta Virgo,
+gloriosa regina mundi, intercede pro nobis ad Dominum.&mdash;Aut.
+cxliv.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page337" id=
+"page337"></a>{337}</span>
+<p>"Blessed mother of God, Mary, perpetual Virgin, the temple of
+the Lord, the holy place of the holy Spirit, thou alone without
+example hast pleased our Lord Jesus Christ: Pray for the people,
+mediate for the clergy, intercede for the female sex who are under
+a vow." [Beata Dei Genitrix, Maria Virgo perpetua, templum Domini,
+sacrarium Spiritus Sancti, sola sine exemplo placuisti Domino
+nostro Jesu Christo; ora pro populo, interveni pro clero, intercede
+pro devoto femineo sexu.&mdash;Vern. clxiii.]</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Holy Mary, pray for us!</p>
+<p>Holy mother of God, pray for us!</p>
+<p>Holy Virgin of virgins, pray for us!"</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>In the form of prayer called Litani&aelig; Lauretan&aelig;,
+between the most solemn addresses to the ever blessed Trinity, and
+to the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world, are
+inserted more than forty addresses to the Virgin, invoking her
+under as many varieties of title. She is appealed to as&mdash;The
+Mirror of Justice, The Cause of our Joy, The mystical Rose, The
+Tower of David, The Tower of Ivory, The House of Gold, The Arc of
+the Covenant, The Gate of Heaven, The Refuge of Sinners, The Queen
+of Angels, the Queen of all Saints. [Vern. ccxxxix.]</p>
+<p>In examining the case of the invocation of saints, we placed
+under this head, as the safer course, a kind of invocation which
+seemed to vacillate between this appeal to them merely for
+intercession, and the last consummation of all, direct prayer to
+them for blessings. We exemplified it by the hymn to St. Stephen.
+The following seems very much of the same character, addressed to
+the Virgin:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Hail, O Queen, Mother of mercy, our life, sweetness, and hope,
+Hail! To thee we cry, banished sons <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page338" id="page338"></a>{338}</span> of Eve. To thee we sigh,
+groaning and weeping in this valley of tears. Come then, our
+Advocate, turn those compassionate eyes of thine on us, and after
+this exile show to us Jesus, the blessed fruit of thy womb. O
+merciful! O pious! O sweet Virgin Mary! [Salve, Regina, Mater
+Misericordi&aelig;, vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra, salve. Ad te
+clamamus exules filii Ev&aelig;. Ad te suspiramus gementes et
+flentes in hac lachrymarum valle. Eja ergo Advocata nostra, illos
+tuos misericordes oculos ad nos converte, et Jesum benedictum
+fructum ventris tui nobis post hoc exilium ostende. O clemens! O
+pia! O dulcis Virgo Maria!]</p>
+<p>"Pray for us, O holy Mother of God, that we may be made worthy
+of the promises of Christ." [Ora pro nobis, Sancta Dei Genetrix, ut
+digni efficiamur promissionibus Christi.&mdash;&AElig;st. 151.]</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>VI. Unhappily, in the appointed religious services of the Roman
+ritual, we have too many examples of prayer for benefits spiritual
+and temporal, addressed directly to the Virgin. It is in vain to
+say that all that is meant is to ask her intercession; the people
+will not, cannot, do not, regard it in that light. It is affirmed
+that when the Church of Rome guides and directs her sons and
+daughters to pray for specific benefits at the hands of the Virgin
+mother, without any mention of her prayers, without specifying that
+her petitions are all that they ask; yet they are taught only to
+ask for her intercession, and are not encouraged to look for the
+blessings as her gift and at her hands. But, can this be right and
+safe? In an act of all human acts the most solemn and holy, can
+recourse be had to such refinements without great danger?</p>
+<p>Among many others of a similar kind this invocation frequently
+recurs, "Deem me worthy to praise thee, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page339" id="page339"></a>{339}</span> O sacred
+Virgin; give to me strength against thy enemies." [Dignare me
+laudare te, Virgo sacrata. Da mihi virtutem contra hostes
+tuos.&mdash;&AElig;st. clvi.]</p>
+<p>The following seems to be among the most favourite addresses to
+the Virgin:&mdash;"Hail, Star of the Sea, kind Mother of God, and
+ever Virgin! Happy Gate of Heaven, taking that 'Hail!' from the
+mouth of Gabriel, establish us in peace,&mdash;changing the name of
+Eve. For the guilty, loose their bonds; bring forth light for the
+blind; drive away our evils; demand for us all good things. SHOW
+THAT THOU ART A MOTHER. Let Him who endured for us to be thy Son,
+through thee receive our prayers. O excellent Virgin, meek among
+all, us, FREED FROM FAULT, MAKE MEEK AND CHASTE; make our life
+pure; prepare a safe journey; that, beholding Jesus, we may always
+rejoice. Praise be to God the Father, glory to Christ most high,
+and to the Holy Spirit; one honour to the three. Amen."</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>[Ave Man's Stella,</p>
+<p>Dei Mater alma,</p>
+<p>Atque semper Virgo!</p>
+<p>Felix coeli porta,</p>
+<p>Sumens illud Ave</p>
+<p>Gabrielis ore,</p>
+<p>Funda nos in pace,</p>
+<p>Mutans Ev&aelig; nomen.</p>
+<p>Solve vincla reis,</p>
+<p>Profer lumen c&aelig;cis,</p>
+<p>Mala nostra pelle,</p>
+<p>Bona cuncta posce.</p>
+<p>MONSTRA TE ESSE MATREM;</p>
+<p>Sumat per te preces,</p>
+<p>Qui pro nobis natus</p>
+<p>Tulit esse tuus.</p>
+<p>Virgo singularis,</p>
+<p>Inter omnes mitis,</p>
+<p>Nos culpa solutos,</p>
+<p>Mites fac et castos,</p>
+<p>Vitam pr&aelig;sta puram,</p>
+<p>Iter para tutum,</p>
+<p>Ut videntes Jesum</p>
+<p>Semper coll&aelig;temur.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Sit laus Deo Patri, summo Christo decus,</p>
+<p>Spiritui Sancto, tribus honor unus. Amen.&mdash;&AElig;st.
+597.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>In the body of this hymn, there is undoubtedly reference to an
+application to be made to the Son, &amp;c.; but can it be fitting
+that such language as is here suggested to the Virgin, for her to
+use, should be addressed by a <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page340" id="page340"></a>{340}</span> mortal to God? can such a
+call upon her to show her power and influence over the eternal Son
+of the eternal Father be fitting&mdash;"Show that thou art a
+mother?" I confess that against what is here implied, my
+understanding and my heart entirely revolt.<a id="footnotetag127"
+name="footnotetag127"></a><a href=
+"#footnote127"><sup>127</sup></a></p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote127" name=
+"footnote127"></a><b>Footnote 127:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag127">(return)</a>
+<p>At the present day some versions, contrary to the whole drift
+and plain sense and meaning of the passage, have translated it, as
+though the prayer was, that Mary would, by her maternal good
+offices in our behalf, prove to us that she was our mother. An
+instance of what I mean occurs in a work called "Nouveau Recueil de
+Cantiques," p. 353.</p>
+<p>"Monstra te esse Matrem: Faites voir que vous &ecirc;tes
+v&eacute;ritablement notre m&egrave;re." In an English manual,
+first printed in 1688, and then called "The Prince of Wales's
+Manual," the lines are thus rendered&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Shew us a Mother's care,</p>
+<p>To Him convey our prayer,</p>
+<p>Who for our sake put on</p>
+<p>The title of thy Son.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>I rejoice to see an indication of a feeling of impropriety in
+the sentiment in its plain, obvious meaning; still the change is
+inadmissible. She is addressed above, in the second line, as the
+mother of God; Jesus is immediately mentioned, in the very next
+line, and through the entire stanza, as her Son; and the prayer is,
+that through her that Being who endured to be her Son would hear
+the prayers of the worshippers.</p>
+<p>Since I first prepared this note for the press, I have found a
+proof, that the obvious grammatical and logical meaning, "show
+thyself to be His mother," is the sense in which it was received
+and interpreted before the Reformation. In a work dedicated to the
+"Youth of England studious of good morals," and entitled "Expositio
+Sequentiarum," the only interpretation given to this passage is
+thus expressed: "Show thyself to be a MOTHER, namely BY APPEASING
+THY SON, and let thy Son take our prayers through thee, who
+(namely, the Son born of the Virgin Mary,) for us miserable sinners
+endured to be thy Son." "Monstra te esse MATREM (sc.) placando
+TILIUM TUUM, et filius tuus sumat precem, id est, deprecationes
+nostras per te qui (sc.) filius natus ex Virgine Maria pro nobis
+(sc.) miseris peccatoribus tulit, id est, sustinuit esse tuus
+filius." It must be observed, that this work was expressly written
+for the purpose of explaining these parts of the ritual according
+to the use of Sarum. It was printed by the famous W. de Worde, at
+the sign of the Sun in Fleet-street, 1508. The passage occurs in p.
+33. b. This is by no means the only book of the kind. I have before
+me one printed at Basil, in 1504, and another at Cologne the same
+year. They are evidently all drawn from some common source, but are
+not reprints all of the same work, for there are in each some
+variations. The Cologne edition tells us, that it was the reprint
+of a familiar commentary long ago (jamdudum) published on the
+hymns. All these join in construing the passage so as to represent
+the prayer to the Virgin to be, that she would show and prove that
+she was mother by appeasing her Son, and causing him to hear our
+prayers. Nor can any other meaning be attached to the translation
+of the words as given by Cardinal Du Perron (Replique &agrave; la
+Rep. du Roy de la G. Bretagne. Paris, 1620, p. 970). "Et pourtant
+quand l'Eglise dit &agrave; la saincte Vierge, 'Defends nous de
+l'ennemy, et nous re&ccedil;oy &agrave; l'heure delamort,' elle
+n'entend pas prier la Vierge qu'elle nous re&ccedil;oive par sa
+propre virtu, mais par impetration de la grace de son Fils, comme
+l'Eglise le temoigne en ces mots: 'Monstre que tu es m&egrave;re,
+re&ccedil;oive par toy nos prieres celuy, qui n&eacute; pour nous a
+eu agreeable d'&ecirc;tre tien!'" This novel interpretation I have
+not found in any one book of former days.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page341" id=
+"page341"></a>{341}</span>
+<p>Another prayer runs thus: "Under thy protection we take refuge,
+Holy Mother of God. Despise not our supplications in our
+necessities; but from all dangers ever deliver us, O glorious and
+Blessed Virgin." [Sub tuum pr&aelig;sidium confugimus, sancta Dei
+Genetrix; nostras deprecationes ne despicias in necessitatibus, sed
+a periculis cunctis libera nos semper, Virgo gloriosa et
+benedicta.&mdash;&AElig;st. cxlvi.]</p>
+<p>Let us suppose the object of these addresses to be changed; and
+instead of the Virgin let us substitute the name of the
+ever-blessed God and Father of us all. The very words here
+addressed to the Virgin are offered to Him, and spoken of Him in
+some of the most affecting prayers and praises recorded in the
+Bible<a id="footnotetag128" name="footnotetag128"></a><a href=
+"#footnote128"><sup>128</sup></a>.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote128" name=
+"footnote128"></a><b>Footnote 128:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag128">(return)</a>
+<p>The identity of the prayers offered to the Virgin with those
+offered in the Book of inspiration, or in the Roman Ritual to the
+Almighty, becomes very striking, if we lay side by side the
+authorized language of the Roman Liturgy, and the only translation
+of the Scriptures authorized by the Roman Church.</p>
+<table summary="Translation">
+<tr>
+<td><i>Roman Ritual in addressing the Virgin</i></td>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td><i>Roman Ritual, or Translation of the Bible, in addressing the
+Almighty</i>.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Sub tuum pr&aelig;sidium confugimus.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Dominus, firmamentum meum et refugium meum. Ad te
+confugi.&mdash;Ps. xvii. 1; cxlii. 11.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Nostras deprecationes ne despicias in necessitatibus.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Ne despexeris deprecationem meam.&mdash;Ps. liv. 1.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Sed a periculis cunctis libera nos.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Libera, Domine, animam servi tui ab omnibus periculis inferni.
+Hiem. ccvi.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Libera nos a malo. Orat. Dom.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+<td>A periculo mortis libera nos, Domine.&mdash;Hiem. cciv.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Tu nos ab hoste protege.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>Eripe me de inimicis meis, Domine.&mdash;Ps. cxlii. 11.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>Et hora mortis SUSPICE.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td><i>Suscipe</i>, Domine, servum tuum.&mdash;Hiem.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page342" id=
+"page342"></a>{342}</span>
+<p>But another hymn in the office of the Virgin, addressed in part
+to the blessed Saviour himself, and partly to the Virgin Mary, is
+still more revolting to all my feelings with regard to religious
+worship. The Redeemer is only asked to remember his mortal birth;
+no blessing is here supplicated for at his hands; his protection is
+not sought; no deliverance of our souls at the hour of death is
+implored from Him; these blessings, and these heavenly benefits,
+and these divine mercies, are sought for exclusively at the hands
+of the Virgin alone. Can such a mingled prayer, can such a contrast
+in prayer, be the genuine fruit of that Gospel which bids us ask
+for all we need in prayer to God in the name and for the sake of
+his blessed Son?</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Author of our salvation, remember that once, by <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page343" id="page343"></a>{343}</span> being
+born of a spotless virgin, thou didst take the form of our body!
+Mary, mother of grace, mother of mercy, do thou protect us from the
+enemy, and receive us at the hour of death. Glory to thee, O Lord,
+who wast born of a Virgin, with the Father and the Holy Spirit,
+through eternal ages. Amen<a id="footnotetag129" name=
+"footnotetag129"></a><a href=
+"#footnote129"><sup>129</sup></a>."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote129" name=
+"footnote129"></a><b>Footnote 129:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag129">(return)</a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Memento, Salutis Auctor, Tu nos ab hoste protege, Quod nostri
+quondam corporis, Et hora mortis suscipe. Ex illibata Virgine,
+Gloria tibi, Domine, Nascendo formam sumpseris. Qui natus es de
+Virgine, Maria mater grati&aelig;, Cum Patre et Sancto Spiritu,
+Mater misericordi&aelig;, In sempiterna s&aelig;cula. Amen.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the new version, (referred to in page 260 of the present
+work,) this hymn stands thus:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Memento, rerum Conctitor, Maria mater grati&aelig;, Nostri quod
+olim corporis, Dulcis parens clementi&aelig;, Sacrata ab alvo
+Virginis, Tu nos ab hoste protege, Nascendo forrnam sumpseris. In
+mortis hora suscipe, &amp;c.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&AElig;st. clv.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Could the beloved John, to whose kind and tender care our
+blessed Lord gave his mother of especial trust, have offered to her
+such a prayer as this? To God alone surely would he have prayed for
+deliverance from all evil and mischief. To God alone would he have
+prayed:&mdash;"In the hour of death, good Lord, deliver us, and all
+for Jesus Christ's sake, our only Saviour and Mediator."</p>
+<p>To one other example of the practice of the Church of Rome I
+must refer. The rubric in our Book of Common Prayer directs that
+"at the end of every Psalm throughout the year, shall be repeated,
+Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost: As
+it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without
+end. Amen." In the Roman Breviary also we find this rubric: "This
+verse, <i>Gloria</i>, is always said in the end of all psalms,
+EXCEPT IT BE OTHERWISE <span class="pagenum"><a name="page344" id=
+"page344"></a>{344}</span> NOTED." [&AElig;st. 3.] Such
+notifications occur at the end of various psalms. On the Feast of
+the Assumption [&AElig;st. 595.], fourteen psalms are appointed to
+be used. At the close of every one of these psalms, without however
+any note that the Gloria is not to be said, there is appended an
+anthem to the Virgin. In some cases, so intimately is the anthem
+interwoven with the closing words of the psalm, as that under other
+circumstances it would induce us to infer that the Gloria was
+intended to be left out, especially as in the Parvum Officium of
+the Virgin [&AElig;st. clv.], though to the various psalms anthems
+in the same manner have been annexed, yet the words "Gloria Patri
+et Filio" are inserted in each case between the psalm and the
+anthem. Be this as it may, the annexation of the anthem has a
+lamentable tendency to withdraw the thoughts of the worshippers
+from the truths contained in the inspired psalm, and to fix them
+upon Mary and her Assumption; changing the Church's address from
+the Eternal Being, alone invoked by the Psalmist, to one, who
+though a virgin blessed among women, is a creature of God's hand.
+Thus, at the conclusion of the 8th psalm; "O Lord, our Lord, how
+excellent is thy name in all the world," we find immediately
+annexed these two anthems, "The holy mother of God is exalted above
+the choirs of angels to the heavenly realms. The gates of paradise
+are opened to us by thee, [by thee, O Virgin [Qu&aelig; gloriosa]]
+who glorious triumphest with the angels." Thus again, an anthem is
+attached to the last verse of the 95th (in the Hebrew and English
+versions the 96th). "He shall judge the earth in equity, and the
+people with his truth. Rejoice, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page345" id="page345"></a>{345}</span> O Virgin Mary; thou alone
+hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world. Deem me worthy to
+praise thee, hallowed Virgin: Give me strength against thy
+enemies." To the 96th (97th), the latter clause of that address is
+repeated, with the addition of the following: "After the birth thou
+didst remain a virgin inviolate. Mother of God, intercede for
+us."</p>
+<p>An instance of the anthem being so intimately interwoven with
+the psalm, as to render the insertion of the "Gloria," between the
+two, to say the least, forced and unnatural, occurs at the close of
+the 86th (87th) psalm. The vulgate translation of the last verse,
+differing entirely from the English, is this: "As the habitation of
+all who rejoice is in thee." This sentence of the Psalmist is thus
+taken up in the Roman Ritual: "As the habitation of all us who
+rejoice is in THEE, Holy Mother of God."</p>
+<p>The object proposed by the Church from of old in concluding each
+psalm by an ascription of glory to the eternal Trinity, was to lead
+the worshipper to apply the sentiments of the psalm to the work of
+our salvation accomplished by the three Persons of the Godhead. The
+analogous end of these anthems in the present service of the Church
+of Rome is to fix the thoughts of the worshipper upon Mary. This
+practice unhappily sanctions the excesses into which Bonaventura
+and others have run in their departures from the purity and
+integrity of primitive worship.</p>
+<p>Cardinal du Perron informs us, that at the altar in the office
+of the mass, prayer is not made directly to any saint, but only
+obliquely, the address being always made to God. But if prayers are
+offered in other parts of the service directly to them, it is
+difficult to see what is gained by that announcement. Surely it is
+trifling <span class="pagenum"><a name="page346" id=
+"page346"></a>{346}</span> to make such immaterial distinctions. If
+as a priest I could address the following prayer to the Virgin in
+preparing for offering mass, why should I not offer a prayer to the
+same being during its celebration?</p>
+<p>"O mother of pity and mercy, blessed Virgin Mary, I a miserable
+and unworthy sinner, flee to thee with my whole heart and
+affection, and I pray thy most sweet pity, that as thou didst stand
+by thy most sweet Son hanging upon the cross, so thou wouldest
+vouchsafe mercifully to stand by me a miserable priest, and by all
+priests who here and in all the holy Church offer Him this day,
+that, aided by thy grace, we may be enabled to offer a worthy and
+acceptable victim in the sight of the most high and undivided
+Trinity. Amen." [O Mater pietatis et misericordi&aelig;, beatissima
+Virgo Maria, ego miser et indignus peccator ad te confugio toto
+corde et affectu. Et precor dulcissimam pietatem tuam, ut sicut
+dulcissimo Filio tuo in cruce pendenti astitisti, ita et mihi
+misero sacerdoti et sacerdotibus omnibus hic et in tota sancta
+ecclesia ipsum hodie offerentibus, clementer assistere digneris, ut
+tua gratia adjuti dignam et acceptabilem hostiam in conspectu
+summ&aelig; et individu&aelig; Trinitatis offerre valeamus.
+Amen.&mdash;Rom. Brev. Hus. Hiem. p. ccxxxiii.]</p>
+<p>This is called, in the Roman Breviary, "A PRAYER to the blessed
+Virgin before the celebration of the mass," and is immediately
+followed by another prayer directed to be offered to any saint,
+male or female, whose feast is on that day celebrated. "O Holy N.
+behold I, a miserable sinner, DERIVING CONFIDENCE FROM THY MERITS,
+now offer the most holy sacrament of the body and blood of our Lord
+Jesus Christ, FOR THY HONOUR AND GLORY. I humbly and devotedly pray
+thee that thou wouldest deign to intercede for me to-day, that I
+may be enabled to offer so great a sacrifice <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page347" id="page347"></a>{347}</span> worthily
+and acceptably, and to praise Him eternally with thee and with all
+his elect, and that I may live with Him for ever." [O sancte N.
+ecce ego miser peccator de tuis mentis confisus, offero nunc
+sacratissimura sacramentum corporis et sanguinis Domini nostri Jesu
+Christ! PRO TUO HONORE ET GLORIA; precor te humiliter et devote ut
+pro me hodie intercedere digneris, ut tantum sacrificium digne et
+acceptabiliter offerre valeam, ut Eum tecum et cum omnibus electis
+ejus &aelig;ternaliter laudare et cum eo semper regnare
+valeam.&mdash;Hiem. ccxxxiii.]</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Such, Christian brethren, is the result of our inquiries into
+the real practice of the Church of Rome with regard to the worship
+of the Virgin Mary at the present day, in every part of the world
+where allegiance to that Church is acknowledged. Can we wonder that
+individuals, high in honour with that Church, have carried out the
+same worship to far greater lengths? I have ever present to my mind
+the principle of fixing upon the Church of Rome herself that only
+which is to be found in her canons, acknowledged decrees, and
+formularies. And unhappily of that which directly contravenes the
+Gospel-rule and primitive practice, far more than enough is found
+in her authorized rituals to compel all who hold to the Gospel and
+the integrity of primitive times, to withdraw their assent and
+consent from her worship. But with this principle before us, surely
+common justice and common prudence require that we should see for
+ourselves the practical workings of the system. "By their fruits ye
+shall know them," is a principle no less sanctioned by the Gospel
+than suggested by common sense and experience And, indeed, the
+shocking lengths to which priests, bishops, cardinals, and
+canonized persons have gone in this particular of the worship of
+the Virgin, might well <span class="pagenum"><a name="page348" id=
+"page348"></a>{348}</span> cause every upright and enlightened
+Roman Catholic to look anxiously to the foundation; to determine
+honestly, though with tender caution and pious care, for himself,
+whether the corruption be not in the well-head, whether the stream
+do not flow impregnated with the poison from the very fountain
+itself; whether the prayers authorized and directed by the Church
+of Rome to be offered to the Virgin be not in themselves at
+variance with the first principles of the Gospel&mdash;Faith in one
+God, the giver of every good, and in one Mediator and Intercessor
+between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, whose blood cleanseth
+from all sin: in a word, to see whether all the aberrations of her
+children in this department of religious duty have not their
+prototype in the laws and ordinances, the rules and injunctions,
+the example and practice of their mother herself.</p>
+<p>Indeed I am compelled here to say, that, however revolting to us
+as believers in Jesus, and as worshippers of the one true God, are
+those extravagant excesses into which the votaries of the Virgin
+Mary have run, I have found few of their most unequivocal
+ascriptions of divine worship to her, for a justification of which
+they cannot with reason appeal to the authorized ritual of the
+Church of Rome.</p>
+<p>In leaving this point of our inquiry, I would suggest two
+considerations: 1st, If it was intended that the invocation of the
+Virgin should be exclusively confined to requests, praying her to
+pray and intercede by prayer for the petitioners, why should
+language be addressed to her which in its plain, obvious,
+grammatical, and common sense interpretation conveys the form of
+direct prayers to her for benefits believed to be at her disposal?
+And, 2ndly, If the Church had <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page349" id="page349"></a>{349}</span> intended that her members,
+when they suppliantly invoked the Virgin Mary, and had recourse to
+her aid, should have offered to her direct and immediate prayers
+that she would grant temporal and spiritual benefits, to be
+dispensed at her own will, and by her own authority and power, in
+that case, what words could the Church have put into the mouth of
+the petitioners which would more explicitly and unequivocally have
+conveyed that idea?</p>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-2" id="sect3-5-2">SECTION
+II.</a>&mdash;WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN, CONTINUED.</h4>
+<p>I have no intention of dwelling at any length on the
+extraordinary excesses to which the adoration of the Virgin Mary
+has been carried in the Church of Rome, I do not mean by obscure
+and illiterate or fanatical individuals, but by her celebrated
+prelates, doctors, and saints. My researches have brought to my
+knowledge such a mass of error and corruption in the worship of
+Christians as I never before had any conception of; and rather than
+bring it all forward, and exhibit it to others, I would turn my own
+eyes from it altogether. Still many reasons render it absolutely
+necessary that we should not pass over the subject entirely in
+silence. Few in England, I believe, are aware of the real facts of
+the case; and it well becomes us to guard ourselves and others
+against such melancholy results as would appear to be inseparable
+from the invocation and worship of the Virgin. If indeed we could
+be justified in regarding such palpable instances of her worship in
+its most objectionable form as the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page350" id="page350"></a>{350}</span> marks of former and less
+enlightened times, most gladly would I draw a veil over them, and
+hide them from our sight for ever. But when I find the solemn
+addresses of the present chief authorities in the Church, nay, the
+epistles of the present sovereign Pontiff himself, cherishing,
+countenancing, and encouraging the selfsame evil departures from
+primitive truth and worship, it becomes a matter not of choice, but
+of necessity, to give examples at least of the deplorable excesses
+into which the highest and most honoured in that communion have
+been betrayed. On the present Pope's encyclical letter [A.D. 1840]
+we have already observed; and in this place I propose to examine
+only one more of those many excesses meeting us on every side,
+which characterize the public worship of the Virgin. The instance
+to which I refer seems to take a sort of middle station between the
+authorized enjoined services of the Church of Rome, and the
+devotions of individuals and family worship. It partakes on the one
+hand far too much of a public character to be considered in the
+light of private religious exercises; and on the other it wants
+that authority which would rank it among the appointed services of
+the Church. The devotional parts of the services are found neither
+in the Missals nor the Breviaries, and the adoption and celebration
+of the service seems to be left to the option and care of
+individuals. But the service is performed in the Churches,&mdash;a
+Priest presides,&mdash;the Host is presented to the adorations of
+the people,&mdash;and a sermon is preached by an appointed
+minister. The service to which I am referring is performed every
+evening through the entire month of May, and is celebrated
+expressly in honour of the Virgin Mary.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page351" id=
+"page351"></a>{351}</span>
+<p>The month of May is dedicated to her, and is called Mary's
+month. Temporary altars are raised to her honour, surrounded by
+flowers and adorned with garlands and drapery; her image usually
+standing before the altar. Societies are formed chiefly for the
+celebration of the Virgin's praises, and in some Churches the
+effect, both to the eye and to the ear, corresponds with the
+preparation. One thing only is wanting&mdash;the proper object of
+worship. I have now before me a book of hymns published professedly
+for the religious fraternities in Paris, and used in the Churches
+there. [Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques &agrave; l'usage des
+confr&eacute;ries des Paroisses de Paris. Paris, 1839.] Many of
+these hymns are addressed to the Virgin alone; some without any
+reference to the Son of God and Man, the only Saviour, and without
+any allusion to the God of Christians; indeed, an address to a
+heathen Goddess more entirely destitute of Christianity can
+scarcely be conceived. I copy one hymn entire.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Around the altars of Mary</p>
+<p>Let us, her children, press;</p>
+<p>To that mother so endeared</p>
+<p>Let us address the sweetest prayers.</p>
+<p>Let a lively and holy mirth</p>
+<p>Animate us in this holy day:</p>
+<p>There exists no sadness</p>
+<p>For a heart full of her love.</p>
+<p>Let us adorn this sanctuary with flowers;</p>
+<p>Let us deck her revered altar;</p>
+<p>Let us redouble our efforts to please her.</p>
+<p>Be this month consecrated to her;</p>
+<p>Let the perfume of these crowns</p>
+<p>Form a delicious incense,</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page352" id=
+"page352"></a>{352}</span>
+<p>Which ascending even to her throne</p>
+<p>May carry to her both our hearts and our prayers.</p>
+<p>Let the holy name of Mary</p>
+<p>Be for us a name of salvation!</p>
+<p>Let our softened soul</p>
+<p>Ever pay to her a sweet tribute of love.</p>
+<p>Let us join the choirs of angels</p>
+<p>The more to celebrate her beauty;</p>
+<p>And may our songs of praise</p>
+<p>Resound in eternity.</p>
+<p>O holy Virgin! O our mother!</p>
+<p>Watch over us from fhe height of heaven;</p>
+<p>And when from this sojourning of misery,</p>
+<p>We present our prayers to you;</p>
+<p>O sweet, O divine Mary!</p>
+<p>Lend an ear to our sighs,</p>
+<p>And after this life</p>
+<p>Make us to taste of immortal pleasures."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>[Autour des autels de Marie</p>
+<p class="i2">Nous ses enfants, empressons-nous;</p>
+<p>A cette M&egrave;re si ch&eacute;rie,</p>
+<p class="i2">Adressons les voeux les plus doux.</p>
+<p>Qu'une vive et sainte all&eacute;gresse</p>
+<p class="i2">Nous anime dans ce saint jour;</p>
+<p>Il n'existe point de tristesse</p>
+<p class="i2">Pour un coeur plein de son amour.</p>
+<p>Ornons des fleurs ce sanctuaire,</p>
+<p class="i2">Parons son autel r&eacute;v&eacute;r&eacute;,</p>
+<p>Redoublons d'efforts pour lui plaire.</p>
+<p class="i2">Que ce mois lui soi, consacr&eacute;;</p>
+<p>Que le parfume de ces couronnes</p>
+<p class="i2">Forme un encens d&eacute;licieux,</p>
+<p>Qui s'&eacute;levant jusqu'&agrave; son tr&ocirc;ne,</p>
+<p class="i2">Lui porte et nos coeurs et nos voeux.</p>
+<p>Que le nom sacr&eacute; de Marie</p>
+<p class="i2">Soit pour nous un nom de salut;</p>
+<p>Que toujours notre &acirc;me attendrie,</p>
+<p class="i2">D'amour lui paie un doux tribut.</p>
+<p>Unissons-nous aux choeurs des anges,</p>
+<p class="i2">Pour mieux c&eacute;l&eacute;brer sa
+beaut&eacute;.</p>
+<p>Et puissent nos chants de louanges</p>
+<p class="i2">Retentir dans l'&eacute;ternit&eacute;.</p>
+<p>O Vierge sainte! &ocirc; notre M&egrave;re!</p>
+<p class="i2">Veillez sur nous du haut des cieux;</p>
+<p>Et de ce s&eacute;jour de mis&egrave;re,</p>
+<p class="i2">Quand nous vous pr&eacute;sentons nos voeux,</p>
+<p>O douce, &ocirc; divine Marie!</p>
+<p class="i2">Pr&ecirc;tez l'oreille &agrave; nos
+soupirs;&mdash;</p>
+<p>Et faites qu'apr&egrave;s cette vie,</p>
+<p class="i2">Nous go&ucirc;tions d'immortels plaisirs.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&mdash;"Cantiques &agrave; l'usage des Confr&eacute;ries."
+Paris, 1839, p. 175.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>In the course of the present work I have already suggested the
+propriety of trying the real import, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page353" id="page353"></a>{353}</span> the true intent, and
+meaning and force of an address to a Saint, by substituting the
+holiest name ever uttered on earth, for the name of the Saint to
+whom such address is offered; and if the same words, without any
+change, form a prayer fit to be offered by us sinners to the
+Saviour of the world, then to ask ourselves, Can this be right? I
+would earnestly recommend the application of the same test here;
+and in many other of the prayers now offered (for many such there
+are now offered) by Roman Catholics to the Virgin. Suppose, instead
+of offering these songs of praise and prayer, and self-devotion to
+Mary in the month of May, we were to offer them, on the day of his
+nativity, to our blessed Lord, would they not form an act of faith
+in Him as our Saviour and our God?</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Around the altar of Jesus,</p>
+<p>Let us, his children, press;</p>
+<p>To that Saviour so endeared</p>
+<p>Let us address the sweetest prayers.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page354" id=
+"page354"></a>{354}</span>
+<p>Let a lively and holy mirth</p>
+<p>Animate us in this holy day:</p>
+<p>There exists no sadness</p>
+<p>For a heart full of his love.</p>
+<p>Let the holy name of Jesus</p>
+<p>Be for us a name of salvation!</p>
+<p>Let our softened soul</p>
+<p>Ever pay to HIM a sweet tribute of love.</p>
+<p>O holy Jesus! O our Saviour!</p>
+<p>Watch over us from the height of heaven;</p>
+<p>And when from this sojourning of misery,</p>
+<p>We present our prayers to Thee;</p>
+<p>O sweet, O divine Redeemer,</p>
+<p>Lend an ear to our sighs; and after this life,</p>
+<p>Make Thou us to taste of immortal pleasures."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-3" id="sect3-5-3">SECTION
+III.&mdash;BONAVENTURA.</a></h4>
+<p>I will now briefly call your attention to the devotional works
+of the celebrated Bonaventura. He is no ordinary man; and the
+circumstances under which his works were commended to the world are
+indeed remarkable. I know not how a Church can give the impress of
+its own name and approval in a more full or unequivocal manner to
+the works of any human being, than the Church of Rome has stamped
+her authority on the works of this her saint.</p>
+<p>In the "Acta Sanctorum", [Antwerp, 1723, July 14, p. 811-823.]
+it is stated, that this celebrated man was born in 1221, and died
+in 1274. He passed through all degrees of ecclesiastical dignities,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page355" id=
+"page355"></a>{355}</span> short only of the pontifical throne
+itself. He was of the order of St. Francis, and refused the
+archbishopric of York, when it was offered to him by Pope Clement
+the Fourth, in 1265; whose successor, Gregory the Tenth, elevated
+him to the dignity of cardinal bishop. His biographer expresses his
+astonishment, that such a man's memory should have been so long
+buried with his body; but adds, that the tardiness of his honours
+was compensated by their splendour.</p>
+<p>More than two centuries after his death, his claims to
+canonization were urged upon Sixtus the Fourth; and that Pope
+raised him to the dignity of saint; the diploma of his canonization
+bearing date 18 kalends of May, 1482, the eleventh year of that
+pope's reign.</p>
+<p>Before a saint is canonized by the Pope, it is usually required,
+that miracles wrought by him, or upon him, or at his tomb, be
+proved to the satisfaction of the Roman court<a id="footnotetag130"
+name="footnotetag130"></a><a href=
+"#footnote130"><sup>130</sup></a>. We need not dwell on the nature
+of an inquiry into a matter-of-fact, alleged to have been done by
+an individual two hundred years before; and whose memory is said to
+have lain buried with his corpse. Among the miracles specified, it
+is recorded, that on one occasion, when he was filled with solemn
+awe and fear at the celebration of the Lord's Supper, God, by an
+angel, took a particle of the consecrated host from the hands of
+the priest, and gently placed it in the holy man's mouth. But, with
+these transactions, I am not anxious to interfere, except so far as
+to ascertain the degree of authority with which any pious Roman
+Catholic must be induced to invest Bonaventura as a teacher and
+instructor in the doctrines of Christianity, authorized and
+appointed by his Church. The case stands thus:&mdash;Pope Sixtus
+IV. states in his <span class="pagenum"><a name="page356" id=
+"page356"></a>{356}</span> diploma, that the proctor of the order
+of Minors, proved by a dissertation on the passage of St. John,
+"There are three that bear record in heaven," that the blessed
+Trinity had borne testimony to the fact of Bonaventura being a
+saint in heaven: the Father proving it by the attested miracles;
+the Son, in the WISDOM OF HIS DOCTRINE; the Holy Spirit, by the
+goodness of his life. The pontiff then adds, in his own words, "He
+so wrote on divine subjects, THAT THE HOLY SPIRIT SEEMS TO HAVE
+SPOKEN IN HIM." [Page 831. "Ea de divinis rebus scripsit, ut in eo
+Spiritus Sanctus locutus videatur."] A testimony referred to by
+Pope Sixtus the Fifth.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote130" name=
+"footnote130"></a><b>Footnote 130:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag130">(return)</a>
+<p>See the canonization of St. Bonaventura in the Acta
+Sanctorum.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This latter pontiff was crowned May 1, 1585, more than a century
+after the canonization of Bonaventura, and more than three
+centuries after his death. By his order, the works of Bonaventura
+were "most carefully emendated." The decretal letters, A.D. 1588,
+pronounced him to be an acknowledged doctor of Holy Church,
+directing his authority to be cited and employed in all places of
+education, and in all ecclesiastical discussions and studies. The
+same act offers plenary indulgence to all who assist at the mass on
+his feast, in certain specified places, with other minor immunities
+on the conditions annexed. [Page 837.]</p>
+<p>In these documents Bonaventura<a id="footnotetag131" name=
+"footnotetag131"></a><a href="#footnote131"><sup>131</sup></a> is
+called the Seraphic Doctor; and I repeat my doubt, whether it is
+possible for any human authority to give a more full, entire, and
+unreserved sanction to the works of any human being than the Church
+of Rome has given to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page357" id=
+"page357"></a>{357}</span> the writings of Bonaventura. And what do
+those works present to us, on the subject of the Invocation and
+worship of the Virgin Mary?</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote131" name=
+"footnote131"></a><b>Footnote 131:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag131">(return)</a>
+<p>The edition of his works which I have used was published at
+Mentz in 1609; and the passages referred to are in vol. vi. between
+pp. 400 and 500.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Taking every one of the one hundred and fifty psalms<a id=
+"footnotetag132" name="footnotetag132"></a><a href=
+"#footnote132"><sup>132</sup></a>, Bonaventura so changes the
+commencement of each, as to address them not as the inspired
+Psalmist did, to the Lord Jehovah, the One only Lord God Almighty,
+but to the Virgin Mary; inserting much of his own composition, and
+then adding the Gloria Patri to each. It is very painful to refer
+to these prostitutions of any part of the Holy Book of revealed
+truth; but we must not be deterred from looking this evil in the
+face. A few examples, however, will suffice.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote132" name=
+"footnote132"></a><b>Footnote 132:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag132">(return)</a>
+<p>It is curious to find the Cardinal Du Perron, in his answer to
+our King James, declaring that he had never seen nor met with this
+Psalter in his life, and he was sure it was never written by
+Bonaventura; alleging that it was not mentioned by Trithemius or
+Gesner. The Vatican editors, however, have set that question at
+rest. They assure us that they have thrown into the appendix all
+the works about the genuineness of which there was any doubt, and
+that Bonaventura wrote many works not mentioned by Trithemius,
+which they have published from the Vatican press. Of this Psalter
+there is no doubt. See Cardinal Du Perron, Replique &agrave; la
+Rep. du Roi de Grand Bretagne. Paris, 1620, p. 974.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the 30th psalm. "In thee, O Lord, have I trusted; let me not
+be confounded for ever," &amp;c., the Psalter of the Virgin
+substitutes these words: [In te, Domina, speravi; non confundar in
+&aelig;ternum, &amp;c. &amp;c. In manus tuas, Domina, commendo
+spiritum meum, totam vitam meam, et diem ultimum meum.&mdash;P.
+480.]</p>
+<p>"In thee, O Lady, have I trusted; let me not be confounded for
+ever: in thy grace take me.</p>
+<p>"Thou art my fortitude and my refuge; my consolation and my
+protection.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page358" id=
+"page358"></a>{358}</span>
+<p>"To thee, O Lady, have I cried, while my heart was in heaviness;
+and thou didst hear me from the top of the eternal hills.</p>
+<p>"Bring thou me out of the snare which they have hid for me; for
+thou art my succour.</p>
+<p>"Into thy hands, O Lady, I commend my spirit, my whole life, and
+my last day.&mdash;Gloria Patri," &amp;c.</p>
+<p>In the 31st psalm we read, "Blessed are they whose hearts love
+thee, O Virgin Mary; their sins shall be mercifully blotted out BY
+THEE...." [Beati quorum corda te diligunt, Virgo Maria; peccata
+ipsorum A TE misericorditer diluentur.&mdash;P. 481.]</p>
+<p>In the 35th, v. 2. "Incline thou the countenance of God upon us;
+COMPEL HIM to have mercy upon sinners. O Lady, thy mercy is in the
+heaven, and thy grace is spread over the whole earth." [Inclina
+vultum Dei super nos. COGE illum peccatoribus misereri; Domina, in
+coelo misericordia tua, et gratia diffusa est super terram.]</p>
+<p>In the 67th, instead of, "Let God arise, and let his enemies be
+scattered," the Psalter of the Virgin has,</p>
+<p>"Let Mary arise, and let her enemies be scattered." [Exurgat
+Maria, et dissipentur inimici ejus.&mdash;P. 483.]</p>
+<p>In the opening of the 93rd psalm there is a most extraordinary,
+rather, as it sounds to me, a most impious and blasphemous
+comparison of the Supreme God with the Virgin Mary, in reference to
+the very Attribute, which shines first, last, and brightest in
+HIM,&mdash;His eternal mercy. Nay, it draws the contrast in favour
+of the Virgin, and against God. Most glad should I be, to find that
+I had misunderstood this passage; and that it admits of another
+acceptation<a id="footnotetag133" name=
+"footnotetag133"></a><a href="#footnote133"><sup>133</sup></a>. But
+I fear its real meaning is beyond controversy.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote133" name=
+"footnote133"></a><b>Footnote 133:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag133">(return)</a>
+<p>A similar idea indeed pervades some addresses to the Virgin of
+the present day, representing the great and only potentate as her
+heavenly husband, in himself full of rage, but softened into
+tenderness towards her votaries by her influence. See a hymn, in
+the Paris collection already referred to, p. 353, &amp;c. of this
+work (Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques, p. 183).</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Daignez, Marie, en ce jour (Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day)</p>
+<p class="i2">Ecouter nos soupirs, (To hear our sighs,)</p>
+<p class="i2">Et seconder nos d&eacute;sirs. (And to second our
+desires.)</p>
+<p>Daignez, Marie, en ce jour (Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day)</p>
+<p>Recevoir notre encens, notre amour. (To receive our incense, our
+love.)</p>
+<p>Du c&eacute;leste &eacute;poux (Calm the rage)</p>
+<p>Calmez le courroux, (Of thy heavenly husband,)</p>
+<p>Qu'il se montre doux (Let HIM show himself kind)</p>
+<p>A tous qui sont &agrave; vous. (To all those who are thine.)</p>
+<p>Du c&eacute;leste &eacute;poux (Of thy heavenly husband)</p>
+<p>Calmez le courroux, (Calm the rage,)</p>
+<p>Que son coeur s'attendrisse sur nous. (Let his heart be softened
+towards us.)</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page359" id=
+"page359"></a>{359}</span>
+<p>"The Lord is a God of vengeance; but thou, O Mother of Mercy,
+bendest to be merciful." [Deus ultionum Dominus; sed tu, Mater
+Misericordi&aelig;, ad miserandum inflectis.&mdash;P. 485.]</p>
+<p>The well known and dearly valued penitentiary psalm (129th) "De
+profundis," is thus addressed to Mary:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Out of the depths have I called to thee, O Lady:</p>
+<p>"O Lady, hear my voice. Let thine ears be attent to the voice of
+thy praise and glorifying: deliver me from the hand of my enemies:
+confound their imaginations and attempts against me. Rescue me in
+the evil day; and, in the day of death, forget not my soul. Carry
+me into the haven of safety: let my name be enrolled among the
+just." [De profundis clamavi ad te, Domina: Domina, exaudi vocem
+meam. Fiant aures tu&aelig; intendentes in vocem laudis et
+glorificationis tu&aelig;. Libera me de manu adversariorum meorum:
+confunde ingenia et conatus eorum contra me. Erue me in die mala:
+et in die mortis ne obliviscaris anim&aelig; me&aelig;. Deduc me ad
+portum salutis: inter justos scribatur nomen meum.&mdash;P.
+489.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page360" id=
+"page360"></a>{360}</span>
+<p>But, as the penitential psalms are thus turned, from Him to whom
+the Psalmist addressed them, so his hymns of praise to Jehovah, are
+made to flow through the same channel to the Virgin. And all nature
+in the sea, on the earth, in the heavens, and heaven of heavens, is
+called upon to praise and glorify Mary. Thus, in the 148th psalm,
+we read,&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Praise our Lady of heaven, glorify her in the highest. Praise
+her, all ye men and cattle, ye birds of the heaven, and fishes of
+the sea. Praise her, sun and moon; ye stars and circles of the
+planets. Praise her, cherubim and seraphim, thrones and dominions,
+and powers. Praise her, all ye legions of angels. Praise her, all
+ye orders of spirits above." [Laudate Dominam nostram de coelis:
+glorificate eam in excelsis. Laudate eam omnes homines et jumenta:
+volucres coeli et pisces maris. Laudate eam sol et luna:
+stell&aelig;, et circuli planetarum. Laudate eam cherubim et
+seraphim: throni et dominationes, et potestates. Laudate eam omnes
+legiones angelorum. Laudate eam omnes ordines spirituum
+supernorum.&mdash;P. 491.]</p>
+<p>The last sentence of the psalms is thus rendered,&mdash;"Let
+every spirit [<i>or</i> every thing that hath breath] praise our
+Lady."</p>
+<p>To this Psalter are added many hymns changed in the same manner.
+One, entitled, "A Canticle, like that of Habakkuk iii." presents to
+us an address to the Virgin Mary, of the very words which our
+blessed Saviour most solemnly addressed to his heavenly Father.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>O Lord, I have heard thy O Lady, I have heard thy report,
+speech, and was afraid, &amp;c. &amp;c. and was astonished; I
+considered thy works, O Lady, and I was afraid at thy work. In the
+midst of the years thou hast revived it.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page361" id=
+"page361"></a>{361}</span>
+<p class="i10">I will confess to thee, O Lady, because thou hast
+hid these things from the wise, and hast revealed them to
+babes.</p>
+<p class="i10">Thy glory hath covered the heavens, and the earth is
+full of thy mercy.</p>
+<p class="i10">Thou, O Virgin, wentest forth for the salvation of
+thy people, for salvation with thy Christ [thy anointed].</p>
+<p class="i10">O thou Blessed, our salvation rests in thy hands.
+Remember our poverty, O thou pious One.</p>
+<p class="i10">WHOM THOU WILLEST, HE SHALL BE SAVED; AND HE FROM
+WHOM THOU TURNEST AWAY THY COUNTENANCE, GOETH INTO DESTRUCTION.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>[Domina, audivi auditionem tuam, et obstupui: consideravi opera
+tua, et expavi, Domina, opus tuum: circa medium annorum vivificasti
+illud.</p>
+<p>Confitebor tibi, Domina: quia abscondisti h&aelig;c a
+sapientibus: et revelasti ea parvulis. Operuit coelos gloria tua,
+et misericordia tua plena est terra.</p>
+<p>Egressa es, Virgo, in salutem populi tui: in salutem cum Christo
+tuo. O Benedicta, in manibus tuis est reposita nostra salus;
+recordare, pia, paupertatis nostr&aelig;.</p>
+<p>Quem vis, ipse salvus erit, et a quo avertis vultum tuum, vadit
+in interitum.&mdash;G.P., &amp;c.]</p>
+<p>The song of the Three Children is altered in the same manner. In
+it as well as in the Canticle of Zacharias, these prayers are
+introduced;</p>
+<p>"O Mother of Mercy, have mercy upon us miserable sinners; who
+neglect to repent of our past sins, and commit every day many to be
+repented of." [Miserere, misericordi&aelig; Mater, nobis miseris
+peccatoribus, qui retroacta peccata poenitere negligimus, ac multa
+quotidie poenitenda committimus.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page362" id=
+"page362"></a>{362}</span>
+<p>The Te Deum is thus lamentably perverted:</p>
+<p>"We praise thee, Mother of God; we acknowledge thee, Mary the
+Virgin. [Te Matrem Dei laudamus; Te Mariam Virginem
+profitemur.]</p>
+<p>"All the earth doth worship thee, spouse of the eternal
+Father.</p>
+<p>"To thee all Angels and Archangels, Thrones and Principalities,
+faithfully do service....</p>
+<p>"To thee the whole angelic creation with incessant voice
+proclaim,</p>
+<p>"Holy! Holy! Holy! Mary, parent, mother of God, and
+virgin!...</p>
+<p>"... Thou with thy Son sittest at the right hand of the
+Father....</p>
+<p>"O Lady, SAVE THY PEOPLE, that we may partake of the inheritance
+of thy Son.</p>
+<p>"And rule us and guard us for ever....</p>
+<p>"Day by day we salute thee, O pious One; and we desire to praise
+thee in mind and voice even for ever.</p>
+<p>"Vouchsafe, O sweet Mary, now and for ever, to keep us without
+sin.</p>
+<p>"Have mercy upon us, O pious One; have mercy upon us.</p>
+<p>"Let thy great mercy be with us, because we put our trust in
+thee, O Virgin Mary.</p>
+<p>"In thee, sweet Mary, do we hope, defend thou us eternally.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page363" id=
+"page363"></a>{363}</span>
+<p>"Praise becomes thee, empire becomes thee; to thee be virtue and
+glory for ever and ever. Amen."</p>
+<p>[SALVUM FAC POPULUM tuum, Domina, ut simus participes
+h&aelig;reditatis Filii tui,</p>
+<p>Et rege nos et custodi nos in &aelig;ternum.</p>
+<p>Dignare, Dulcis Maria, mine et semper nos sine delicto
+conservare. Miserere, Pia, nobis! miserere nobis! Fiat misericordia
+tua magna nobiscum, quia in te, Virgo Maria, confidimus. In te,
+Dulcis Maria, speramus, nos defendas in &aelig;ternum. Te decet
+laus, te decet imperium, tibi virtus et gloria in s&aelig;cula
+s&aelig;culorum, Amen.]</p>
+<p>Can this by any the most subtle refinement be understood to be a
+mere request to her to pray for us?</p>
+<p>The Athanasian Creed is employed in the same manner; and it is
+very remarkable that the Assumption itself of the Virgin into
+heaven is there specified as one of the points to be believed on
+pain of losing all hopes of salvation.</p>
+<p>"Whosoever will be saved, before all things it is necessary that
+he hold firm the faith concerning the Virgin Mary: which except a
+man keep whole and undefiled, without doubt he shall perish
+everlastingly.... [Quicunque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est
+ut teneat de Maria firmam fidem.]</p>
+<p>"Whom at length He took up (assumpsit) unto heaven, and she
+sitteth at the right hand of her Son, not ceasing to pray to her
+Son for us. [Quam demum ipse in coelum assumpsit, et sedit ad
+dexteram Filii, non cessans pro nobis Filium exorare.]</p>
+<p>"This is the faith concerning Mary the Virgin, which except
+every one believe faithfully and firmly he cannot be saved."
+[H&aelig;c est fides de Maria Virgine: quam nisi quisque fideliter
+firmiterque crediderit, salvus esse non poterit.]</p>
+<p>In the Litany addressed to her, these sentences are found.</p>
+<p>"Holy Mary, whom all things praise and venerate, pray for
+us,&mdash;be propitious,&mdash;spare us, O Lady.</p>
+<p>"From all evil deliver us, O Lady.</p>
+<p>"In the devastating hour of death, deliver us, O Lady.</p>
+<p>"From the horrible torments of hell, deliver us, O Lady.</p>
+<p>"We sinners do beseech thee to hear us.</p>
+<p>"That thou wouldest vouchsafe to give eternal rest <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page364" id="page364"></a>{364}</span> to all
+the faithful departed, we beseech thee to hear us. &amp;c.
+&amp;c."</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>[Sancta Maria, quam omnia laudant</p>
+<p>Et venerantur, ora pro nobis.</p>
+<p>Propitia esto. Parce nobis, Domina.</p>
+<p>Ab omni malo libera nos, Domina.</p>
+<p>In hora mortis devastante libera nos, Domina.</p>
+<p>Ab inferni horribili cruciamine libera nos, Domina.</p>
+<p>Peccatores te rogamus, audi nos.</p>
+<p>Ut cunctis fidelibus defunctis requiem</p>
+<p>&AElig;ternam donare digneris, te rogamus, audi nos.]</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>I will add to this catalogue of prayers and praises to the
+Virgin, only the translation of one prayer more from the same
+canonized Saint; it contains a passage often referred to, but the
+existence of which has been denied. It stands, however, in his
+works, vol. vi. page 466.</p>
+<p>"Therefore, O Empress, and our most benign Lady, by THY RIGHT OF
+MOTHER COMMAND thy most beloved Son [JURE MATRIS IMPERA tuo
+dilectissimo Filio], our Lord, Jesus Christ, that He vouchsafe to
+raise our minds from the love of earthly things to heavenly
+desires, who liveth and reigneth."</p>
+<hr />
+<p>Now let any man of common understanding and straightforward
+principles say, whether any, the most ingenious refinement can
+interpret all this to mean merely that Bonaventura invoked the
+Virgin Mary to pray for him, or for his fellow-creatures. It looks
+as though he were resolved on set purpose to exalt her to an
+equality with the Almighty, when we find him not once, not
+casually, not in the fervent rapture of momentary excitement, but
+deliberately, through one hundred and fifty Psalms, applying to
+Mary the very words dictated by the Holy Spirit to the Psalmist,
+and consecrated <span class="pagenum"><a name="page365" id=
+"page365"></a>{365}</span> to the worship of the one supreme God;
+and then selecting the most solemn expressions by which the
+Christian Church approaches the Lord of heaven and earth, our
+Father, our Saviour, our Sanctifier: employing too the very words
+of her most solemn form of belief in the ever-blessed Trinity, and
+substituting Mary's name for the God of Christians. On the words,
+"By thy right of mother command thy Son," beyond the assertion of
+the fact that there they are to this day, I wish to add nothing,
+because the very denial of their existence often repeated shows,
+that many Roman Catholics themselves regard them as
+objectionable.</p>
+<p>But, if such a man as Bonaventura, one of the most learned and
+celebrated men of his age, could be tempted by the views cherished
+by the Church of Rome, to indulge in such language, what can be
+fairly expected of the large mass of persons who find that language
+published to the world with the highest sanction which their
+religion can give, as the work of a man whom the Almighty declared
+when on earth, by miracles, to be a chosen vessel, and to be under
+the guidance of the Holy Spirit; and of whom they are taught by the
+infallible testimony<a id="footnotetag134" name=
+"footnotetag134"></a><a href="#footnote134"><sup>134</sup></a> of
+his canonization, that he is now reigning with Christ in heaven,
+and is himself the lawful and appointed object of religious
+invocation. I profess to you that I see no way by which Christians
+can hold and encourage this doctrine of the Invocation of Saints,
+without at the same time countenancing and cherishing what, were I
+to join in such invocation, would stain my soul with the guilt of
+idolatry. If the doctrine were confessedly Scriptural, come what
+would come, our duty would be to maintain it at all hazards,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page366" id=
+"page366"></a>{366}</span> and to brave every danger rather than
+from fear of consequences to renounce what we believe to have come
+from God; securing the doctrine at all events, and then putting
+forth our very best to guard against its perversion and abuse. But
+surely, it well becomes our brethren of the Church of Rome, to
+examine with most rigid and unsparing scrutiny into the very
+foundation of such a doctrine as this; a doctrine which in its
+mildest and most guarded form is considered by a very large number
+of their fellow Christians, as a dishonouring of God and of his
+Son, our Saviour; and which in its excess, an excess witnessed in
+the books of learned and sainted authors, and in the every day
+practice of worshippers, seems to be in no wise distinguishable
+from the practices of acknowledged polytheism, and pagan worship.
+If that foundation, after honest and persevering examination,
+approves itself as based sure and deep on the word of God, and the
+faith and practice of the apostles and the Church founded by them
+from the first, I have not another word to say, beyond a fervent
+prayer that the God in whom we trust would pour the bright beams of
+his Gospel abundantly into the hearts of all who receive that
+Gospel as the word of life. But were they my dying words to my
+dearest friend who had espoused that doctrine, I would say to him,
+Look well yourself to the foundation, because I am, after long
+examination, convinced, beyond a shadow of doubt that the doctrine
+and practice of the Invocation of Saints and Angels is as contrary
+to the doctrine and practice of the primitive Church, as it is in
+direct opposition to the express words of Scripture, and totally
+abhorrent from the spirit which pervades the whole of the Old, and
+the whole of the New Testament of God's eternal truth.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote134" name=
+"footnote134"></a><b>Footnote 134:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag134">(return)</a>
+<p>Bellarmin, in his Church Triumphant, maintains that in the act
+of Canonization, the Church is infallible. Vol. ii. p. 871.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page367" id=
+"page367"></a>{367}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-4" id="sect3-5-4">SECTION IV.</a>&mdash;BIEL,
+DAMIANUS, BERNARDINUS DE BUSTIS, BERNARDINUS SENENSIS, &amp;c.</h4>
+<p>Unhappily these excesses in the worship of the Virgin Mary are
+not confined to Bonaventura, or to his age. We have too many
+examples of the same extravagant exaltation of her as an object of
+adoration and praise in men, whose station and abilities seemed to
+hold them forth to the world as burning and shining lights. Again,
+let me repeat, that in thus soliciting your attention to the
+doctrines and expressed feelings of a few from among the host of
+the Virgin's worshippers, I am far from believing that the
+enlightened Roman Catholics in England now are ready to respond to
+such sentiments. My desire is that all persons should be made aware
+of the excesses into which even celebrated teachers have been
+tempted to run, when they once admitted the least inroad to be made
+upon the integrity of God's worship; and I am anxious also, without
+offence, but with all openness, to caution my countrymen against
+encouraging that revival of the worship of the Virgin in England,
+to promote which the highest authorities in the Church of Rome have
+lately expressed their solicitude, intimating, at the same time,
+their regret that the worship of the Virgin at the present time
+has, in England, degenerated from its exaltation in former ages,
+and that England is now far behind her continental neighbours in
+her worship. Though these excessive departures from Gospel truth
+and the primitive worship of one God by one Mediator may not be the
+doctrines of all who belong to the Church of Rome, yet they are the
+tenets of some of her most <span class="pagenum"><a name="page368"
+id="page368"></a>{368}</span> celebrated doctors, of men who were
+raised to her highest dignities in their lifetime, and solemnly
+enrolled by her among the saints of glory after their death. Their
+words and their actions are appealed to now in support of similar
+tenets and doctrines, though few, in this country at least, are
+found to put them forth in all their magnitude and fulness. But
+even in their mildest and least startling form these doctrines are
+awfully dangerous.</p>
+<p>The fact is, that the direct tendency of the worship of the
+Virgin, as practically illustrated in the Church of Rome, is to
+make GOD himself an object of FEAR, and the VIRGIN an object of
+LOVE; to invest Him, who is the Father of mercy and God of all
+comfort, with awfulness, and majesty, and with the terrors of
+eternal justice, and in direct and striking contrast to array the
+Virgin mother with mercy and benignity, and compassionate
+tenderness. Christians cannot be too constantly and too carefully
+on their guard against doing this wrong to our heavenly Father. His
+own inspired word invites us to regard Him not only as the God of
+love, but as Love itself. "God is love;" [1 John iv. 8.] and so far
+from terrifying us by representations of his tremendous majesty,
+and by declarations that we cannot ourselves draw nigh to God; so
+far from bidding us to approach Him with our suits and
+supplications through mediators whom we should regard as having,
+more than our blessed Redeemer, a fellow-feeling with us, and at
+the same time resistless influence with Him; his own invitation and
+assurance is, "Come unto me, and I will give you rest:" [Matt. xi.
+28.] "No one cometh unto the Father but by me:" [John xiv. 6.] "Him
+that cometh to me I will <span class="pagenum"><a name="page369"
+id="page369"></a>{369}</span> in no wise cast out:" [John vi. 37.]
+"Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain
+mercy, and find grace to help in time of need." [Heb. iv. 16.]</p>
+<p>How entirely opposed to such passages as these, breathing the
+spirit that pervades the whole Bible, are those doctrines which
+represent the Virgin Mary as the Mediatrix by whom we must sue for
+the divine clemency; as the dispenser of all God's mercies and
+graces; as the sharer of God's kingdom, as the fountain of pity, as
+the moderator of God's justice, and the appeaser of his wrath.
+"Show thyself a mother." "Compel thy Son to have pity." "By thy
+right of mother command thy Son." "God is a God of vengeance; but
+thou, Mary, dost incline to mercy;" such expressions convey
+sentiments and associations shocking to our feelings, and from
+which our reason turns away, when we think of God's perfections,
+and the full atonement and omnipotent intercession of his Son
+Christ our Redeemer. But it must not be disguised, that these are
+the very sentiments in which the most celebrated defenders of the
+worship of the Virgin, in the Church of Rome, teach their disciples
+to acquiesce, and in which they must have themselves fully
+acquiesced, if they practised what they taught. It is very painful
+to make such extracts as leave us no alternative in forming our
+opinions on this point; but it is necessary to do so, otherwise we
+may injure the cause of truth by suppressing the reality; a reality
+over which there seems to be a strong disposition, in the present
+day, in part at least, to draw a veil; an expedient which can only
+increase the danger.</p>
+<p>The first author, whose sentiments I would request you to weigh,
+is Gabriel Biel, a schoolman of great celebrity<a id=
+"footnotetag135" name="footnotetag135"></a><a href=
+"#footnote135"><sup>135</sup></a>. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page370" id="page370"></a>{370}</span> In his thirty-second
+lecture, on the Canon of the Mass, he thus expresses himself,
+referring to a sermon of St. Bernard, "The will of God was, that we
+should have all through Mary.... You were afraid to approach the
+Father, frightened by only hearing of Him.... He gave you Jesus for
+a Mediator. What could not such a Son obtain with such a Father? He
+will surely be heard for his own reverence-sake; for the Father
+loveth the Son. But, are you afraid to approach even Him? He is
+your brother and your flesh; tempted through all, that He might
+become merciful. THIS BROTHER MARY GAVE TO YOU. But, perhaps, even
+in Him you fear the divine Majesty, because, although He was made
+man, yet He remained God. You wish to have an advocate even to Him.
+Betake yourself to Mary. For, in Mary is pure humanity, not only
+pure from all contamination, but pure also by the singleness of her
+nature<a id="footnotetag136" name="footnotetag136"></a><a href=
+"#footnote136"><sup>136</sup></a>. Nor should I, with any doubt
+say, she too will be heard for her own reverence-sake. The Son,
+surely, will hear the Mother, and the Father will hear the
+Son."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote135" name=
+"footnote135"></a><b>Footnote 135:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag135">(return)</a>
+<p>Tubingen, 1499. Gabriel Biel, born at Spires about A.D. 1425,
+was in A.D. 1484 appointed the first Professor of Theology in the
+then newly founded University of Tubingen. He afterwards retired to
+a monastery, and died A.D. 1495.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote136" name=
+"footnote136"></a><b>Footnote 136:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag136">(return)</a>
+<p>This is a very favourite argument in the present day, often
+heard in the pulpits on the Continent.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In his 80th lecture, the same author comments on this prayer,
+which is still offered in the service of the Mass:</p>
+<p>"Deliver us, we beseech thee, O Lord, from all evils past,
+present, and future; and by the intercession of the blessed and
+glorious ever-virgin mother of God, Mary, with thy blessed
+apostles, Peter and Paul, and Andrew, and all saints, mercifully
+grant peace in our days, that, aided by the help of thy mercy, we
+may be both ever <span class="pagenum"><a name="page371" id=
+"page371"></a>{371}</span> free from sin, and free from all
+disquietude. Through the same our Lord, &amp;c."</p>
+<p>On this prayer Biel observes, "Again we ask, in this prayer, the
+defence of peace; and since we cannot, nor do we presume to obtain
+this by our own merit, ... therefore, in order to obtain this, we
+have recourse, in the second part of this prayer, to the suffrages
+of all his saints, whom He hath constituted, in the court of his
+kingdom, as our mediators, most acceptable to himself, whose
+prayers his love does not reject. But, of them, we fly, in the
+first place, to the most blessed Virgin, the Queen of Heaven, to
+whom the King of kings, the heavenly Father, has given the half of
+his kingdom; which was signified in Hester, the queen, to whom,
+when she approached to appease king Asuerus, the king said to her,
+Even if thou shalt ask the half of my kingdom, it shall be given
+thee. So the heavenly Father, inasmuch as He has justice and mercy
+as the more valued possessions of his kingdom, RETAINING JUSTICE TO
+HIMSELF, GRANTED MERCY to the Virgin Mother. We, therefore, ask for
+peace, by the intercession of the blessed and glorious Virgin."
+[Cum habeat justitiam et misericordiam tanquam potiora regni sui
+bona, justitia sibi retenta, misericordiam Matri Virgini
+concessit.]</p>
+<p>The very same partition of the kingdom of heaven, is declared to
+have been made between God himself and the Virgin by one who was
+dignified by the name of the "venerable and most Christian Doctor,"
+John Gerson<a id="footnotetag137" name=
+"footnotetag137"></a><a href="#footnote137"><sup>137</sup></a>, who
+died in 1429; excepting that, instead of justice and mercy, Gerson
+mentions power and mercy as the two parts of which God's kingdom
+consists, and that, whilst power remained with the Lord, the part
+of mercy ceded "to the mother of Christ, and the reigning
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page372" id=
+"page372"></a>{372}</span> spouse; hence, by the whole Church, she
+is saluted as Queen of Mercy."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote137" name=
+"footnote137"></a><b>Footnote 137:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag137">(return)</a>
+<p>Paris, 1606. Tract iv. Super "Magnificat," part iii. p. 754. See
+Fabricius, vol. iii. p. 49. Patav. 1754.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I would next refer to a writer who lived four centuries before
+Biel, but whose works received the papal sanction so late as the
+commencement of the seventeenth century, Petrus Damianus, Cardinal
+and Bishop. His works were published at the command of Pope Clement
+VIII., who died A.D. 1604, and were dedicated to his successor,
+Paul V., who gave the copyright for fifteen years to the Editor,
+Constantine Cajetan, A.D. 1606. I will quote only one passage from
+this author. It is found in his sermon on the nativity of the
+Virgin, whom he thus addresses: "Nothing is impossible with thee,
+with whom it is possible to restore those in despair to the hope of
+blessedness. For how could that authority, which derived its flesh
+from thy flesh, oppose thy power? For thou approachest before that
+golden altar of human reconciliation not only asking, but
+commanding; a mistress, not a handmaid." [Accedis enim ante illud
+aureum human&aelig; reconciliationis altare, non solum rogans, sed
+imperans; Domina, non ancilla. Paris, 1743. vol. ii. p. 107. Serm.
+44.]</p>
+<p>I must now solicit your attention to the sentiments of two
+writers, whose partial identity of name has naturally led, in some
+instances, to the one being mistaken for the other, Bernardinus de
+Bustis, and Bernardinus Senensis. Bernardinus de Bustis,
+[Fabricius, vol. i. 215.] in the country of Milan, was the
+celebrated author of the "Office of the Immaculate Conception of
+the Blessed Virgin," which was confirmed by the bull of Sixtus the
+Fourth, and has since been celebrated on the 8th of December.</p>
+<p>He composed different works in honour of the Virgin,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page373" id=
+"page373"></a>{373}</span> to one of which he gave the title
+"Mariale." In this work, with a great variety of sentiments of a
+similar tendency, he thus expresses himself:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Of so great authority in the heavenly palace is that empress,
+that, omitting all other intermediate saints, we may appeal to her
+from every grievance.... With confidence, then, let every one
+appeal to her, whether he be aggrieved by the devil, or by any
+tyrant, or by his own body, or by divine justice;" [Cologne, 1607.
+Part iii. Serm. ii. p. 176.] and then, having specified and
+illustrated the three other sources of grievance, he thus proceeds:
+"In the fourth place, he may APPEAL TO HER, if any one feels
+himself AGGRIEVED BY THE JUSTICE OF GOD [Licet ad ipsam appellare,
+si quis a Dei justitia se gravari sentit.] ... That empress,
+therefore, Hester, was a figure of this empress of the heavens,
+with whom God divided his kingdom. For, whereas God has justice and
+mercy, He retained justice to himself to be exercised in this
+world, and granted mercy to his mother; and thus, if any one feels
+himself to be aggrieved in the court of God's justice, let him
+appeal to the court of mercy of his mother." [Ideo si quis sentit
+se gravari in foro justiti&aelig; Dei, appellet ad forum
+misericordi&aelig; matris ejus.]</p>
+<p>For one moment, let us calmly weigh the import of these
+words:&mdash;Is it any thing short of robbing the Eternal Father of
+the brightest jewel in his crown, and sharing his glory with
+another? Is it not encouraging us to turn our eyes from the God of
+mercy as a stern and ruthless judge, and habitually to fix them
+upon Mary as the dispenser of all we want for the comfort and
+happiness of our souls?</p>
+<p>In another place, this same author thus exalts Mary:</p>
+<p>"Since the Virgin Mary is mother of God, and God is her Son; and
+every son is naturally inferior to his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page374" id="page374"></a>{374}</span> mother,
+and subject to her; and the mother is preferred above, and is
+superior to her son, it follows that the blessed Virgin is herself
+superior to God, and God himself is her subject, by reason of the
+humanity derived from her;" [Part ix. Serm. ii. p. 605.] and again.
+"O the unspeakable dignity of Mary, who was worthy to command the
+Commander of all." [Part xii. Serm, ii. p. 816.]</p>
+<p>I will detain you by only one more quotation from this famed
+Doctor. It appears to rob God of his justice and power, as well as
+of his mercy; and to turn our eyes to Mary for the enjoyment of all
+we can desire, and for safety from all we can dread. Would that
+Bernardine stood alone in the propagation of such doctrines. "We
+may say, that the blessed Virgin is chancellor in the court of
+heaven. For we see, that in the chancery of our lord the pope,
+three kinds of letters are granted: some are of simple justice,
+others are of pure grace, and the third mixed, containing justice
+and grace.... The third chancellor is he to whom it appertains to
+give letters of pure grace and mercy. And this office hath the
+blessed Virgin; and therefore she is called the mother of grace and
+mercy: but those letters of mercy she gives only in the present
+life. For, to some souls, as they are departing, she gives letters
+of pure grace; to others, of simple justice; and to others, mixed,
+namely, of justice and grace. For some were very much devoted to
+her, and to them she gives letters of pure grace, by which she
+COMMANDS, that glory be given to them without any pain of
+purgatory: others were miserable sinners, and not devoted to her,
+and to them she gives letters of simple justice, by which she
+COMMANDS that condign vengeance be done upon them; others were
+lukewarm and remiss in devotion, and to them she gives letters of
+justice and grace, by which <span class="pagenum"><a name="page375"
+id="page375"></a>{375}</span> she COMMANDS that grace be given to
+them, and yet, on account of their negligence and sloth, some pain
+of purgatory be also inflicted on them." [Part xii. Serm. ii. On
+the twenty-second excellence, p. 825.]</p>
+<p>The only remaining author, to whom I will at present refer you,
+is a canonized saint, Bernardinus Senensis. A full account of his
+life, his miracles, and his enrolment among the saints in heaven,
+is found in the Acta Sanctorum, vol. v. under the 20th of May, the
+day especially dedicated to his honour. Eugenius IV. died before
+the canonization of Bernardine could be completed: the next pope,
+Nicholas V. on Whitsunday 1450, in full conclave, enrolled him
+among the saints, to the joy, we are told, of all Italy. In 1461,
+Pius the Second said that Bernardine was taken for a saint even in
+his lifetime; and, in 1472, Sixtus IV. issued a bull, in which he
+extols the saint, and authorizes the translation of his body into a
+new church, dedicated, as others had been, to his honour.</p>
+<p>This Bernardine is equally explicit with others, in maintaining,
+that all the blessings which Christians can receive on earth are
+dispensed by Mary; that her princedom equals the princedom of the
+Eternal Father; that all are her servants and subjects, who are the
+subjects and servants of the Most High; that all who adore the Son
+of God should adore his virgin-mother, and that the Virgin has
+repaid the Almighty for all that He has done for the human race.
+Some of these doctrines were to me quite startling; I was not
+prepared for them; but I have been assured they find an echo in the
+pulpits in many parts of the continent. Very few quotations will
+suffice. [Opera, per John de la Haye. Paris, 1636. Five volumes
+bound in two.]</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page376" id=
+"page376"></a>{376}</span>
+<p>"As many creatures do service to the glorious Mary, as do
+service to the Trinity.... For he who is the Son of God, and of the
+blessed Virgin, wishing (so to speak) to make, in a manner, the
+princedom of his mother equal to the princedom of his father, he
+who was God, served his mother on earth. Moreover, this is true,
+all things, even the Virgin, are servants of the divine empire; and
+again, this is true, all things, even God, are servants of the
+empire of the Virgin." [Vol. iv. Serm. v. c. vi. p. 118.]</p>
+<p>"Therefore, all the angelic spirits are the ministers and
+servants of this glorious Virgin." [Serm. iii. c. iii. p. 104.]</p>
+<p>"To comprise all in a brief sentence, I do not doubt that God
+made all the liberations and pardons in the Old Testament on
+account of the reverence and love of this blessed maid, by which
+God preordained from eternity, that she should be, by
+predestination, honoured above all his works. On account of the
+immense love of the Virgin, as well Christ himself, as the whole
+most blessed Trinity, frequently grants pardon to the most wicked
+sinners." [Serm. v. c. ii. p. 116.]</p>
+<p>"By the law of succession, and the right of inheritance, the
+primacy and kingdom of the whole universe is due to the blessed
+Virgin. Nay, when her only Son died on the cross, since He had no
+one on earth to succeed Him of right, his mother, by the laws of
+all, succeeded, and by this acquired the principality of all.
+[Serm. v. c. vii. p. 118.] ... But, of the monarchy of the
+universe, Christ never made any testamentary bequest, because that
+could never be done without prejudice to his mother. Moreover, HE
+KNEW THAT A MOTHER CAN ANNUL THE <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page377" id="page377"></a>{377}</span> WILL OF HER SON, IF IT BE
+MADE TO THE PREJUDICE OF HERSELF." [Insuper noverat quod potest
+mater irritare Filii testamentum si in sui pr&aelig;judicium sit
+confectum.&mdash;P. 118.]</p>
+<p>"The Virgin Mother<a id="footnotetag138" name=
+"footnotetag138"></a><a href="#footnote138"><sup>138</sup></a>,
+from the time she conceived God, obtained a certain jurisdiction
+and authority in every temporal procession of the Holy Spirit, so
+that no creature could obtain any grace of virtue from God except
+according to the dispensation of his Virgin mother<a id=
+"footnotetag139" name="footnotetag139"></a><a href=
+"#footnote139"><sup>139</sup></a>. As through the neck the vital
+breathings descend from the head into the body, so the vital graces
+are transfused from the head Christ into his mystical body, through
+the Virgin. I fear not to say, that this Virgin has a certain
+jurisdiction over the flowing of all graces. And, because she is
+the mother of such a Son of God, who produces the Holy Spirit;
+THEREFORE, ALL THE GIFTS, VIRTUES, AND GRACES OF THE HOLY SPIRIT
+ARE ADMINISTERED BY THE HANDS OF HERSELF, TO WHOM SHE WILL, WHEN
+SHE WILL, HOW SHE WILL, AND IN WHAT QUANTITY SHE WILL." [Serm. v.
+p. 119.]</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote138" name=
+"footnote138"></a><b>Footnote 138:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag138">(return)</a>
+<p>Serm. v. c. viii. and Serm. vi. c. ii. p. 120 and 122. There is
+an omission (probably by an error of the press) in the first
+passage, which the second enables us to supply.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote139" name=
+"footnote139"></a><b>Footnote 139:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag139">(return)</a>
+<p>This writer is constantly referring to St. Bernard's doctrine,
+"No grace comes from heaven upon the earth, but what passes through
+the hands of Mary."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"She is the queen of mercy, the temple of God, the habitation of
+the Holy Spirit, always sitting at the right hand of Christ in
+eternal glory. Therefore she is to be venerated, to be saluted, and
+to be adored with the adoration of hyperdulia. And therefore she
+sits at the right hand of the King, that as often as you adore
+Christ the king you may adore also the mother of Christ." [Serm.
+vi. p. 121.]</p>
+<p>"The blessed Virgin Mary alone has done more for <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page378" id="page378"></a>{378}</span> God; or
+as much (so to speak) as God hath done for the whole human race.
+For I verily believe that God will grant me indulgence if I now
+speak for the Virgin. Let us gather together into one what things
+God hath done for man, and let us consider what satisfaction the
+Virgin Mary hath rendered to the Lord." Bernardine here enumerates
+many particulars, placing one against the other, which for many
+reasons I cannot induce myself to transfer into these pages, and
+then he sums up the whole thus: "Therefore, setting each individual
+thing one against another, namely, what things God had done for
+man, and what things the blessed Virgin has done for God, you will
+see that Mary has done more for God, than God has for man; so that
+thus, on account of the blessed Virgin, (whom, nevertheless, He
+himself made,) God is in a certain manner under greater obligations
+to us than we are to Him." [Serm. vi. p. 120.]</p>
+<p>The whole treatise he finishes with this address to the
+Virgin:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Truly by mere babbling are we uttering these thy praises and
+excellences; but we suppliantly pray thy immense sweetness. Do
+thou, by thy benignity, supply our insufficiencies, that we may
+worthily praise thee through the endless ages of ages. Amen."</p>
+<p>In closing these brief extracts I would observe, that by almost
+every writer in support of the worship of the Virgin, an appeal is
+made to St. Bernard<a id="footnotetag140" name=
+"footnotetag140"></a><a href="#footnote140"><sup>140</sup></a> as
+their chief authority. Especially is the following passage quoted
+by many, either whole or in part, at almost every turn of their
+argument:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote140" name=
+"footnote140"></a><b>Footnote 140:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag140">(return)</a>
+<p>The present Pope, in the same manner, refers to him in his
+Encyclical Letter.&mdash;A.D. 1840.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>"If thou art disturbed by the heinousness of thy crimes, and
+confounded by the foulness of thy conscience, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page379" id="page379"></a>{379}</span> if
+terrified by the horror of judgment thou begin to be swallowed up
+in the gulf of despair, think of Mary, invoke Mary; let her not
+depart from thy heart, let her not depart from thy mouth. For
+whilst thinking of her, thou dost not err; imploring her, thou dost
+not despair; following her, thou dost not lose thy way; whilst she
+holds thee, thou dost not fall; whilst she protects thee, thou dost
+not fear; whilst she is thy leader, thou art not wearied; whilst
+she is favourable, thou reachest thy end<a id="footnotetag141"
+name="footnotetag141"></a><a href=
+"#footnote141"><sup>141</sup></a>."</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote141" name=
+"footnote141"></a><b>Footnote 141:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag141">(return)</a>
+<p>See Bern. Sen. vol. iv. p. 124. The passage is found in Bernard,
+Paris, 1640. p. 25.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>If the Virgin Mary is thus regarded as the source and well-head
+of all safety and blessing, we cannot wonder, that glory and praise
+are ascribed in the selfsame terms to her as to the Almighty.
+Cardinal Bellarmin closes the several portions of his writings with
+"Praise to God and the blessed Virgin Mary<a id="footnotetag142"
+name="footnotetag142"></a><a href=
+"#footnote142"><sup>142</sup></a>." It is painful to reflect, that
+either the highest glory, due to that God who will not share his
+glory with another, is here ascribed to one of the creatures of his
+hand (however highly favoured and full of grace), or else that to
+the most high God is ascribed an inferior glory and praise, such as
+it is lawful for us to address to an exalted fellow-creature.
+Surely the only ascription fitting the lips and the heart of those
+who have been enlightened by the bright beams of Gospel truth, is
+Glory to God alone through Christ his Son.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote142" name=
+"footnote142"></a><b>Footnote 142:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag142">(return)</a>
+<p>Such ascriptions are very common. Joannes de Carthagena, a most
+voluminous writer of homilies, adopts this as the close of his
+sections: "Praise and glory to the Triune God, to the Humanity of
+Christ, to the Blessed Virgin Mary his mother, and to St. Joseph
+her dearest spouse."&mdash;Catholic Homilies on the Sacred Secrets
+of the Mother of God, and Joseph, p. 921. Paris, 1615.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page380" id=
+"page380"></a>{380}</span>
+<hr />
+<h4><a name="sect3-5-5" id="sect3-5-5">SECTION V.&mdash;MODERN
+WORKS OF DEVOTION AMONG ROMAN CATHOLICS.</a></h4>
+<p>It may perhaps be surmised, that the authors referred to in the
+last section lived many years ago, and that the sentiments of the
+faithful members of the Church of Rome have undergone material
+changes on these points. Assurances are given on every side, that
+the invocation of the saints and of the Virgin is nothing more than
+a request, that they would intercede with God, and implore his
+mercy for the suppliants. But whatever implicit reliance we may
+place on the good faith with which these declarations are made, we
+can discover no new key by which to interpret the forms of prayer
+and praise satisfactorily. Confessedly there are no changes in the
+authorized services. We discover no traces of change in the worship
+of private devotion. The Breviary and Missal contain the same
+offices of the Virgin Mary as in former days. The same sentiments
+are expressed towards her in public; the same forms of
+devotion<a id="footnotetag143" name="footnotetag143"></a><a href=
+"#footnote143"><sup>143</sup></a>, both in prayer and praise, are
+prepared for the use of individuals in their daily exercises.
+Whatever meaning is to be attached to the expressions employed, the
+prevailing expressions themselves remain the same as we found them
+to have been in past ages.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote143" name=
+"footnote143"></a><b>Footnote 143:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag143">(return)</a>
+<p>Works of this character abound in every place, where Catholic
+books may be purchased.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Since I made these extracts from the learned and celebrated
+doctors and canonized saints of former ages, my attention has been
+invited to the language now <span class="pagenum"><a name="page381"
+id="page381"></a>{381}</span> used in forms of devotion, the spirit
+of which implies similar views of the power and love of the Virgin
+Mary, as the fountain of mercies to mankind, and the dispenser of
+every heavenly blessing.</p>
+<p>At the head of these modern works, I was led to read over again
+the encyclical letter of the present sovereign pontiff, from the
+closing sentences of which I have already made extracts. And
+referring his words to a test which we have more than once applied
+in a similar case&mdash;that of changing the name of the person,
+and substituting the name of God, or his blessed Son, I cannot see
+how the spirit of his sentiments falls in the least below the
+highest degree of religious worship. His words, in the third
+paragraph of his letter, as they appear in the Laity's Directory
+for 1833, are these:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"But having at length taken possession of our see in the Lateran
+Basilic according to the custom and institution of our
+predecessors, we turn to you without delay, venerable brethren, and
+in testimony of our feelings towards you, we select for the date of
+our letter this most joyful day on which we celebrate the solemn
+festival of the most blessed Virgin's triumphant assumption into
+heaven, that she who has been through every great calamity our
+patroness and protectress, may WATCH OVER US WRITING TO YOU, AND
+LEAD OUR MIND BY HER HEAVENLY INFLUENCE to those counsels which may
+prove most salutary to Christ's flock."</p>
+<p>Let us substitute for the name of Mary, the holiest of all, The
+Eternal Spirit of Jehovah Himself; and will not these words be a
+proper vehicle of the sentiments of a Christian pastor? Let us fix
+upon Christmas-day, or Easter, or Holy Thursday, and what word
+expressive <span class="pagenum"><a name="page382" id=
+"page382"></a>{382}</span> of gratitude for past mercies to the
+supreme Giver of all good things, or of hope and trust in the
+guidance of the Spirit of counsel, and wisdom, and
+strength&mdash;of the most High God, who alone can order the wills
+and ways of men&mdash;might not a bishop of Christ's flock take
+from this declaration of the Sovereign Pontiff, and use in its
+first and natural sense, when speaking of the Lord Jehovah Himself?
+"We select for the date of our letter this most joyful day on which
+we celebrate the solemn festival of the most blessed Redeemer's
+nativity, (or glorious resurrection, or ascension,) that He who has
+been through every great calamity our patron and protector, may
+watch over us writing to you, and lead our mind by his heavenly
+influence to those counsels which may prove most salutary to
+Christ's flock."</p>
+<p>In these sentiments of the present Pope there is no allusion (as
+there is in the other clause) to Mary's prayers and intercessions.
+Looking to and weighing the words employed, and as far as words can
+be relied upon as interpreters of the thoughts, looking to the
+spirit of his profession, only one inference can be fairly drawn.
+However direct and immediate the prayers of the suppliants may be
+to the Virgin for her protection and defence from all dangers,
+spiritual and bodily, and for the guidance of the inmost thoughts
+in the right way, (blessings which we of the Anglican Catholic
+Church, following the footsteps of the primitive flock of Christ,
+have always looked for at the hand of God Almighty only, to be
+granted by Him for the sake of his blessed Son,) such petitioners
+to Mary would be sanctioned to the utmost by the principles and
+example of the present Roman Pontiff.</p>
+<p>We have already, when examining the records of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page383" id="page383"></a>{383}</span> the
+Council of Chalcedon, compared the closing words of this encyclical
+letter with the more holy and primitive aspirations of the Bishops
+of Rome and Constantinople in those earlier days; and the
+comparison is striking between the sentiments now expressed in the
+opening parts of the same letter, and the spirit of the collects
+which were adopted for the use of the faithful, before the
+invocation of saints and of the Virgin had gained its present
+strong hold in the Church of Rome. For example, a collect at
+Vespers teaches us to pray to God as the source from whom all holy
+desires and all good counsels proceed [Hiem. 149.]; and on the
+fifth Sunday after Easter this prayer is offered: "O God, from whom
+all good things do come, grant, we pray Thee, that by thy
+inspiration we may think those things that be good; and by thy
+guidance may perform the same;" whilst on the fifth Sunday after
+the Epiphany, in a collect, the spirit of which is strongly
+contrasted with the sentiments in both parts of this encyclical
+letter, God is thus addressed: "We beseech thee, O Lord, with thy
+continual pity, guard thy family, that, leaning on the sole hope of
+heavenly grace, it may ever be defended by thy protection." [Ut
+qu&aelig; in <i>sola</i> spe grati&aelig; coelestis innititur, tua
+semper protectione muniatur.&mdash;Hiem, 364. "Let us raise our
+eyes to the Blessed Virgin, who is our greatest hope, yea, the
+entire ground of our hope."]</p>
+<p>Similar materials are abundant. A whole volume, indeed, might
+readily be composed consisting solely of rules and instructions,
+confessions and forms of prayer, appertaining to the Virgin and the
+Saints, published by authority at the present day, both in our
+country and on the Continent, for the use of our Roman Catholic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page384" id=
+"page384"></a>{384}</span> brethren; but to which the word of God,
+and the doctrine and practice of the primitive Church, are in our
+estimation as much opposed as to the prayers of Bonaventura, or to
+the doctrine of either of the Bernardins. It would, however, be
+unprofitable to dwell on this subject at any great length. I will,
+therefore, only briefly refer to two publications of this sort, to
+which my own attention has been accidentally drawn: "The Imitation
+of the Blessed Virgin,"<a id="footnotetag144" name=
+"footnotetag144"></a><a href="#footnote144"><sup>144</sup></a> and
+"The Little Testament of the Holy Virgin."<a id="footnotetag145"
+name="footnotetag145"></a><a href=
+"#footnote145"><sup>145</sup></a></p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote144" name=
+"footnote144"></a><b>Footnote 144:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag144">(return)</a>
+<p>"The Imitation of the Blessed Virgin, composed on the plan of
+the Imitation of Christ. London, 1816. Approved by T.R. Asselini,
+Doctor of Sorbonne, last Bishop of Boulogne. From the French."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote145" name=
+"footnote145"></a><b>Footnote 145:</b><a href=
+"#footnotetag145">(return)</a>
+<p>"The Little Testament of the Holy Virgin, translated from the
+French, and revised by a Catholic Priest. Third Edition. Dublin,
+1836."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The first professes to be "composed on the plan of the
+'Imitation of Christ.'" This is, in itself, highly objectionable;
+its tendency is to exalt Mary, by association, to the same place in
+our hearts and minds, which Thomas &agrave; Kempis had laboured, in
+his "Imitation of Christ," to secure for the Saviour; and it
+reminds us of the proceedings of Bonaventura, who wrote psalms to
+the honour of the Virgin after the manner which David used in his
+hymns to the Lord of Glory. In this work we read the following
+prayer to the Virgin, which seems to be stained with the error, the
+existence of which elsewhere we have already noticed, of
+contrasting the justice and the stern dealings even of the Saviour,
+with the mercy, and loving-kindness, and fellow-feeling of Mary;
+making God an object of fear, Mary an object of love.</p>
+<p>"Mother of my Redeemer, O Mary, in the last moments <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page385" id="page385"></a>{385}</span> of my
+life, I implore thy assistance with more earnestness than ever. I
+find myself, as it were, placed between heaven and hell. Alas! what
+will become of me, if thou do not exert, in my behalf, thy powerful
+influence with Jesus?... I die with SUBMISSION since JESUS has
+ORDAINED it; but notwithstanding the natural horror which I have of
+death, I die with PLEASURE, because I die under THY protection."
+[Chap. xiii. p. 344.]</p>
+<p>In the fourteenth chapter the following passage occurs: "It is
+giving to the blessed Virgin a testimony of love particularly dear
+and precious to her, to make her holy spouse Joseph the first
+object of our devotion, next to that which consecrates us to her
+service.... The name of Joseph is invoked with singular devotion by
+all the true faithful. They frequently join it with the sacred
+names of Jesus and Mary. Whilst Jesus and Mary lived at Nazareth,
+if we had wished to obtain some favour from them, could we have
+employed a more powerful protector than St. Joseph? Will he now
+have less power and credit? GO THEREFORE TO JOSEPH, (Gen. xli. 55.)
+that he may intercede for you. Whatever favour you ask, God will
+grant it you at his request.... Go to Joseph in all your
+necessities; but especially to obtain the grace of a happy death.
+The general opinion that he died in the arms of Jesus and Mary has
+inspired the faithful with great confidence, that, through his
+intercession, they will have an end as happy and consoling as his.
+In effect, it has been remarked, that it is particularly at the
+hour of death that those who have been during their life careful to
+honour this great saint, reap the fruit of their devotion." [P.
+347.]</p>
+<p>In this passage the unworthy idea, itself formed on a groundless
+tradition, is introduced of paying reverence <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page386" id="page386"></a>{386}</span> to one
+saint, in order to gratify and conciliate another. Joseph must be
+especially honoured in order to do what is most acceptable to Mary.
+Surely this tends to withdraw the mind from that habitual reference
+of all our actions immediately to God, which the primitive teachers
+were so anxious to cultivate in all Christians.</p>
+<p>In the "Little Testament of the Holy Virgin," the following (p.
+46) is called, "A Prayer to the blessed Virgin." Can any words
+place more on an entire level with each other, the eternal Son of
+God and the Virgin? "Jesus and Mary?!"</p>
+<p>"O Mary! what would be our poverty and misery if the Father of
+Mercies had not drawn you from his treasury to give you to earth!
+Oh! my Life and Consolation, I trust and confide in your holy name.
+My heart wishes to love you; my mouth to praise you; my mind to
+contemplate you; my soul sighs to be yours. Receive me, defend me,
+preserve me; I cannot perish in your hands. Let the demons tremble
+when I pronounce your holy name, since you have ruined their
+empire; but we shall say with Saint Anselm, that he does not know
+God, who has not an idea sufficiently high of your greatness and
+glory. We shall esteem it the greatest honour to be of the number
+of your servants. Let your glory, blessed Mother, be equal to the
+extent of your name; reign, after God, over all that is beneath
+God; but, above all, reign in my heart; you will be my consolation
+in suffering, my strength in weakness, my counsel in doubt. At the
+name of Mary my hope shall be enlightened, my love inflamed. Oh!
+that I could deeply engrave the dear name on every heart, suggest
+it to every tongue, and make all celebrate it with me. Mary! sacred
+name, under which no one <span class="pagenum"><a name="page387"
+id="page387"></a>{387}</span> should despair. Mary! sacred name,
+often assaulted, but always victorious. Mary! it shall be my life,
+my strength, my comfort! Every day shall I envoke IT AND THE DIVINE
+NAME OF JESUS. The Son will awake the recollection of the mother,
+and the mother that of the Son. JESUS AND MARY! this is what my
+heart shall say at the last hour, if my tongue cannot; I shall hear
+them on my death bed,&mdash;they shall be wafted on my expiring
+breath, and I with them, to see THEM, know THEM, bless and love
+THEM for eternity. Amen."</p>
+<p>There may, perhaps, be a reasonable ground for our hoping that
+these are not the sentiments entertained by the enlightened Roman
+Catholics of our country and age. Any one has a full right to say,
+"These are productions of individuals for which we and the Church
+to which we belong are not responsible, any more than the Church of
+England is responsible for all doctrines and sentiments expressed
+by writers in her communion! Even the sentiments above referred to
+of the present reigning pope, you have no right to allege as the
+doctrines of the Church!" But I would again venture to suggest to
+every one, who would thus speak, the duty of ascertaining for
+himself, whether the sentiments of those who at present fill the
+highest places, and which fully justify these devotional exercises
+and prayers to the Virgin and the Saints, be not themselves fully
+justified by the authorized ritual of the Roman Church. On this
+point are supplied, even in this volume, materials sufficiently
+diversified and abundant in quantity to enable any one to form a
+correct judgment.</p>
+<p>By two brief extracts I will now bring this branch of our
+inquiry to a close. The first is from the concluding paragraphs of
+a discourse lately delivered and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page388" id="page388"></a>{388}</span> published. In principle,
+the sentiments here professed apparently admit not only of being
+identified with those of the authorized services of the Church of
+Rome, but also, though not so naked and revolting in appearance as
+the doctrines of Bonaventura, Biel, and the two Bernardins, yet in
+reality they equally depart from the simplicity of the Gospel, and
+are equally at direct variance with that, its first and its last
+principle, ONE GOD AND ONE MEDIATOR BETWEEN GOD AND MEN, THE MAN
+CHRIST JESUS.</p>
+<p>"Remember that this day you have put yourselves and your
+families under the protection of the ever-blessed Mother of God,
+and Her chaste Spouse, St. Joseph; of those who were chosen of God
+to protect the infancy of Jesus from the danger by a persecuting
+world. ENTREAT THEM TO PROTECT YOU AND YOURS FROM THE PERILS of a
+seducing and ensnaring world; to plead your interests in heaven,
+and secure by their intercession your everlasting crown. Loudly
+proclaim the praises of your heavenly Queen, but at the same time
+turn Her power to your everlasting advantage by your earnest
+supplications to HER." (See Appendix.)</p>
+<p>The other extract, which sanctions to the full whatever
+offerings of praise and ascriptions of glory we have found
+individuals making to the Virgin and to Saints, is from an
+announcement in, I believe, the last English edition of the Roman
+Breviary published, in its present form, under the sanction of the
+Pope himself.</p>
+<p>"To those who devoutly recite the following prayer after the
+office, Pope Leo the Tenth hath granted pardon (indulsit) for the
+defects and faults in celebrating it, contracted by human
+frailty.</p>
+<p>"To the most holy and undivided Trinity; to the manhood
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page389" id=
+"page389"></a>{389}</span> of our crucified Lord Jesus Christ; to
+the fruitful spotlessness of the most blessed and most glorious and
+ever-Virgin Mary; and to the entire body of all the Saints, be
+eternal praise, honour, virtue, and glory, from every creature, and
+to us remission of all sins, through endless ages of ages. Amen."
+[Norwich, 1830. &AElig;st.]</p>
+<p>On the indulgence for pardon given by Pope Leo the Tenth, more
+than 300 years ago, for such defects and faults in celebrating a
+religious service as may be contracted by human frailty; and on the
+fact of the notification of that indulgence being retained, and set
+forth so prominently in the service books at the present day, I
+will say nothing. Whatever associations may be raised in our minds
+by these circumstances, the subject does not fall within our
+present field of inquiry. But to join the Holy Trinity with the
+Virgin Mother, and all the Saints in one and the same ascription of
+ETERNAL PRAISE, HONOUR, and GLORY, is as utterly subversive of the
+integrity of primitive Christian Worship, as it is repugnant to the
+plainest sense of holy Scripture, and derogatory to the dignity of
+that Supreme Being, who declares Himself to be a jealous God.</p>
+<p>It has, indeed, been maintained that such ascriptions of glory
+and praise jointly to God and his Saints, is sanctioned by the
+language of our blessed Saviour Himself when He speaks of his
+having given his glory to his disciples [John xvii. 22.], and of
+his second advent, when He shall come in his own glory, and in his
+Father's, and of the holy angels. [Luke ix. 26.] But between the
+two cases there is no analogy whatever; the inference is utterly
+fallacious. We know that the Lord of Hosts is the King of glory,
+and that his eternal Son shared the glory of his Father before the
+foundations <span class="pagenum"><a name="page390" id=
+"page390"></a>{390}</span> of the world were laid. We know, too,
+that the Almighty has been pleased to create beings of various
+degrees and orders, differing from each other in kind or in
+excellence according to his supreme will. Among those creatures of
+his hand are the angels whom we reverence and love, as his faithful
+servants and his ministers to us for good. But when we speak and
+think of religious adoration; of giving thanks; and ascribing
+eternal glory and honour, we have only one object in our
+minds,&mdash;the supreme Sovereign Lord of all.</p>
+<p>With regard to the gracious words of our Saviour in his prayer
+to the Father, on the eve of his death, St. Peter's acts and words
+supply us with a plain and conclusive comment. He was himself one
+of those to whom Christ had declared that He had given the glory
+which his Father had given to Him; and yet when Cornelius fell down
+at his feet to worship him, he took him up, saying, "Stand up; I
+myself also am a man." [Acts x. 26.] The Saviour was pleased to
+impart his glory to his Apostles, dividing to them his heavenly
+gifts severally as He willed. We praise Him for those graces which
+shone so brightly in them, and we pray to Him to enable us by his
+grace to follow them, as they followed his blessed steps. We
+reverence their memory, but we give God alone the praise.</p>
+<p>As to the other instance, the words of our Lord (assuring us
+that the angels should accompany Him at his second advent in their
+glory, the glory which He assigned to them in the order of
+creation,) no more authorize us to ascribe praise and glory by a
+religious act to them, when we praise the God of angels and men,
+than would <span class="pagenum"><a name="page391" id=
+"page391"></a>{391}</span> the assurance of an inspired apostle,
+that "there is one glory of the sun, another glory of the moon, and
+another glory of the stars," sanction us in joining those
+luminaries in the same ascription of glory with their Almighty
+Creator and ours. Just as reasonably would a pagan justify his
+worship of the sun, the moon, and the stars, by this passage of
+Scripture, as our Roman Catholic brethren would justify themselves
+by the former passage in their ascription of praise and glory to
+the holy angels, and saints, and the blessed Virgin. We honour the
+holy angels, we praise God for the glory which He has imparted to
+them, and for the share which He has been pleased to assign to them
+in executing his decrees of mercy in the heavenly work of our
+salvation; and we pray to HIM to grant that they may by his
+appointment succour and defend us on earth, through Jesus Christ
+our Lord. But we address no invocation to them; we ascribe no glory
+to them as an act of religious worship. By offering thanks and
+praise to God He declares that we honour HIM; by offering thanks
+and praise, and by ascribing glory and honour to angel, saint, or
+virgin, we make them gods.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page392" id=
+"page392"></a>{392}</span>
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="conclusion" id="conclusion">CONCLUSION.</a></h3>
+<p>We have now, my fellow Christians, arrived at the conclusion of
+the task which I proposed to undertake. I have laid before you, to
+the utmost of my abilities and means, the result of my inquiry into
+the evidence of holy Scripture and primitive antiquity, on the
+invocation of saints and angels, and the blessed Virgin Mary. In
+this inquiry, excepting so far as was necessary to elucidate the
+origin and history of the Roman Catholic tenet of the Assumption of
+the Virgin, we have limited our researches to the writers who lived
+before the Nicene Council. That Council has always been considered
+a cardinal point,&mdash;a sort of climacteric in the history of the
+early Church. It was the first Council to which all the bishops of
+Christendom were summoned; and the influence of its decrees is felt
+beneficially in the Catholic Church to this very day. In fixing
+upon this Council as our present boundary line, I was influenced by
+a conviction, that the large body of Christians, whether of the
+Roman, the Anglican, or any other branch of the Church Catholic,
+would consent to this as an indisputable axiom,&mdash;that what the
+Church Catholic did not believe or practise up to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page393" id="page393"></a>{393}</span> that date
+of her existence upon earth, cannot be regarded as either Catholic
+or primitive, or apostolical. Ending with St. Athanasius, (who,
+though he was present at that Council, yet brings his testimony
+down through almost another half century, his death not having
+taken place till A.D. 873, on the verge of his eightieth year,) we
+have examined the remains of Christian antiquity, reckoning forward
+to that Council from the times of the Apostles. We have searched
+diligently into the writings, the sentiments, and the conduct of
+those first disciples of our Lord. We have contemplated the words
+of our blessed Saviour himself, and the inspired narrative of his
+life and teaching. With the same object in view we have studied the
+prophets of the Old Testament, and the works of Moses; and we have
+endeavoured, at the fountainhead, to ascertain what is the mind and
+will of God, as revealed to the world from the day when He made
+man, on the question of our invoking the angels and saints to
+intercede with Him in our behalf, or to assist and succour us on
+the earth. And the result is this:&mdash;From first to last, the
+voice of God Himself, and the voices of the inspired messengers of
+heaven, whether under the patriarchal, the Mosaic, or the Christian
+dispensations, the voices too of those maintainers of our common
+faith in Christ, who prayed, and taught, in the Church, before the
+corruptions of a degenerate world had mingled themselves with the
+purity of Christian worship, combine all, in publishing, throughout
+the earth, one and the self-same principle, "Pray only to God; draw
+nigh to Him alone; invoke no other; seek no other in the world of
+spirits, neither angel, nor beatified saint; seek Him, and He will
+favourably, with mercy, hear your prayers." To this one
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page394" id=
+"page394"></a>{394}</span> principle, when the Gospel announced the
+whole counsel of God in the salvation of man, our Lord himself, his
+Apostles, and his Church, unite in adding another principle of
+eternal obligation,&mdash;There is one Mediator between God and
+men, the man Christ Jesus; whatsoever the faithful shall ask the
+Father in the name of that Mediator, He will grant it to them: He
+is ever living to make intercession for those who believe in Him:
+Invoke we no other intercessor, apply we neither to saint nor
+angel, plead we the merits of no other. Let us lift up our hearts
+to God Almighty himself, and make our requests known to Him in the
+name, and through the mediation of Christ, and He will fulfil our
+desires and petitions as may be most expedient for us; He will
+grant to us, in this world, a knowledge of his truth, and in the
+world to come life everlasting!</p>
+<p>Watching the tide of evidence through its whole progress, we
+find it to flow all in this one direction. Here and there indeed
+attempts have been made to raise some mounds and barriers of human
+structure, in order to arrest its progress, and turn it from its
+straight course, but in vain; unchecked by any such endeavours, it
+rolls on in one full, steady, strong, and resistless current. Until
+we have long passed the Nicene Council, we find no one writer of
+the Christian Church, whose remains tell us, that he either himself
+invoked saints and angels, and the Virgin Mary, or was at all aware
+of any such practice prevailing in Christendom. Suppose, for one
+moment, that our doctrine is right; and then we find the whole
+tenour of the Old and New Testaments, and the ancient writers, in
+their plain meaning, agreeably to the interpretation of the most
+learned and unbiassed critics, fully coinciding in every respect
+with our view of God being the sole object of invocation,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page395" id=
+"page395"></a>{395}</span> and of the exclusive character of
+Christ's intercession, mediation, and advocacy. Suppose, for
+another moment, the Roman Catholic theory to be correct, then the
+whole general tenour and drift of Scripture must be evaded; the
+clearest statements and announcements must be explained away by
+subtle distinctions, gratuitous definitions, and casuistical
+refinements, altogether foreign from the broad and simple truths of
+Revelation; then, too, in ascertaining the sentiments of an author,
+not his general and pervading principles, evidenced throughout his
+writings, must be appealed to; but casual and insulated expressions
+must be contracted or expanded as may best seem to counteract the
+impression made by the testimony of those principles. We may safely
+ask, Is there such evidence, that the primitive Church offered
+invocations to saints and angels, and the Virgin, as would satisfy
+us in the case of any secular dispute with regard to ancient usage?
+On the contrary, is not the evidence clear to a moral
+demonstration, that the offering of such addresses is an innovation
+of later days, unknown to the primitive Christians till after the
+middle of the fourth century, and never pronounced to be an article
+of faith, until the Council of Trent, more than a thousand years
+after its first appearance in Christendom, so decreed it.</p>
+<p>The tendency, indeed, of some Roman Catholic writings,
+especially of late years, is to draw off our minds on these points
+from the written word of God, and the testimony of the earliest
+Church, and to dwell upon the possibility, the reasonableness of
+the doctrines of the Church of Rome in this respect, their
+accordance with our natural feelings, and their charitableness. But
+in points of such vast moment, in things concerning the soul's
+salvation, we can depend with satisfaction and <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page396" id="page396"></a>{396}</span> without
+misgiving, only on the sure word of promise; nothing short of God's
+own pledge of his own eternal truth can assure us, that all is
+safe. Such substitution of what may appear to us reasonable, and
+agreeable to our natural sentiments, and desirable if true, in
+place of the assurances of God's revealed Will, may correspond with
+the arguments of a heathen philosopher unacquainted with the truth
+as it is in Jesus, but cannot satisfy disciples of Him who brought
+life and immortality to light by his Gospel. Such questions as
+these, "Is there any thing unreasonable in this? Would not this be
+a welcome tenet, if true?" well became the lips of Socrates in his
+defence before his judges, but are in the strict sense of the word
+preposterous in a Christian. With the Christian the first question
+is, What is the truth? What is revealed? What has God promised?
+What has He taught man to hope for? What has He commanded man to
+do? By his own words, by the words and by the example of his
+inspired messengers, by the doctrine and practice of his Church,
+the witness and interpreter of the truth, how has He directed us to
+sue for his mercy and all its blessings? On what foundation, sure
+and certain, can we build our hopes that "He will favourably with
+mercy hear our prayers?" For in this matter, a matter of spiritual
+life and death, we can anchor our hope on no other rock than his
+sure word of promise.</p>
+<p>That sure word of promise, if I am a faithful believer, I have;
+but it is exclusive of any invocation by me of saint, or angel, or
+virgin. The pledge of heaven is most solemnly and repeatedly given;
+God, who cannot lie, has, in language so plain, that he may run who
+readeth it, assured me that if I come to HIMSELF by HIS SON, my
+prayer shall not be cast out, my suit shall <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page397" id="page397"></a>{397}</span> not be
+denied, I shall not be sent empty away. In every variety of form
+which language can assume, this assurance is ratified and
+confirmed. His own revealed will directs me to pray for my
+fellow-creatures, and to expect a beneficial effect from the
+prayers of the faithful upon earth in my behalf. To pray for them,
+therefore, and to seek their prayers, and to wait patiently for an
+answer to both, are acts of faith and of duty. And were it also
+appointed by God's will to be an act of faith and duty in a
+Christian to seek the prayers, and aid, and assistance, of saints
+and angels by supplicatingly invoking them, surely the same word of
+truth would have revealed that also. Whereas the reverse shows
+itself under every diversified state of things, from the opening of
+the sacred book to its very last page. The subtle distinction of
+religious worship into latria, dulia, and hyperdulia, the refined
+classification of prayer under the two heads of direct, absolute,
+final, sovereign, on the one hand, and of oblique, relative,
+transitory, subaltern, on the other, swell indeed many elaborate
+works of casuistry, but are not discoverable in the remains of
+primitive Christians, nor in the writings of God's word have they
+any place. I cannot find in the inspired Apostles any reference to
+the necessity, the duty, the lawfulness, the expediency of our
+seeking by prayer the good offices of the holy dead, or of the
+angels of light. In their successors the earliest inspired teachers
+and pastors of Christ's fold, I seek in vain for any precept, or
+example, or suggestion, or incidental allusion looking that way.
+Why then should a Christian wish to add to that which God has been
+pleased to appoint and to reveal? Why should I attempt to enter
+heaven through any other gate than <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page398" id="page398"></a>{398}</span> that gate which the Lord of
+heaven has opened for me? or why should I seek to reach that gate
+by any other way than the way which He has made for me; which He
+has Himself plainly prescribed to me; in which He has promised that
+his word shall be a lantern unto my feet; and along which those
+saints and servants of his, who received the truth from his own
+lips, and sealed it by their blood, have gone before?</p>
+<p>Whenever a maintainer of the doctrine and practice of invoking
+the Saints asks me, as we have lately been asked in these words,
+"May I not reasonably hope that their prayers will be more
+efficacious than my own and those of my friends? And, under this
+persuasion, I say to them, as I just now said to you, holy Mary,
+holy Peter, holy Paul, pray for me. What is there in reason or
+revelation to forbid me to do so?" To this and similar questions
+and suggestions, I answer at once, God has solemnly covenanted to
+grant the petitions of those who ask HIM for his mercy, in the name
+and for the sake of his Son; and in his holy word has, both by
+precept and example, taught us in this life to pray for each other,
+and to ask each other's prayers [James v. 16; I Tim. ii. 1.]; but
+that He will favourably answer the prayers which we supplicate
+angels to offer, or which we offer to Himself through the merits
+and by the intercession of departed mortals, is no where in the
+covenant. Moreover, when God invites me and commands me to approach
+Him myself, in the name of his Son, and trusting to his merits, it
+is not Christian humility, rather it savours of presumption, and
+intruding into those things which we have not seen [Coloss. ii.
+18.], to seek to prevail with Him by <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"page399" id="page399"></a>{399}</span> pleading other merits, and
+petitioning creatures, however glorious, to interest themselves
+with Him in our behalf, angels and saints, of whose power even to
+hear us we have no evidence. When Jesus Himself, who knows both the
+deep counsels of the Eternal Spirit, and man's wants and weaknesses
+and unworthiness, and who loveth his own to the end, pledges his
+never-failing word, that whatsoever we ask the Father in his name,
+He will give it us, can it be less than an unworthy distrust of his
+truth and faithfulness to ask the Father for the merits and by the
+intercession of another? and as though in fear lest God should fail
+of his promise, or be unmindful of us Himself, to invoke angels and
+the good departed to make our wants known unto HIM, and prevail
+with HIM to relieve us?</p>
+<p>Surely it were wiser and safer to adhere religiously to that one
+way which cannot fail, than to adopt for ourselves methods and
+systems, for the success of which we have no guarantee; which may
+be unacceptable in his sight; and the tendency of which may be to
+bring down a curse and not a blessing.</p>
+<p>May the great Shepherd and Bishop of souls pour down upon his
+Church the abundance of his mercy, preserving those in the truth
+who now possess it, restoring it to those by whom it has been lost,
+and imparting it to all who are yet in darkness. And, whilst we
+speak the truth in love, and endeavour to keep the unity of the
+spirit in the bond of peace, may HE, for his own glory, and for the
+safety and comfort of his people, shed this truth abroad in our
+hearts, and enlighten us to receive it in all its fulness and
+integrity, and in the very sense in which the Holy Spirit, when He
+guided <span class="pagenum"><a name="page400" id=
+"page400"></a>{400}</span> the pen of St. Paul, willed the Church
+to interpret it, "There is one God and one Mediator between God and
+men, the man Christ Jesus."</p>
+<hr />
+<p>O everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the
+services of Angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant,
+that as thy holy Angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by thy
+appointment they may succour and defend us on earth, through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. Amen.</p>
+<p>O Almighty God, who hast built thy Church upon the foundation of
+the Apostles and Prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the head
+corner-stone; Grant us so to be joined together in unity of spirit
+by their doctrine, that we may be made an holy temple, acceptable
+unto Thee, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.</p>
+<p>O Almighty God, who hast knit together thine elect in one
+communion and fellowship, in the mystical body of thy Son Christ
+our Lord; Grant us grace, so to follow thy blessed Saints in all
+virtuous and godly living, that we may come to those unspeakable
+joys, which Thou hast prepared for them that unfeignedly love Thee;
+through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page401" id=
+"page401"></a>{401}</span>
+<hr />
+<h2>APPENDIX.</h2>
+<hr />
+<p>Note.&mdash;Pages 107 and 110.</p>
+<p>The following is the original of the passages discussed in the
+text. Justin Martyr, Apol. I. p. 47. &sect; vi. Benedictine Edition
+by P. Maran. Paris, A.D. 1742.</p>
+<p>[Greek: Enthende kai atheoi keklaemetha; kai homologoumen ton
+toiouton nomizomenon theon atheoi einai, all' ouchi tou
+alaethestatou, kai patros dikaiosunaes kai sophrosunaes, kai ton
+allon areton, anepimiktou te kakias Theou; all' ekeinon te, kai ton
+par' autou huion elthonta kai didaxanta haemas tauta, kai ton ton
+allon hepomenon kai exomoioumenon agathon angelon straton, pneuma
+te to prophaetikon sebometha, kai proskunoumen, logoi kai
+alaetheiai timontes, kai panti boulomenoi mathein, hos
+edidachthaemen, aphthonos paradidontes.]</p>
+<p>Ibid. page 50, 51. sect. xiii.&mdash;[Greek: 'Atheoi men oun hos
+ouk esmen, ton daemiourgon toude tou pantos sebomenoi, ... ton
+didaskalon te touton genomenon haemin, kai eis touto genaethenta
+Iaesoun Christon ton staurothenta epi Pontiou Pilatou, tou
+genomenou en Ioudaiai epi chronois Tiberiou Kaisaros epitropou,
+huion autou tou ontos Theou mathontes, kai en deuterai chorai
+echontes, pneuma te prophaetikon en tritaei taxei, hoti meta logou
+timomen, apodeixomen....]</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 134.</p>
+<p>In the text it has been observed, that "Coccius in his elaborate
+work quotes the two following passages as Origen's, without
+expressing <span class="pagenum"><a name="page402" id=
+"page402"></a>{402}</span> any hesitation or doubt respecting their
+genuineness; in which he is followed by writers of the present
+day."</p>
+<p>The modern works, to which reference is here made, are chiefly
+the Lectures delivered by Dr. Wiseman, in the Roman Catholic Chapel
+in Moorfields in the year 1836, and the compilation of Messrs.
+Berington and Kirk [Berington and Kirk. London, 1830, p. 403.],
+from which Dr. Wiseman in his preface to his Lectures (p. ix.)
+informs us, that in general he had drawn his quotations of the
+Fathers. In citing the testimony of Origen in support of the
+invocation of saints, it is evident that Dr. Wiseman has drawn from
+that source; for whereas the two confessedly spurious passages,
+from the Lament, and from the Book on Job, are in that compilation
+quoted in the same page, Dr. Wiseman cites only the passage from
+the Lament, as from a work on the Lamentations, but gives his
+reference to the Book on Job. His words are these:&mdash;"Again he
+(Origen) thus writes on the Lamentations: 'I will fall down on my
+knees, and not presuming, on account of my crimes, to present my
+prayer to God, I will invoke all the saints to my assistance. O ye
+saints of heaven, I beseech you with a sorrow full of sighs and
+tears; fall at the feet of the Lord of mercies for me, a miserable
+sinner,'&mdash;Lib. ii. De Job." [Lectures on the Principal
+Doctrines and Practices of the Catholic Church, by Nicholas
+Wiseman, D.D. London, 1836. Vol. i. preface, p. ix. and vol. ii. p.
+107.]</p>
+<p>When we find such passages as these, which have been so long ago
+and so repeatedly pronounced to be utterly spurious, yet cited in
+evidence at the present time, and represented as conveying the
+genuine testimony of Origen, we shall be pardoned for repeating the
+sentiments expressed so many years ago by the learned Bishop of
+Avranches with regard to the very work here cited, "It is wonderful
+that, WITHOUT ANY MARK OF THEIR BEING FORGERIES, they should be
+sometimes cited in evidence by some theologians."</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 151.</p>
+<p>The whole passage cited as Origen's comment on the words of
+Ezekiel, "The heavens are opened," is in the Latin version as
+follows. The Greek original, if it ever existed, is lost. The
+portion between brackets is the part suspected of being an
+interpolation.</p>
+<p>6. <i>Et aperti sunt coeli</i>. Clausi erant coeli, et ad
+adventum Christi aperti sunt, ut reseratis illis veniret super eum
+Spiritus Sanctus in specie columb&aelig;. Neque enirn poterat ad
+nos commeare nisi primum <span class="pagenum"><a name="page403"
+id="page403"></a>{403}</span> ad su&aelig; natur&aelig; consortem
+descendisset. <i>Ascendit Jesus in altum, captivam duxit
+captivitatem, accepit dona in hominibus. Qui descendit, ipse est
+qui ascendit super omnes coelos ut impleret omnia. Et ipse dedit
+alios apostolos, alios prophetas, alios evangelistas, alios
+pastores et magistros in perfectionem sanctorum</i>.</p>
+<p>[7. <i>Aperti sunt coeli</i>. Non sufficit unum coelum aperiri:
+aperiuntur plurimi, ut descendant non ab uno, sed ab omnibus coelis
+angeli ad eos qui salvandi sunt. Angeli qui ascendebant et
+descendebant super Filium hominis, et accesserunt as eum, et
+ministrabant ei. Descenderunt autem angeli, quia prior descenderat
+Christus, metuentes descendere priusquam Dominus virtutum omnium
+rerumque pr&aelig;ciperet. Quando autem viderunt principem
+militi&aelig; coelestis in terrestribus locis commorari, tunc per
+apertam viam ingressi sunt sequentes Dominum suum, et parentes
+voluntati ejus qui distribuit eos custodes credentium nomini suo.
+Tu heri sub d&aelig;monio eras, hodie sub angelo. <i>Nolite</i>,
+inquit Dominus, <i>contemnere unum de minimis istis</i> qui sunt in
+ecclesia. <i>Amen enim dico vobis, quia angeli eorum per omnia
+vident faciem Patris qui est in coelis</i>. Obsequuntur saluti
+tu&aelig; angeli, concessi sunt ad ministerium Filii Dei, et
+dicuntinter se: si ille descendit, et descendit in corpus; si
+mortali indutus est carne, et sustinuit crucem, et pro hominibus
+mortuus est, quit nos quiescimus? quid parcimus nobis? Eja omnes
+angeli descendamus e coelo. Ideo et multitudo militi&aelig;
+coelestis erat laudantium et glorificantium Deum, quando natus est
+Christus. Omnia angelis plena sunt: veni, angeli, suscipe sermone
+conversum ab errore pristino, a doctrina d&aelig;moniorum, ab
+iniquitate in altum loquente: et suscipiens eum quasi medicus bonus
+confove atque institue, parvulus est, hodie nascitur senex
+repuerascens: et suscipe tribuens ei baptismum secund&aelig;
+regenerationis, et advoca tibi alios socios ministerii tui, ut
+concti pariter eos qui aliquando decepti sunt, erudiatis ad fidem.
+<i>Gaudium enim est majus in coelis super unum peccatorem
+poenitentiam agentem, quam supra nonaginta novem justos quibus non
+opus est poenitentia</i>. Exultat omnis creatura, coll&aelig;tatur
+et applaudit his qui salvandi sunt. Nam <i>expectatio
+creatur&aelig; revelationem filiorum Dei expectat</i>. Et licet
+nolint ii qui scripturas apostolicas interpolaverunt istiusmodi
+sermones inesse libris eorum quibus possit Creator Christus
+approbari, expectat tamen omnis creatura filios Dei, quando
+liberentur a delicto, quando auferentur de Zabuli manu, quando
+regenerentur a Christo. Verum jam tempus est, ut de pr&aelig;senti
+loco aliqua tangamus. Vidit Propheta non visionem, sed visiones
+Dei. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page404" id=
+"page404"></a>{404}</span> Quare non vidat unam, sed plurimas
+visiones? Audi Dominum pollicentem atque dicentem: <i>Ego visiones
+multiplicavi</i>. 8. <i>Quinta mensis</i>. Hic annus quinta
+captivitatis regis Joachim. Trigesimo anno &aelig;tatis Ezekielis,
+et quinto captivitatis Joachim, Propheta mittiur ad Jud&aelig;os.
+Non despexit clementissimus pater, nec longo tempore incommonitum
+populum dereliquit. Quintus est annus. Quantum temporis
+intercessit? Quinque anni interfluxerunt ex quo captivi
+serviunt.]</p>
+<p>Statim descendit Spiritus Sanctus,&mdash;aperuit coelos, ut hi
+qui captivitatis jugo premebantur, viderent ea qu&aelig; videbantur
+a Propheta. Dicente quippe eo, <i>Et aperti sunt coeli</i>, quodam
+modo et ipsi intuebantur oculis cordis qu&aelig; ille etiam oculis
+carnis aspexerat.&mdash;Vol. iii. p. 358.</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 165.</p>
+<p>In a note on the Epistle of St. Cyprian to his brother,
+reference was made to the Appendix for a closer comparison of
+Cyprian's original letter with the modern translation of the
+passage under consideration. By placing the two versions in
+parallel columns side by side, we shall immediately see, that the
+mode of citing the testimony of St. Cyprian adopted in Dr.
+Wiseman's Lectures, from the compilation of Messrs. Berington and
+Kirk, is rather to substitute his own comment and inference, than
+to allow the witness to speak for himself in his own words. The
+whole paragraph, as it appears in Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, is
+this:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"St. Cyprian in the same century: 'Let us be mindful of one
+another in our prayers; with one mind and with one heart, in this
+world and in the next, let us always pray with mutual charity
+relieving our sufferings and afflictions. And may the charity of
+him, who, by the divine favour, shall first depart hence, still
+persevere before the Lord; may his prayer, for our brethren and
+sisters, not cease.' Therefore, after having departed this life,
+the same offices of charity are to continue, by praying for those
+who remain on earth." [Lect. xiii. vol. ii. p. 107, and Berington
+and Kirk, p. 430.]</p>
+<p><i>St. Cyprian's words</i>. <i>Epist.</i> lvii. <i>p.</i>
+96.</p>
+<p><i>Translation adopted by Dr. Wiseman from Berington and
+Kirk.</i></p>
+<table summary="Translations">
+<tr>
+<td>1. Memories nostri invicem simus,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1. Let us be mindful of one another IN OUR PRAYERS;</td>
+<td></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>2. Concordes atque unanimes,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>2. With one mind and with one heart,</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>3. Utrobique.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>3. In this world and in the next,</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>4. PRO NOBIS semper oremus,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>4. Let us always pray,</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>5. Pressuras et angustias mutua caritate relevemus,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>5. With mutual charity RELIEVING our sufferings and
+afflictions.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>6. Et si quis istinc nostrum prior divin&aelig; dignationis
+celeritate pr&aelig;cesserit, perseveret apud Dominum NOSTRA
+DILECTIO,</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>6. And may the CHARITY OF HIM, who, by the divine favour, shall
+first depart hence, still persevere before the Lord;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>7. Pro fratribus et sororibus nostris apud misericordiam patris
+non cesset oratio.</td>
+<td></td>
+<td>7. May HIS prayer, for our brethren and sisters, not
+cease.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>In this translation, by inserting the words, <i>in our
+prayers</i>, which are not in the original in the first clause; by
+rendering the adverb <i>utrobique</i>, IN THIS WORLD AND IN THE
+NEXT, in the third clause; by omitting the words <i>pro nobis, for
+each other</i>, which are in the original, in the fourth clause; by
+changing in the fifth the verb <i>relevemus, let us relieve</i>,
+implying another branch of their mutual kindness, into the
+participle <i>relieving</i>, which may imply, that the relief
+alluded to was also to be conveyed by the medium of their prayers;
+by substituting <i>the charity of him</i>, in place of <i>nostra
+dilectio, our charity</i>, in the sixth; and by inserting the word
+<i>his</i>, which is not in the original, before <i>prayer</i>,
+where the grammar of the sentence requires <i>our</i>, in the
+seventh clause;&mdash;by these means the translator makes Cyprian
+express a sentiment far removed from what the words of Cyprian, in
+their plain and natural sense, convey. It must, however, be borne
+in mind, as we have shown in our examination of the passage, that
+the sentiment of Cyprian, even as it is thus unduly extracted from
+his words, would not in the remotest degree countenance the
+invocation of saints. It would do no more than imply his belief,
+that the faithful departed may take an interest in the welfare of
+their surviving friends on earth, and promote that welfare by their
+prayers; a point which, in the preface, is mentioned as one of
+those topics, the discussion of which would be avoided in this
+inquiry, as quite distinct from the invocation of saints.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page406" id=
+"page406"></a>{406}</span>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 176.</p>
+<p>An extract from Eusebius, unnoticed in the text of this work,
+has recently been cited as conveying his testimony in favour of the
+invocation of saints. I have judged it better to defer the
+consideration of it to the appendix. It has been cited in these
+terms: "In the fourth century Eusebius of C&aelig;sarea thus
+writes: 'May we be found worthy by the prayers and intercessions of
+all the saints.'" [Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, vol. ii. p. 107. Lect.
+xiii. Berington and Kirk, p. 431.] To form a just estimate of this
+alleged testimony, it is requisite that we have before us not only
+that incomplete clause, but the whole passage purporting to
+contain, in these words, the closing sentences of a commentary on
+Isaiah: [Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1707. Dr. Wiseman's reference
+is "Com. in Isai. Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1706."]</p>
+<p>"'And they shall be for a spectacle to all flesh.' To what
+flesh? Altogether to that which shall be somewhere punished? Nay,
+to that which shall of the heavenly vision be deemed worthy,
+concerning which it was said before, All flesh shall come to
+worship before me, of which may we also be deemed worthy by the
+prayers and intercessions of all the saints. Amen."</p>
+<p>In examining this passage I am willing for the present that all
+its clauses should be accepted as the genuine words of Eusebius,
+and accepted too in the meaning attached to them by those who have
+cited them. And to what do they amount? If these are indeed his
+expressions, Eusebius believed that the saints departed can forward
+our spiritual welfare by their prayers and ministering offices; and
+he uttered his desire that we might thus be benefited. Now whether
+we agree with him or not in that belief; whether we consider the
+faithful departed as able to take an interest in our welfare and to
+promote it, or regard such an opinion as without foundation in the
+word of God and in primitive doctrine; the belief implied and the
+wish expressed here by Eusebius, are widely indeed removed from the
+act of suppliantly invoking the saints departed, and resorting to
+them with entreaties for their prayers and intercessions in our
+behalf. These two things, although often confounded, are far from
+being equivalent; and by all who would investigate with fairness
+the subject of our inquiry, they must be carefully kept distinct.
+The invocation of saints being the single point in question, our
+business is to ascertain, not what opinions Eusebius may have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page407" id=
+"page407"></a>{407}</span> entertained as to the condition, and
+power, and offices of the saints departed, but whether he invoked
+them; whether he had recourse to them with supplications for their
+prayers, or aid and succour. And keeping this closely in view, even
+if we admit this passage to be genuine, and interpret it as those
+who have cited it wish it to be interpreted, we find in it no
+authority for the invocation of saints. A Christian would be no
+more countenanced by this language of Eusebius in suppliantly
+invoking departed saints, than he would in praying to the angels
+for their help and mediation be countenanced by the terms of the
+prayer in regard to them, addressed by the Anglican Church to God,
+"O everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services
+of angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant, that as
+thy holy angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by THY
+appointment they may succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. Amen." Whoever petitions them, makes them
+Gods&mdash;Deos qui rogat ille facit.</p>
+<p>But whilst, for the sake of the argument, I have admitted this
+passage to be genuine, and correctly translated, and have shown
+that whether genuine or not, and even if it be thus correctly
+translated, it affects not in the least the issue of our inquiry, I
+do not feel at liberty to withhold the acknowledgment of my
+persuasion that in this concession I grant too much. For, in the
+first place, I am assured, that if the passage came from the pen of
+Eusebius, no one is justified in confining the desire and wish
+contained in it to the intercessions and prayers of the saints in
+heaven; and, secondly, I see reasons for inferring that the last
+clause was framed and attached to this work, not by Eusebius
+himself, but by some editor or scribe.</p>
+<p>In support of my first persuasion, I would observe that the very
+language of the writer of these comments on Isaiah and the Psalms
+precludes us from regarding the Saints departed as exclusively
+constituting those "holy ones" by whose intercessions and prayers
+he expresses his desire that our spiritual welfare may be promoted.
+In this very comment on Isaiah (ch. vi. 2. p. 376), when he is
+speaking of the heavenly inhabitants, and illustrates his views by
+God's dealings towards the children of men in this world, he
+employs this expression: "For as among men the Saints of God
+partake of more excellent graces." On the 67th (68th) Ps. v. 34,
+having interpreted the words, "his strength is in the clouds," as
+referring to the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page408" id=
+"page408"></a>{408}</span> prophets and teachers of divine wisdom,
+under the guidance of the Spirit, pouring heavenly truths upon the
+souls of men as the clouds drop rain on fertile lands, he proceeds
+thus to comment on the expression, "God is wonderful among his
+Saints." [Vol. i. p. 364. The English translation refers the word
+"holy" to places, not persons.] "These Saints are different from
+those before called Apostles and prophets. And who can they be,
+except those who out of all nations are deemed worthy of purity and
+holiness, among whom God is wonderful, giving to them power and
+strength?" Thus in perfect accordance with the language of this
+writer, the Saints, from whose prayers and intercessions he desires
+to derive spiritual benefits, may be the Saints of God on
+earth&mdash;in the same state with those saints still living in the
+flesh, whose prayers St. Paul desired to be offered up for himself,
+that by them a door of utterance to speak the mystery of Christ
+might be opened unto him [Coloss. i. 2; iv. 2, 3.]&mdash;and with
+those saints to whom the same Apostle wrote at Philippi: "To all
+the saints in Christ Jesus:" and to whom he sent the greetings of
+the saints who then surrounded him: "ALL the SAINTS salute you."
+[Phil i. 1; iv. 22.]</p>
+<p>But before the closing words of this paragraph, whatever be its
+meaning, be acknowledged as the genuine and undoubted production of
+Eusebius, I would suggest the careful weighing of some
+considerations, which appear to me to involve serious
+difficulties.</p>
+<p>1. First, through all the voluminous works of Eusebius, I have
+found in no single passage any allusion to the prayers of saints
+departed, or to their ministering offices in our behalf, though
+numberless openings show themselves for the natural introduction of
+such a subject.</p>
+<p>2. Secondly, among all the various works and treatises of
+Eusebius, I have not found one which is closed by any termination
+of the kind; on the contrary, they all end with remarkable
+suddenness and abruptness, precisely as this comment would end,
+were the sentence under consideration removed. Each, indeed, of the
+books of his Ecclesiastical History, is followed by a notice of the
+close of the book, in some cases too that notice involving a
+religious sentiment: for example, at the close of the 10th book we
+read: "With the help of God, the end of the tenth book." But that
+these are appendages made by an editor or scribe is evident in
+itself, and moreover <span class="pagenum"><a name="page409" id=
+"page409"></a>{409}</span> in many instances is shown by such
+sentences as these, "And this we have found in a certain copy in
+the 8th volume:" "This is in some copies, as if omitted from the
+8th book." I find no one instance of Eusebius bringing a chapter or
+a treatise to its close by any religious sentiment, or any
+termination of the nature here contemplated.</p>
+<p>It is also difficult to conceive that any author, having the
+flow and connexion of the whole passage present to his mind, would
+himself have appended this ejaculation as we now find it. We know
+that editors and scribes often attached a sentiment of their own to
+the closing words of an author. And it seems far more probable,
+that a scribe not having the full drift of the argument mainly
+before him, but catching the expression, "heavenly vision,"
+appended such an ejaculation. That the writer himself should
+introduce such a sentence by the connecting link of a relative
+pronoun feminine, which must of necessity be referred, not as the
+grammatical construction would suggest to the feminine noun
+preceding it,&mdash;not to any word expressed or understood in the
+intervening clause preceding it,&mdash;not to the last word in the
+sentence even before that intervening clause, nor yet to the
+principal and leading subject immediately under discussion and
+thrice repeated,&mdash;but to a noun incidentally introduced,
+seems, to say the least, strange and unnatural. "And they shall be
+for a spectacle to all flesh. To what flesh? Altogether to that
+which shall be somewhere punished? Nay, to that which shall of the
+heavenly vision be deemed worthy, concerning WHICH it was said
+before, All FLESH shall come to worship before me, of which may we
+also be deemed worthy by the prayers and intercessions of all the
+saints. Amen." But the classical reader will appreciate these
+remarks more satisfactorily by examining them with reference to the
+passage in the original language.</p>
+<p>[Greek: Kai esontai eis orasin pasaei sarki. poiai de sarki; ae
+pantos pou taei kolasthaesomenaei; taes de epouraniou theas
+kataxiothaesomenaei peri HAES anotero elegeto aexei pasa sarx tou
+proskunaesai enopion mou, HAES kai haemeis axiotheiaemen euchais
+kai presbeiais panton ton hagion, amaen.]</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 181.</p>
+<p>ATHANASIUS.</p>
+<p>In the text I observed that some Roman Catholic writers of the
+present day had cited the homily there shown to be utterly
+spurious, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page410" id=
+"page410"></a>{410}</span> as the genuine work of St. Athanasius,
+and as recording his testimony in defence of the invocation of
+Saints. The passage there referred to Dr. Wiseman thus introduces,
+and comments upon.</p>
+<p>"St. Athanasius, the most zealous and strenuous supporter that
+the Church ever possessed of the divinity of Jesus Christ, and
+consequently of his infinite superiority over all the saints, thus
+enthusiastically addresses his ever-blessed Mother: 'Hear now, O
+daughter of David; incline thine ear to our prayers. We raise our
+cry to thee. Remember us, O most holy Virgin, and for the feeble
+eulogiums we give thee, grant us great gifts from the treasures of
+thy graces, thou who art full of grace. Hail, Mary, full of grace,
+the Lord is with thee. Queen and mother of God, intercede for us.'
+Mark well," continues Dr. Wiseman, "these words; 'grant us great
+gifts, from the treasures of thy graces;' as if he hoped directly
+to receive them from her. Do Catholics use stronger words than
+these? Or did St. Athanasius think or speak with us, or with
+Protestants?"</p>
+<p>In answer to these questions I reply with sure and certain
+confidence, first, that the genuine words of St. Athanasius himself
+prove him to have spoken and thought with the Anglican Church, and
+not with the Roman Church on the invocation of saints and angels,
+and the blessed Virgin Mary; and secondly, that whatever words
+Roman Catholics use, whether stronger or not than these, these
+words on which the above questions are put, never came forth from
+the pen of St. Athanasius. Their spuriousness is not a question of
+doubt or difficulty. It has been shown in the text that the whole
+homily has been for ages utterly repudiated, as a work falsely
+attributed to St. Athanasius. It is indeed very disheartening to
+those, whose object is the discovery and the establishment of the
+truth, to find works cited in evidence as the genuine productions
+of primitive Christian teachers, which have been so long ago, and
+so repeatedly, and that not by members of another communion, but by
+the most learned men of the Church of Rome, adjudged to be
+spurious. I do not mean that I think it not fully competent for a
+writer of the present day to call in question, and overrule and set
+aside the decisions of former editors, as to the genuine or the
+spurious character of any work. On the contrary I am persuaded that
+a field is open in that department of theology, which would richly
+repay all the time and labour and expense, which persons well
+qualified for the task could bestow upon its culture. What I lament
+is this, that after a work has been deliberately condemned as
+unquestionably <span class="pagenum"><a name="page411" id=
+"page411"></a>{411}</span> spurious, by competent and accredited
+judges for two centuries and a half at the least, that very work
+should be now cited as genuine and conclusive evidence, without any
+the most distant allusion to the judgment which had condemned it,
+or even to any suspicion of its being a forgery. In this instance,
+also, Dr. Wiseman has implicitly followed the compilation of
+Messrs. Berington and Kirk. This is evident, because the extract,
+as it stands word for word the same in his Lectures and their
+compilation, is not found as one passage in the spurious homily,
+but is made up of sentences selected from different clauses, and
+put together so as to make one paragraph. It is worthy of notice,
+that in quoting their authority, both Dr. Wiseman, and those whom
+he follows, refer us to the very volume in which the Benedictine
+editors declare that there was no learned man, who did not
+pronounce the work to be spurious; and in which also they quote at
+length the letter of Baronius which had proved it to be a forgery.
+[Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, vol. ii. p. 108, from Berington and Kirk,
+p. 430, 431.]</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Page 231. (Decree of the Council of Trent.) [Canones
+et Decreta Sacros. OEcumen. et Genera. Concilii Tridentini, &amp;c.
+Rom. fol. A.D. 1564.]</p>
+<p>Mandat sancta Synodus omnibus Episcopis, et ceteris docendi
+munus curamque sustinentibus, ut juxta Catholic&aelig;, et
+Apostolic&aelig; Ecclesi&aelig; usum, a prim&aelig;vis
+Christian&aelig; religionis temporibus receptum, sanctorumque
+Patrum consensionem, et sacrorum Conciliorum decreta, inprimis de
+Sanctorum intercessione, invocatione, Reliquiarum honore, et
+legitimo imaginum usu, fideles diligenter instruant, docentes eos,
+Sanctos, una cum Christo regnantes, orationes suas pro hominibus
+Deo offerre; bonum atque utile esse suppliciter eos invocare; et ob
+beneficia impetranda a Deo per Filium ejus Jesum Christum, Dominum
+nostrum, qui solus noster Redemptor et Salvator est, ad eorum
+orationes, opem, auxiliumque confugere: illos vero, qui negant
+sanctos &aelig;tern&acirc; felicitate in coelo fruentes, invocandos
+esse; aut qui asserunt, vel illos pro hominibus non orare, vel
+eorum, ut pro nobis etiam singulis orent, invocationem esse
+idololatriam, vel pugnare cum verbo Dei, adversarique honori unius
+Mediatoris Dei et hominum, Jesu Christi, vel stultum esse, in coelo
+regnantibus voce, vel mente supplicare, impie sentire. Sanctorum
+quoque Martyrum, et aliorum cum Christo viventium Sancta corpora,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page412" id=
+"page412"></a>{412}</span> qu&aelig; viva membra fuerunt Christi,
+et templum Spiritus Sancti, ab ipso ad &aelig;ternam vitam
+suscitanda et glorificanda, a fidelibus veneranda esse; per
+qu&aelig; multa beneficia a Deo hominibus pr&aelig;stantur: ita ut
+affirmantes, Sanctorum Reliquiis venerationem, atque honorem non
+deberi; vel eas, aliaque sacra monumenta a fidelibus inutiliter
+honorari; atque eorum opis impetrand&aelig; causa sanctorum
+memorias frustra frequentari; omnino damnandos esse, prout
+jampridem eos damnavit, et nunc etiam damnat Ecclesia. [De
+Invocatione, Veneratione, et Reliquiis Sanctorum, et Sacris
+Imaginibus, p. 202.]</p>
+<p>Note.&mdash;Pages 369 and 390.</p>
+<p>In a prefatory epistle, addressed to the "Chaplains, Wardens,
+and Brethren of the Holy Catholic Gild," in Huddersfield, Dr.
+Wiseman (p. 4) expresses himself thus: "Yesterday I laid the badge
+of your association at the feet of the sovereign pontiff, and it
+was most condescendingly and graciously received. But this is not
+all. As I had foretold, I found His Holiness fully informed of your
+establishment and public manifestation; and I had the satisfaction
+of hearing him express his WISH THAT SIMILAR INSTITUTIONS SHOULD
+REVIVE ALL OVER THE COUNTRY."</p>
+<p>Towards the close of the sermon, to which this preface is
+prefixed, and which was preached at St. Patrick's Chapel,
+Huddersfield, Sept. 26th, 1839, and was printed at York in the
+present year [A.D. 1840], the preacher draws the comparison,
+referred to in page 370 of this work, between England and the
+continent, and between England as it is, and England as it once
+was, and as, in his view, it ought to be again. After describing
+the scenes which you may witness in Roman Catholic countries,
+"where you might see the poor and the afflicted crowding round some
+altar, where their pious confidence or experience of past favours
+leads them to hope that their prayers will best be heard through
+the intercession of our dear Lady," he thus proceeds: "Oh that the
+time had come, when a similar expression of our devout feelings
+towards her should publicly be made, and all should unite to show
+her that honour, that reverence, and love which she deserves from
+all Christians, and which has so long been denied her amongst us.
+There was a time when England was second to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="page413" id="page413"></a>{413}</span> no other
+country upon earth in the discharge of this holy duty; and it will
+be only PART OF THE RESTORATION OF OUR GOOD AND GLORIOUS DAYS OF
+OLD to revive to the utmost this part of ancient piety. Therefore
+do I feel sincere joy at witnessing the establishment of this
+excellent brotherhood, and its public manifestation in this town
+this day, both as a means of encouraging devotion and virtue, and
+as a return to one of the venerable institutions of our
+forefathers. Enter then fully into its spirit."</p>
+<p>["A Sermon delivered at St. Patrick's, Huddersfield, Sept. 26th,
+1839, on occasion of the Holy Catholic Gild there established, by
+the Rev. N. Wiseman, D.D., Professor in the University of Rome.
+York, 1840," p. 22, 23. The first quotation made in p. 390, is from
+this Sermon.]</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Primitive Christian Worship, by James Endell Tyler
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+Project Gutenberg's Primitive Christian Worship, by James Endell Tyler
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Primitive Christian Worship
+ Or, The Evidence Of Holy Scripture And The Church, Against The
+ Invocation Of Saints And Angels, And The Blessed Virgin Mary.
+
+
+Author: James Endell Tyler
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2004 [EBook #14072]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRIMITIVE CHRISTIAN WORSHIP ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David King, The Million Book Project and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+PRIMITIVE CHRISTIAN WORSHIP
+
+OR,
+
+THE EVIDENCE
+
+OF
+
+HOLY SCRIPTURE AND THE CHURCH,
+
+AGAINST THE
+
+INVOCATION OF SAINTS AND ANGELS, AND THE
+BLESSED VIRGIN MARY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BY
+
+J. ENDELL TYLER, B.D.
+
+RECTOR OF ST. GILES-IN-THE-FIELDS,
+AND CANON RESIDENTIARY OF ST. PAUL'S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Speaking the truth in love.--EPH. iv. 15
+
+Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.--1 THESS. v. 21.
+
+SECOND EDITION
+
+LONDON
+
+Printed for the
+
+SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE;
+SOLD AT THE DEPOSITORY,
+GREAT QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS,
+NO. 4, ROYAL EXCHANGE;
+AND BY ALL BOOKSELLERS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+1847.
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+THE ONE
+
+HOLY, CATHOLIC, AND APOSTOLIC
+
+CHURCH,
+
+AS A TRIBUTE OF VENERATION AND LOVE,
+
+THIS WORK IS DEDICATED,
+
+BY HER DEVOTED SERVANT AND SON.
+
+Nov. 25, 1840.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PREFACE.
+
+Members of the Church of Rome, and members of the Church of England,
+have too long entertained towards each other feelings of hostility.
+Instead of being drawn together as brethren by the cords of that one
+faith which all Catholics hold dear, their sentiments of sympathy and
+affection have been absorbed by the abhorrence with which each body has
+regarded the characteristic tenets of its adversary; whilst the terms
+"heretic" on the one side, and "idolater" on the opposite, have rendered
+any attempt to bring about a free and friendly discussion of each
+other's views almost hopeless.
+
+Every Christian must wish that such animosities, always ill-becoming the
+servants and children of the God of love, should cease for ever. Truth
+indeed must never be sacrificed to secure peace; nor must we be tempted
+by the seductiveness of a liberality, falsely so called, to soften down
+and make light of those differences which keep the Churches of England
+and Rome asunder. But surely the points at issue may be examined without
+exasperation and rancour; and the results of inquiries carried on with a
+singleness of mind, in search only for the truth, may be offered on the
+one side without insult or offence, and should be received and examined
+without contempt and scorn on the other.
+
+The writer of this address is not one in whom early associations would
+foster sentiments of evil will against members of the Church of Rome; or
+encourage any feeling, incompatible with regard and kindness, towards
+the conscientious defenders of her creed. From his boyhood he has lived
+on terms of friendly intercourse and intimacy with individuals among her
+laity and of her priesthood. In his theological pursuits, he has often
+studied her ritual, consulted her commentators, and perused the homilies
+of her divines; and, withal, he has mourned over her errors and
+misdoings, as he would have sighed over the faults of a friend, who,
+with many good qualities still to endear him, had unhappily swerved from
+the straight path of rectitude and integrity.
+
+In preparing these pages, the author is not conscious of having been
+influenced by any motive in the least degree inconsistent with
+sentiments of charity and respect; at all events, he would hope that no
+single expression may have escaped from his pen tending to hurt
+unnecessarily the feelings of any sincere Christian. He has been
+prompted by a hope that he may perhaps induce some individuals to
+investigate with candour, and freedom, and with a genuine desire of
+arriving at the truth, the subjects here discussed; and that whilst
+some, even of those who may have hitherto acquiesced in erroneous
+doctrines and practices, may be convinced of their departure from
+Christian verity; others, if tempted to desert the straight path of
+primitive worship, may be somewhat strengthened and armed by the views
+presented to them here, against the captivating allurements of religious
+error.
+
+Whether the present work may, by the Divine favour, be made in some
+degree instrumental in forwarding these results, or in effecting any
+good, the author presumes not to anticipate; but he will hope for the
+best. He believes that the honest pursuit of the truth, undertaken with
+an humble zeal for God's glory, and in dependence on his guidance and
+light, is often made successful beyond our own sanguine expectations.
+
+With these views the following pages are offered, as the result of an
+inquiry into the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of Saints and
+Angels, and of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
+
+To prevent misconception as to the nature of this work, the author would
+observe, that since the single subject here proposed to be investigated
+is, "The Invocation of Saints and Angels and the Blessed Virgin Mary,"
+he has scrupulously avoided the discussion of many important and
+interesting questions usually considered to be connected with it. He has
+not, for example, discussed the practice of praying for the dead; he has
+investigated no theory relating to the soul's intermediate state between
+our dissolution and the final judgment; he has canvassed no opinion as
+to any power in the saints and the faithful departed to succour either
+by their prayers or by any other offices, those who are still on earth,
+and on their way to God. From these and such like topics he has
+abstained, not because he thinks lightly of their importance, nor
+because his own mind is perplexed by doubts concerning them; but because
+the introduction of such points would tend to distract the thoughts from
+the exclusive contemplation of the one distinct question to be
+investigated.
+
+He is also induced to apprise the reader, that in his work, as he
+originally prepared it, a far wider field, even on the single subject of
+the present inquiry, was contemplated than this volume now embraces. His
+intention was to present an historical survey of the doctrine and
+practice of the invocation of Saints and Angels, and the Virgin, tracing
+it from the first intimation of any thing of the kind through its
+various progressive stages, till it had reached its widest prevalence in
+Christendom. When, however, he had arranged and filled up the results of
+the inquiries which he made into the sentiments and habits of those
+later writers of the Church, whose works he considered it necessary to
+examine with this specific object in view, he found that the bulk of the
+work would be swollen far beyond the limits which he had prescribed to
+himself; he felt also that the protracted investigation would materially
+interfere with the solution of that one independent question which he
+trusts now is kept unmixed with any other. He has, consequently, in the
+present address limited the range of his researches on the nature of
+Primitive Christian Worship, to the writers of the Church Catholic who
+lived before the Nicene Council, or were members of it.
+
+In one department, however, he has been under the necessity of making,
+to a certain extent, an exception to this rule. Having found no allusion
+to the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin, on which much of the
+religious worship now paid to her seems to be founded, in any work
+written before the middle of the fifth century, he has been induced, in
+his examination of the grounds on which that doctrine professes to be
+built, to cite authors who flourished subsequently to the Nicene
+Council.
+
+The author would also mention, that although in substance he has
+prepared this work for the examination of all Christians equally, and
+trusts that it will be found not less interesting or profitable to the
+members of his own Church than to any other, yet he has throughout
+adopted the form of an address to his Roman Catholic countrymen. Such a
+mode of conveying his sentiments he considered to be less controversial,
+while the facts and the arguments would remain the same. His object is
+not to condemn, but to convince: not to hold up to obloquy those who are
+in error, but, as far as he may be allowed, to diminish an evil where it
+already exists, and to check its further prevalence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+PART I.--CHAPTER I.
+
+Introduction--The duty of examining the grounds of our Faith--Principles
+of conducting that examination--Errors to be avoided--Proposed plan of
+the present work.
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Sec. 1. Evidence of Holy Scripture, how to be ascertained
+ 2. Direct Evidence of the Old Testament
+ 3. Evidence of the Old Testament, continued
+ 4. ------ New Testament
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Sec. 1. Evidence of Primitive Writers
+ 2. ------ Apostolic Fathers
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Sec. 1. Evidence of Justin Martyr
+ See also Appendix
+ 2. Evidence of Irenaeus
+ 3. ------ Clement of Alexandria
+ 4. ------ Tertullian
+ ------ Methodius
+ 5. ------ Origen
+ See also Appendix
+ 6. Supplementary Section on Origen
+ See also Appendix
+ 7. Evidence of St. Cyprian
+ See also Appendix
+ 8. Evidence of Lactantius
+ 9. ------ Eusebius
+ See also Appendix
+ 10. Apostolical Canons and Constitutions
+ 11. Evidence of St. Athanasius
+ See also Appendix
+
+PART II.--CHAPTER I.
+
+State of Worship at the time of the Reformation
+Sec. 1. "Hours of the Virgin"
+ 2. Service of Thomas Becket
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Council of Trent
+ See also Appendix
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Present Service in the Church of Rome
+
+PART III.
+
+WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN MARY.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+Sec. 1. Introductory Remarks
+ 2. Evidence of Holy Scripture
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Evidence of Primitive Writers
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Assumption of the Virgin Mary
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Councils of Constantinople, Ephesus, and Chalcedon
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+Sec. 1. Present authorized Worship of the Virgin
+ 2. Worship of the Virgin, continued
+ 3. Bonaventura
+ 4. Biel, Damianus, Bernardinus de Bustis, Bernardinus Senensis,&c.
+ See also Appendix
+5. Modern Works of Devotion
+ See also Appendix
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+ * * * * * {1}
+
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE DUTY OF PRIVATE JUDGMENT.
+
+
+Fellow Christians,
+
+Whilst I invite you to accompany me in a free and full investigation of
+one of those tenets and practices which keep asunder the Roman and the
+Anglican Church, I am conscious in how thankless an undertaking I have
+engaged, and how unwelcome to some is the task in which I call upon you
+to join. Many among the celebrated doctors of the Roman Church have
+taught their disciples to acquiesce in a view of their religious
+obligation widely different from the laborious and delicate office of
+ascertaining for themselves the soundness of the principles in which
+they have been brought up. It has been with many accredited teachers a
+favourite maxim, that individuals will most acceptably fulfil their duty
+by abstaining {2} from active and personal inquiries into the
+foundations of their faith; and by giving an implicit credence to
+whatever the Roman Church pronounces to be the truth[1]. Should this
+book fall into the hands of any who have adopted that maxim for the rule
+of their own conduct as believers, its pages will of course afford them
+no help; nor can they take any interest in our pursuit, or its results.
+Whilst, however, I am aware, that until the previous question (involving
+the grounds on which the Church of Rome builds her claim to be the sole,
+exclusive, and infallible teacher of Christians in all the doctrines of
+religion,) shall have been solved, many members of her body would throw
+aside, as preposterous, any treatise which professed to review the
+soundness of her instructions; I have been at the same time assured,
+that with many of her communion the case is far otherwise; and that
+instead of their being averse to all investigation, a calm, candid, and
+friendly, but still a free and unreserved inquiry into the disputed
+articles of their creed, is an object of their sincere desire. On this
+ground I trust some preliminary reflections upon the duty of proving all
+things, with a view of holding the more fast {3} and sure what is good,
+may be considered as neither superfluous nor out of place.
+
+ [Footnote 1: It is sometimes curious to observe the language in
+ which the teachers and doctors themselves profess their entire,
+ unlimited, and implicit submission of all their doctrines, even
+ in the most minute particulars, to the judgment and will of the
+ authorities of Rome. Instances are of very frequent occurrence.
+ Thus Joannes de Carthagena, a very voluminous writer of
+ homilies, closes different parts of his work in these words,
+ "These and all mine I willingly subject to the judgment of the
+ Catholic Roman Church, ready, if there be written any thing in
+ any way in the very least point contrary to her doctrine, to
+ correct, amend, erase, and utterly abolish it." Hom. Cath. De
+ Sacris Arcanis Deiparae et Josephi. Paris, 1615. page 921.]
+
+But just as it would belong to another and a separate province to
+examine, at such length as its importance demands, the claims of the
+Church of Rome to be acknowledged as that universal interpreter of the
+word and will of God, from whose decisions there is no appeal; so would
+it evidently be incompatible with the nature of the present address, to
+dwell in any way corresponding with the magnitude and delicacy of the
+subject, on the duty, the responsibility, and the privilege of private
+judgment; on the dangers to which an unchastened exercise of it may
+expose both an individual, and the cause of Christian truth; or on the
+rules which sound wisdom and the analogy of faith may prescribe to us in
+the government of ourselves with respect to it. My remarks, therefore,
+on this subject will be as few and brief as I believe to be consistent
+with an acknowledgment of the principles upon which this work has been
+conducted.
+
+The foundation, then, on which, to be safe and beneficial, the duty of
+private judgment, as we maintain, must be built, is very far indeed
+removed from that common and mischievous notion of it which would
+encourage us to draw immediate and crude deductions from Holy Scripture,
+subject only to the control and the colouring of our own minds,
+responsible for nothing further than our own consciousness of an honest
+intention. Whilst we claim a release from that degrading yoke which
+neither are we nor were our fathers able to bear, we deprecate for
+ourselves and for our fellow-believers that licentiousness which in
+doctrine and practice tempts a man to follow merely what is right in his
+own eyes, uninfluenced by the example, the precepts, {4} and the
+authority of others, and owning no submissive allegiance to those laws
+which the wise and good have established for the benefit of the whole
+body. The freedom which we ask for ourselves, and desire to see imparted
+to all, is a rational liberty, tending to the good, not operating to the
+bane of its possessors; ministering to the general welfare, not to
+disorder and confusion. In the enjoyment of this liberty, or rather in
+the discharge of the duties and trusts which this liberty brings with
+it, we feel ourselves under an obligation to examine the foundations of
+our faith, to the very best of our abilities, according to our
+opportunities, and with the most faithful use of all the means afforded
+to us by its divine Author and finisher. Among those means, whilst we
+regard the Holy Scriptures as paramount and supreme, we appeal to the
+witness and mind of the Church as secondary and subsidiary; a witness
+not at all competing with Scripture, never to be balanced against it;
+but competing with our own less able and less pure apprehension of
+Scripture. In ascertaining the testimony of this witness, we examine the
+sentiments and practice of the ancient teachers of the Church; not as
+infallible guides, not as uniformly holding all of them the same
+opinions, but as most valuable helps in our examination of the evidence
+of the Church, who is, after all, our appointed instructor in the truths
+of the Gospel,--fallible in her individual members and branches, yet the
+sure witness and keeper of Holy Writ, and our safest guide on earth to
+the mind and will of God. When we have once satisfied ourselves that a
+doctrine is founded on Scripture, we receive it with implicit faith, and
+maintain it as a sacred deposit, entrusted to our keeping, to be
+delivered down whole and entire without our adding {5} thereto what to
+us may seem needful, or taking away what we may think superfluous.
+
+The state of the Christian thus employed, in acting for himself in a
+work peculiarly his own, is very far removed from the condition of one
+who labours in bondage, without any sense of liberty and responsibility,
+unconscious of the dignity of a free and accountable agent, and
+surrendering himself wholly to the control of a task-master. Equally is
+it distant from the conduct of one who indignantly casting off all
+regard for authority, and all deference to the opinions of others,
+boldly and proudly sets up his own will and pleasure as the only
+standard to which he will submit. For the model which we would adopt, as
+members of the Church, in our pursuit of Christian truth, we find a
+parallel and analogous case in a well-principled and well-disciplined
+son, with his way of life before him, exercising a large and liberal
+discretion in the choice of his pursuits; not fettered by peremptory
+paternal mandates, but ever voluntarily referring to those principles of
+moral obligation and of practical wisdom with which his mind has been
+imbued; shaping his course with modest diffidence in himself, and
+habitual deference to others older and wiser than himself, yet acting
+with the firmness and intrepidity of conscious rectitude of principle,
+and integrity of purpose; and under a constant sense of his
+responsibility, as well for his principles as for his conduct.
+
+Against the cogency of these maxims various objections have been urged
+from time to time. We have been told, that the exercise of private
+judgment in matters of religion, tends to foster errors of every
+diversity of character, and leads to heresy, scepticism, and infidelity:
+it is represented as rending the Church of Christ, and totally {6}
+subverting Christian unity, and snapping asunder at once the bond of
+peace. So also it has been often maintained, that the same cause robs
+individual Christians of that freedom from all disquietude and
+perplexity and anxious responsibility, that peace of mind, satisfaction,
+and content, which those personally enjoy, who surrender themselves
+implicitly to a guide, whom they believe to be unerring and infallible.
+
+For a moment let us pause to ascertain the soundness of such objections.
+And here anticipating, for argument's sake, the worst result, let us
+suppose that the exercise of individual inquiry and judgment (such as
+the best teachers in the Anglican Church are wont to inculcate) may lead
+in some cases even to professed infidelity; is it right and wise and
+justifiable to be driven by an abuse of God's gifts to denounce the
+legitimate and faithful employment of them? What human faculty--which
+among the most precious of the Almighty's blessings is not liable to
+perversion? What unquestionable moral duty can be found, which has not
+been transformed by man's waywardness into an instrument of evil? Nay,
+what doctrine of our holy faith has not the wickedness or the folly of
+unworthy men employed as a cloke for unrighteousness, and a vehicle for
+blasphemy? But by a consciousness of this liability in all things human,
+must we be tempted to suppress the truth? to disparage those moral
+duties? or to discountenance the cultivation of those gifts and
+faculties? Rather would not sound philosophy and Christian wisdom
+jointly enforce the necessity of improving the gifts zealously, of
+discharging the moral obligation to the full, and of maintaining the
+doctrine in all its integrity; but guarding withal, to the utmost of our
+power and watchfulness, against the abuses to which {7} any of these
+things may be exposed? And we may trust in humble but assured
+confidence, that as it is the duty of a rational being, alive to his own
+responsibility, to inquire and judge for himself in things concerning
+the soul, with the most faithful exercise of his abilities and means; so
+the wise and merciful Ruler of our destinies will provide us with a sure
+way of escaping from all evils incident to the discharge of that duty,
+if, in reliance on his blessing, we honestly seek the truth, and
+perseveringly adhere to that way in which He will be our guide.
+
+It is a question very generally and very reasonably entertained among
+us, whether the implicit submission and unreserved surrender of
+ourselves to any human authority in matters of faith, (though whilst it
+lasts, it of course affords an effectual check to open scepticism,) does
+not ultimately and in very deed prove a far more prolific source of
+disguised infidelity. Doubts repressed as they arise, but not solved,
+silenced but not satisfied, gradually accumulate in spite of all
+external precaution; and at length (like streams pent back by some
+temporary barrier) break forth at once to an utter discarding of all
+authority, and an irrecoverable rejection of the Christian faith. From
+unlimited acquiescence in a guide whom our associations have invested
+with infallibility, the step is very short, and frequently taken, to
+entire apostasy and the renunciation of all belief.
+
+The state of undisturbed tranquillity and repose in one, who has
+divested himself of all responsibility in matters of religious belief
+and practice, enjoying an entire immunity from the anxious and painful
+labour of trying for himself the purity and soundness of his faith, is
+often painted in strong contrast with the {8} lamentable condition of
+those who are driven about by every wind of novelty. The condition of
+such a man may doubtless be far more enviable than theirs, who have no
+settled fixed principles, and who wander from creed to creed, and from
+sect to sect, just as their fickle and roving minds suggest some
+transitory preference. But the believer must not be driven by the evils
+of one extreme to take refuge in the opposite. The whirlpool may be the
+more perilous, but the Christian mariner must avoid the rock also, or he
+will equally make shipwreck of his faith. He must with all his skill,
+and all his might, keep to the middle course, shunning that presumptuous
+confidence which scorns all authority, and boldly constitutes itself
+sole judge and legislator; but equally rescuing his mind from the
+thraldom which prostrates his reason, and paralyzes all the faculties of
+his judgment in a matter of indefeasible and awful responsibility.
+
+Here, too, it is questioned, and not without cause, whether the
+satisfaction and comfort so often represented in warm and fascinating
+colours, be really a spiritual blessing; or whether it be not a
+deception and fallacy, frequently ending in lamentable perplexity and
+confusion; like guarantees in secular concerns, which as long as they
+maintain unsuspected credit afford a most pleasing and happy security to
+any one who depends upon them; but which, when adverse fortune puts
+their responsibility to the test, may prove utterly worthless, and be
+traced only by losses and disappointments. Such a blind reliance on
+authority may doubtless be more easy and more free from care, than it is
+to gird up the loins of our mind, and engage in toilsome spiritual
+labour. But with a view to our own ultimate safety, wisdom bids us look
+to our foundations in time, and assure ourselves {9} of them;
+admonishing us that if they are unsound, the spiritual edifice reared
+upon them, however pleasing to the eye, or abounding in present
+enjoyments, will at length fall, and bury our hopes in its ruin.
+
+On these and similar principles, we maintain that it well becomes
+Christians, when the soundness of their faith, and the rectitude of
+their acts of worship, are called in question, "to prove all things, and
+hold fast that which is good." Thus, when the unbeliever charges us with
+credulity in receiving as a divine revelation what he scornfully
+rejects, it behoves us all (every one to the extent of his means and
+opportunities) to possess ourselves of the accumulated evidences of our
+holy faith, so that we may be able to give to our own minds, and to
+those who ask it of us, a reason for our hope. The result can assuredly
+be only the comfort of a still more unshaken conviction. Thus, too, when
+the misbeliever charges us with an undue and an unauthorized ascription
+of the Divine attributes to our Redeemer and to our Sanctifier, which he
+would confine to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, exclusively of the
+Eternal Son and the Blessed Spirit, it well becomes every Catholic
+Christian to assure himself of the evidence borne by the Scriptures to
+the divinity of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, together with the
+inseparable doctrines of redemption by the blood of Christ, and
+sanctification by the Spirit of grace; appealing also in this
+investigation to the tradition of the Church, and the testimony of her
+individual members from the earliest times, as under God his surest and
+best guides. In both these cases, I can say for myself that I have acted
+upon my own principles, and to the very utmost of my faculties have
+scrutinized the foundations {10} of my faith, and from each of those
+inquiries and researches I have risen with a satisfaction increased far
+beyond my first anticipations. What I had taken up in my youth on
+authority, I have been long assured of by a moral demonstration, which
+nothing can shake; and I cling to it with an affection, which, guarded
+by God's good providence, nothing in this world can dissolve or weaken.
+
+It is to engage in a similar investigation that I now most earnestly but
+affectionately invite the members of the Church of Rome, in order to
+ascertain for themselves the ground of their faith and practice in a
+matter of vast moment, and which, with other points, involves the
+principle of separation between the Roman and Anglican branches of the
+universal Church. Were the subjects of minor importance, or what the
+ancient writers were wont to call "things indifferent," reason and
+charity would prescribe that we should bear with each other, allowing a
+free and large discretion in any body of Christians, and not severing
+ourselves from them because we deemed our views preferable to theirs. In
+such a case we might well walk in the house of God as friends, without
+any interruption of the harmony which should exist between those who
+worship the true God with one heart and one mind, ever striving to keep
+the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. But when the points at
+issue are of so vast moment; when two persons agreeing in the general
+principles of belief in the Gospel and its chief characteristic
+doctrines, yet find it impossible to join conscientiously in the same
+prayer, or the same acts of faith and worship, then the necessity is
+imperative on all who would not be parties to the utter breaking up of
+Christian unity, nor assist in propagating error, to make sure of their
+{11} foundations; and satisfy themselves by an honest inquiry and
+upright judgment, that the fault does not rest with them.
+
+Such appear to me both the doctrine and the practice of the INVOCATION
+OF SAINTS. I have endeavoured to conjecture in what light this doctrine
+and this practice would have presented itself to my mind, after a full
+and free inquiry into the nature and history and circumstances of the
+case, had I been brought up in communion with the Church of Rome; the
+question to be solved being, "Could I continue in her communion?" And
+the result of my inquiry is, that I must have either discarded that
+doctrine at once and for ever, or have joined with my lips and my knees
+in a worship which my reason condemned, and from which my heart shrunk.
+I must have either left the communion of Rome, or have continued to
+offer prayers to angels, and the spirits of departed mortals. Unless I
+had resolved at once to shut my eyes upon my own personal
+responsibility, and to surrender myself, mind and reason, soul and body,
+to the sovereign and undisputed control of others, never presuming to
+inquire into the foundation of what the Church of Rome taught; I must
+have sought some purer portion of the Catholic Church, in which her
+members addressed the One Supreme Being exclusively, without
+contemplating any other in the act of religious invocation. The
+distinction invented in comparatively late years, of the three kinds of
+worship; one for God, the second for the Virgin Mary, the third for
+Angels and Saints;--the distinction, too, between praying to a saint to
+give us good things, and praying to that saint to procure them for us at
+God's hand, (or, as the distinction {12} is sometimes made, into prayer
+direct, absolute, final, sovereign, confined to the Supreme Being on the
+one hand; and prayer oblique, relative, transitory, subordinate, offered
+to saints on the other,) would have appeared to me the ingenious and
+finely-drawn inventions of an advocate, not such a sound process of
+Christian simplicity as the mind could rest upon, with an undoubting
+persuasion that all was right.
+
+This, however, involves the very point at issue; and I now invite you,
+my Christian Brethren, to join with me, step by step, in a review of
+those several positions which have left on my mind the indelible
+conviction that I could never have passed my life in communion with that
+Church whose articles of fellowship maintained the duty of invoking
+saints and angels; and whose public offices were inseparably interwoven
+with addresses in prayer to other beings, than the Holy and undivided
+Trinity, the one only God.
+
+In pursuing this inquiry I have thought the most convenient and
+satisfactory division of our work would be--
+
+First, to ascertain what inference an unprejudiced study of the revealed
+will of God would lead us to make; both in the times of the elder
+covenant, when "holy men of old spake as they were moved by the Holy
+Ghost," and in that "fulness of time" when God spoke to us by his Son.
+
+Secondly, to examine into the belief and practice of the Primitive
+Church, beginning with the inspired Apostles of our Lord.
+
+Thirdly, to compare the results of those inquiries with the tenets and
+practice of the Church of Rome, with reference to three periods; the
+first immediately {13} preceding the Reformation; the second comprising
+the Reformation, and the proceedings of the Council of Trent; the third
+embracing the belief and practice of the present day.
+
+In this investigation, I purpose to reserve the worship of the Virgin
+Mary, called by Roman Catholic writers "Hyperdulia," and for various
+reasons the most important and interesting portion of the whole inquiry,
+for separate and distinct examination; except only so far as our review
+of any of the primitive writers may occasion some incidental departure
+from that rule.
+
+May God guide us to his truth! {14}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+SECTION I.--THE EVIDENCE OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.
+
+
+Here, Christian Brethren, bear with me if I briefly, but freely, recall
+to our thoughts on this first entrance upon a review of the inspired
+volume, the principles, and tone of mind, the temper and feelings, in a
+word, the frame both of the understanding and of the heart, with which
+we should study the sacred pages, on whatever subject we would try all
+things, and hold fast what should prove itself to be most in accordance
+with the will of God. Whether we would regard the two great parts into
+which the Holy Scriptures are divided, as the Old and the New Covenants;
+or whether we would prefer to call them the Old and the New Testaments,
+it matters not. Although different ideas and associations are suggested
+by those different names, yet, under either view, the same honest and
+good heart, the same patience of investigation, the same upright and
+unprejudiced judgment, the same exercise of our mental faculties, and
+the same enlightened conscience, must be brought to the investigation.
+In the one case we must endeavour to ascertain for ourselves the true
+intent and {15} meaning of the inspired word of God, on the very same
+principles with those on which we would interpret a covenant between
+ourselves, and a person who had made it in full and unreserved reliance
+on our integrity, and on our high sense of equity, justice, and honour.
+In the other case we must bring the selfsame principles and feelings to
+bear on our inquiry, as we should apply in the interpretation of the
+last will and testament of a kind father, who with implicit confidence
+in our uprightness and straightforward dealing and affectionate anxiety
+to fulfil his intentions to the very utmost, had assigned to us the
+sacred duty of executor or trustee.
+
+Under the former supposition, our sincere solicitude would be to
+ascertain the true intent and meaning of the contracting parties, not to
+seek out plausible excuses for departing from it; not to cull out and
+exaggerate beyond their simple and natural bearing, such expressions in
+the deed of agreement, as might seem to justify us in adopting the view
+of the contract most agreeable to our present wishes and most favourable
+to our own interests. Rather it would be our fixed and hearty
+resolution, at whatever cost of time, or labour, or pecuniary sacrifice,
+or personal discomfort, to apply to the instrument our unbiassed powers
+of upright and honest interpretation.
+
+Or adopting the latter analogy, we should sincerely strive to ascertain
+the chief and leading objects of our parent's will; what were his
+intentions generally; what ruling principles seemed to pervade his views
+in framing the testament; and in all cases of obscurity and doubt, in
+every thing approaching an appearance of inconsistency, we should refer
+to that paramount principle as our test and guide. We should not for a
+moment {16} suffer ourselves to be tempted to seek for ambiguous
+expressions, which ingenuity might interpret so as to countenance our
+departure from the general drift of our parent's will, in cases where it
+was at variance with our own inclination, and where we could have wished
+that he had made another disposition of his property, or given to us a
+different direction, or trusted us with larger discretion. Moreover, in
+any points of difficulty, we should apply for assistance, in solving our
+doubts, to such persons as were most likely to have the power of judging
+correctly, and whose judgment would be least biassed by partiality and
+prejudice;--not to those whose credit was staked on the maintenance of
+those principles which best accorded with our own inclination.
+Especially if in either case some strong feeling should have been raised
+and spread abroad on any point, we should seek the judgment and counsel
+of those who had been familiar with the testator's intentions, or with
+the views of the covenanting party, before such points had become matter
+of discussion.
+
+Now only let us act upon these principles in the interpretation of THAT
+COVENANT in which the Almighty has vouchsafed to make Himself one of the
+contracting parties, and man, the creature of his hand, is the other:
+only let us act on these principles in the interpretation of THAT
+TESTAMENT of which the Saviour of the world is the Testator; and with
+God's blessing on our labours (a blessing never denied to sincere prayer
+and faithful exertions) we need not fear the result. Any other principle
+of interpretation will only confirm us in our prejudices, and involve us
+more inextricably in error. {17}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--DIRECT EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
+
+
+The first step in our proposed inquiry is to ascertain what evidence on
+the doctrine and practice of the Invocation of Saints and Angels can be
+fairly drawn from the revealed word of God in the Old Testament.
+
+Now, let us suppose that a person of a cultivated and enlightened mind,
+and of a sound and clear judgment, but hitherto a stranger to
+revelation, were required to study the ancient Scriptures with the
+single view of ascertaining what one object more than any other,
+subordinate to the great end of preparing the world for the advent of
+Messiah, seemed to be proposed by the wisdom of the Almighty in
+imparting to mankind that revelation; could he fix upon any other point
+as the one paramount and pervading principle with so much reason, as
+upon this, the preservation in the world of a practical belief in the
+perfect unity of God, and the fencing of his worship against the
+admixture of any other, of whatever character or form; The announcement
+that the Creator and Governor of the universe is the sole Giver of every
+temporal and spiritual blessing; the one only Being to whom, his
+rational creatures on earth should pay any religious service whatever;
+the one only Being to whom mortals must seek by prayer and invocation
+for the supply of any of their wants? Through the entire volume the
+inquirer would find that the unity of God is announced in every variety
+of expression; and that the exclusive worship {18} of HIM alone is
+insisted upon and guarded with the utmost jealousy by assurances, by
+threats, and by promises, as the God who heareth prayer, alone to be
+called upon, alone to be invoked, alone to be adored. So to speak, he
+would find that recourse was had to every expedient for the express
+purpose of protecting God's people from the fatal error of embracing in
+their worship any other being or name whatever; not reserving supreme
+adoration for the Supreme Being, and admitting a sort of secondary
+honour and inferior mode of invocation to his exalted saints and
+servants; but banishing at once and for ever the most distant
+approximation towards religious honour--the veriest shadow of spiritual
+invocation to any other Being than Jehovah HIMSELF ALONE.
+
+In process of time, the heathen began to deify those mortals who had
+conferred signal benefits on the human race, or had distinguished
+themselves by their power and skill above their fellow-countrymen. Male
+and female divinities were multiplying on every side. Together with
+Jupiter, the fabled father of gods and men, worshipped under different
+names among the various tribes, were associated those "gods many and
+lords many," which ignorance and superstition, or policy and craft, had
+invented; and which shared some a greater, some a less portion of
+popular veneration and religious worship. To the people of God, the
+worshippers of Jehovah, it was again and again most solemnly and awfully
+denounced, that no such thing should be. "Thou shalt worship the Lord
+thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve," is a mandate repeated in every
+variety of language, and under every diversity of circumstance. In some
+passages, indeed, together with the most clear assurances, {19} that
+mankind need apply to no other dispenser of good, and can want no other
+as Saviour, advocate, or intercessor, that same truth is announced with
+such superabundance of repetition, that in the productions of any human
+writer the style would be chargeable with tautology. In the Bible, this
+repetition only the more forces upon the mind, and fixes there, that
+same principle as an eternal verity never to be questioned; never to be
+dispensed with; never to be diluted or qualified; never to be invaded by
+any service, worship, prayer, invocation, or adoration of any other
+being whatever. Let us take, for example, the forty-fifth chapter of
+Isaiah, in which the principle is most strongly and clearly illustrated.
+"I am the LORD, and there is none else: there is no God beside me; I
+girded thee, though thou hast not known me; that they may know from the
+rising of the sun and from the west, that there is none beside me: I am
+the Lord, and there is none else. They shall be ashamed, and also
+confounded, all of them; they shall go to confusion together, that are
+makers of idols. But Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an
+everlasting salvation: ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world
+without end: I am the Lord, and there is none else. I said not unto the
+seed of Jacob, Seek ye me in vain. They have no knowledge that set up
+the wood of their graven image, and pray unto a god that cannot save.
+There is no god beside me; a just God and a Saviour; there is none
+beside me. Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth; for
+I am God, and there is none else."
+
+But it is needless to multiply these passages; and members of the Church
+of Rome will say, that they themselves acknowledge, as fully as members
+of the Anglican Church can do, that there is but one supreme {20} God
+and Lord, to whom alone they intend to offer the worship due to God; and
+that the appeals which they offer by way of invocation to saints and
+angels for their services and intercession, do not militate against this
+principle. But here let us ask ourselves these few questions:--
+
+First, if it had been intended by the Almighty to forbid any religious
+application, such as is now professedly the invocation of saints and
+angels, to any other being than Himself alone, what words could have
+been employed more stringently prohibitory?
+
+Secondly, had such an address to saints and angels, as the Church of
+Rome now confessedly makes, been contemplated by our heavenly Lawgiver
+as an exception to the general rule, would not some saving clause, some
+expressions indicative of such an intended exception, have been
+discovered in some page or other of his revealed will?
+
+Thirdly, if such an appeal to the angels of heaven, or to the spirits of
+the just in heaven, had been sanctioned under the elder covenant, would
+not some example, some solitary instance, have been recorded of a
+faithful servant of Jehovah offering such a prayer with the Divine
+approbation?
+
+Lastly, when such strong and repeated declarations and injunctions
+interspersed through the entire volume of the Old Testament,
+unequivocally show the will of God to be, that no other object of
+religious worship should have place in the heart or on the tongue of his
+own true sons and daughters, can it become a faithful child of our
+Heavenly Father to be seeking for excuses and palliations, and to invent
+distinctions between one kind of worship and another?
+
+God Himself includes all in one universal prohibitory {21} mandate,
+"Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve." So
+far from according with those general rules for the interpretation of
+the revealed will of God, which we have already stated, and from which,
+in the abstract, probably few would dissent, an anxiety to force the
+word of God into at least an acquiescence in the invocation of saints
+and angels, indicates a disposition to comply with his injunctions,
+wherever they seem to clash with our own view, only so far as we cannot
+avoid compliance; and to seek how we may with any show of propriety
+evade the spirit of those commands. Instead of that full, free, and
+unstinted submission of our own inclinations and propensities to the
+Almighty's will wherever we can discover it, which those entertain whom
+the Lord seeketh to worship Him; to look for exceptions and to act upon
+them, bears upon it the stamp of a reserved and grudging service. After
+so many positive warnings, enactments, and denunciations, against
+seeking by prayer the aid of any other being whatever, surely a positive
+command would have been absolutely necessary to justify a mortal man in
+preferring any prayer to any being, saint, angel, or archangel, save
+only the Supreme Deity alone. Instead of any such command or even
+permission appearing, not one single word occurs, from the first
+syllable in the Book of Genesis to the last of the prophet Malachi,
+which could even by implication be brought to countenance the practice
+of approaching any created being in prayer.
+
+But let us now look to the examples on this subject afforded in the Old
+Testament. Many, very many a prayer is recorded of holy men, of inspired
+men, of men, to whose holiness and integrity and acceptance {22} the
+Holy Spirit bears witness; yet among these prayers there is not found
+one invocation addressed to saint or angel. I will not here anticipate
+the observations which it will be necessary to make in consequence of
+the extraordinary argument which has been devised, to account for the
+absence of invocations to saints before the resurrection of Christ,
+namely, that before that event the saints were not admitted into heaven.
+Although pressed forward with such unhesitating confidence in its
+validity, that argument is so singular in its nature, and so important
+in its consequences, and withal so utterly groundless, as to call for a
+separate examination, on which we will shortly enter: meanwhile, we are
+now inquiring into the matter of fact.
+
+The whole Book of Psalms is a manual of devotion, consisting
+alternately, or rather intermixedly, of prayers and praises, composed
+some by Moses, some by other inspired Israelites of less note, but the
+greater part by David himself; and what is the force and tendency of
+their example? Words are spoken in collaudation of "Moses and Aaron
+among the saints of the Lord," and of "Samuel among such as called upon
+his name;" and mention is made with becoming reverence of the holy
+angels; but not one word ever falls from the pen of the Psalmist,
+addressed, by way of invocation, to saint or angel. In the Roman Ritual
+supplication is made to Abel and Abraham as well as to Michael and all
+angels. If it is now lawful, if it is now the duty of the worshippers of
+the true God to seek his aid through the mediation of those holy men,
+can we avoid asking, Why the inspired patriarchs did not appeal to Abel
+for his mediation? Why did not the inspired David invoke the father of
+the faithful to intercede for him with God? If the departed spirits {23}
+of faithful men may be safely addressed in prayer; if those who in their
+lifetime have, to their fellow-mortals, (who can judge only from outward
+actions, and cannot penetrate the heart,) appeared accepted servants and
+honoured saints of our Creator, may now be invoked by an act of
+religious supplication either to grant us aid, or to intercede with God
+for aid in our behalf, why did not men whom God declared to be partakers
+of his Spirit of truth, offer the same supplication to those departed
+spirits, who, before and after their decease, had this testimony from
+Omniscience itself, that they pleased God? Why is no intimation given in
+the later books of the Old Testament that such supplications were
+offered to Moses, or Aaron, or Abraham, or Noah? When wrath was gone out
+from the presence of the Lord, and the plague was begun among the
+people, Aaron took a censer in his hand, and stood between the living
+and the dead, and the plague was stayed. If the soul of Aaron was
+therefore to be regarded as a spirit influential with God, one whose
+intercession could avail, one who ought to be approached in prayer, were
+it only for his intercession, could a stronger motive be conceived for
+suggesting that invocation, than David must have felt, when the
+pestilence was destroying its thousands around him, and all his glory
+and strength, and his very life too, were threatened by its resistless
+ravages? But no! neither Abel, nor Abraham, nor Moses, nor Aaron, must
+be petitioned to intercede with God, and to pray that God would stay his
+hand. To God and God alone, for his own mercy's sake, must his afflicted
+servant turn in supplication. We find among his prayers no "Holy
+Abraham, pray for us,"--"Holy Abel, pray for us." His own Psalm of
+thanksgiving describes full well the object and the nature of his {24}
+prayer: "When the waves of death compassed me, the floods of ungodly men
+made me afraid, the sorrows of hell compassed me about, the snares of
+death prevented me; in my distress I called upon the Lord, and cried to
+my God; and He did hear my voice out of his temple, and my cry did enter
+into his ears." [2 Sam. (2 Kings Vulg.) xxii. 5. or Ps. xviii.] Abraham,
+when on earth, prayed God to spare the offending-people; but he invoked
+neither Noah, nor Abel, nor any of the faithful departed, to join their
+intercessions with his own. Isaac prayed to God for his son Jacob, but
+he did not ask the mediation of his father Abraham in his behalf; and
+when Jacob in his turn supplicated an especial blessing upon his
+grandsons Ephraim and Manasseh, though he called with gratitude to his
+mind, and expressed with his tongue, the devotedness both of Abraham and
+of Isaac to the Almighty, yet we do not find him appealing to them, or
+invoking their intercession with Jehovah.
+
+When the conscience-struck Israelites felt that they had exposed
+themselves to the wrath of Almighty God, whose sovereign power, put
+forth at the prayer of Samuel, they then witnessed, distrusting the
+efficacy of their own supplication, and confiding in the intercession of
+that man of God, they implored him to intercede for them; and Samuel
+emphatically responded to their appeal, with an assurance of his
+earnestly undertaking to plead their cause with heaven: "And all the
+people said unto Samuel, Pray for thy servants unto the Lord thy God,
+that we die not. And Samuel said unto the people, Fear not.... The Lord
+will not forsake his people, for his great name's {25} sake....
+Moreover, God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing to
+pray for you." [1 Sam. (1 Kings Vulg.) xii. 19.] Samuel is one whom the
+Holy Spirit numbers among those "who called upon God's name;" and when
+Samuel died, all Israel gathered together to lament and to bury
+him,--but we read of no petition being offered to him to carry on the
+same intercessory office, when he was once removed from them. As long as
+he was entabernacled in the flesh and sojourned on earth with his
+brethren, they besought him to pray for them, to intercede with their
+God and his God for blessings at his hand, (just as among ourselves one
+Christian asks another to pray for him,) but when Samuel's body had been
+buried in peace, and his soul had returned to God who gave it, the Bible
+never records any further application to him; we no where read, "Holy
+Samuel, pray for us."
+
+Again, what announcement could God Himself make more expressive of his
+acceptance of the persons of any, than He actually and repeatedly made
+to Moses with regard to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob? How could He more
+clearly intimate that if the spirits of the faithful departed could
+exercise intercessory or mediatorial influence with Him, those three
+holy patriarchs would possess such power above all others who had ever
+lived on the earth? "I am the God of your fathers; the God of Abraham,
+the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob: and Moses hid his face, for he was
+afraid to look upon God." "Thus shalt thou say unto the children of
+Israel, The God of thy fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac,
+the God of Jacob, hath sent me unto you. This is my name for ever, and
+this is my memorial throughout all generations." [Exod. iii. 6. 15.] Did
+Moses in his alarm and dread, when he was afraid {26} to look upon God,
+call upon those holy and accepted servants to aid him in his perplexity,
+and intercede for him and his people with the awful Eternal Being on
+whose majesty he dared not to look? Did he teach his people to invoke
+Abraham? That was far from him. When Moses, that saint of the Lord, was
+himself called hence and was buried, (though no mortal man was allowed
+to know the place of his sepulture,) did the surviving faithful pray to
+him for his help and intercession with God? He had wrought so many and
+great miracles as never had been before witnessed on earth; whilst in
+the tabernacle of the flesh he had talked with God as a man talketh with
+his friend; and yet the sacred page records no invocation ever breathed
+to his departed spirit. The same is the result of our inquiry
+throughout.
+
+I will specify only one more example--Hezekiah, who "trusted in the Lord
+God of Israel, and clave to the Lord, and departed not from following
+him, but kept his commandments," when he and his people were in great
+peril, addressed his prayer only to God. He offered no invocation to
+holy David to intercede with the Almighty for his own Jerusalem; he made
+his supplication directly and exclusively to Jehovah; and, yet, the very
+answer made to that prayer would surely have seemed to justify Hezekiah
+in seeking holy David's mediation, if prayer for the intercession of any
+departed mortal could ever have been sanctioned by Heaven: "Thus saith
+the Lord, the God of David thy father; I have heard thy prayer, I have
+seen thy tears; _I_ will heal thee. I will save this city for mine own
+sake, and for my servant David's sake." [2 Kings (Vulg. 4 Kings) xix.
+15. and xx. 6.] Of what saint in the calendar was ever such a thing as
+this spoken? {27}
+
+I have already intimated my intention of referring, with somewhat more
+than a cursory remark, to the position assumed, and the argument built
+upon it by writers in communion with Rome, for the purpose of nullifying
+or escaping from the evidence borne by the examples of the Old Testament
+against the invocation of saints. The writers to whom I refer, with
+Bellarmin at their head, openly confess that the pages of the Old
+Testament afford no instance of invocation being offered to the spirits
+of departed mortals; and the reason which they allege is this, No one
+can be invoked who is not admitted to the presence of God in heaven; but
+before Christ went down to hell[2] and released the spirits from prison,
+no mortal was admitted into heaven; consequently, before the
+resurrection of Christ the spirit of no mortal was invoked. The
+following are the words of Bellarmin at the close of the preface to his
+"Church Triumphant:"--"The spirits of the patriarchs and prophets before
+the coming of Christ were for this reason not worshipped and invoked, as
+we now worship and invoke the Apostles and martyrs, because they were
+yet shut up and detained in prisons below[3]." Again, he says, "Because
+before {28} the coming of Christ the saints who died did not enter
+heaven and saw not God, nor could ordinarily know the prayers of
+suppliants, therefore, it was not customary in the Old Testament to say,
+'Holy Abraham, pray for me,' &c.; but the men of that time prayed to God
+only, and alleged the merits of the saints who had already departed,
+that their own prayers might be aided by them."
+
+ [Footnote 2: The word Hell, signifying, in Saxon, a
+ hidden-place, altogether corresponding in its etymology with
+ "hades," is now used for the place of torment called by the
+ Hebrews "Gehennah;" and we must perhaps regret that the same
+ Saxon word is employed to signify also the unseen region of
+ departed spirits. This circumstance has been the source of much
+ difficulty and confusion.]
+
+ [Footnote 3: "Nam idcirco ante Christi adventum non ita
+ colebantur neque invocabantur spiritus patriarcharum atque
+ prophetarum, quemadmodum nunc Apostolos et martyres colimus et
+ invocamus, quod illi adhuc infernis carceribus clausi
+ detinebantur."--Ingolstadii, 1601. vol. ii. p. 833. "The last
+ edition, enlarged and corrected by the Author."]
+
+Now let us inquire into this statement thus broadly made, and ascertain
+for ourselves whether the point assumed and the argument built upon it
+can stand the test of examination. Is this argument such as ought to
+satisfy the mind of one, who would humbly but honestly follow the
+apostolic rule, "Prove all things: hold fast that which is good?" Is
+this such an exposition as that the reason of a cultivated mind, and the
+faith of an enlightened Christian, can acquiesce in it? Let it be
+examined neither with prejudice in its favour, nor with any undue
+suspicion of its soundness, but with candour and impartiality
+throughout.
+
+It is not necessary to dwell at any length on the inconsistencies and
+perplexities involved in this assumed abstract theory with regard to the
+souls of the faithful who died before the resurrection of Christ, and
+which require to be cleared away before its advocates can reasonably
+expect to obtain for it any general acceptance among thinking men. I do
+not wish to contravene the theory, far less to substitute another in its
+stead. On the contrary, I am fully content, in company with some of the
+most valuable among Roman Catholic writers, following the example of
+Augustin [Aug. De Pecc. Orig. c. 23. tom. vii. p. 338.--Quoted by De
+Sacy. 2 Kings (Vulg. 4 Kings) ii.], to leave the subject where Scripture
+has left it. To the arguments {29} alleged, I would wish to reply
+independently of any opinion, as a matter of Christian belief, with
+regard to the place, the condition, and the circumstances of the souls
+of the patriarchs and prophets before our blessed Lord's resurrection.
+It may, nevertheless, materially facilitate an inquiry into the
+soundness of the reasons alleged for the total absence of invocation to
+those souls, if we briefly contemplate some of the difficulties which
+surround this novel theory. At all events, such a process will incline
+us to abstain from bold assumptions on a point upon which the Almighty
+has been pleased to throw so little light in his Holy Word, or at least
+avoid all severity of condemnation towards those who may differ from our
+views.
+
+It is very easy to assert, that all the souls of the faithful departed
+were kept in the prison-house of Hades, and to allege in its behalf an
+obscure passage of St. Peter, to which many of the most learned and
+unprejudiced Christian teachers assign a meaning totally unconnected
+with the subject of departed spirits. But surely the case of Enoch's
+translation from this life to heaven, making, as it has been beautifully
+expressed, but one step from earth to glory, which St. Paul, in his
+Epistle to the Hebrews, cites with a most important comment of his own,
+requires to be well and patiently weighed. He was taken from the earth
+by an immediate act of Providence, that he should not see death; and
+before his translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God.
+Surely the case of Elijah too, when we would ascertain the soundness of
+this theory, must not be dismissed summarily from our thoughts, of whom
+the book of eternal truth declares, that Jehovah took him {30} in a
+whirlwind into heaven; his ascent being made visible to mortal eyes, as
+was afterwards the ascension of the blessed Saviour Himself. Indeed the
+accounts of Elijah's translation, and of our Lord's ascension, whether
+in the Septuagint and Greek Testament, the Vulgate, or our own
+authorized version, present a similarity of expression very striking and
+remarkable.
+
+On this subject we are strongly reminded, first, with what care and
+candour and patience the language of Holy Scripture should be weighed,
+which so positively declares, that Moses and Elijah, both in glory,
+appeared visibly to the Apostles at the transfiguration of our blessed
+Saviour, and conversed with Him on the holy mount: "And behold there
+talked with Him two men, who were Moses and Elias, who appeared in glory
+(in majesty, as the Vulgate renders the word), and spake of his decease
+which He should accomplish at Jerusalem;" [Luke ix. 30.]--and, secondly,
+how unwise it is to dogmatize on such subjects beyond the plain
+declaration of the sacred narrative. Moreover, how very unsatisfactory
+is the theory which we are examining as to the state of the souls of the
+faithful who died before Christ, even the words of Jerome himself prove,
+who, commenting on the transfiguration of the blessed Jesus, is
+unhappily led to represent the Almighty as having summoned Elijah to
+descend from heaven, and Moses to ascend from Hades, to meet our Lord in
+the Mount[4].
+
+ [Footnote 4: "Elia inde descendente quo conscenderat, et Moyse
+ ab inferis resurgente."--Hieron. in Matt. xvii. 1. Paris, 1706.
+ vol. iv. p. 77.]
+
+Strange and startling as is this sentiment of Jerome, it is, you will
+observe, utterly irreconcileable with the theory, that the reason why
+the ancient Church did not {31} pray to the saints departed, was because
+they were not yet in heaven.
+
+On this point, among Roman Catholic writers themselves, there prevails a
+very great diversity of opinion, arising probably from the difficulty
+which they have experienced in their endeavours to make all facts and
+doctrines square with the present tenets and practices of their
+Church[5]. Thus, whilst some maintain that Elijah was translated to the
+terrestrial paradise in which Adam had been placed, not enjoying the
+immediate divine presence; others cite the passage as justifying the
+belief that the saints departed pray for us[6]. But not only are
+different authors at variance with each other on very many points here;
+the same writer in his zeal is betrayed into great and palpable
+inconsistency. Bellarmin, anxious to enlist the account given by our
+Lord of the rich man and Lazarus, to countenance the invocation of
+saints by the example of the rich man appealing to Abraham, maintains
+that section of Holy Writ to be not a parable, but a true history of a
+matter of fact which took place between two real individuals; and of his
+assertion he adduces this proof, that "the Church worships that Lazarus
+as verily a holy man[7];" and yet he denies that any of the holy men
+were in heaven before the {32} death of Christ. Either Abraham was in
+heaven in the presence of God, or not; if he was in heaven, why did not
+his descendants invoke his aid? if he was not in heaven, the whole
+argument drawn from the rich man's supplication falls to the ground.
+
+ [Footnote 5: See De Sacy on 4 Kings i. 1. See also Estius, 1629.
+ p. 168. Pope Gregory's Exposition; Rome, 1553. p. 99. Stephen's
+ Bible in loc. 1557, &c. The Vulgate ed. Antwerp, 1624, cites a
+ note, "Thy prayers are stronger than chariots and horsemen."]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Gaspar Sanctius, Antwerp, 1624. p. 1360, considers
+ the fable not improbable, that Elijah, living in the terrestrial
+ paradise, wrote there the letters to Joram (mentioned 2 Chron.
+ xxi. 12), and sent them by angels.]
+
+ [Footnote 7: Colit Lazarum ilium ut vere sanctum
+ hominem.--Bellarm. De Ecd. Triumph, p. 864.]
+
+Another very extraordinary inconsistency, arising from the same
+solicitude, forces itself upon our notice, when the same author urges a
+passage in Leviticus [Levit. xix. 13.] to prove, that the saints are now
+admitted at once into the enjoyment of the presence of God in heaven,
+without waiting for the day of final judgment. [Bell vol. ii. p. 865.]
+"God (such are his words) commanded it to be written, 'The work of the
+hireling shall not remain with thee till the morning;' therefore, unless
+God would appear inconsistent with Himself, He will not keep back the
+reward of his saints to the end of the world." How strange, that in the
+same treatise [Ibid. p. 833.] this author should expressly maintain,
+that the reward of Abel and Abraham, and the holy prophet and lawgiver
+Moses, the very man who was commanded to write that law in Leviticus,
+was kept back,--the last for a longer period than a thousand years; the
+first well nigh four thousand years.
+
+I mention these particulars merely to point out how very unsatisfactory
+and unsound is the attempted solution of the difficulties which surround
+on every side the theory of those who maintain, that the reason why we
+have no instance of the righteous departed being invoked in the times of
+the elder covenant is, that they were not as yet admitted into heaven,
+but were kept in prison till the resurrection of Christ. I would also
+observe, even at the risk {33} of repetition, that I am here not
+maintaining any opinion as to the appointed abiding-place, the
+condition, and circumstances, the powers of consciousness, volition or
+enjoyment of the departed, before Christ's resurrection; on the
+contrary, I am rather urging the consideration of the great and serious
+caution requisite before we espouse, as an article of faith, any opinion
+which rests on so questionable a foundation, and which involves such
+interminable difficulties.
+
+But while we need not dwell longer on this immediate point, yet there
+are two considerations which appear to be altogether decisive as to the
+evidence borne against the Invocation of Saints by the writers of the
+Old Testament. If the spirits of the saints departed were not invoked
+before the resurrection of Christ, purely because they were not then
+admitted into heaven; the first consideration I would suggest is this:
+Why did the faithful and inspired servants of Jehovah not invoke the
+angels and archangels who were in heaven? The second is this: Why did
+not the inspired Apostles and faithful disciples of our Lord invoke the
+spirits of those saints after his resurrection; that is (according to
+the theory before us), after those saints had been taken by Christ with
+him into his Father's presence? I wish not to anticipate here our
+inquiry into the testimony borne by the writers of the New Testament as
+to the doctrine and practice of the Roman Church in this particular; and
+I will only add, that whatever be the cause of the absence from the Old
+Testament of all worship and invocation of Abel and Abraham, whom the
+Roman Church now invokes, the alleged reason that it was because they
+were not in heaven till after Christ's resurrection, is utterly set
+aside by the conduct of the Apostles and disciples of our Lord recorded
+in the New {34} Testament, for more than half a century after his return
+to his Father's glory.
+
+This, however, seems to be the proper place for entertaining the first
+consideration, Why did not the holy men of old, under the elder
+covenant, invoke angels and archangels, as the Roman Church now does?
+Writers, indeed, who have declared themselves the defenders of that
+doctrine and practice, refer us to passages, which they cite, as
+affording examples of the worship of angels; and we will not knowingly
+allow any one of those sections of Holy Writ to remain unexamined. We
+must first endeavour to ascertain the testimony borne by the books of
+the Old Testament: and that presents to us such a body of evidence as
+greatly increases our surprise at the perseverance with which the
+invocation of angels has been maintained by any community of men
+acknowledging the inspiration of the sacred volume.
+
+The inspired writers of the Old Testament, and those to whom through
+their mouth and pen the Divine word was addressed, were as fully as
+ourselves acquainted with the existence of angelic beings. They were
+aware of the station of those angels in the court of heaven, of their
+power as God's ambassadors, and agents for good. Either their own eyes
+had seen the mighty operations of God by the hands of those celestial
+messengers; or their ears had heard their fathers tell what HE had done
+by their instrumentality in times of old. Why then did not God's chosen
+people offer to the angels the same worship and invocation which the
+Church of Rome now addresses to them in common with the patriarchs and
+prophets of the elder covenant, and with saints and martyrs under the
+new? In the condition of the holy angels no one ever suggests that {35}
+any change, affecting the argument, has taken place since the time when
+man was created and made. And as the angels of heaven were in themselves
+the same, equally in the presence of God, and equally able to succour
+men through that long space of four thousand years, which intervened
+between Adam's creation and the birth of HIM who was Son of Adam and Son
+of God, so was man in the same dependent state, needing the guidance and
+protection of a power above his own. Nay, surely, if there was in man
+any difference affecting the argument, it would all add weight to the
+reason against the invocation of angels by Christians. The Israelites of
+old had no clear knowledge, as we have, of one great Mediator, who is
+ever making intercession for us; and yet they sought not the mediation
+and intercession and good offices of those superhuman beings, of whose
+existence and power, and employment in works of blessing to man, they
+had no doubt[8]. This is a point of great importance to our argument,
+and I will refer to a few passages in support of it.
+
+ [Footnote 8: A small section indeed of their countrymen in our
+ Saviour's time denied the reality of a future state, and the
+ existence of angels and spirits; but the sect was of then recent
+ origin, and the overwhelming majority believed as their fathers
+ had believed.]
+
+When David, who had, as we know [1 Chron. xxi. 16.], visible
+demonstration afforded him of the existence and ministration of the
+angels, called upon them to unite with his own soul, and with all the
+works of creation through all places of God's dominion, in praising
+their merciful, glorious, and powerful Creator, he thus conveys to us
+the exalted ideas with which he had been filled of their nature, their
+excellence, and their ministration. "The Lord hath prepared his throne
+in the heavens, and his {36} kingdom ruleth over all: Bless the Lord, ye
+his angels that excel in strength, that do his commandments, hearkening
+unto the voice of his word. Bless ye the Lord, all ye his hosts, ye
+ministers of his that do his pleasure." [Ps. ciii. 19-21.] David knew
+moreover that one of the offices, in the execution of which the angels
+do God's pleasure, is that of succouring and defending us on earth. For
+example, in one of the psalms used by the Church of Rome at complin, and
+with the rest repeated in the Church of England, and prophetic of the
+Redeemer, David, to whom this psalm is probably to be ascribed, declares
+of the man who had made the Most High his refuge and strength, "There
+shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy
+dwelling; for he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in
+all thy ways; they shall bear thee up in their hands lest thou dash thy
+foot against a stone." [Ps. xci. 10-12.] And again, with exquisitely
+beautiful imagery, he represents those same blessed servants of heaven
+as an army, as a host of God's spiritual soldiers keeping watch and ward
+over the poorest of the children of men, who would take refuge in his
+mercy: "The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him,
+and delivereth them[9]." And yet David, the prophet of the Lord, never
+addresses to these beings, high and glorious though they are, one single
+invocation: he neither asks them to assist him, nor to pray for him, nor
+to pray with him in his behalf.
+
+ [Footnote 9: Ps. xxxiv. 7. (Vulg. xxxiii. 8.) "Immittet angelus
+ Domini in circuitu timentium eum, et eripiet eos." In the
+ Vulgate the beauty of the figure is lost; which, however, Roman
+ Catholic writers restore in their comments. Basil makes a
+ beautiful use of the metaphor. See De Sacy in loc.] {37}
+
+Isaiah was admitted by the Holy Spirit to witness in the fulness of its
+glory the court and the throne of heaven; and he heard the voices of the
+seraphim proclaiming their Maker's praise; he experienced also
+personally the effect of their ministration, when one of them said, "Lo,
+this hath touched thy lips, and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy
+sin purged." [Isaiah vi. 7.] Still, though Isaiah must have regarded
+this angel as his benefactor under God, yet neither to this seraph, nor
+to any of the host of heaven, does he offer one prayer for their good
+offices, even by their intercession. He ever ascribes all to God alone;
+and never joins any other name with His either in supplication or in
+praise. Let us also take the case of Daniel. He acknowledges not only
+that the Lord's omnipotent hand had rescued him from the jaws of the
+lions, but that the deliverance was brought about by the ministration of
+an angel. "My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut the lions' mouths,
+that they have not hurt me." [Dan. vi. 22.] Yet when we look through
+Daniel's prayers, we find no allusion to any of the highest angels. He
+had seen Gabriel before his prayer; he had heard the voice and felt the
+hand of that heavenly messenger who was commissioned to reveal to him
+what should be done in the latter end; and immediately after the
+offering of his prayer, the same Gabriel announces himself as one who
+was come forth to give the prophet skill and understanding. And yet
+neither towards Gabriel, nor any other of the angels of God, does one
+word of invocation fall from the lips of Daniel. In the supplications of
+that holy, intrepid, and blessed servant and child of God, we search in
+vain for any thing approaching in spirit to the invocation, "Sancte
+Gabriel, ora pro nobis." {38}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--EVIDENCE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT (continued)
+
+
+We must now briefly refer to those passages, by which Roman Catholic
+writers have endeavoured to maintain that religious adoration was paid
+to angels by the faithful sons of God. The two principal instances cited
+are, first, the case of Abraham bowing down before three men, whom he
+recognizes as messengers from heaven; and, secondly, the words of Jacob
+when he gave his benediction to his grandsons.
+
+With regard to the first instance, how very far the prostration of
+Abraham was in itself from implying an act of religious worship, being
+as it was the ordinary mode of paying respect to a fellow mortal, is
+evident from the very words of Scripture. The Hebrew word, which we
+translate by "bowed himself," and which the Vulgate unhappily renders
+"adoravit" ("adored"), is, letter for letter, the same in the case of
+Abraham saluting his three heavenly visitors, and in the case of Jacob
+saluting his brother Esau. The parallelism of the two passages is very
+striking.
+
+GEN. xviii. 2. GEN. xxxiii. 1 and 3.
+
+And he [Abraham] lift up his And Jacob lifted up his eyes,
+eyes, and lo! three men stood and looked, and behold! Esau
+by him; and when he saw them, came ... And he passed over, and
+he ran to meet them from the _bowed himself to the ground_ seven
+tent door; and _bowed himself_ times until he came near to his
+_toward the ground_. brother. {39}
+
+By rendering the Hebrew word[10], which means to "bow or bend oneself,"
+by the word "adoravit," which is literally "to pray to," the Latin
+Vulgate has laid the foundation for much unsound and misleading
+criticism. But suppose the word had meant, what it does not mean, an act
+of solemn religious worship; and let it be granted (as I am not only
+ready to grant, but prepared to maintain) that Abraham paid religious
+adoration at that time, what inference can fairly and honestly be drawn
+from that circumstance in favour of the invocation of angels? The
+ancient writers of the Christian Church, and those whom the Church of
+Rome habitually holds in great respect, are full and clear in
+maintaining that the person whom Abraham then addressed, was no created
+being, neither angel nor seraph; but the Angel of the Covenant; the
+Word, the eternal Son of God, Himself God[11]. Before the visible and
+miraculous presence of the God of heaven, who for his own glory and in
+carrying on the work of man's salvation, sometimes deigned so to reveal
+Himself, the patriarchs of old bowed themselves to the earth. Can this,
+with any shadow of {40} reason, be employed to sanction the invocation
+of Michael and all the myriads of angels who fill the court of heaven?
+
+ [Footnote 10: Not only is the Hebrew word precisely the same,
+ letter for letter, and point for point, [Hebrew: shahah], but
+ the Septuagint in each case employs the same, [Greek:
+ prosekunaesen]; and the Vulgate in each case renders it by the
+ same word, "adoravit." The Roman Catholic commentator De Sacy
+ renders it in each case, "se prosternavit," which corresponds
+ exactly with our English version. The Douay Bible in each case
+ renders it "adored."]
+
+ [Footnote 11: Many early Christian writers may be cited to the
+ same purpose: it is enough, however, to refer to Justin Martyr
+ and to Athanasius; who are very full and elaborate in
+ maintaining, that the angel here mentioned was no created being,
+ but was the Angel of the Covenant, God, in the fulness of time
+ manifested in the flesh. The passage from Athanasius will be
+ quoted at some length, when we come to examine that father's
+ testimony. For Justin Martyr, see Dial. cum Tryph. ch. 56, &c.
+ p. 150, &c. (Paris, 1742.)]
+
+The only other instance to which it will be necessary to call your
+attention, occurs in the forty-eighth chapter of Genesis. The passage,
+however, is so palpably and on the very face of it inapplicable, that
+its examination needs not detain us long. "And he [Jacob] blessed
+Joseph, and said, God, before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac did
+walk, the God who fed me all my life long unto this day, the ANGEL which
+redeemed me from all evil, bless the lads." [Gen. xlviii. 15.] Here the
+patriarch speaks of God as the Angel, and the Angel as God: being the
+Angel or Messenger of the Covenant--God manifested to man. He speaks not
+of Michael or Gabriel, or archangel or seraph, or any created being; but
+of the Lord Himself, who appeared to him, agreeably to the revelation of
+God Himself recorded in a previous chapter, and thus communicated by the
+patriarch to Rachel and Leah: "And the ANGEL of God spake unto me in a
+dream, saying, Jacob; and I said, Here am I. And he said ... _I_ am the
+GOD of Bethel, where thou anointedst the pillar, and vowedst a vow unto
+me." [Gen. xxxi. 11.] The Angel whose blessing he desired for the lads
+was the God[12], to whom he had vowed a vow in Bethel, the Lord Himself.
+
+ [Footnote 12: It may not be superfluous to add, that this is the
+ interpretation of the passage adopted by primitive writers,
+ Among others see Eusebius Demonstr. Evan. lib. v. ch. 10: who
+ declares that the Angel spoken of by Jacob was God the Son.]
+
+Independently, however, of this conclusive consideration, if the latter
+member of this sentence had merely expressed a wish, that an angel might
+be employed as {41} an instrument of good in behalf of Ephraim and
+Manasseh, I could readily offer such a prayer for a blessing on my own
+children. My prayer would be addressed to the angel neither immediately
+nor transitively, but exclusively to God alone, supplicating Him
+graciously to employ the service of those ministering spirits for our
+good. Such a prayer every Catholic in communion with the Church of
+England is taught and directed to offer. Such a prayer is primitive and
+scriptural; and such is offered in the Church on the anniversary of
+Saint Michael and all angels:
+
+"O Everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services of
+angels and men in a wonderful order, mercifully grant that as Thy holy
+angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by Thy appointment they may
+succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."
+
+Such is the prayer of the Church Catholic, whether of the Roman or the
+Anglican branch; it is in spirit and in truth a Christian prayer, fit
+for faithful mortals to offer on earth to the Lord of men and of angels
+in heaven. Would that the Church of Rome, preserving, as she has
+preserved, this prayer in all its original purity, had never been
+successfully tempted to mingle in the same service, supplications, which
+rob the one only God of his exclusive honour and glory, as the God "who
+heareth prayer;" and to rob Christ of his exclusive honour and glory, as
+our only Mediator and Advocate!
+
+Here, though unwilling, by departing from the order of our argument, to
+anticipate our examination in its place of the Roman ritual, I cannot
+refrain from contrasting this prayer, the genuine offspring of Christian
+faith, with some forms of invocation contained in {42} the Roman service
+on St. Michael's day, in which I could not join, and the adoption of
+which I deeply lament. The first is appointed to be said at the part of
+the Mass called "The Secret:" "We offer to Thee, O Lord, the sacrifice
+of praise, humbly beseeching Thee, That by the intervention of the
+prayers of the angels for us, Thou, being appeased, mayest both accept
+the same, and make them profitable for our salvation. Through ..." The
+second is offered at the Post Communion: "Supported [propped up,
+suffulti] by the intercession of Thy blessed archangel Michael, we
+humbly beseech Thee, O Lord, that what with honour we follow[13], we may
+obtain also in mind. Through ..."
+
+ [Footnote 13: I do not understand the exact meaning of these
+ words, which however contain no portion of that sentiment, the
+ presence of which in this prayer I deplore. The original is
+ this: "Beati archangeli tui Michaelis intercessione suffulti,
+ supplices te Domine deprecamur, ut quod honore prosequimur,
+ contingamus et in mente. Per ..." Probably the general sense is,
+ that what we reverently seek we may actually realize.]
+
+Still, though here the Christian seems to be taught to rest on a broken
+reed, to support and prop himself up by a staff which must bend and
+break; yet I acknowledge that so much violence is not done to my
+Christian principles, nor do my feelings, as a believer in God and his
+ever-blessed Son, meet with so severe a shock by either of these
+prayers, as by the invocation addressed to the archangel himself in the
+"Gradual" on that same day:
+
+"O holy Michael, O archangel, defend us in battle, that we perish not in
+the dreadful judgment."
+
+Christians of the Church of Rome! for one moment meditate, I beseech
+you, on this prayer. It is not addressed to God; in it there is no
+mention made of {43} Christ: having called upon the angels, and on your
+own soul in the words of the psalmist, to praise the Lord, you address
+your supplication to Michael himself; not even invoking him for his
+intercession, but imploring of him his protection. If it be said, that
+his intercession is all that is meant, with most unfeigned sincerity I
+request you to judge for yourselves, whether any prayer from poor sinful
+man, putting his whole trust in the Lord and imploring his help, could
+be addressed to our God and Saviour more immediate and direct than this?
+In the place of the name of his servant Michael, substitute the highest
+and the holiest name ever uttered in heaven or on earth, and can words
+form a prayer more direct to God? "O Lord God Almighty, O Lord Jesus our
+only Saviour, defend us in battle, that we perish not in the dreadful
+judgment. Hallelujah!"--Can this be right? Were the archangel allowed
+now, by his Lord and ours, to make his voice heard upon earth by
+Christians offering to him this prayer, would he utter any other words,
+than the angel, his fellow-servant and ours, once addressed to Saint
+John, when he fell down to worship before him, "See thou do it not; for
+I am thy fellow-servant: worship God."
+
+Such then is the evidence borne by the writers of the Old Testament. No
+prayer to angel or beatified spirit occurs from its first to its last
+page. The theory which would have us account for the absence of all
+prayer to the saints before the advent of Messiah, by reason of their
+not having been then admitted into their everlasting habitations, and
+the immediate presence of God proves to be utterly groundless. The holy
+angels were confessedly in heaven [Matt. xviii. 10.], beholding the face
+of {44} God; but no invocation was ever addressed to them, by patriarch,
+or prophet, or people, as mediators or intercessors. God, and God alone,
+the one eternal Jehovah, is proclaimed by Himself throughout, and is
+acknowledged throughout to be the only object of any kind of spiritual
+worship; the only Being who heareth prayer, to whom alone therefore all
+mankind should approach with the words and with the spirit of
+invocation. It has been argued by some writers, that in the times of the
+Old Testament, prayer was not offered to God through a mediator at all;
+and that as the one Mediator was not then revealed in his person and his
+offices, the subsidiary intercessors could not of course act; and
+therefore could not be invoked by man. The answer to this remark is
+conclusive. That Mediator has been revealed in his person and his
+offices; and has been expressly declared to be the one Mediator between
+God and man: we therefore seek God's covenanted mercies through Him.
+Those subsidiary intercessors have never been revealed; and therefore we
+do not seek their aid. To assure us that it was the mind and will of our
+Heavenly Father that we should approach Him by secondary and subsidiary
+mediators and intercessors, the same clear and unquestionable revelation
+of their persons and their offices as mediators would have been
+required, as He has vouchsafed of the mediation of his Son. Had God
+willed that the faithful should approach Him by the intercessions of the
+saints and martyrs, is it conceivable that He would not have given some
+intimation of his will in this respect? If believers in the Gospel were
+to have unnumbered mediators of intercession in heaven, as well as the
+one Mediator of redemption, would not the {45} Gospel itself have
+announced it? Could such declarations as these have remained on record
+without any qualifying or limiting expression, "He[14] is able also to
+save to the uttermost them who come unto God by Him, seeing He ever
+liveth to make intercession for them." "There is one God, and one
+Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." But this involves
+the question to which the next section must be devoted. All I would
+anticipate here is, that if the irresistible argument from the Old
+Testament is sought to be evaded on the ground that no mediator at all
+was then revealed, we must require a distinct revelation of the
+existence and offices of other mediators and intercessors, before we can
+be justified in applying to them for their intervention in our behalf.
+And the question now is. Are they so revealed?
+
+ [Footnote 14: Heb. vii. 25. I Tim. ii. 5.--Unde et salvare in
+ perpetuum potest accedentes per semetipsum ad Deum, semper
+ vivens ad interpellandum pro nobis.--_Vulg._]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.--EVIDENCE OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+
+
+Though such is the evidence borne against the invocation of saints and
+angels by the Old Testament, yet it has been said that we are living
+neither under the patriarchal, nor the Mosaic dispensation, but under
+the Gospel, to whom therefore as Christians neither the precepts nor the
+examples of those ancient times are applicable: {46} the injunctions
+consequently given of old to preserve the chosen people from idolatry
+and paganism, cannot be held to prohibit Christians from seeking the aid
+of those departed saints who are now reigning with Christ. But, surely,
+those precepts, and denunciations, and commands, are still most strictly
+applicable, as conveying to us a knowledge of the will of our Heavenly
+Father, that his sons and daughters on earth should associate no name,
+however exalted among the principalities and powers in heavenly places,
+with his own holy name in prayer, and spiritual invocation. I am
+throughout this address supposing myself to be speaking to those whose
+heart's desire is to fulfil the will of God in all things; not those who
+are contented to depart from the spirit of that will, whenever they can
+devise plausible arguments to countenance such departure.
+
+The cases both of precept and example through the Old Testament
+affording so stringent and so universal a rule against the association
+of any name with the name of the Almighty in our prayers; before we can
+conclude that Christians have a liberty denied to believers under the
+former dispensations, we must surely produce a declaration to that
+effect, clear, unequivocal, and precisely in point. Nothing short of an
+enactment, rescinding in terms the former prohibitory law, and
+positively sanctioning supplications and prayers to saints and angels,
+seems capable of satisfying any Christian bent on discovering the will
+of God, and resolved to worship Him agreeably to the spirit of that will
+as it has been revealed. But let us read the New Testament from its
+first to its very last word, and we shall find, that the doctrines, the
+precepts, and the examples, the pervading reigning spirit of the entire
+{47} volume, combine in addressing us with voices loud and clear. Pray
+to God Almighty solely in the name and for the sake of his dear and only
+Son Jesus Christ our Lord, and offer no prayer, no supplication, no
+intreaty, to any other being or power, saint or angel, though it be only
+to ask for their intercession with the great God. But this involves the
+whole question, and must be sifted thoroughly. Let us then review the
+entire volume with close and minute scrutiny, and ask ourselves, Is
+there a single passage, interpreted to the best of our skill, with the
+aid of those on whose integrity and learning we can rely, which directly
+and unequivocally sanctions any religious invocation of whatever kind to
+any being except God alone? And then let us calmly and deliberately
+resolve this point: In a matter of so vital importance, of so immense
+interest, and of so sacred a character as the worship of the Supreme
+Being, who declares Himself to be a jealous God, ought we to suffer any
+refinements of casuistry to entice us from the broad, clear light of
+revelation? If it were God's good pleasure to make exceptions to his
+rule--a rule so repeatedly, and so positively enacted and
+enforced--surely the analogy of his gracious dealings with mankind would
+have taught us to look for an announcement of the exceptions in terms
+equally forcible and explicit. Instead, however, of this, we find no
+single act, no single word, nothing which even by implication can be
+forced to sanction any prayer or religious invocation, of whatever kind,
+to any other being save to God alone.
+
+Let us first look to the language and conduct of our blessed Lord, whose
+prayers to his Father are upon record for our instruction and comfort,
+and whose precepts and example form the best rule of a Christian's {48}
+life. So far from repealing the ancient law, he repeats in his own
+person its solemn announcement, "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one
+Lord." [Mark xii. 29.] While the same heavenly Teacher commands us with
+authority, "When thou prayest, pray to thy Father which is in secret,
+and thy Father, who seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly." [Matt.
+vi. 6.] No allusion in any word of His do we find to any prayer from a
+mortal on this earth to an angel or saint in heaven. And yet occasions
+were multiplied on which a reference to the invocation of angels would
+have been natural, and apparently called for. He again and again places
+beyond all doubt the reality of their good services towards mankind, but
+it is as God's servants, and at God's bidding; not in answer to any
+supplication or invoking of ours. The parable of the rich man and
+Lazarus has been cited [Bellarmin, p. 895.] to bear contrary evidence;
+but, in the first place, that parable does not offer a case in point; in
+the second place, were it in point, it might be fairly and strongly
+urged against the practice of invoking the spirit of any departed
+mortal, even the father of the faithful himself. For what are the
+circumstances of the parabolic representation? A lost spirit in the
+regions of torment prays to Abraham in the regions of the blessed, and
+the spirit of the departed patriarch professes himself to have no power
+to grant the request of the departed and condemned spirit. [Luke xvi.
+19.] The practice indeed of our Roman Catholic brethren would have been
+exemplified, had our blessed Lord represented the rich man's five
+brethren still on earth as pious men, and as supplicating Abraham in
+heaven to pray for themselves, or to mitigate {49} their lost brother's
+punishment and his woes. But then it would have afforded Christians
+little encouragement to follow their example, when they found Abraham
+declaring himself unable to aid them in attaining the object of their
+prayer, or in any way to assist them at all. Without one single
+exception, we find our blessed Lord's example, precepts, and doctrines
+to be decidedly against the practice of invoking saint or angel; whilst
+not one solitary act or word of His can be cited to countenance or
+palliate it.
+
+Next it follows, that we inquire into the conduct and the writings of
+Christ's Apostles and immediate followers, to whom He graciously
+promised that the Holy Spirit should guide them into all truth. In the
+Acts of the Apostles, various instances of prayer attract our notice,
+but not one ejaculation is found there to any other being save God
+alone. Neither angel nor saint is invoked. The Apostles prayed for
+guidance in the government of Christ's infant Church, but it was, "Thou,
+Lord, who knowest the hearts of all men." [Acts i. 24.] They prayed for
+their own acceptance, but it was "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." [Acts
+vii. 59.] They prayed for each other, as in behalf of St. Peter when in
+prison; but we are expressly told, that the prayer which was made
+without ceasing by the Church for him was addressed to GOD. [Acts xii.
+5.]
+
+To deliver St. Peter from his chains, an angel was sent on an especial
+mission from heaven; but though St. Peter saw him, and heard his voice,
+and followed him, and knew of a surety that the Almighty had employed
+the ministration of an angel to liberate him from his bonds, yet we do
+not hear thereafter of {50} Peter having himself prayed to an angel to
+secure his good offices, and his intercession with God, nor has he once
+indirectly intimated to others that such supplications would be of
+avail, or were even allowable. He exhorts his fellow-Christians to pray,
+"Watch unto prayer," but it is because "The eyes of the LORD are over
+the righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers." [1 Pet. iv. 7;
+iii. 12.] He Himself prays for them, but it is, that the God of all
+grace might make them perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle them. He
+suggests no invocation of saint or angel to intercede with God for them.
+He bids them cast all their care upon GOD, on the assurance that God
+Himself careth for them.
+
+Precisely the same result issues from a contemplation of the acts and
+exhortation of St. Paul. He too experienced in his own person the
+comfort of an angel's ministration, bidding him cast off all fear when
+in the extreme of imminent peril. [Acts xxvii. 23, 24.] Many a prayer of
+that holy Apostle is upon record; many an earnest exhortation to prayer
+was made by him; we find many a declaration relative to his own habits
+of prayer. But with him God and God alone is the object of prayer
+throughout: by him no saint or angel or archangel is alluded to, as one
+whose intercession might be sought by himself or by us. He could speak
+in glowing language of patriarchs, prophets, and angels, but unto none
+of these would he turn. "Be careful for nothing, but in every thing by
+prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made
+known unto God." [Phil. iv. 6.] And let any one receive, in the plain
+meaning of his words, his prohibitory monition [Col. ii. 18.], and say,
+could St. Paul have {51} uttered these words without any qualifying
+expression, had he worshipped angels by invocation, even asking them
+only to aid him by their prayers. "Let no one beguile you of your reward
+in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels; not holding the
+Head," which Head he had in the first chapter (v. 18) declared to be the
+dear Son of God, "in whom we have redemption through his blood, even the
+forgiveness of our sins."
+
+The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews could bring before our minds
+with most fervent uplifting eloquence Abel and Abraham and David,--that
+goodly fellowship of the prophets, that holy army of martyrs; he could
+speak as though he were an eye-witness of what he describes, of the
+general assembly and church of the first-born, whose names are written
+in heaven. And, surely, had the thought of seeking the support or
+intercession of saint or angel by invocation addressed to them, been
+familiar to him; had the thought even occurred to his mind with
+approbation, he would not have allowed such an occasion to pass by,
+without even alluding to any benefit that might arise from our invoking
+such friends of God. So far from that allusion, the utmost which he says
+at the close of his eulogy is this, "These all, having obtained a good
+report through faith, received not the promise; God having provided some
+better thing for us, that they without us should not be made perfect."
+[Heb. xi. 39, 40.]
+
+The beloved Apostle who could look forward in full assurance of faith to
+the day of Christ's second coming, and knew that "when He shall appear
+we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is," has left us this
+record of his sentiments concerning prayer: {52} "This is the confidence
+that we have in HIM, that, if we ask any thing according to his will, he
+heareth us; and if we know that he hear us, whatsoever we ask, we know
+that we have the petitions that we desired of him." [1 John v. 14, 15.]
+St. John alludes to no intercessor, to no advocate, save only that
+"Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, who is also the
+propitiation for our sins." [1 John ii. 1.] St. John never suggests to
+us the advocacy or intercession of saint or angel; with him God in
+Christ is all in all.
+
+I will only refer to one more example, that of St. James: the instance
+is equally to the point, and is strongly illustrative of the truth. This
+Apostle is anxious to impress on his fellow-Christians a due sense of
+the efficacy of our intercessions: "The effectual fervent prayer of a
+righteous man availeth much." [James v. 16.] He instances its power with
+God by the case of Elijah, a man so holy, that the Almighty suffered him
+not to pass through the regions of death and the grave, but translated
+him at once from this life to glory: "Elias was a man subject to like
+passions as we are, and he prayed that it might not rain; and it rained
+not on the earth by the space of three years and six months; and he
+prayed again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth brought forth her
+fruit." [James v. 17, 18.] And yet St. James is very far from suggesting
+the lawfulness or efficacy of any invocation to the hallowed spirit of
+this man, to whose prayer the elements and natural powers of the sky and
+the earth had been made obedient. He exhorts all men to pray, but it
+must be to God alone, and directly to God, without applying for the
+intervention of any mediators or intercessors from among angels or men.
+{53} "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth
+liberally to all men, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him; but
+let him ask in faith, nothing wavering." [James i. 5, 6.] Like the
+writer to the Hebrews, he would have us come ourselves "boldly" and
+directly "to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find
+grace to help in time of need."
+
+Surely, these Apostles, chosen vessels for conveying the truths of
+salvation throughout the world, knew well how the Almighty could best be
+approached by his children on earth; and had the invocation of saint or
+angel found a place in their creed, they would not have kept so
+important a truth from us.
+
+Before leaving this part of our inquiry, I would propose the patient and
+unprejudiced weighing of the import of two passages in the New
+Testament, often quoted on this subject; one in the Acts of the
+Apostles, the other in the Apocalypse.
+
+The holy Apostles Barnabas and Paul, by the performance of a striking
+miracle, had excited feelings of religious reverence and devotion among
+the people of Lystra, who prepared to offer sacrifice to them as two of
+their fabled deities. [Acts xiv. 11-18.] The indignant zeal with which
+these two holy men rushed forward to prevent such an act of impiety,
+however admirable and affecting, does not constitute the chief point for
+which reference is here made to this incident. They were men, still
+clothed with the tabernacle of the flesh, and the weakness of human
+nature; and the priests and people were ready to offer to them the
+wonted victims, the abomination of the heathen. Now, I am fully aware of
+the wide difference, in many {54} particulars, between such an act and
+the act of a Christian praying to their spirits after their departure
+hence, and supplicating them to intercede with the true God in his
+behalf: and on this difference Roman Catholic writers have maintained
+the total inapplicability of this incident to the present state of
+things. But, surely, if any such prayer to departed saints had been
+familiar to their minds, instead of repelling the religious address of
+the inhabitants of Lystra at once and for ever, they would have altered
+the tone of their remonstrance, and not have suppressed the truth when a
+good opportunity offered itself for imparting it. And, supposing that it
+was part of their commission to announce and explain the invocation of
+saints at all, on what occasion could an explanation of the just and
+proper invocation of angels and saints departed have been more
+appropriate in the Apostles, than when they were denouncing the
+unjustifiable offering of sacrifice to themselves while living? But
+whether the more appropriate place for such an announcement were at
+Lystra, in Corinth, at Athens, or at Rome, it matters not; nor whether
+it would have been more advantageously communicated by their oral
+teaching, or in their epistles. Doubtless, had the Apostles, by their
+example or teaching, sanctioned the invocation of saints and angels, in
+the course of fifty years or more after our blessed Saviour's
+resurrection, it would infallibly have appeared in some page or other of
+the New Testament. Instead of this the whole tenor of the Holy Volume
+breathes in perfect accordance with the spirit of the apostolical
+remonstrance at Lystra, to the fullest and utmost extent of its meaning,
+"We preach unto you that ye should turn from these vanities to serve the
+living God." {55}
+
+Of the other instance, it well becomes every Catholic Christian to
+ponder on the weight and cogency. John, the beloved disciple of our
+Lord, when admitted to view with his own eyes and hear with his mortal
+ears the things of heaven, rapt in amazement and awe, fell down to
+worship before the feet of the angel who showed him these things. [Rev.
+xxii. 8, 9.] If the adoration of angels were ever justifiable, surely it
+was then; and what a testimony to the end of the world would have been
+put upon record, had the adoration of an angel by the blessed John at
+such a moment, when he had the mysteries and the glories of heaven
+before him, been received and sanctioned. But what is the fact? "Then
+saith he to me, See thou do it not. I am thy fellow-servant, and of thy
+brethren the prophets, and of them who keep the sayings of this book.
+Worship God." I cannot understand the criticism by which the
+conclusiveness of this direct renouncement of all religious adoration
+and worship is attempted to be set aside. To my mind these words,
+uttered without any qualification at such a time, by such a being, to
+such a man, are conclusive beyond gainsaying. The interpretation put
+upon this transaction, and the words in which it is recorded, and the
+inference drawn from them by a series of the best divines, with St.
+Athanasius at their head, presents so entirely the plain common-sense
+view of the case to our minds, that all the subtilty of casuists, and
+all the ingenuity of modern refinements, will never be able to
+substitute any other in its stead. "The angel (such are the words of
+that ancient defender of the true faith), in the Apocalypse, forbids
+John, when desiring to worship him, saying, 'See thou {56} do it not; I
+am thy fellow-servant, and of thy brethren the prophets, and of them who
+keep the sayings of this book. Worship God.' Therefore, to be the object
+of worship belongs to God only; and this even the angels themselves
+know: though they surpass others in glory, but they are all creatures,
+and are not among objects of worship, but among those who worship the
+sovereign Lord." [Athan. Orat. 2. Cont. Ar. vol. i. p. 491.] To say that
+St. John was too fully illuminated by the Holy Spirit to do, especially
+a second time, what was wrong; and thence to infer that what he did was
+right, is as untenable as to maintain, that St. Peter could not,
+especially thrice, have done wrong in denying our Lord. He did wrong, or
+the angel would not have chided and warned him. And to say that the
+angel here forbade John personally to worship him, because he was a
+fellow-servant and one of the prophets; and thus that the prohibition
+only tended to exalt the prophetic character, not to condemn the worship
+of angels, is proved to be also a groundless assumption, from the
+angel's own words, who reckons himself as a fellow-servant with not St.
+John only, but all those also who keep the words of the book of
+God,--thus equally forbidding every faithful Christian to worship their
+fellow-servants the angels. They are almost the last words in the volume
+of inspired truth, and to me, together with those last words, they seem
+with "the voice of a great multitude, and of many waters, and of mighty
+thunderings," from the very throne itself of the Most High, to proclaim
+to every inhabiter of the earth, Fall down before no created being;
+adore no created being; pray to, invoke, call upon no created being,
+whether saint or angel: worship {57} and adore God only; pray to God
+only. Trust to his mercy; seek no other mediator or intercessor than his
+own only and blessed Son. "He who testifieth these things saith, Surely,
+I come quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus. The grace of our Lord
+Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen." [Rev. xxii. 20, 21.]
+
+Thus the New Testament, so far from mitigating the stringency of the
+former law, so far from countenancing any departure from the obligation
+of that code which limits religious worship to God alone, so far from
+suggesting to us invocation to sainted men, and to angels as
+intercessors with the eternal Giver of all good, reiterates the
+injunction, and declares, that invocation in order to be Christian must
+be addressed to God alone; and that there is one and only one Mediator
+between God and men, the man Jesus Christ, who is at the right hand of
+his Father, a merciful High Priest sympathizing with us in our
+infirmities, ever making intercession for us, able to save to the
+uttermost those who come unto God through Him.
+
+The present seems to be a convenient place for observing, that however
+the distinction is strongly insisted upon, or rather implicitly
+acquiesced in by many, which would admit of a worship or service called
+dulia (the Greek [Greek: douleia]) to saints and angels, and would limit
+the worship or service called latria ([Greek: latreia]) to the supreme
+God only, yet that such distinction has no ground whatever to rest upon
+beyond the will and the imagination of those who draw it. The two words
+are used in the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament, and in the
+original Greek of the {58} New promiscuously, without any such
+distinction whatever. The word which this distinction would limit to the
+supreme worship of the Most High, is used to express the bodily service
+paid by the vanquished to their conquerors, as well as the religious
+service paid by idolaters to their fabled deities, and by the true
+worshippers to the Most High. The word which this distinction would
+reserve for the secondary worship paid to saints and angels, is employed
+to express not only the service paid by man to man, but also the service
+and worship paid to God alone, even when mentioned in contradistinction
+to other worship. It will be necessary to establish this by one or two
+instances; and first as to "latria." One single chapter in the Book of
+Deuteronomy supplies us with instances of the word used in the three
+senses, of service to men, service to idols, and service to God, xxviii.
+36. 47, 48: "Because thou servedst [Greek: elatreusas] not the Lord thy
+God with joyfulness and gladness of heart; Therefore thou shalt serve
+[Greek: latreuseis] thine enemies which the Lord shall send against thee
+in hunger and in thirst and nakedness." "The Lord shall bring thee unto
+a nation which neither thou nor thy fathers have known; and there shalt
+thou serve [Greek: latreuseis] other gods, wood and stone." Next as to
+the word "dulia." The First Book of Samuel (called also the First of
+Kings) alone supplies us with instances of this word being used in each
+of the same three senses of service from man to man, from man to idols,
+and from man to his Maker and God. 1 Sam. xvii. 9. "Ye shall be our
+servants and serve [Greek: douleusite haemin] us." xii. 24. "Only fear
+the Lord, and serve [Greek: douleusate] him in truth with all your
+heart." xxvi. 19. {59} "They have driven me out from the inheritance of
+the Lord, saying, Go, serve[15] other gods."
+
+ [Footnote 15: [Greek: douleue]. In this case also the Vulgate
+ translates all the three passages alike by the same verb,
+ "servire."]
+
+It is worthy of remark, that the same word "dulia[16]" is employed, when
+the Lord by his prophet speaks of the most solemn acts of religious
+worship; not in general obedience only, but in the offerings and
+oblations of their holy things. Ezek. xx. 40. "In mine holy mountain, in
+the mountain of the height of Israel, saith the Lord God, there shall
+all the house of Israel, all of them in the land, serve me [Greek:
+douleusousi. Vulg: serviet.]; there will I accept them, and there will I
+require your offerings, and the first-fruits of your oblations, with all
+your holy things." St. Matthew also uses the same word when he records
+the saying of our blessed Lord, "Ye cannot serve God and mammon." [Matt.
+vi. 24.; Greek: douleuein. Vulg: servire.]
+
+ [Footnote 16: It is also remarkable that in all these cases,
+ whether the Septuagint employs the word "dulia," or "latria,"
+ the word in the Hebrew is precisely the same, [Hebrew: avad].
+ That in the fifth century the words were synonymous is evident
+ from Theodoret. I. 319. See Edit. Halle.--Index.]
+
+I will only detain you by one more example, drawn from two passages,
+which seems the more striking because each of the two words "dulia" and
+"latria" is used to imply the true worship of God in a person, who was
+changed from a state of alienation to a state of holiness. The first is
+in St. Paul's 1st Epistle to the Thessalonians, i. 9. "How ye turned to
+God from idols, to serve [Greek: douleuein theo zonti] the living and
+true God." The second is in Heb. ix. 14. "How much more shall the blood
+of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself {60} without
+spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve[17] the
+living God."
+
+ [Footnote 17: [Greek: latoeuein theo zonti.] In each of these
+ two cases the Vulgate uses "servire."]
+
+The word "hyperdulia," now used to signify the worship proper to the
+Virgin Mary, as being a worship of a more exalted character than the
+worship offered to saints and angels, archangels, and cherubim and
+seraphim, will not require a similar examination. The word was invented
+in later times, and has been used chiefly to signify the worship of the
+Virgin, and is of course found neither in the Scriptures, nor in any
+ancient classical or ecclesiastical author. {61}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SECTION I.--THE EVIDENCE OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.
+
+
+Before we enter upon the next branch of our proposed inquiry, allow me
+to premise that I am induced to examine into the evidence of Christian
+antiquity not by any misgiving, lest the testimony of Scripture might
+appear defective or doubtful; far less by any unworthy notion that God's
+word needs the additional support of the suffrages of man[18]. On the
+contrary, the voice of God in his revealed word is clear, certain, and
+indisputable, commanding the invocation of Himself alone in acts of
+religious worship, and condemning any such departure from that
+singleness of adoration, as they are {62} seduced into, who invoke
+saints and angels. And it is a fixed principle in our creed, that where
+God's written word is clear and certain, human evidence cannot be
+weighed against it in the balance of the sanctuary. When the Lord hath
+spoken, well does it become the whole earth to be silent before him;
+when the eternal Judge Himself hath decided, the witness of man bears on
+its very face the stamp of incompetency and presumption.
+
+ [Footnote 18: While some authors seem to go far towards the
+ substitution of the fathers for the written word of God, others
+ in their abhorrence of that excess have run into the opposite,
+ fancying, as it would seem, that they exalt the Divine oracles
+ just in the same proportion as they disparage the uninspired
+ writers of the Church. The great body of the Church of England
+ adhere to a middle course, and adopt that golden mean, which
+ ascribes to the written Word its paramount authority, from which
+ is no appeal, and yet honours Catholic tradition as the handmaid
+ of the truth.]
+
+For myself I can say (what I have good hope these pages will of
+themselves evince) that no one can value the testimony of Christian
+tradition within its own legitimate sphere more sincerely, or more
+highly, than the individual who is now soliciting your attention to the
+conclusions which he has himself drawn from it. When Scripture is
+silent, or where its meaning is doubtful, Catholic tradition is to me a
+guide, which I feel myself bound to follow with watchful care and
+submissive reverence.
+
+Now let it be for the present supposed, that instead of the oracles of
+God having spoken, as we believe them to have spoken, with a voice
+clear, strong, and uniform against the doctrine and practice of the
+invocation of saints and angels, their voices had been weak, doubtful,
+and vague; in other words, suppose in this case the question had been
+left by the Holy Scriptures an open question, then what evidence would
+have been deducible from the writings of the primitive Church? What
+testimony do the first years and the first ages after the canon of
+Scripture was closed, bear upon this point? And here I would repeat the
+principle of inquiry, proposed above for our adoption in the more
+important and solemn examination of the Holy Volume itself.--We ought to
+endeavour to ascertain what may {63} fairly and honestly be regarded as
+the real bearing of each author's remains, and not suffer the general
+tone and spirit of a writer to be counterbalanced by single expressions,
+which may be so interpreted as to convey an opposite meaning. Rather we
+should endeavour to reconcile with that general spirit and pervading
+tendency of a writer's sentiments any casual expressions which may admit
+of two acceptations. We adopt this principle in our researches into the
+remains of classical antiquity; we adopt the same principle in
+estimating the testimony of a living witness. In the latter case,
+indeed, the ingenuity of the adverse advocate is often exercised in
+magnifying the discrepancies between some minor facts or incidental
+expressions with the broad and leading assertions of the witness, with a
+view to invalidate his testimony altogether, or at least to weaken the
+impression made by it. But then a wise and upright judge, assured of the
+truth of the evidence in the main, and of the integrity of the
+individual, will not suffer unessential, apparent inconsistencies to
+stifle and bury the body of testimony at large, but will either extract
+from the witness what may account for them, or show them to be
+immaterial. Inviting, therefore, your best thoughts to this branch of
+our subject, I ask you to ascertain, by a full and candid process of
+induction, this important and interesting point,--Whether we of the
+Anglican Church, by religiously abstaining from the presentation, in
+word or in thought, of any thing approaching prayer or supplication,
+entreaty, request, or any invocation whatever, to any other being except
+God alone, do or do not tread in the steps of the first Christians, and
+adhere to the very pattern which they set; and whether members of the
+Church of Rome by addressing angel or saint in any form of invocation
+seeking {64} their aid, either by their intercession or otherwise, have
+not unhappily swerved decidedly and far from those same footsteps, and
+departed widely from that pattern?
+
+In one point of view it might perhaps be preferable to enter at once
+upon our investigation, without previously stating the conclusions to
+which my own inquiries have led; but, on the whole, I think it more fair
+to make that statement, in order, that having the inferences already
+drawn placed before the mind, the inquirer may in each case weigh the
+several items of evidence bearing upon them separately, and more justly
+estimate its whole weight collectively at the last.
+
+After then having examined the passages collected by the most celebrated
+Roman Catholic writers, and after having searched the undisputed
+original works of the primitive writers of the Greek and Latin Churches,
+the conclusion to which I came, and in which every day of further
+inquiry and deliberation confirms me more and more in this:--
+
+In the first place, negatively, that the Christian writers, through the
+first three centuries and more, never refer to the invocation of saints
+and angels as a practice with which they were familiar: that they have
+not recorded or alluded to any forms of invocation of the kind used by
+themselves or by the Church in their days; and that no services of the
+earliest times contain hymns, litanies, or collects to angels, or to the
+spirits of the faithful departed.
+
+In the second place, positively, that the principles which they
+habitually maintain and advocate are irreconcileable with such a
+practice.
+
+In tracing the history of the worship of saints and angels, we proceed
+(gradually, indeed, though by no {65} means at all periods, and through
+every stage, with equal rapidity,) from the earliest custom established
+and practised in the Church,--of addressing prayers to Almighty God
+alone for the sake of the merits of his blessed Son, the only Mediator
+and Intercessor between God and man,--to the lamentable innovation both
+of praying to God for the sake of the merits, and through the mediation
+of departed mortals, and of invoking those mortals themselves as the
+actual dispensers of the spiritual blessings which the suppliant seeks
+from above. It is not only a necessary part of our inquiry for
+ascertaining the very truth of the case; it is also curious and
+painfully interesting, to trace the several steps, one after another,
+beginning with the doctrine maintained by various early writers, both
+Greek and Latin, that the souls of the saints are not yet reigning with
+Christ in heaven, and ending with the anathema of the Council of Trent,
+against all who should maintain that doctrine; beginning with prayer and
+thanksgiving to Almighty God alone, and ending with daily prayers both
+to saints and angels; one deviation from the strict line of religious
+duty, and the pure singleness of Christian worship, successively gliding
+into another, till at length the whole of Christendom, with a few
+remarkable exceptions, was seen to acquiesce in public and private
+devotions, which, if proposed, the whole of Christendom would once with
+unanimity have rejected.
+
+Before I offer to you the result of my inquiries as to the progressive
+stages of degeneracy and innovation in the worship of Almighty God, I
+would premise two considerations:
+
+First, I would observe, that the soundness of my conclusion on the
+general points at issue does not depend at all on the accuracy of the
+arrangement of those stages {66} which I have adopted. Should any one,
+for example, think there is evidence that two or more of those
+progressive steps, which I have regarded as consecutive, were
+simultaneous changes, or that any one which I have ranked as subsequent
+took rather the lead in order of time, such an opinion would not tend in
+the least to invalidate my argument; the substantial and essential point
+at issue being this: Is the invocation of saints and angels, as now
+practised in the Church of Rome, agreeable to the primitive usage of the
+earliest Christians?
+
+Secondly, I would observe, that the places and occasions most favourable
+for witnessing and correctly estimating the changes and gradual
+innovations in the worship of those early times, are the tombs of the
+martyrs, and the Churches in which their remains were deposited; and at
+the periods of the annual celebration of their martyrdom, or in some
+instances at what was called their translation,--the removal, that is,
+of their mortal remains from their former resting-place to a church, for
+the most part dedicated to their memory. On these occasions the most
+extraordinary enthusiasm prevailed; sometimes the ardour of the
+worshippers, as St. Chrysostom [St. Chrys. Paris, 1718. Vol. xii. p.
+330.] tells us, approaching madness. But even at times of less
+excitement, by contemplating, immediately after his death, the acts and
+sufferings of the martyr, and recalling his words, and looks, and
+stedfast bearing, and exhorting each other to picture to themselves his
+holy countenance then fixed on them, his tongue addressing them, his
+sufferings before their eyes, encouraging all to follow his example,
+they began habitually to consider him as actually himself one of the
+faithful assembled round {67} his tomb. Hence they believed that he was
+praying with them as well as for them; that he heard their eulogy on his
+merits, and was pleased with the honours paid to his memory: hence they
+felt sure of his goodwill towards them, and his ability, as when on
+earth, to promote their welfare. Hence they proceeded, by a fatal step,
+first, to implore him to give them bodily relief from some present
+sufferings; then invoking him to plead their cause with God, and to
+intercede for the supply of their spiritual wants, and the ultimate
+salvation of their souls; and, lastly, they prayed to him generally as
+himself the dispenser of temporal and spiritual blessings.
+
+The following then is the order in which the innovations in Christian
+worship seem to have taken place, being chiefly introduced at the annual
+celebrations of the martyrs:--
+
+1st. In the first ages confession and prayer and praise were offered to
+the Supreme Being alone, and that for the sake of his Son our only
+Saviour and Advocate: when mention was made of saint or martyr, it was
+to thank God for the graces bestowed on his departed holy ones when on
+earth, and to pray to God for grace that we might follow their good
+examples, and attain, through Christ, to the same end and crown of our
+earthly struggles. This act of worship was usually accompanied by a
+homily setting forth the Christian excellences of the saint, and
+encouraging the survivors so to follow him, as he followed Christ.
+
+2nd. The second stage seems to have been a prayer to Almighty God, that
+He would suffer the supplications and intercessions[19] of angels and
+saints to prevail {68} with him, and bring down a blessing on their
+fellow-petitioners on earth; the idea having spread among enthusiastic
+worshippers, as I have already observed, that the spirits of the saints
+were suffered to be present around their tombs, and to join with the
+faithful in their addresses to the throne of grace.
+
+ [Footnote 19: The Greek word [Greek: presbeia], "embassy,"
+ employed on such occasions, is still used in some eastern
+ Churches in the same sense.]
+
+3rd. The third stage seems to have owed its origin to orators constantly
+dwelling upon the excellences of the saints in the panegyrics delivered
+over their remains, representing their constancy and Christian virtues
+as superhuman and divine, and as having conferred lasting benefits on
+the Church. By these benefits at first was meant the comfort and
+encouragement of their good example, and the honour procured to the
+religion of the cross by their bearing witness to its truth even unto
+death; but in process of time the habit grew of attaching a sort of
+mysterious efficacy to their merits; hence this third gradation in
+religious worship, namely, prayers to God that "He would hear his
+suppliants, and grant their requests for the sake of his martyred
+servant, and by the efficacy of that martyr's merits."
+
+4th. Hitherto, unauthorized and objectionable as the two last forms of
+prayer are, still the petitions in each case were directed to God alone.
+The next step swerved lamentably from that principle of worship, and the
+petitioners addressed their requests to angels and sainted men in
+heaven; at first, however, confining their petitions to the asking for
+their prayers and intercessions with Almighty God.
+
+5th. The last stage in this progressive degeneracy of Christian worship
+was to petition the saints and angels, directly and immediately
+themselves, at first for the temporal, and afterwards for the spiritual
+benefits which the petitioners desired to obtain from heaven. For it
+{69} is very curious, but not more curious than evident, that the
+worshippers seem for some time to have petitioned their saints for
+temporal and bodily benefits, before they proceeded to ask for spiritual
+blessings at their hands, or by their prayers. (See Basil. Oral. in
+Mamanta Martyrem.)
+
+Of these several gradations and stages we find traces in the records of
+Christian antiquity, after superstition and corruption had spread
+through Christian worship, and leavened the whole. Of all of them we
+have lamentable instances in the present ritual of the Church of Rome,
+as we shall see somewhat at large when we reach that division of our
+inquiry. But from the beginning it was not so. In the earliest ages we
+find only the first of these forms of worship exemplified, and it is the
+only form now retained in the Anglican Ritual; of which, among other
+examples, the following passage in the prayer for Christ's Church
+militant on earth supplies a beautiful specimen: "We bless Thy holy name
+for all Thy servants departed this life in Thy faith and fear;
+beseeching Thee to give us grace so to follow their good examples, that
+with them we may be partakers of Thy heavenly kingdom: Grant this, O
+Father, for Jesus Christ's sake, our only Mediator and Advocate. Amen."
+
+We now proceed to examine the invaluable remains of Christian antiquity,
+not for the purpose of testing the accuracy of the above catalogue of
+gradations _seriatim_ and in order of time; but to satisfy ourselves on
+the question, whether the invocation of saints and angels prevailed from
+the first in the Christian Church; or whether it was an innovation
+introduced after pagan superstition had begun to mingle its poisonous
+corruptions with the pure worship of {70} Almighty God. And here, I
+conceive, few persons will be disposed to doubt, that if the primitive
+believers were taught by the Apostles to address the saints reigning in
+heaven and the holy angels, and the Virgin Mother of our Lord, with
+adoration and prayers, the earliest Christian records must have
+contained clear and indisputable references to the fact, and that
+undesigned allusions to the custom would inevitably be found offering
+themselves to our notice here and there. I do not mean that we should
+expect to meet with full and explicit statements either of the doctrine
+or the practice of the primitive Church in this particular; much less
+such apologies and elaborate defences of the practice as abound to the
+overflow in later times. But, what is more satisfactory in proof of the
+general and established prevalence of any opinions or customs, we should
+surely find expressions incidentally occurring, which implied an
+habitual familiarity with such opinions or customs. In every record, for
+example, of primitive antiquity, from the very earliest of all,
+expressions are constantly meeting us which involve the doctrine of the
+ever-blessed Trinity, the atoning sacrifice of Christ's death, the
+influences of the Holy Spirit; habitual prayer and praise offered to the
+Saviour of the world, as very and eternal God; the holy Sacraments of
+Baptism and the Lord's Supper; with other tenets and practices of the
+Apostolic Church. It is impossible to study the remains of Christian
+antiquity without being assured beyond the reach of doubt, that such
+were the doctrines and practice of the universal Church from the days of
+the Apostles. Is the invocation of saints and angels and the blessed
+Virgin to be made an exception to this rule? Can it stand this test? The
+great anxiety and labour of Roman Catholic {71} writers to press the
+authors of every age to bear witness on their side in this behalf,
+proves that in their judgment no such exception is admissible. It is
+clearly beyond gainsaying, that if the present doctrine of the Church of
+Rome, with respect to the worship of angels and saints, as propounded by
+the Council of Trent; and if her present practice as set forth in her
+authorized liturgies and devotional services, and professed by her
+popes, bishops, clergy, and people, had been the doctrine and practice
+of the primitive Church, we should have found evident and indisputable
+traces of it in the earliest works of primitive antiquity, in the
+earliest liturgies, and in the forms of prayer and exhortations to
+prayer with which those works abound. It by no means follows that if
+some such allusions were partially discoverable, therefore the doctrines
+and practice must forthwith be pronounced to be apostolical; but if no
+such traces can be found, their absence bears witness that neither did
+those doctrines nor that practice exist. If, for example, through the
+remains of the first three centuries we could have discovered no trace
+of the doctrine or practice of holy Baptism and the Eucharist, we must
+have concluded that the doctrine and the practice were the offspring of
+later years. But when we read every where, in those remains,
+exhortations to approach those holy mysteries with a pure heart and
+faith unfeigned; when we find rules prescribed for the more orderly
+administration of the rites; in a word, when we perceive throughout as
+familiar references to these ordinances as could be now made by
+Catholics either of Rome or of England, while this would not of itself
+necessarily prove their divine origin, we should with equal plausibility
+question the existence of Jerusalem or Constantinople, or of David or
+Constantine, as we {72} should doubt the prevalence both of the doctrine
+and practice of the Church in these particulars, even from the Apostles'
+days.
+
+With these principles present to our minds, I now invite you to
+accompany me in a review of the testimonies of primitive Christian
+antiquity with regard to supplications and invocations of saints and
+angels, and of the blessed Virgin Mary.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II--CENTURY I.--THE EVIDENCE OF THE APOSTOLIC FATHERS.
+
+
+It will be necessary for the satisfaction of all parties, that we
+examine, in the first place, those ancient writings which are ascribed
+to an Apostle, or to fellow-labourers of the Apostles; familiarly known
+as the writings of the Apostolic Fathers. They are five in number,
+Barnabas, Clement, Hermas, Ignatius, and Polycarp. Many able writers, as
+well of the Roman as of the Anglican communion, have discussed at large
+the genuineness of these writings; and have come to very different
+results. Some critics are of opposite and extreme opinions, others
+ranging between them with every degree and shade of variation. Some of
+these works have been considered spurious; others have been pronounced
+genuine; though, even these have been thought to be, in many parts,
+interpolated. The question, however, of their genuineness, though deeply
+interesting in itself, will not affect their testimony with {73} regard
+to the subject before us[20]. They were all in existence before the
+Council of Nicaea; and we shall probably not be wrong in assigning to the
+first two a date at the very lowest computation not less remote than the
+middle of the second century; somewhere, it may be, at the furthest,
+about one hundred years after the death of our Lord. (A.D. 130-150.)
+With all their errors and blemishes and interpolations taken at the
+worst, after every reasonable deduction for defects in matter, taste,
+and style, the writings which are ascribed to the Apostolic Fathers are
+too venerable for their antiquity, too often quoted with reverence and
+affection by some who have been the brightest ornaments of the Christian
+Church, and possess too copious a store of genuine evangelical truth,
+sound principle, primitive simplicity, and pious sentiment, to be passed
+over with neglect by any Catholic Christian. The few extracts {74} made
+here will, I am assured, be not unacceptable to any one, who holds dear
+the religion of Christ[21].
+
+ [Footnote 20: I do not think it suitable in this address to
+ enter upon the difficult field of inquiry, whether all or which
+ of these works were the genuine productions of those whose names
+ they bear; and whether the Barnabas, Clement, and Hermas to
+ which three of them are ascribed, were the Barnabas, Clement,
+ and Hermas of whom express mention is made in the pages of Holy
+ Scripture. I have determined, in conducting my argument, to
+ affix to them in each case the lowest proposed antiquity. The
+ edition of Archbishop Wake, (who maintains the highest antiquity
+ for these works, though I have not here adopted his
+ translation,) may be consulted with much profit.
+
+ Did the question before us relate to the genuineness and dates
+ of these works, they could not, with any approach to fairness,
+ be all five placed without distinction under the same category.
+ The evidence for the genuineness of Clement, Ignatius in the
+ shorter copy, and Polycarp, is too valuable to be confounded
+ with that of the others, which are indisputably subject to much
+ greater doubt. But this question has only an incidental bearing
+ on our present inquiry, and will be well spared.]
+
+ [Footnote 21: The edition of the works of these Apostolic
+ Fathers used here is that of Cotelerius as revised by Le Clerc,
+ Antwerp, 1698.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE EPISTLE OF ST. BARNABAS.
+
+In the work entitled The Catholic Epistle of Barnabas, which was written
+probably by a Jew converted to the Christian faith, about the close of
+the first century, or certainly before the middle of the second[22], I
+have searched in vain for any thing like the faintest trace of the
+invocation of saint or angel. The writer gives directions on the subject
+of prayer; he speaks of angels as the ministers of God; he speaks of the
+reward of the righteous at the day of judgment; but he suggests not the
+shadow of a supposition, that he either held the doctrine himself which
+the Church of Rome now holds, or was aware of its existence among
+Christians. In his very beautiful but incomplete summary of Christian
+duty [Sect. 18, 19. p. 50, 51, 52.], which he calls "The Way of Light,"
+we perceive more than one most natural opening for reference to that
+doctrine, had it been familiar to his mind. In the midst indeed of his
+brief precepts of religious and moral obligation, he directs the
+Christian to seek out every day "the persons of the saints," but they
+are our fellow-believers on earth; those saints or holy ones, for
+administering to whose necessities, the Scripture assures us that God
+will not forget our work and labour of love [Heb. vi. 10.]: these the
+author bids the Christians {75} search out daily, for the purposes of
+religious intercourse, and of encouragement by the word.
+
+ [Footnote 22: Archbishop Wake considers this Epistle to have
+ been written by St. Barnabas to the Jews, soon after the
+ destruction of Jerusalem.]
+
+The following interesting extracts shall conclude our reference to this
+work:--
+
+"There are two ways of doctrine and authority, one of light, the other
+of darkness; and the difference between the two ways is great. Over the
+one are appointed angels of God, conductors of the light; over the
+other, angels of Satan: and the one (God) is Lord from everlasting to
+everlasting; the other (Satan) is ruler of the age of iniquity. The way
+of light is this ... Thou shalt love Him that made thee; thou shalt
+glorify Him that redeemed thee from death. Thou shalt be single in
+heart, and rich in spirit. Thou shalt not join thyself to those who are
+walking in the path of death. Thou shalt hate to do what is displeasing
+to God; thou shalt hate all hypocrisy. Thou shalt entertain no evil
+counsel against thy neighbour. Thou shalt not take away thy hand from
+thy son or thy daughter, but shalt teach them the fear of the Lord from
+their youth. Thou shalt communicate with thy neighbour in all things,
+and call not things thine own. Thou shalt not be of a froward tongue,
+for the mouth is the snare of death. To the very utmost of thy power
+keep thy soul chaste. Do not open thine hand to receive, and close it
+against giving. Thou shalt love as the apple of thine eye every one who
+speaketh to thee the word of the Lord. Call to remembrance the day of
+judgment, night and day. Thou shalt search out every day the persons of
+the saints [23]; both meditating by the word, {76} and proceeding to
+exhort them, and anxiously caring to save a soul by the word. Thou shalt
+preserve what thou hast received, neither adding thereto, nor taking
+therefrom. Thou shalt not come with a bad conscience to thy prayer."
+
+ [Footnote 23: There is much obscurity in the phraseology of this
+ passage: [Greek: ekzaetaeseis kath hekastaen haemeran ta prosopa
+ ton hagion kai dia logou skopion kai poreuomenos eis to
+ parakalesai, kai meleton eis sosai psuchaen to logo]. In the
+ corresponding exhortation among the Apostolical Constitutions
+ (book vii. ch. 9), the expression is, "Thou shalt seek the
+ person ([Greek: prosopon]) of the saints, that thou mayest find
+ rest (or find refreshment, or refresh thyself) ([Greek: in
+ epanapanae tois logois auton]) in their words." The author seems
+ evidently to allude to the reciprocal advantage derived by
+ Christians from religious intercourse.]
+
+The closing sentences contain this blessing: "Now God, who is the Lord
+of all the world, give to you wisdom, skill, understanding, knowledge of
+his judgments, with patience. And be ye taught of God; seeking what the
+Lord requires of you, and do it, that ye may be saved in the day of
+judgment.... The Lord of glory and of all grace be with your spirit.
+Amen."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SHEPHERD OF HERMAS.
+
+This work, which derives its title from the circumstance of an angelic
+teacher being represented as a shepherd, is now considered by many to
+have been the production of Hermas, a brother of Pius, Bishop of
+Rome[24] though others are persuaded that the work is of a much earlier
+date[25]. The author speaks of guardian angels and of evil angels, and
+he speaks much of prayer; but not the faintest hint shows itself
+throughout the three books, of which the work consists, that he had {77}
+any idea of prayer being addressed to any created being, whether saint
+or angel. On the evidence of this writer I will not detain you much
+longer than by the translation of a passage as it is found in the Greek
+quotation from Hermas, made by Antiochus (Homil. 85), on a point the
+most nearly, of all that I can find, connected with the immediate
+subject of our inquiry. The Latin is found in the second book, ninth
+mandate. It contains sound spiritual advice, of universal application.
+
+ [Footnote 24: Ecclesiastical writers refer the appointment of
+ Pius, as Bishop of Rome, to the year 153.]
+
+ [Footnote 25: Archbishop Wake thinks it not improbable that this
+ book was written by the same Hermas, of whom mention is made by
+ St. Paul.]
+
+"Let us then remove from us double-heartedness and faint-heartedness,
+and never at all doubt of supplicating any thing from God; saying within
+ourselves, 'How can I, who have been guilty of so many sins against Him,
+ask of the Lord and receive?' But with thine whole heart turn to the
+Lord, and ask of Him without doubting; and thou shalt know his great
+mercy, that He will not forsake thee, but will fulfil the desire of thy
+soul. For God is not as men are, a rememberer of evil, but is Himself
+one who remembers not evil, and is moved with compassion towards his
+creature. Do thou, therefore, cleanse thy heart of doubt, and ask of
+Him, and thou shalt receive thy request. But when thou doubtest, thou
+shalt not receive. For they who doubt towards God are the
+double-hearted, and shall receive nothing whatever of their desires. For
+those who are whole in the faith, ask every thing, trusting in the Lord,
+and they receive because they ask nothing doubting. [See St. James i.
+6.] And if thou shouldest be tardy in receiving, do not doubt in thy
+mind because thou dost not receive soon the request of thy soul. For the
+cause of the tardiness of thy receiving is some trial, or some
+transgression which thou knowest not of. Do thou then {78} not cease to
+offer the request of thy soul, and thou shalt receive it. But if thou
+grow faint in asking, accuse thyself, and not the Giver. For
+double-heartedness is a daughter of the devil, and works much mischief
+towards the servants of God. Do thou, therefore, take to thyself the
+faith that is strong."
+
+In the twelfth section of the ninth Similitude, in the third book, in
+the midst of much to the same import, and of much, too, which is strange
+and altogether unworthy of the pen from which the previous quotation
+proceeded, he thus writes, as the Latin records his words, the Greek of
+this passage having been lost.
+
+"These all are messengers to be reverenced for their dignity. By these,
+therefore, as it were by a wall, the Lord is girded round. But the gate
+is the Son of God, who is the only way to God. For no one shall enter in
+to God except by his Son." [Book iii. Simil. 2.]
+
+On the subject of prayer, I cannot refrain from referring you to a
+beautiful similitude, illustrative of the powerful and beneficial
+effects of the intercession of Christians for each other. The author
+compares a rich man, abounding in deeds of charity, to a vine full of
+fruit supported by an elm. The elm seems not to bear fruit at all; but
+by supporting the vine, which, without that support, would bear no fruit
+to perfection, it may be said to bear fruit itself. So the poor man, who
+has nothing to give in return for the rich man's fruits of charity,
+beyond the support which his prayers and praises ascending to God in his
+behalf will obtain, confers a far more substantial benefit on the rich
+man than the most liberal outpouring of alms from the rich can confer on
+the poor. [Ibid.] Yet the writer, who {79} had formed such strong
+notions of the benefits mutually obtained by the prayers of Christians
+for each other, says not a word about the intercession of saints and
+angels, nor of our invoking them. He will not suffer us to be deterred
+by any consciousness of our own transgressions from approaching God
+Himself, directly and immediately ourselves; but He bids us draw near
+ourselves to the throne and mercy seat of our heavenly Father.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ST. CLEMENT, BISHOP OF ROME.
+
+It is impossible to read the testimony borne by Eusebius, and other most
+ancient writers, to the character and circumstances of Clement, without
+feeling a deep interest in whatever production of his pen may have
+escaped the ravages of time. "Third from the Apostles," says Eusebius,
+"Clement obtained the bishopric of Rome; one who had seen the Apostles
+and conversed with them, and had still the sound of their preaching in
+his ears, and their tradition before his eyes;--and not he alone, for
+many others[26] at that time were still living, who had been taught by
+the Apostles. In the time of this Clement, no small schism having arisen
+among the brethren in Corinth, the Church in Rome sent a most important
+letter to the Corinthians, urging them to return to peace, renewing {80}
+their faith, and [reminding them of] the tradition which had been so
+lately received from the Apostles." [Euseb. Eccl. Hist. v. c. 6.]
+
+ [Footnote 26: See St. Paul to the Philippians, iv. 3. "And I
+ entreat thee also, true yoke-fellow, help those women which
+ laboured with me in the gospel, with Clement also, and with
+ other my fellow-labourers, whose names are in the book of
+ life."]
+
+Of the many works which have been attributed to Clement, it is now
+generally agreed, that one, and only one, can be safely received as
+genuine, whilst some maintain that even that one is not altogether free
+from interpolations, if not itself spurious[27]. But though we must
+believe the other works to have been assigned improperly to Clement; yet
+I have not thought it safe to pass them by unexamined, both because some
+of them are held in high estimation by writers of the Church of Rome,
+and especially because whatever pen first composed them, of their very
+great antiquity there can be entertained no reasonable doubt. Indeed,
+the Apostolical Canons, and the Apostolical Constitutions, both ascribed
+to Clement as their author, acting under the direction of the Apostolic
+Council, stand first among the records of the Councils received by the
+Church of Rome.
+
+ [Footnote 27: Archbishop Wake concludes that this first Epistle
+ was written shortly after the end of Nero's persecution, and
+ before A.D. 70.]
+
+To Clement's first Epistle to the Corinthians, now regarded by many as
+the only genuine work of that primitive writer, the date of which is
+considered by many to be about A.D. 90, Jerome bears this very
+interesting testimony in his book on illustrious men:
+
+"He, Clement, wrote in the person of the Church of Rome, to the Church
+in Corinth, a very useful epistle, which is publicly read in some
+places; in its character agreeing with St. Paul's Epistle to the
+Hebrews, not only in the sense, but even in the words: and indeed the
+resemblance is very striking in each." [Catalogus Scriptorum
+Ecclesiasticorum, Jeron., vol. iv, part ii. p. 107, edit. Benedict.
+Paris, 1706.] {81}
+
+It is impossible to read this Epistle of one of the earliest bishops of
+Christ's flock in the proper frame of mind, without spiritual
+edification. A tone of primitive simplicity pervades it, which is quite
+delightful. His witness to the redemption by the atoning sacrifice of
+Christ's death, and to the life-giving influences of the Spirit of
+grace, is clear, repeated, and direct. His familiar acquaintance with
+the ancient Scriptures is very remarkable; though we might not always
+acquiesce in the critical accuracy of his application. His reference to
+the Epistles written by St. Paul to the same Church at Corinth that he
+was then addressing, affords one of those unobtrusive and undesigned
+collateral evidences to the Holy Scriptures, which are as abundant in
+the primitive writings, as they are invaluable. No one can read this
+Epistle of Clement, without acquiescing in the expression of Jerome,
+that it is "very admirable."
+
+Perhaps in the present work the Epistle of Clement becomes even more
+interesting from the circumstance of his having been a bishop of the
+Church founded by the Apostles themselves in the very place where that
+Church exists, to whose members this inquiry is more especially
+addressed. In his writings I have searched diligently for every
+expression which might throw light upon the opinions and practice either
+of the author or of the Church in whose name he wrote; of the Church
+which he addressed, or of the Catholic Church at large to which he
+refers, on the subject of our inquiry. So far, however, from any word
+occurring, which could be brought to bear in favour of the adoration of
+saints and angels, or of any supplication to them for their succour or
+their prayers, the peculiar turn and character of his Epistle in many
+parts seems to supply {82} more than negative evidence against the
+prevalence of any such belief or practice. Clement speaks of angels; he
+speaks of the holy men of old, who pleased God, and were blessed, and
+were taken to their reward; he speaks of prayer; he urges to prayer; he
+specifies the object of our prayers; he particularizes the subjects of
+our prayers; but there is not the most distant allusion to the saints
+and angels as persons to whom supplications could be addressed. Pray for
+yourselves (such are the sentiments of this holy man); pray for your
+brethren who have fallen from their integrity; pray to God Almighty, for
+the sake of his Son, and your prayer will be heard and granted. Of any
+other intercessor or advocate, angel, saint, or Virgin Mother; of any
+other being to whom the invocations of the faithful should be offered,
+Clement seems to have had no knowledge. Could this have been so, if
+those who received the Gospel from the very fountain-head had been
+accustomed to pray to those holy men who had finished their course on
+earth, and were gone to their reward in heaven? Clement invites us to
+contemplate Enoch, and Abraham, and David, and Elijah, and Job, with
+many of their brethren in faith and holiness; he bids us look to them
+with reverence and gratitude, but it is only to imitate their good
+examples. He tells us to think of St. Paul and St. Peter and their
+brethren in faith and holiness; but it is in order to listen to their
+godly admonitions, and to follow them in all pious obedience to the will
+of our heavenly Father, as they followed Christ. I must content myself
+with a very few brief extracts from this Epistle[28]:
+
+ [Footnote 28: I am induced to mention here that two Epistles,
+ ascribed to St. Clement, written in Arabic, and now appended to
+ Wetstein's Greek Testament (Amsterdam, 1751), are believed by
+ many to be genuine, whilst others say they are spurious. At all
+ events they are productions of the earliest times. The
+ manuscript was procured at Constantinople. I have examined the
+ Latin translation carefully, and in some points submitted my
+ doubts to a very learned Syriac scholar. The general subject is
+ the conduct of those who have professed celibacy, whilst of the
+ invocation of saints no trace whatever is to be found. The
+ passages most closely bearing on the point before us are to the
+ following effect:
+
+ The writer urges Christians to be careful to maintain good
+ works, especially in the cause of charity, visiting the sick and
+ afflicted, praying with them, and praying for them, and
+ persevering always in prayer; asking and seeking of God in joy
+ and watchfulness, without hatred or malice. In the Lord's
+ husbandry, he says, it well becomes us to be good workmen, who
+ are like the Apostles, imitating the Father, the Son, and the
+ Holy Ghost, who are ever anxious for the salvation of men.
+
+ "Therefore (he adds, at the close of the first of these
+ Epistles) let us look to and imitate those faithful ones, that
+ we may behave ourselves as is meet in the Lord. So shall we
+ serve the Lord, and please him, in righteousness and justice
+ without a stain. Finally, farewell in the Lord, and rejoice in
+ the Lord, all ye holy ones. Peace and joy be with you from God
+ the Father, by Jesus Christ our Lord."] {83}
+
+Ch. 21. "Take heed, beloved, lest the many loving-kindnesses of the Lord
+prove our condemnation, if we do not live as is worthy of him, nor do
+with one accord what is good and well-pleasing in his sight.... Let us
+consider how nigh to us he is, and that nothing of our thoughts or
+reasonings is concealed from him. Justice it is that we should not
+become deserters from his will.... Let us venerate the Lord Jesus, whose
+blood was given for us."
+
+Ch. 29. "Let us then approach him in holiness of soul, lifting up holy
+and undefiled hands towards him; loving our merciful and tender Father
+who hath made us a portion of his elect." {84}
+
+Ch. 36. "This is the way, beloved, in which we find Jesus Christ our
+salvation, the chief-priest of our offerings, our protector, and the
+succourer of our weakness. By him let us look stedfastly to the heights
+of heaven; by him let us behold his most high and spotless face: by him
+the eyes of our heart are opened; by him our ignorant and darkened minds
+shoot forth into his marvellous light; by him the Supreme Governor
+willed that we should taste immortal knowledge: who, being the
+brightness of his magnificence, is so much greater than the angels, as
+he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they."
+
+Ch. 49. "He who hath love in Christ, let him keep the commandments of
+Christ. Who can tell of the bond of the love of God? The greatness of
+his goodness who can adequately express?... Love unites us to God.... By
+love the Lord took us; by the love which he had for us Christ our Lord
+gave his blood for us by the will of God, and his flesh for our flesh,
+and his life for our lives."
+
+Ch. 56. "Let us pray for those who are in any transgression, that
+meekness and humility may be granted to them; that they may submit, not
+to us, but to the will of God; for thus to them will the remembrance
+towards God and the saints, with mercies, be fruitful and perfect[29]."
+
+ [Footnote 29: The original is obscure, and has been variously
+ rendered, [Greek: outos gar estai autois egkarpos kai teleia hae
+ pros ton theon kai tous hagious met oiktirmon mneia.] The Editor
+ refers his readers to Rom. xii. 13. "Distributing to the
+ necessity of saints." The received translation is this, "Sic
+ enim erit ipsis fructuosa et perfecta quae est apud Deum et
+ sanctos cum misericordia recordatio."]
+
+Ch. 58. "The all-seeing God, the Sovereign Ruler {85} of spirits, and
+the Lord of all flesh, who hath chosen the Lord Jesus, and us through
+him, to be a peculiar people; grant to every soul that calleth on his
+glorious and holy name, faith, fear, peace, patience, long-suffering,
+self-control, purity, and temperance, to the good pleasure of his name,
+through our high-priest and protector Jesus Christ; through whom to him
+be glory and majesty, dominion and honour, now and for ever and ever,
+world without end. Amen."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT IGNATIUS.
+
+This martyr to the truth as it is in Jesus sealed that truth with his
+blood about seventy years after the death of our Lord. From Antioch in
+Syria, of which place he was bishop, he was sent to the imperial city,
+Rome; and there he ended his mortal career by a death which he had long
+expected, and which he was prepared to meet not only with resignation to
+the Divine will, but even with joy and gladness. His Epistles are
+written with much of the florid colouring of Asiatic eloquence; but they
+have all the raciness of originality, and they glow with that Christian
+fervour and charity which compels us to love him as a father and a
+friend, a father and friend in Christ. The remains of this apostolic
+father I have carefully studied, with the single view of ascertaining
+whether any vestige, however faint, might be traced in him of the
+invocation of saints and angels; but I can find none. Neither here, nor
+in the case of any of the apostolical fathers, whose remains we are
+examining, have I contented myself with merely ascertaining that they
+bear no direct and palpable evidence; I have always endeavoured to find,
+and then thoroughly to sift, any expressions which might with {86} the
+slightest plea of justification be urged in testimony of primitive
+belief and practice sanctioning the invocation of saints. I find none.
+Brethren of the Church of Rome, search diligently for yourselves; "I
+speak as to wise men: Judge ye what I say."
+
+The remains of Ignatius offer to us many a passage on which a Christian
+pastor would delight to dwell: but my province here is not to recommend
+his works to the notice of Christians; I am only to report the result of
+my inquiries touching the matter in question; and as bearing on that
+question, the following extracts will not be deemed burdensome in this
+place:--
+
+In his Epistle to the Ephesians, exhorting Christians to united prayer,
+he says, "For if the prayer of one or two possesses such strength, how
+much more shall the prayer both of the bishop and of the whole Church?"
+[Page 13. Sec. 5-7.] "For there is one physician of a corporeal and a
+spiritual nature, begotten and not begotten; become God in the flesh,
+true life in death, both from Mary and from God; first liable to
+suffering, and then incapable of suffering." [In the majority of the
+manuscripts the reading is, "in an immortal true life."]
+
+Here we must observe that these Epistles of Ignatius have come down to
+us also in an interpolated form, abounding indeed with substitutions and
+additions, but generally resembling paraphrases of the original text. Of
+the general character of that supposititious work, two passages
+corresponding with our quotations from the genuine productions of
+Ignatius may give a sufficiently accurate idea. The first passage above
+quoted is thus paraphrased: "For if the prayer of one or two possesses
+{87} such strength that Christ stands among them, how much more shall
+the prayer both of the bishop and of the whole Church, ascending with
+one voice to God, induce him to grant all their requests made in Jesus
+Christ?" [Page 47. c. 5.] The paraphrase of the second is more full:
+"Our physician is the only true God, ungenerated and unapproachable; the
+Lord of all things, but the Father and Generator of the only-begotten
+Son. We have also as our physician our Lord God, Jesus Christ, who was
+before the world, the only-begotten Son and the Word, but also
+afterwards man of the Virgin Mary; 'for the Word was made flesh.' He who
+was incorporeal, now in a body; he who could not suffer, now in a body
+capable of suffering; he who was immortal in a mortal body, life in
+corruption--in order that he might free our immortal souls from death
+and corruption, and heal them, diseased with ungodliness and evil
+desires as they were." [Page 48. c. 7.]
+
+It must here be observed, that though these are indisputably not the
+genuine works of Ignatius, but were the productions of a later age, yet
+no trace is to be found in them of the doctrine, or practice, of the
+invocation of saints. In this point of view their testimony is nothing
+more nor less than that of an anonymous paraphrast, who certainly had
+many opportunities of referring to that doctrine and practice; but who
+by his total silence seems to have been as ignorant of them as the
+author himself whose works he is paraphrasing.
+
+To return to his genuine works: In his Epistle to the Magnesians we find
+these expressions: "For as the Lord did nothing without the Father,
+being one with {88} him, neither by himself, nor by his Apostles; so
+neither do ye any thing without the bishop and priests, nor attempt to
+make any thing appear reasonable to yourselves individually. But at one
+place be there one prayer, and one supplication, one mind, one hope in
+love, in blameless rejoicing: Jesus Christ is one; than which nothing is
+better. All, then, throng as to one temple, as to one altar, as to one
+Jesus Christ, who proceeded from one Father, and is in one, and returned
+to one." [Page 19. Sec. 7.] Again he says, "Remember me in your prayers,
+that I may attain to God. I am in need of your united prayer in God, and
+of your love."
+
+In his Epistle to the Trallians, he expresses himself in words to which
+no Anglican Catholic would hesitate to respond: "Ye ought to comfort the
+bishop, to the honour of God, and of Jesus Christ, and of the Apostles."
+[Page 25. Sec. 12.] He speaks in this Epistle with humility and reverence
+of the powers and hosts of heaven; but he makes no allusion to any
+religious worship or invocation of them.
+
+The following extract is from his Epistle to the Philadelphians: "My
+brethren, I am altogether poured forth in love for you; and in exceeding
+joy I make you secure; yet not I, but Jesus Christ, bound in whom I am
+the more afraid, as being already seized[30]; but your prayer to God
+will perfect me, that I may obtain the lot mercifully assigned to me.
+Betaking myself to the Gospel as to the flesh of Jesus, and to the
+Apostles as the presbytery of the Church; let us also love the prophets,
+because they also have proclaimed the Gospel, and hoped in him, and
+waited for him; in whom also {89} trusting, they were saved in the unity
+of Jesus Christ, being holy ones worthy of love and admiration, who have
+received testimony from Jesus Christ, and are numbered together in the
+Gospel of our common hope." [Page 32. Sec. 5.]
+
+ [Footnote 30: This clause is very obscure, and perhaps
+ imperfect.]
+
+I am induced to add the paraphrase on this passage also. "My brethren, I
+am very much poured out in loving you, and with exceeding joy I make you
+secure; not I, but by me, Jesus Christ, in whom bound I am the more
+afraid. For I am yet not perfected, but your prayer to God will perfect
+me; so that I may obtain that to which I was called, flying to the
+Gospel as the flesh of Jesus Christ, and to the Apostles as the
+presbytery of the Church. And the prophets also I love, as persons who
+announce Christ, as partaking of the same spirit with the Apostles. For
+just as the false prophets and false apostles have drawn one and the
+same wicked and deceitful and seducing spirit, so also the prophets and
+the apostles, one and the same holy spirit, good, leading, true, and
+instructing. For one is the God of the Old and the New Testament. One is
+Mediator between God and man, for the production of the creatures endued
+with reason and perception, and for the provision of what is useful, and
+adapted to them: and one is the Comforter who wrought in Moses and the
+prophets and the apostles. All the saints therefore were saved in
+Christ, hoping in him, and waiting for him; and through him they
+obtained salvation, being saints worthy of love and of admiration,
+having obtained a testimony from Jesus Christ in the Gospel of our
+common hope." [Page 81. Sec. 5.]
+
+In his Epistle to the Romans he speaks to them of his own prayer to God,
+and repeatedly implores them {90} to pray for him. "Pray to Christ for
+me, that by these instruments [the teeth of the wild beasts] I may
+become a sacrifice of God. I do not, as Peter and Paul, command you:
+they were Apostles, I am a condemned man. They were free; but I am still
+a servant. Yet if I suffer, I shall become the freedman of Jesus Christ,
+and shall rise again free: and now in my bonds I learn to covet
+nothing." [Page 28. Sec. 4.] Again he says, "Remember the Church in Syria
+in your prayers." [Page 30. Sec. 9.] He prays for his fellow-labourers in
+the Lord: he implores them to approach the throne of grace with
+supplications for mercy on his own soul. Of prayer to saint or angel he
+says nothing. Of any invocation offered to them by himself or his
+fellow-believers, Ignatius appears entirely ignorant.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT POLYCARP.
+
+The only remaining name among those, whom the Church has reverenced as
+apostolical fathers, is the venerable Polycarp. He suffered martyrdom by
+fire, at a very advanced age, in Smyrna, about one hundred and thirty
+years after his Saviour's death. Of Polycarp, the apostolical bishop of
+the Catholic Church of Smyrna, only one Epistle has survived. It is
+addressed to the Philippians. In it he speaks to his brother Christians
+of prayer, constant, incessant prayer; but the prayer of which he speaks
+is supplication addressed only to God [31]. He marks out for our
+imitation the good example of St. Paul and the other Apostles; assuring
+us that they had not run in vain, {91} but were gone to the place
+prepared for them by the Lord, as the reward of their labours. But not
+one word does he utter bearing upon the invocation of saints in prayer;
+he makes no allusion to the Virgin Mary.
+
+ [Footnote 31: [Greek: deaesesin aitoumenoi ton pantepoptaen
+ Theon]. Sect. 7.]
+
+Before we close our examination of the recorded sentiments of the
+apostolical fathers on the immediate subject of our inquiry, we must
+refer, though briefly, to the Epistle generally received as the genuine
+letter from the Church of Smyrna to the neighbouring Churches, narrating
+the martyrdom of Polycarp. It belongs, perhaps, more strictly to this
+place than to the remains of Eusebius, because, together with the
+sentiments of his contemporaries who witnessed his death and dictated
+the letter, it purports to contain the very words of the martyr himself
+in the last prayer which he ever offered upon earth. With some
+variations from the copy generally circulated, this letter is preserved
+in the works of Eusebius. [Euseb. Paris, 1628, dedicated to the
+Archbishop by Franciscus Vigerus.] On the subject of our present
+research the evidence of this letter is not merely negative. So far from
+countenancing any invocation of saint or martyr, it contains a
+remarkable and very interesting passage, the plain common-sense
+rendering of which bears decidedly against all exaltation of mortals
+into objects of religious worship. The letter, however, is too well
+known to need any further preliminary remarks; and we must content
+ourselves with such references and extracts as may appear to bear most
+directly on our subject.
+
+"The Church of God, which is in Smyrna, to the Church in Philomela, and
+to all the branches [Greek: paroikais] {92} of the holy Catholic Church
+dwelling in any place, mercy, peace, and love of God the Father, and our
+Lord Jesus Christ be multiplied." [Book i. Hist. iv. c. xv. p. 163.]
+
+"The Proconsul, in astonishment, caused it to be proclaimed thrice,
+Polycarp has confessed himself to be a Christian. On this they all
+shouted, that the Proconsul should let a lion loose on Polycarp. But the
+games were over, and that could not be done: they then with one accord
+insisted on his being burnt alive."
+
+Polycarp, before his death, offered this prayer, or rather perhaps we
+should call it this thanksgiving, to God for his mercy in thus deeming
+him worthy to suffer death for the truth, "Father of thy beloved and
+blessed Son Jesus Christ, by whom we have received our knowledge
+concerning thee, the God of angels and power, and of the whole creation,
+and of the whole family of the just, who live before thee; I bless thee
+because thou hast deemed me worthy of this day and this hour to receive
+my portion among the number of the martyrs, in the cup of Christ, to the
+resurrection both of soul and body in the incorruption of the Holy
+Ghost; among whom may I be received before thee this day in a rich and
+acceptable sacrifice, even as thou, the true God, who canst not lie,
+foreshowing and fulfilling, hast beforehand prepared. For this, and for
+all I praise thee, I bless thee; I glorify thee, through the eternal
+high-priest Jesus Christ thy beloved Son, through whom to thee, with him
+in the Holy Ghost, be glory both now and for future ages. Amen."
+
+(I cannot help suggesting a comparison between the prayer of this
+primitive martyr bound to the stake, with the prayer of Thomas Becket,
+of Canterbury, as stated in the ancient services for his day, when he
+was murdered in his own cathedral, to which we shall hereafter refer at
+length. The comparison will impress us with the difference between
+religion and superstition, between the purity of primitive Christian
+worship, and the unhappy corruptions of a degenerate age. "To God and
+the Blessed Mary, and Saint Dionysius, and the holy patrons of this
+Church, I commend myself and the Church.") {93}
+
+After his death, the narrative proceeds, "But the envious adversary of
+the just observed the honour put upon the greatness of his testimony,
+[or of his martyrdom [Greek: to megethos autou taes marturias],] and his
+blameless life from the first, and knowing that he was now crowned with
+immortality, and the prize of undoubted victory, resisted, though many
+of us desired to take his body, and have fellowship with his holy flesh.
+Some then suggested to Nicetes, the father of Herod, and brother of
+Dalce, to entreat the governor not to give his body, 'Lest,' said he,
+'leaving the crucified One they should begin to worship this man [Greek:
+sebein];' and this they said at the suggestion and importunity of the
+Jews, who also watched us when we would take the body from the fire.
+This they did, not knowing that we can never either leave Christ, who
+suffered for the salvation of all who will be saved in all the world, or
+worship any other." [The Paris translation adds "ut Deum."] "For him
+being the Son of God we worship [Greek: proskunumen], but the martyrs,
+as disciples and imitators of our Lord, we worthily love[32], because of
+their pre-eminent [Greek: anuperblaeton] good-will towards their {94}
+own king and teacher, with whom may we become partakers and
+fellow-disciples."
+
+ [Footnote 32: [Greek: axios agapomen]. Ruffinus translates it by
+ "diligimus et veneramur," and it is so quoted by Bellarmin.]
+
+"The centurion, seeing the determination of the Jews, placed him in the
+midst, and burnt him as their manner is. And thus we collecting his
+bones, more valuable than precious stones, and more esteemed than gold,
+we deposited them where it was meet. There, as we are able, collecting
+ourselves together in rejoicing and gladness, the Lord will grant to us
+to observe the birth-day of his martyrdom, for the remembrance of those
+who have before undergone the conflict, and for exercise and preparation
+of those who are to come." [Greek: hos dunaton haemin sunagomenois en
+agalliasei kai chara parexei ho Kurios epitelein taen tou martyriou
+autou haemeran genethlion, eis te ton proaethlaekoton mnaemaen, kai ton
+mellonton askaesin te kai hetoimasian.]
+
+In this relic of primitive antiquity, we have the prayer of a holy
+martyr, at his last hour, offered to God alone, through Christ alone.
+Here we find no allusion to any other intercessor; no commending of the
+dying Christian's soul to saint or angel. Here also we find an explicit
+declaration, that Christians offered religious worship to no one but
+Christ, whilst they loved the martyrs, and kept their names in grateful
+remembrance, and honoured even their ashes when the spirit had fled.
+Polycarp pleads no other merits; he seeks no intercession; he prays for
+no aid, save only his Redeemer's. Here too we find, that the place of a
+martyr's burial was the place which the early Christians loved to
+frequent; but then we are expressly told with what intent they met
+there,--not, as in later times, to invoke the departed spirit of the
+martyr, but to call to mind, in grateful remembrance, the sufferings of
+those who had already endured the awful struggle; and by {95} their
+example to encourage and prepare other soldiers of the cross thereafter
+to fight the good fight of faith; assured that they would be more than
+conquerors through Him who loved them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have now examined those works which are regarded by us all, whether
+of the Roman or Anglican Church, as the remains of apostolical
+fathers,--Christians who, at the very lowest calculation, lived close
+upon the Apostles' time, and who, according to the firm conviction of
+many, had all of them conversed with the Apostles, and heard the word of
+truth from their mouths. I do from my heart rejoice with you, that these
+holy men bear direct, clear, and irrefragable testimony to those
+fundamental truths which the Church of Rome and the Church of England
+both hold inviolate--the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, with its
+essential and inseparable concomitants, the atonement by the blood of a
+crucified Redeemer, and the vivifying and sanctifying influences of the
+Holy Spirit.
+
+Supposing for a moment no trace of such fundamental doctrines could be
+discovered in these writings, would not the absence of such vestige have
+been urged by those who differ from us, as a strong argument that the
+doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity was an innovation of a later date;
+and would not such an argument have been urged with reason? How, in
+plain honesty, can we avoid coming to the same conclusion on the subject
+of the invocation of saints? If the doctrine and the practice of praying
+to saints, or to angels, for their succour, or even their intercession,
+had been known {96} and recognised, and approved and acted upon by the
+Apostles, and those who were the very disciples of the Apostles, not
+only deriving the truth from their written works, but having heard it
+from their own living tongue,--in the nature of things would not some
+plain, palpable, intelligible, and unequivocal indications of it have
+appeared in such writings as these; writings in which much is said of
+prayer, of intercessory prayer, of the one object of prayer, of the
+subjects of prayer, of the nature of prayer, the time and place of
+prayer, the spirit in which we are to offer prayer, and the persons for
+whom we ought to pray? Does it accord with common sense, and common
+experience, with what we should expect in other cases, with the analogy
+of history, and the analogy of faith, that we should find a profound and
+total silence on the subject of any prayer or invocation to saints and
+angels, if prayer or invocation of saints and angels had been
+recognised, approved, and practised by the primitive Church?
+
+At the risk of repetition, or surplusage, I would beg to call your
+attention to one point in this argument. I am far from saying that no
+practice is apostolical which cannot be proved from the writings of
+these apostolical fathers: that would be a fallacy of an opposite kind.
+I ground my inference specifically and directly on the fact, that these
+writers are full, and copious, and explicit, and cogent on the nature
+and duty of prayer and supplications, as well for public as for private
+blessings; and of intercessions by one Christian for another, and for
+the whole race of mankind no less than for mercy on himself; and yet
+though openings of every kind palpably offered themselves for a natural
+introduction of the subject, there is in no one single instance any
+reference or allusion to the {97} invocation of saint or angel, as a
+practice either approved or even known.
+
+When indeed I call to mind the general tendency of the natural man to
+multiply to himself the objects of religious worship, and to create, by
+the help of superstition, and the delusive workings of the imagination,
+a variety of unearthly beings whose wrath he must appease, or whose
+favour he may conciliate; when I reflect how great is the temptation in
+unenlightened or fraudulent teachers to accommodate the dictates of
+truth to the prejudices and desires of those whom they instruct, my
+wonder is rather that Christianity was so long preserved pure and
+uncontaminated in this respect, than that corruptions should gradually
+and stealthily have mingled themselves with the simplicity of Gospel
+worship. That tendency is plainly evinced by the history of every nation
+under heaven: Greek and Barbarian, Egyptian and Scythian, would have
+their gods many, and their lords many. From one they would look for one
+good; on another they would depend for a different benefit, in mind,
+body, and estate. Some were of the highest grade, and to be worshipped
+with supreme honours; others were of a lower rank, to whom an inferior
+homage was addressed; whilst a third class held a sort of middle place,
+and were approached with reverence as much above the least, as it fell
+short of the greatest. In the heathen world you will find exact types of
+the dulia, the hyperdulia, and the latria, with which unhappily the
+practical theology of modern Christian Rome is burdened. Indeed, my
+wonder is, that under the Christian dispensation, when the household and
+local gods, the heathen's tutelary deities, and the genii, had been
+dislodged by the light of the Gospel, saints and angels had not at a
+much {98} earlier period been forced by superstition to occupy their
+room.
+
+We shall be led to refer to some passages in the earliest Christian
+writers, especially in Origen, which bear immediately on this point,
+representing in strong but true colours the futility of deeming a
+multitude of inferior divinities necessary for the dispensation of
+benefits throughout the universe, whose good offices we must secure by
+acts of attention and worship. I anticipate the circumstance in this
+place merely to show that the tendency of the human mind, clinging to a
+variety of preternatural protectors and benefactors, was among the
+obstacles with which the first preachers of the Gospel had to struggle.
+In the proper place I shall beg you to observe how hardly possible it
+would have been for those early Christian writers, to whom I have
+referred above, to express themselves in so strong, so sweeping, and so
+unqualified a manner, had the practice of applying by invocation to
+saints and angels then been prevalent among the disciples of the Cross.
+
+We may, I believe, safely conclude, that in these primitive writings,
+which are called the works of the Apostolical Fathers, there is no
+intimation that the present belief and practice of the Church of Rome
+were received, or even known by Christians. The evidence is all the
+other way. Indeed, Bellarmin, though he appeals to these remains for
+other purposes, and boldly asserts that "all the fathers, Greek and
+Latin, with unanimous consent, sanction and teach the adoration of
+saints and angels," yet does not refer to a single passage in any one of
+these remains for establishing this point. He cites a clause from the
+spurious work strangely ascribed to Dionysius the Areopagite, which was
+the forged production, as the learned are all {99} agreed, of some
+centuries later; and he cites a pious sentiment of Ignatius, expressing
+his hope that by martyrdom he might go to Christ, and thence he infers
+that Ignatius believed in the immediate transfer of the soul from this
+life to glory and happiness in heaven, though Ignatius refers there
+distinctly to the resurrection. [Epist. ad Rom. c. iv. See above, p.
+90.] But Bellarmin cites no passage whatever from these remains to
+countenance the doctrine and practice of the adoration of saints and
+angels. {100}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+SECTION I.--THE EVIDENCE OF JUSTIN MARTYR.
+
+
+Justin, who flourished about the year 150, was trained from his early
+youth in all the learning of Greece and of Egypt. He was born in
+Palestine, of heathen parents; and after a patient examination of the
+evidences of Christianity, and a close comparison of them with the
+systems of philosophy with which he had long been familiar, he became a
+disciple of the Cross. In those systems he found nothing solid, or
+satisfactory; nothing on which his mind could rest. In the Gospel he
+gained all that his soul yearned for, as a being destined for immortal
+life, conscious of that destiny, and longing for its accomplishment. His
+understanding was convinced, and his heart was touched; and regardless
+of every worldly consideration, and devoted to the cause of truth, he
+openly embraced Christianity; and before kings and people, Jews and
+Gentiles, he pleaded the religion of the crucified One with unquenchable
+zeal and astonishing power. The evidence of such a man on any doctrine
+{101} connected with our Christian faith must be looked to with great
+interest.
+
+In the volumes which contain Justin's works we find "Books of
+Questions," in which many inquiries, doubts, and objections, as well of
+Jews as of Gentiles, are stated and answered. It is agreed on all sides
+that these are not the genuine productions of Justin, but the work of a
+later hand. Bellarmin appeals to them, acknowledging at the same time
+their less remote origin. The evidence, indeed, appears very strong,
+which would lead us to regard them as the composition of a Syrian
+Christian, and assign to them the date of the fifth century; and as
+offering indications of the opinions of Christians at the time of their
+being put together, they are certainly interesting documents. When
+fairly quoted, the passages alleged in defence of the invocation of
+saints, so far from countenancing the practice, assail irresistibly that
+principle, which, with other writers, Bellarmin himself confesses to be
+the foundation of that doctrine. For these Books of Questions assert
+that the souls of the faithful are not yet in glory with God, but are
+reserved in a separate state, apart from the wicked, awaiting the great
+day of final and universal doom. In answer to Question 60, the author
+distinctly says:--"Before the resurrection the recompense is not made
+for the things done in this life by each individual." [Quaestiones et
+Responsiones ad Orthodoxos, p. 464.]
+
+In reply to the 75th Question, inquiring into the condition of man after
+death, this very remarkable answer is returned:--
+
+"The same relative condition which souls have with the body now, they
+have not after the departure from the body. For here all the
+circumstances of the union {102} are in common to the just and the
+unjust, and no difference is in them in this respect,--as to be born and
+to die, to be in health and to be in sickness, to be rich and to be
+poor, and the other points of this nature. But after the departure from
+the body, forthwith takes place the distinction of the just and the
+unjust: for they are conducted by the angels to places corresponding
+with their deserts: the souls of the just to paradise, where is the
+company and the sight of angels and archangels, and also, by vision, of
+the Saviour Christ, according to what is said, 'Being absent from the
+body, and present with the Lord;' and the souls of the unjust to the
+places in hades, according to what is said of Nebucodonosor king of
+Babylon, 'Hades from beneath hath been embittered, meeting thee.'--And
+in the places corresponding with their deserts they are kept in ward
+unto the day of the resurrection and of retribution." [Page 469.]
+
+I much regret to observe that Bellarmin omits to quote the latter part
+of this passage, stopping short with an "&c." at the words _hades_, or
+_inferorum loca_, although the whole of the writer's testimony in it
+turns upon the very last clause. [Bellarmin, c. iv. p. 851. "Improborum
+autem ad inferorum loca."]
+
+The next question (76) runs thus: "If the retribution of our deeds does
+not take place before the resurrection, what advantage accrued to the
+thief that his soul was introduced into paradise; especially since
+paradise is an object of sense, and the substance of the soul is not an
+object of sense?
+
+"Answer. It was an advantage to the thief entering into paradise to
+learn by fact the benefits of the faith by which he was deemed worthy of
+the assembly of the {103} saints, in which he is kept till the day of
+judgment and restitution; and he has the perception of paradise by that
+which is called intellectual perception, by which souls see both
+themselves and the things under them, and moreover also the angels and
+demons. For a soul doth not perceive or see a soul, nor an angel an
+angel, nor a demon a demon; except that according to the said
+intellectual perception they see both themselves and each other, and
+moreover also all corporeal objects." [Page 470.]
+
+On this same point I must here subjoin a passage from one of Justin's
+own undisputed works. In his Dialogue with Trypho the Jew, sect. 5, he
+says, "Nevertheless I do not say that souls all die; for that were in
+truth a boon to the wicked. But what? That the souls of the pious remain
+somewhere in a better place, and the unjust and wicked in a worse,
+waiting for the time of judgment, when it shall be: thus the one
+appearing worthy of God do not die any more; and the others are punished
+as long as God wills them both to exist and to be punished." [Page 107.]
+
+Not only so; Justin classes among renouncers of the faith those who
+maintain the doctrine which is now acknowledged to be the doctrine of
+the Church of Rome, and to be indispensable as the groundwork of the
+adoration of saints. In his Trypho, sect. 80, he states his sentiment
+thus strongly: "If you should meet with any persons called Christians,
+who confess not this, but dare to blaspheme the God of Abraham, the God
+of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, and say there is no resurrection of the
+dead ([Greek: nekron]), but that their souls, at the very time of their
+death, are taken up into heaven; do not regard them as Christians."
+[Page 178.] {104}
+
+This, according to Bellarmin's own principle, is fatal evidence: if the
+redeemed and the saints departed are not in glory with God already, they
+cannot intercede with him for men. On the subject, however, of worship
+and prayer, Justin Martyr has left us some testimonies as to the
+primitive practice, full of interest in themselves, independently of
+their bearing on the points at issue. At the same time I am not aware of
+a single expression which can be so construed as to imply the doctrine
+or practice among Christians of invoking the souls of the faithful. He
+speaks of public and private prayer; he offers prayer, but the prayer of
+which he speaks, and the prayer which he offers are to God alone; and he
+alludes to no advocate or intercessor in heaven, except only the eternal
+Son of God himself. In his first Apologia (or Defence addressed to the
+Emperor Antoninus Pius) he thus describes the proceedings at the baptism
+of a convert:--
+
+"Now, we will explain to you how we dedicate ourselves to God, being
+made new by Christ.... As many as are persuaded, and believe the things
+which by us are taught and declared to be true, and who promise that
+they can so live, are taught to pray and implore, with fasting,
+forgiveness of God for their former sins, we ourselves joining with them
+in fasting and prayer; and then they are taken by us to a place where
+there is water, and by the same manner of regeneration as we ourselves
+were regenerated, they are regenerated; for they undergo this washing in
+the water in the name of God the Father and Lord of all, and of our
+Saviour Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Ghost." [Apol. i. sect 61, page
+79.]
+
+The following is his description of the Christian {105} Eucharist,
+subsequently to the baptism of a convert: "Afterwards we conduct him to
+those who are called brethren, where they are assembled together to
+offer earnestly our united prayers for ourselves and for the enlightened
+one [the newly baptized convert], and for all others every where, that
+we, having learned the truth, may be thought worthy to be found in our
+deeds good livers, and keepers of the commandments, that we may be saved
+with the everlasting salvation. Having ceased from prayers, we salute
+each other with a kiss; and then bread is brought to him who presides
+over the brethren, and a cup of water and wine; and he taking it, sends
+up prayer and praise to the Father of all, through the name of the Son
+and the Holy Spirit; and offers much thanksgiving for our being thought
+by him worthy of these things. When he has finished the prayers and
+thanksgivings, all the people present respond, saying, 'Amen.' Now, Amen
+in the Hebrew tongue means, 'So be it.' And when the presider has given
+thanks, and all the people have responded, those who are called Deacons
+among us give to every one present to partake of the bread and wine and
+water that has been blessed, and take some away for those who were not
+present." [Sect. 65. p. 82.]
+
+The following is Justin's account of their worship on the Lord's day:
+"In all our oblations we bless the Creator of all things, through his
+Son Jesus Christ, and through the Holy Spirit. And upon the day called
+Sunday, there is an assembly of all who dwell in the several cities or
+in the country, in one place where the records of the apostles, or the
+writings of the prophets are read, as time allows. When the reader has
+ceased, {106} the presider makes a discourse for the edification of the
+people, and to animate them to the practice of such excellent things [or
+the imitation of such excellent persons]. At the conclusion we all rise
+up together and pray; and, as we have said, when we have ceased from
+prayer, the bread and wine and water are brought forward, and the
+presider sends up prayer and thanksgiving alike, to the utmost of his
+power. And the people respond, saying, Amen. And then is made to each
+the distribution and participation of the consecrated elements ([Greek:
+eucharistauthenton]). And of those who have the means and will, each
+according to his disposition gives what he will; and the collected sum
+is deposited with the presider, and he aids the orphans and widows, and
+those who through sickness or other cause are in need, and those in
+bonds, and strangers; and, in a word, he becomes the reliever of all who
+are in want." [Sect. 67. p. 83.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In Justin Martyr I am unable to find even a single vestige of the
+invocation of Saints. With regard to Angels, however, there is a very
+celebrated passage, to which Bellarmin and others appeal, as conclusive
+evidence that the worship of them prevailed among Christians in his
+time, and was professed by Justin himself.
+
+Justin, in his first Apology, having stated that the Christians could
+never be induced to worship the demons, whom the heathen worshipped and
+invoked, proceeds thus[33]: "Whence also we are called Atheists, {107}
+[men without God]; and we confess that with regard to such supposed gods
+we are atheists, but not so with regard to the most true God, the Father
+of justice and temperance, and of the other virtues without any mixture
+of evil. But both HIM and the SON, who came from Him, and taught these
+things to us, and THE HOST OF THE OTHER GOOD ANGELS ACCOMPANYING AND
+MADE LIKE, and THE PROPHETIC SPIRIT, we reverence and worship, honouring
+them in reason and truth; and without grudging, delivering the doctrine
+to every one who is willing to learn as we were taught." [Page 47.]
+Governing the words "the host of the other good angels," as much as the
+words "Him" and "His Son," and "the prophetic Spirit," by the verbs "we
+reverence and worship," Bellarmin and others[34] maintain, that Justin
+bears testimony in this passage to the worship of angels. That this
+cannot be the true interpretation of Justin's words will be
+acknowledged, I think, by every Catholic, whether Anglican or Roman,
+when he contemplates it in all its naked plainness; all will revolt from
+it as impious and contrary to the principles professed by the most
+celebrated and honoured among Roman Catholic writers. This
+interpretation of the passage, when analysed, implies the awful thought,
+that we Christians pay to the host of angels, God's ministers and our
+own fellow-servants, the same reverence, worship, and honour which we
+pay to the supreme Father, and his ever-blessed Son, and the Holy
+Spirit, without any difference or inequality. No principles of
+interpretation can avoid that inference.
+
+ [Footnote 33: The genuineness of this passage has been doubted.
+ But I see no ground for suspicion that it is spurious. It is
+ found in the manuscripts of Justin's works; of which the most
+ ancient perhaps are in the King's Library in Paris. I examined
+ one there of a remote date.]
+
+ [Footnote 34: The Benedictine Editor puts this note in the
+ margin, "Justin teaches that angels following the Son are
+ worshipped by Christians."--Preface, p. xxi.] {108}
+
+"Him the most true Father of righteousness we reverence and worship,
+honouring him in reason and truth."
+
+"The Son who came from him, and taught us these things, we reverence and
+worship, honouring him in reason and truth."
+
+"The army of the other good angels accompanying and assimilated, we
+reverence and worship, honouring them in reason and truth."
+
+"The Prophetic Spirit we reverence and worship, honouring him in reason
+and truth."
+
+Is it possible to conceive that any Christian would thus ascribe the
+same religious worship to a host of God's creatures, which he would
+ascribe to God, as GOD? "We are accused," said Justin, "of being
+atheists, of having no God. How can this be? We do not worship your
+false gods, but we have our own most true God. We are not without a God.
+We have the Father, and the Son, and the Good Angels, and the Holy
+Spirit." If Justin meant that they honoured the good angels, but not as
+GOD, that would be no answer to those who called the Christians
+atheists. The charge was, that "they had no God." The answer is, "We
+have a God;" and then Justin describes the God of Christians. Can the
+army of angels be included in that description? If they are, then they
+are made to share in the adoration, worship, homage, and reverence of
+the one only God Most High; if they are not, then Justin does not answer
+the objectors[35].
+
+ [Footnote 35: And surely if Justin had intended to represent the
+ holy angels as objects of religious worship, he would not so
+ violently have thrust the mention of them among the Persons of
+ the ever-blessed Trinity, assigning to them a place between the
+ second and third Persons of the eternal hypostatic union.] {109}
+
+To evade this charge of impiety, some writers (among others, M. Maran,
+the Benedictine editor of Justin,) have attempted to draw a distinction
+between the two verbs in this passage, alleging that the lower degree of
+reverence expressed by the latter applies to the angels; whilst the
+former verb, implying the higher degree of worship, alone relates to the
+Godhead. But this distinction rests on a false assumption; the two words
+being used equally to convey the idea, of the highest religious
+worship[36].
+
+ [Footnote 36: For example, the first word ([Greek: sebometha]),
+ "we reverence," is used to mean the whole of religious worship,
+ as well with regard to the true God, as with reference to Diana
+ [Acts xviii. 7. 13; xix. 27.]; whilst the second word ([Greek:
+ proskunoumen]), "we worship," is constantly employed in the same
+ sense of divine worship, throughout the Septuagint [Exod. xxxiv.
+ 14. Ps. xciv. (xcv.) 6. I Sam. (1 Kings) xv. 25. 2 Kings (4
+ Kings) xvii. 36. Heb. i. 6.], (with which Justin was most
+ familiar,) and is used in the Epistle to the Hebrews to signify
+ the worship due from the angels themselves to God, "Let all the
+ angels of God worship him." The very same word is also soon
+ after employed by Justin himself (sect. xvi. p. 53) to mean the
+ whole entire worship of the Most High God: "That we ought to
+ worship ([Greek: proskumein]) God alone, Christ thus proves,"
+ &c. Moreover, the word which Justin uses at the close of the
+ sentence, "honouring them" ([Greek: timontes]), is the identical
+ word four times employed by St. John [John v. 23.], in the same
+ verse, to record our Saviour's saying, "That all men might
+ honour the Son, even as they honour the Father; he that
+ honoureth not the Son, honoureth not the Father, who hath sent
+ him."]
+
+But in determining the true meaning of an obscure passage, grammatically
+susceptible of different acceptations, the author himself is often his
+own best interpreter. If he has expressed in another place the same
+leading sentiment, yet without the same obscurity, and free from all
+doubt, the light borrowed from that passage {110} will frequently fix
+the sense of the ambiguous expression, and establish the author's
+consistency. On this acknowledged principle of criticism, I would call
+your attention to a passage in the very same treatise of Justin, a few
+pages further on, in which he again defends the Christians against the
+same charge of being atheists, and on the self-same ground, "that they
+worship the Father who is maker of all; secondly, the Son proceeding
+from Him; and thirdly, the Holy Spirit." In both cases he refers to the
+same attributes of the Son as the teacher of Christian truth, and of the
+Holy Ghost, as the Prophetic Spirit. His language throughout the two
+passages is remarkably similar, and in the expressions on the true
+meaning of which we have already dwelt, it is most strikingly identical;
+but by omitting all allusion to the angels after the Son, his own words
+proving that the introduction of them could have no place there, (for he
+specifies that the third in order was the Holy Spirit,) Justin has left
+us a comment on the passage under consideration conclusive as to the
+object of religious worship in his creed. The whole passage is well
+worth the attention of the reader. The following extracts are the only
+parts necessary for our present purpose:--
+
+"Who of sound mind will not confess that we are not Atheists,
+reverencing as we do the Maker of the Universe.... and Him, who taught
+us these things, and who was born for this purpose, Jesus Christ,
+crucified under Pontius Pilate.... instructed, as we are, that He is the
+Son of the True God, and holding Him in the second place; and the
+Prophetic Spirit in the third order, we with reason honour." [Sect.
+xiii. p. 50.] {111}
+
+The impiety apparently inseparable from Bellarmin's interpretation has
+induced many, even among Roman Catholic writers, to discard that
+acceptation altogether, and to substitute others, which, though
+involving no grammatical inaccuracy, are still not free from
+difficulty.[37] After weighing the passage with all the means in my
+power, and after testing the various interpretations offered by writers,
+whether of the Church of Rome or not, by the sentiments of Justin
+himself, and others of the same early age, I am fully persuaded that the
+following is the only true rendering of Justin's words:
+
+"Honouring in reason and truth, we reverence and worship HIM, the Father
+of Righteousness, and the Son (who proceeded from Him, and instructed in
+these things both ourselves and the host of the other good angels
+following Him and being made like unto Him), and the Prophetic Spirit."
+
+ [Footnote 37: Le Nourry (Apparatus ad Bibliothecam Maximam
+ Veterum Patrum. Paris, 1697. vol. ii. p. 305), himself a
+ Benedictine, rejects Bellarmin's and his brother Benedictine
+ Maran's interpretation, and conceives Justin to mean, that the
+ Son of God not only taught us those truths to which he was
+ referring, with regard to the being and attributes of God, but
+ also taught us that there were hosts of spiritual beings, called
+ Angels; good beings, opposed to the demons of paganism. Bishop
+ Kaye, in his excellent work on Justin Martyr, which the reader
+ will do well to consult (p. 53), tells us he was sometimes
+ inclined to think that Justin referred to the host of good
+ angels who should surround the Son of God when he should come to
+ judge the world. The view adopted by myself here was recommended
+ by Grabe and by Langus, called The Interpreter of Justin; whilst
+ Petavius, a Jesuit, though he does not adopt it, yet
+ acknowledges that the Greek admits of our interpretation. Any
+ one who would pursue the subject further may with advantage
+ consult the preface to the Benedictine edition referred to in
+ this work. Lumper Hist. Part ii. p. 225. Augustae Vindelicorum,
+ 1784. Petavius, Theologicorum Dogmatum tom. vi. p. 298. lib. xv.
+ c. v. s. 5. Antwerp, 1700.
+
+ The whole passage is thus rendered by Langus (as read in
+ Lumper), "Verum hunc ipsum, et qui ab eo venit, atque ista nos
+ et aliorum obsequentium exaequatorumque ad ejus voluntatem
+ bonorum Angelorum exercitura docuit, Filium, et Spiritum ejus
+ propheticum, colimus et adoramus."]
+
+This interpretation is strongly confirmed by the professed sentiments
+both of Justin and of his contemporaries, {112} with regard to the Son
+of God and the holy angels.
+
+It was a principle generally received among the early Christians, that
+whatever the Almighty did, either by creation or by the communication of
+his will, on earth or in heaven, was done by the Eternal Word. It was
+God the Son, the Logos, who created the angels[38], as well as
+ourselves; it was He who spoke to Moses, to Abraham, and to Lot; and it
+was He who conveyed the Supreme will, and the knowledge of the only true
+God, to the inhabitants of the world of spirits. Agreeably to this
+principle, in the passage under consideration, Justin affirms (not that
+Christians revered and worshipped the angels, but), that God the Son,
+whom Christians worshipped as the eternal Prophet, Angel, and Apostle,
+of the Most High, instructed not only us men on earth, but also the host
+of heavenly angels[39], in these eternal verities, {113} which embrace
+God's nature and the duty of his creatures. [Trypho, Sec. 141. p. 231.]
+
+ [Footnote 38: Thus Tatian (p. 249 in the same edition of
+ Justin), "Before men were prepared, the Word was the Maker of
+ angels."]
+
+ [Footnote 39: "The OTHER good angels." Justin (Apol. i. sect.
+ lxiii. p. 81.) reminds us that Christ, the first-begotten of the
+ Father, Himself God, was also an Angel (or Messenger), and an
+ Apostle; and here Christ, as the Angel of the Covenant and the
+ chief Apostle, is represented as instructing THE OTHER ANGELS in
+ the truths of the economy of grace, just as he instructed his
+ Apostles on earth,--"As my Father hath sent me, even so send I
+ you."]
+
+It is evident that Justin himself considered the host of angels to be
+equally with ourselves in a state of probation, requiring divine
+instruction, and partaking of it. It is also evident that many of his
+contemporaries entertained the same views; among others, Irenaeus and
+Origen. [Irenaeus, book ii. c. 30. p. 163. Origen, Hom. xxxii. in Joann.
+Sec. 10. vol. iv. p. 430.] I will not swell this dissertation by quoting
+the passages at length; though the passages referred to in the margin
+will well repay any one's careful examination. But I cannot refrain from
+extracting the words in which each of those writers confirms the view
+here taken of Justin's sentiments.
+
+Irenaeus, for example, says distinctly, "The Son ever, anciently and from
+the beginning co-existing with the Father, always reveals the Father
+both to angels and archangels, and powers, and excellencies, and to all
+to whom God wishes to make a revelation[40]." And not less distinctly
+does Origen assert the same thing,--"Our Saviour therefore teaches, and
+the Holy Spirit, {114} who spake in the prophets, teaches not only men,
+but also angels and invisible excellencies."
+
+ [Footnote 40: So far did some of the early Christians include
+ the hosts of angels within the covenant of the Gospel, that
+ Ignatius (Epist. ad Smyrn. Sec. 6. p. 36.) does not hesitate to
+ pronounce that the angels incur the Divine judgment, if they do
+ not receive the doctrine of the atonement: "Let no one be
+ deceived. The things in heaven, and the glory of angels, and the
+ powers visible and invisible, if they do not believe on the
+ blood of Christ--for them is judgment." They seem to have
+ founded their opinion on the declaration of St. Paul (Eph. iii.
+ 10): "That now to the principalities and powers in heavenly
+ places might be made known through the Church the manifold
+ wisdom of God."]
+
+I will only add one more ancient authority, in confirmation of the view
+here taken of Justin's words. The passage is from Athenagoras[41] and
+seems to be the exact counterpart of Justin's paragraph.
+
+ [Footnote 41: Athenagoras presented his defence, in which these
+ words occur, to the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, and his son
+ Commodus, in the year 177.]
+
+"Who would not wonder on hearing us called Atheists? we who call the
+Father God, and the Son God, and the Holy Ghost, showing both their
+power in the unity, and their distinction in order. Nor does our
+theology rest here; but we say, moreover, that there is a multitude of
+angels and ministers whom God, the Maker and Creator of the world, BY
+THE WORD PROCEEDING FROM HIM, distributed and appointed, both about the
+elements, and the heavens, and the world, and the things therein, and
+the good order thereof." [Sect. 10. p. 287. edit. Just. Mart.]
+
+I have already stated my inability to discover a single word in Justin
+Martyr which could be brought to sanction the invocation of saints; but
+his testimony is far from being merely negative. He admonishes us
+strongly against our looking to any other being for help or assistance,
+than to God only. Even when speaking of those who confide in their own
+strength, and fortune, and other sources of good, he says, in perfect
+unison with the pervading principles and associations of his whole mind,
+as far as we can read them in his works, without any modification or any
+exception in favour of saint or angel: "In that Christ {115} said, 'Thou
+art my God, go not far from me,' He at the same time taught, that all
+persons ought to hope in God, who made all things, and seek for safety
+and health from Him alone" [Trypho, Sec. 102, p. 197.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--IRENAEUS.
+
+
+Justin sealed his faith by his blood about the year 165; and next to
+him, in the noble army of martyrs, we must examine the evidence of
+Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyons. Of this writer's works a very small proportion
+survives in the original Greek; but that little is such as might well
+make every scholar and divine lament the calamity which theology and
+literature have sustained by the loss of the author's own language. It
+is not perhaps beyond the range of hope that future researches may yet
+recover at least some part of the treasure. Meanwhile we must avail
+ourselves with thankfulness of the nervous though inelegant copy of that
+original, which the Latin translation affords; imperfect and corrupt in
+many parts, as that copy evidently is. This, however, is not the place
+for recommending a study of the remains of Irenaeus; and every one at all
+acquainted with the literature of the early Church, knows well how
+valuable a store of ancient Christian learning is preserved even in the
+wreck of his works.
+
+On the subject of the invocation of saints, an appeal {116} has been
+made only to a few passages in Irenaeus. With regard, indeed, to one
+section, I would gladly have been spared the duty of commenting upon the
+unjustifiable mode of citing his evidence adopted by Bellarmin. It
+forces upon our notice an example either of such inaccuracy of quotation
+as would shake our confidence in him as an author, or of such
+misrepresentation as must lower him in our estimation as a man of
+integrity.
+
+Bellarmin asserts, building upon it as the very foundation-stone of his
+argument for the invocation of saints, that the souls of the saints are
+removed immediately on their dissolution by death, without waiting for
+the day of judgment, into the presence of God, and the enjoyment of HIM
+in heaven. This point, he says, must first be established; for if they
+are not already in the presence of God, they cannot pray for us, and
+prayer to them would be preposterous. [Bell. lib. i. c. 4. vol. ii. p.
+851.] Among the authorities cited by him to establish this point is the
+evidence of Irenaeus (book i. c. 2). [See Benedictine ed, Paris, 1710.
+book i. c. 10. p. 48.] Bellarmin quotes that passage in these words: "To
+the just and righteous, and to those who keep his commandments, and
+persevere in his love, some indeed from the beginning but some from
+repentance, he giving life CONFERS by way of gift incorruption, and
+CLOTHES them with eternal glory." To the quotation he appends this note
+"Mark '_to some_' that is, to those who presently after baptism die, or
+who lay down their life for Christ; or finally to the perfect is given
+immediately life and eternal glory; to others not, except after
+repentance, that is, satisfaction made in another world[42]."
+
+ [Footnote 42: Agreeably to the principles laid down in my
+ preface, I will not here allude to the doctrine of purgatory, on
+ which Bellarmin considers this passage to bear; nor will I say
+ one word on the intermediate state of the soul between death and
+ the resurrection, on which I am now showing that the words of
+ Irenaeus cannot at all be made to bear.] {117}
+
+Here I am compelled to confess that I never found a more palpable
+misquotation of an author than this. I will readily grant that Bellarmin
+may have quoted from memory, or have borrowed from some corrupt version
+of the passage; and that he has unintentionally changed the moods of two
+verbs from the subjunctive to the indicative, and inadvertently changed
+the entire construction and the sense of the passage. But then what
+becomes of his authority as a writer citing testimony?
+
+Irenaeus in this passage is speaking not of what our Lord does now, but
+what he will do at the last day; he refers only to the second coming of
+Christ to judgment at the final consummation of all things, not using a
+single expression which can be made by fair criticism to have any
+reference whatever to the condition of souls on their separation from
+the body. I have consulted the old editions, some at least published
+before the date of Bellarmin's work; the suggestion offering itself to
+my mind, that perhaps the ancient translation was in error, from which
+he might have quoted. But I cannot find that to have been the case. The
+old Latin version of this passage agreeing very closely with the Greek
+still preserved in Epiphanius, and quoted by Roman Catholic writers as
+authentic, conveys this magnificent though brief summary of the
+Christian faith:
+
+"The Church spread throughout the whole world, even to the ends of the
+earth, received both from the Apostles and their disciples that faith
+which is in one {118} God omnipotent, who made heaven and earth, the
+sea, and all things therein, and in one Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
+for our salvation made flesh, and in the Holy Ghost, who by the prophets
+announced the dispensations (of God[43]), and the Advent, and the being
+born of a Virgin, and the suffering, and the resurrection from the dead,
+and the bodily ascension into heaven of the beloved Jesus Christ our
+Lord, and his coming from heaven in the glory of the Father for the
+consummation of all things, and for raising again all flesh of the human
+race, THAT, in order that ([Greek: ina]), to Christ Jesus our Lord and
+God, and Saviour and King, according to the good pleasure of the
+invisible Father, every knee should bow of things in heaven and in
+earth, and under the earth, and that every tongue should confess to Him,
+and that he should execute just judgment on all: that he should send the
+spirits of wickedness, and the transgressing and rebel angels, and the
+impious and unjust, and wicked and blaspheming men into eternal fire;
+but to the just and righteous, and to those who keep his commandments,
+and persevere in his love,--some indeed from the beginning, and some
+from their repentance,--he granting life, by way of gift, SHOULD CONFER
+incorruption, and SHOULD CLOTHE them with eternal glory." [Haeres. xxxi.
+c. 30.]
+
+ [Footnote 43: The words "of God" are in the Latin, but not in
+ the Greek.]
+
+The words, "some from the beginning," "others from their repentance,"
+can refer only to the two conditions of believers; some of whom have
+grace to keep the commandments, and persevere in the love of God from
+the beginning of their Christian course, whilst others, for a time,
+transgress and wax cold in love, but by repentance, through God's grace,
+are renewed and {119} restored to their former state of obedience and
+love. On both these classes of Christians, according to the faith as
+here summed up by Irenaeus, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, when He
+comes in glory for the consummation of all things, and for the
+resurrection of the dead, will confer glory and immortality. No
+ingenuity of criticism can extract from this passage any allusion to the
+intercession of saints, or to their being with God before the end of the
+world[44]. But I am not {120} here condemning Bellarmin's untenable
+criticism: what I lament is the negligence or the disingenuousness with
+which he misquotes the words of Irenaeus, and makes him say what he never
+did say. To extract from an author's words, correctly reported, a
+meaning which he did not intend to convey, however reprehensible and
+unworthy a follower of truth, is one act of injustice: to report him,
+whether wilfully or carelessly, as using words which he never did use,
+is far worse.
+
+ [Footnote 44: It will be well to see the words of Bellarmin and
+ those of the translation side by side:
+
+ (Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the other.)
+
+ _Bellarmin_ lib. i. c. iv. p. 851.
+
+ "Quartus Irenaeus, lib. i. c. 2. 'Justis, inquit, et aequis, et
+ praecepta ejus servantibus et in dilectione perseverantibus,
+ quibusdam quidem ab initio, quibusdam autem ex poenitentia,
+ vitam donans, incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERT, et claritatem
+ aeternam CIRCUMDAT.' Nota '_quibusdam_,' id est, iis qui mox a
+ Baptismo moriuntur, vel qui pro Christo vitam ponunt; vel
+ denique perfectis statim donari vitam et claritatem aeternam;
+ aliis non nisi post poenitentiam, id est, satisfactionem in
+ futuro saeculo actam."
+
+ _Latin Translation_.
+
+ "Et de coelis in gloria Patris adventum ejus ad recapitulanda
+ universa et resuscitandam omnem carnem humani generis, UT
+ Christo Jesu Domino nostro et Deo, et Salvatori, et Regi,
+ secundum placitum Patris invisibilis, 'omne genu curvet
+ coelestium, et terrestrium, et infernorum, et omnis lingua
+ confiteatur ei,' et judicium justum in omnibus faciat;
+ spiritalia quidem nequitiae, et angelos transgresses, atque
+ apostatas factos, et impios et injustos et iniquos, et
+ blasphemos homines in aeternum ignem mittat;--Justis autem et
+ aequis et praecepta ejus servantibus et in dilectione ejus
+ perseverantibus, quibusdam quidem ab initio, quibusdam autem ex
+ poenitentia, vitam donans, incorruptelam loco muneris CONFERAT,
+ et claritatem aeternam CIRCUMDET."--Irenaei liber i. cap. x. p.
+ 48. Interpretatio Vetus.]
+
+Another expression of Irenaeus is appealed to by Bellarmin, and continues
+to be cited at the present day in defence of the invocation of saints;
+the precise bearing of which upon the subject I confess myself unable to
+see, whilst I am very far from understanding the passage from which it
+is an extract. Bellarmin cites the passage not to show that the saints
+in glory pray for us,--that argument he had dismissed before,--but to
+prove that they are to be invoked by us. The insulated passage as quoted
+by him is this: "And as she (Eve) was induced to fly from God, so she
+(Mary) was persuaded to obey God, that of the Virgin Eve the Virgin Mary
+might become the advocate." After the quotation he says, "What can be
+clearer?" [Benedict, lib. v. cap. xix. p. 316.]
+
+In whatever sense we may suppose Irenaeus to have employed the word here
+translated "advocata," it is difficult to see how the circumstance of
+Mary becoming the advocate of Eve, who lived so many generations before
+her, can bear upon the question, Is it lawful and right for us, now
+dwelling on the earth, to invoke those saints whom we believe to be in
+heaven? I will not dwell on the argument urged very cogently by some
+critics on this passage, that the word "advocata," found {121} in the
+Latin version of Irenaeus, is the translation of the original word, now
+lost [[Greek: paraklaetos]--paraclete], which, by the early writers, was
+used for "comforter and consoler," or "restorer;" because, as I have
+above intimated, whatever may have been the word employed by Irenaeus,
+the passage proves nothing as to the lawfulness of our praying to the
+saints. If the angels at God's bidding minister unto the heirs of
+salvation; or further, if they plead our cause with God, that would be
+no reason why we should invoke them and pray to them. This distinction
+between what they may do for us, and what we ought to do with regard to
+them, is an essential distinction, and must not be lost sight of. We
+shall have occasion hereafter to refer to it repeatedly, especially in
+the instances of Origen and Cyprian. I will now do no more than copy in
+a note the entire passage from which the sentence now under
+consideration has been extracted, that the reader may judge whether on
+such a passage, the original of which, in whatever words Irenaeus may
+have expressed himself, is utterly lost, any reliance can satisfactorily
+be placed.
+
+("Manifeste itaque in sua propria venientem Dominum et sua propria eum
+bajulantem conditione quae bajulatur ab ipso, et recapitulationem ejus
+quae in ligno fuit inobedientiae per eam quae in ligno est obedientiam
+facientem, et seductionem illam solutam qua seducta est male illa, quae
+jam viro destinata erat virgo Eva, per veritatem evangelizata est bene
+ab angelo jam sub viro virgo Maria. Quemadmodum enim illa per angeli
+sermonem seducta est ut effugeret Deum praevaricata verbum ejus, ita et
+haec per angelicum sermonem evangelizata est ut portaret Deum obediens
+ejus verbo. Et si ea inobedierat Deo, sed haec suasa est obedire Deo, uti
+virginis Evae virgo Maria fieret advocata. Et quemadmodum astrictum est
+morti genus humanum per virginem, salvatur per virginem, aequa lance
+disposita virginalis inobedientia per virginalem obedientiam. Adhuc enim
+protoplasti peccatum per correptionem primogeniti emendationem
+accipiens, et serpentis prudentia devicta in columbae simplicitate,
+vinculis autem illis resolutis, per quae alligati eramus morti." St.
+Augustin (Paris, 1690. vol. x. p. 500.) refers to the latter part of
+this passage, as implying the doctrine of original sin; but since his
+quotation does not embrace any portion of the clause at present under
+our consideration, no additional light from him is thrown on the meaning
+of Irenaeus.) {122}
+
+But passages occur in Irenaeus, which seem to leave doubt, that neither
+in faith nor in practice would he countenance in the very lowest degree
+the adoration of saints and angels, or any invocation of them.
+
+For example, in one part of his works we read, "Nor does it [the Church]
+do any thing by invocations of angels, nor by incantations, nor other
+depraved and curious means, but with cleanliness, purity, and openness,
+directing prayers to the Lord who made all things, and calling upon the
+name of Jesus Christ our Lord, it exercises its powers for the benefit,
+and not for the seducing, of mankind." [Benedictine Ed. lib. ii. c. 32.
+Sec. 5. p. 166.] It has been said that, by angelic invocations, Irenaeus
+means the addresses to evil angels and genii, such as the heathen
+superstitiously made. Be it so; though that is a mere assumption, not
+warranted by the passage or its context. But, surely, had Irenaeus known
+that Christians prayed to angels, as well as to their Maker and their
+Saviour, he would not have used such an unguarded expression; he would
+have cautioned his readers against so serious, but so natural, a
+misapprehension of his meaning.
+
+With one more reference, we must bring our inquiry into the testimony of
+Irenaeus to a close. The passage occurs in the fifth book, chapter 31.
+[Benedict. lib. v. c. 32. Sec. 2. p, 331.] The principal and most
+important, though not the longest, part of {123} the passage is happily
+still found in the original Greek, preserved in the "Parallels" of
+Damascenus. In its plain, natural, and unforced sense, this passage is
+so decidedly conclusive on the question at issue, that various attempts
+have been made to explain away its meaning, so as not to represent
+Irenaeus as believing that the souls of departed saints, between their
+death and the day of judgment, exist otherwise than in bliss and glory
+in heaven. But those attempts have been altogether unsuccessful. I
+believe the view here presented to us by the plain and obvious sense of
+the words of Irenaeus, is the view at present acquiesced in by a large
+proportion of our fellow-believers. The Anglican Church has made no
+article of faith whatever on the subject. The clause within brackets is
+found both in the Latin and the Greek.
+
+"Since the Lord[45] in the midst of the shadow of death went where the
+souls of the dead were, and then afterwards rose bodily, and after his
+resurrection was taken up, it is evident that of his disciples also, for
+whom the Lord wrought these things, [the souls go into the unseen[46]
+place assigned to them by God, and there remain till the resurrection,
+waiting for the resurrection; afterwards receiving again their bodies
+and rising perfectly [[Greek: holoklaeros], perfecte], that is, bodily,
+even as the Lord also rose again, so will they come into the presence of
+God.] {124} For no disciple is above his master; but every one that is
+perfect shall be as his master. As, therefore, our Master did not
+immediately flee away and depart, but waited for the time of his
+resurrection appointed by his Father (which is evident, even by the case
+of Jonah); after the third day, rising again, he was taken up; so we too
+must wait for the time of our resurrection appointed by God, and
+fore-announced by the prophets; and thus rising again, be taken up, as
+many as the Lord shall have deemed worthy of this."
+
+ [Footnote 45: Bellarmin, rather than allow the testimony of
+ Irenaeus to weigh at all against the doctrine which he is
+ defending, seems determined to combat and challenge that father
+ himself. "Non ausus est dicere," "He has not dared to say, that
+ the souls go to the regions below," &c.]
+
+ [Footnote 46: There is no word in the Greek copy corresponding
+ with the Latin "invisibilem."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA--ABOUT THE YEAR 180.
+
+
+Contemporary with Irenaeus, and probably less than twenty years his
+junior, was Clement, the celebrated Christian philosopher of Alexandria.
+I am not aware that any Roman Catholic writer has appealed to the
+testimony of Clement in favour of the invocation of saints, nor have I
+found a single passage which the defenders of that practice would be
+likely to quote; and yet there are many passages which no one, anxious
+to trace the Catholic faith, would willingly neglect. The tendency of
+Clement's mind to blend with the simplicity of the Gospel of Christ the
+philosophy in which he so fully abounded, renders him far less valuable
+as a Christian teacher; but his evidence as to the matter of fact, is
+even rendered more cogent and pointed by this tendency of his mind. I
+would {125} willingly have transferred to these pages whole passages of
+Clement, but the very nature of my address forbids it. Some sentences
+bearing on the subject immediately before us, we must not omit.
+
+Clement has left on record many of his meditations upon the efficacy,
+the duty, and the blessed comfort of prayer. When he speaks of God, and
+of the Christian in prayer, (for prayer he defines to be "communion or
+intercourse with God,") his language becomes often exquisitely
+beautiful, and sometimes sublime. It is impossible by a few detached
+passages to convey an adequate estimate of the original; and yet a few
+sentences may show that Clement is a man whose testimony should not be
+slighted.
+
+"Therefore, keeping the whole of our life as a feast every where, and on
+every part persuaded that God is present, we praise him as we till our
+lands; we sing hymns as we are sailing. The Christian is persuaded that
+God hears every thing; not the voice only, but the thoughts.... Suppose
+any one should say, that the voice does not reach God, revolving as it
+does in the air below; yet the thoughts of the saints cut not only
+through the air, but the whole world. And the divine power like the
+light is beforehand in seeing through the soul.... He" (the Christian
+whom he speaks of throughout as the man of divine knowledge) "prays for
+things essentially good.
+
+"Wherefore it best becomes those to pray who have an adequate knowledge
+of God, and possess virtue in accordance with Him--who know what are
+real goods, and what we should petition for, and when, and how in each
+case. But it is the extreme of ignorance to ask {126} from those who are
+not gods as though they were gods.... Whence since there is one only
+good God, both we ourselves and the angels supplicate from Him alone,
+that some good things might be given to us, and others might remain with
+us. In this way he (the Christian) is always in a state of purity fit
+for prayer. He prays with angels, as being himself equal with angels;
+and as one who is never beyond the holy protecting guard. And if he pray
+alone he has the whole choir of angels with him." [Stromata, lib. vii. Sec.
+7. p. 851, &c.; Section xii. p. 879.]
+
+Clement has alluded to instances alleged by the Greeks of the effects of
+prayer, and he adds, "Our whole Scripture is full of instances of God
+hearing and granting every request according to the prayers of the
+just." [Lib. vi. Sec. iii. p. 753.]
+
+Having in the same section referred to the opinion of some Greeks as to
+the power of demons over the affairs of mortals, he adds, "But they
+think it matters nothing whether we speak of these as gods or as angels,
+calling the spirits of such 'demons,' and teaching that they should be
+worshipped by men, as having, by divine providence, on account of the
+purity of their lives, received authority to be conversant about earthly
+places, in order that they may minister to mortals." [Lib. vi. Sec. iii. p.
+755.]
+
+Is it possible to suppose that this teacher in Christ's school had any
+idea of a Christian praying to saints or angels? In the last passage,
+the language in which he quotes the errors of heathen superstition to
+refute them, so nearly approaches the language of the Church of Rome
+when speaking of the powers of saints and angels to assist the
+suppliant, that if Clement had entertained {127} any thought whatever of
+a Christian praying for aid and intercession to saint or angel, he must
+have mentioned it, especially after the previous passage on the
+absurdity and gross ignorance of praying for any good at the hands of
+any other than the one true God.
+
+In common with his contemporaries, Clement considered the angels to be,
+as we mortals are, in a state requiring all the protection and help to
+be obtained by prayer; he believed that the angels pray with us, and
+carry our prayers to God: but the thought of addressing them by
+invocation does not appear to have occurred to his mind. At the close of
+his Paedagogus he has left on record a form of prayer to God alone very
+peculiar and interesting. He closes it by an ascription of glory to the
+blessed Trinity. But there is no allusion to saint, or angel, or virgin
+mother.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.--TERTULLIAN.
+
+
+Tertullian, of Carthage, was a contemporary of Clement of Alexandria,
+and so nearly of the same age, that doubts have existed, which of the
+two should take priority in point of time. There is a very wide
+difference in the character and tone of their works, as there was in the
+frame and constitution of their minds. The lenient and liberal views of
+the erudite and accomplished master of the school of Alexandria, stand
+out in prominent and broad contrast with the harsh and austere doctrines
+of Tertullian.
+
+Tertullian fell into errors of a very serious kind by joining himself to
+the heretic Montanus; still on his {128} mind is discoverable the
+working of that spirit which animated the early converts of
+Christianity; and his whole soul seems to have been filled with a desire
+to promote the practical influence of the Gospel.
+
+Jerome, the oracle on such subjects, from whom the Roman Catholic Church
+is unwilling to allow any appeal, expressly tells us that Cyprian[47],
+who called Tertullian the Master, never passed a single day without
+studying his works; and that after Tertullian had remained a presbyter
+of the Church to middle age, he was driven, by the envy and revilings of
+the members of the Roman Church, to fall from its unity, and espouse
+Montanism. Bellarmin calls him a heretic, and says he is the first
+heretic who denied that the saints went at once and forthwith to glory.
+[Hieron. edit. 1684. tom. i. p. 183.]
+
+ [Footnote 47: The words of Jerome, who refers to the
+ circumstance more than once, are very striking: "I saw one
+ Paulus, who said that he had seen the secretary (notarium) of
+ Cyprian at Rome, who used to tell him that Cyprian never passed
+ a single day without reading Tertullian; and that he often said
+ to him, 'Give me the Master,' meaning Tertullian."--Hieron. vol.
+ iv. part ii. p. 115.]
+
+A decided line of distinction is drawn by Roman Catholic writers between
+the works of Tertullian written before he espoused the errors of
+Montanus, and his works written after that unhappy step. The former they
+hold in great estimation, the latter are by many considered of far less
+authority. I do not see how such a distinction ought to affect his
+testimony on the historical point immediately before us. If indeed he
+had held the doctrine of the invocation of saints whilst he continued in
+the full communion of the Church, and rejected it afterwards, no honest
+and sensible writer would quote his later opinions against the practice.
+But we are only seeking in his works for evidence of the {129} matter of
+fact,--Is there any proof in the works of Tertullian that the invocation
+of saints formed a part of the doctrine and practice of the Catholic
+Church in his time[48]? His works will be found in the note, arranged
+under those two heads, as nearly as I can ascertain the preponderating
+sentiments of critics[49].
+
+ [Footnote 48: The reader, who may be induced to consult the work
+ of the present Bishop of Lincoln, entitled, "The Ecclesiastical
+ History of the second and third Centuries, illustrated from the
+ writings of Tertullian," will there find, in the examination and
+ application of Tertullian's remains, the union of sound
+ judgment, diligence in research, clearness of perception,
+ acuteness in discovery, and great erudition mingled with
+ charity.]
+
+ [Footnote 49: Works of Tertullian before he became a
+ Montanist:--
+
+ Adversus Judaeos.
+ The Tract ad Martyres.
+ The two Books ad Nationes.
+ The Apology, and the Tract de Praescriptione Haereticorum.
+ The Tract de Testimonio Animae.
+ The Tracts de Patientia, de Oratione, de Baptismo, de
+ Poenitentia.
+ The two books ad Uxorem.
+
+ Works written after he espoused Montanism:--
+
+ The Tracts de Spectaculis and de Idololatria, though others say
+ these should be ranked among the first class.
+ The Tracts de Corona, and de Fuga in persecutione, Scorpiace,
+ and ad Scapulam.
+ The Tracts de Exhortatione Castitatis, de Monogamia, de
+ Pudicitia, de Jejuniis, de Virginibus Velandis, de Pallio, the
+ five books against Marcion, the Tracts adversus Valentinianos,
+ de Carne Christi, de Resurrectione Carnis, adversus Hermogenem,
+ de Anima, adversus Praxeam, de Cultu Foeminarum.]
+
+I will detain you only by a very few quotations from this father.
+
+In his Apology, sect. 30, we read this very remarkable passage, "We
+invoke the eternal God, the true God, the living God, for the safety of
+the emperor.... {130} Thither (heavenward) looking up, with hands
+extended, because they are innocent; with our head bare, because we are
+not ashamed; in fine, without a prompter, because it is from the heart;
+we Christians pray for all rulers a long life, a secure government, a
+safe home, brave armies, a faithful senate, a good people, a quiet
+world.... For these things I cannot ask in prayer from any other except
+Him from whom I know that I shall obtain; because both He is the one who
+alone grants, and I am the one whom it behoveth to obtain by
+prayer;--his servant, who looks to him alone, who for the sake of his
+religion am put to death, who offer to him a rich and a greater victim,
+which He has commanded; prayer from a chaste frame, from a harmless
+soul, from a holy spirit.... So, let hoofs dig into us, thus stretched
+forward to God, let crosses suspend us, let fires embrace us, let swords
+sever our necks from the body, let beasts rush upon us,--the very frame
+of mind of a praying Christian is prepared for every torment. This do,
+ye good presidents; tear ye away the soul that is praying for the
+emperor." [Page 27.]
+
+In the opening of his reflections on the Lord's Prayer, he says,--
+
+"Let us consider therefore, beloved, in the first place, the heavenly
+wisdom in the precept of praying in secret, by which he required, in a
+man, faith to believe that both the sight and the hearing of the
+Omnipotent God is present under our roofs and in our secret places; and
+desired the lowliness of faith, that to Him alone, whom he believed to
+hear and to see every where, he would offer his worship." [Page 129.]
+
+The only other reference which I will make, is to {131} the solemn
+declaration of Tertullian's Creed; the last clause of which, though in
+perfect accordance with the sentiments of his contemporaries, seems to
+have been regarded with hostile eyes by modern writers of the Church of
+Rome, because it decidedly bids us look to the day of judgment for the
+saints being taken to the enjoyment of heaven; and consequently implies
+that they cannot be properly invoked now.
+
+"To profess now what we defend: By the rule of our faith we believe that
+God is altogether one, and no other than the Creator of the world, who
+produced all things out of nothing by his Word first of all sent down.
+That that Word, called his Son, was variously seen by the patriarchs in
+the name of God; was always heard in the prophets; at length, borne by
+the spirit and power of God the Father into the Virgin Mary, was made
+flesh in her womb, was born of her, and was Jesus Christ. Afterwards He
+preached a new law and a new promise of the kingdom of heaven; wrought
+miracles, was crucified, rose again the third day, and, being taken up
+into heaven, sat on the right hand of the Father; and He sent in his own
+stead the power of the Holy Ghost, to guide believers; that He shall
+come with glory to take the saints to the enjoyment of eternal life and
+the heavenly promises, and to condemn the impious to eternal fire,
+making a reviving of both classes with the restoration of the body." [De
+Praescriptione Haereticorum, Sec. 13. p. 206.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some notice must here be taken of METHODIUS, a pious Christian, of the
+third century. A work (Methodius, Gl. Combes. Paris, 1644) {132}
+formerly attributed to him has been quoted in proof of the early
+invocation of saints; but the work, among many others, has been long ago
+allowed by the best Roman Catholic critics to be the production of a
+later age. (Fabricius, vol. vii. p. 268, and vol. x. p. 241.) Many
+homilies, purporting to have been delivered on the festival of our
+Lord's presentation in the temple, at so early a period, must be
+received as the works of a later age, because that feast began to be
+observed in the Church so late as the fifteenth year of Justinian, in
+the sixth century. Evidently, moreover, the theological language of the
+homily is of a period long subsequent to the date assigned to Methodius.
+In speaking of our blessed Saviour, for example, he employs expressions
+to guard against the Arian heresy, and makes extracts apparently from
+the Nicene creed, "God of himself, and not by grace," "Very God of very
+God, very light of very light, who for us men and our salvation, &c."
+The general opinion indeed seems to be that this, and many other
+writings formerly ascribed to the first Methodius, were written by
+persons of a subsequent age, who either were of the same name or assumed
+his. Even were the work genuine, it would afford just as strong a
+demonstration that Methodius believed that the city of Jerusalem could
+hear his salutation, as that the saints could hear his prayer; for he
+addresses the same "Hail" to Mary, Symeon, and the Holy City alike,
+calling it the "earthly heaven." [Greek: Chairois hae polis, ho epigeios
+ouranos.] {133}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION V.--THE EVIDENCE OF ORIGEN.
+
+
+Jerome informs us that Tertullian, whose remains we have last examined,
+lived to a very advanced age. Long, therefore, before his death
+flourished Origen, one of the most celebrated lights of the primitive
+Church. He was educated a Christian. Indeed his father is said to have
+suffered martyrdom about the year 202. Origen was a pupil of Clement of
+Alexandria. His virtues and his labours have called forth the admiration
+of all ages; and though he cannot be implicitly followed as a teacher,
+what still remains of his works will be delivered down as a rich
+treasure to succeeding times. He was a most voluminous writer; and
+Jerome asked the members of his church, "Who is there among us that can
+read as many books as Origen has composed?" [Vol. iv. epist. xli. p.
+346.] A large proportion of his works are lost; and of those which
+remain, few are preserved in the original Greek. We are often obliged to
+study Origen through the medium of a translation, the accuracy of which
+we have no means of verifying. A difficult and delicate duty also
+devolves upon the theological student to determine which of the works
+attributed to Origen are genuine and which are spurious; and what parts,
+moreover, of the works received on the whole as genuine came from his
+pen. Of {134} the spurious works, some are so palpably written in a much
+later age, and by authors of different religious views, that no one,
+after weighing the evidence, can be at a loss what decision to make
+concerning them; in the case of others, claims and objections may appear
+to be more evenly balanced. I trust on the one hand to refer to no works
+for Origen's testimony which are not confessedly his, nor on the other
+to exclude any passage which is not decidedly spurious; whilst in one
+particular case more immediately connected with our subject, I am
+induced to enter further in detail into a critical examination of the
+genuineness and value of a passage than the character of this work
+generally requires. The great importance attached to the testimony of
+that passage by some defenders of the worship paid to angels, may be
+admitted to justify the fulness of the criticism. Lest, however, its
+insertion in the body of the work might seem inconveniently to interfere
+with the reader's progress in our argument, I have thought it best to
+include it in a supplementary section at the close of our inquiry into
+the evidence of Origen.
+
+Coccius, in his elaborate work, quotes the two following passages as
+Origen's, without expressing any hesitation or doubt respecting their
+genuineness, in which he is followed by writers of the present day. The
+passages are alleged in proof that Origen held and put in practice the
+doctrine of the invocation of saints; and they form the first quotations
+made by Coccius under the section headed by this title: "That the saints
+are to be invoked, proved by the testimony of the Greek Fathers."
+
+The first passage is couched in these words: "I will {135} begin to
+throw myself upon my knees, and pray to all the saints to come to my
+aid; for I do not dare, in consequence of my excess of wickedness, to
+call upon God. O Saints of God, you I pray with weeping full of grief,
+that ye would propitiate his mercies for me miserable. Alas me! Father
+Abraham, pray for me, that I be not driven from thy bosom, which I
+greatly long for, and yet not worthily, because of the greatness of my
+sins."
+
+Coccius cites this passage as from "Origen in Lament," and it has been
+recently appealed to under the title of "Origen on the Lamentations."
+Here, however, is a very great mistake. Origen's work on the
+Lamentations, called also "Selecta in Threnos," and inserted in the
+Benedictine edition (Vol. iii. p. 321.), is entirely a different
+production from the work which contains the above extract. This
+apocryphal work, on the other hand, does not profess to be the comment
+of Origen on the Lamentations, but the Lament or Wailing of Origen
+himself; or, as it used to be called, the Penitence of Origen. (In the
+Paris edition of 1519 it is called "Planctus, seu Lamentum Origenis."
+Pope Gelasius refers to it as "Poenitentia Origenis.") That this work
+has no pretensions whatever to be regarded as Origen's, has been long
+placed beyond doubt. Even in the edition of 1545, this treatise is
+prefaced by Erasmus in these words, "This Lamentation was neither
+written by Origen nor translated by Jerome, but is the fiction of some
+unlearned man, who attempted, under colour of this, to throw disgrace
+upon Origen." [Basil, 1545. vol. i. p. 498.] In the Benedictine edition
+(Paris, 1733.) no trace of this work is to be found. They do not admit
+it among the doubtful, or even the spurious works; they do not so {136}
+much as give room for it in the appendix; on the contrary, they drop it
+altogether as utterly unworthy of being any longer preserved. Instead,
+however, of admitting the work itself, these editors have supplied
+abundant reason for its exclusion, by inserting the sentiments of
+Huetius, or Huet, the very learned bishop of Avranches. He tells us,
+that formerly to Origen's work on Principles used to be appended a
+treatise called, the Lament of Origen, the Latin translation of which
+Guido referred to Jerome. After quoting the passage of Erasmus (as above
+cited from the edition of 1545) in proof of its having been "neither
+written by Origen nor translated by Jerome, but the fabrication of some
+unlearned man, who attempted, under colour of this, to throw disgrace on
+Origen, just as they forged a letter in Jerome's name, lamenting that he
+had ever thought with Origen," Huet proceeds thus: "And Gelasius in the
+Roman Council writes, 'The book which is called The Repentance of
+Origen, apocryphal.' It is wonderful, therefore, that without any mark
+of its false character, it should be sometimes cited by some theologians
+in evidence. Here we may smile at the supineness of a certain heterodox
+man of the present age, who thought the 'Lament,' ascribed to Origen, to
+be something different from the Book of Repentance." [Vol. iv. part ii.
+p. 326.]
+
+The Decree here referred to of Pope Gelasius, made in the Roman Council,
+A.D. 494, by that pontiff, in conjunction with seventy bishops, contains
+these strong expressions, before enumerating some few of the books then
+condemned: "Other works written by heretics and schismatics, the
+Catholic and Apostolic Church by {137} no means receives; of them we
+think it right to subjoin a few which have occurred to our memory, and
+are to be avoided by Catholics." [Conc. Labb. vol. iv. p. 1265.] Then
+follows a list of prohibited works, among which we read, "the book
+called The Repentance of Origen, apocryphal," the very book which Huet
+identifies with the "Lament of Origen," still cited as evidence even in
+the present day. (See Appendix A.)
+
+The second passage cited by Coccius, and also by writers of the present
+time, as Origen's, without any allusion to its spurious and apocryphal
+character, is from the second book of the work called Origen on Job. The
+words cited run thus: "O blessed Job, who art living for ever with God,
+and remainest conqueror in the sight of the Lord the King, pray for us
+wretched, that the mercy of the terrible God may protect us in all our
+afflictions, and deliver us from all oppressions of the wicked one; and
+number us with the just, and enrol us among those who are saved, and
+make us rest with them in his kingdom, where for ever with the saints we
+may magnify him."
+
+This work, like the former, has no claim whatever to be regarded as
+Origen's. It has long been discarded by the learned. Indeed so far back
+as 1545, Erasmus, in his Censura, proved that it was written long after
+the time of Origen by an Arian. (Basil, 1545. vol. i. p. 408; and
+"Censura.") By the Benedictine editors it is transferred to an appendix
+as the Commentary of an anonymous writer on Job; and they thus express
+their judgment as to its being a forgery: "The Commentary of an
+anonymous writer on Job, in previous editions, is ascribed to Origen;
+{138} but that it is not his, Huet proves by unconquerable arguments.
+This translation is assigned to Hilary, the bishop; but although it is
+clear from various proofs of Jerome, that St. Hilary translated the
+tracts or homilies of Origen on Job, yet there is no reason why that man
+who wrote with the highest praise against the Arians, should be
+considered as the translator of this work, which is infected with the
+corruption of Arianism, and which is not Origen's." [Vol. ii. p. 894.]
+Erasmus calls the prologue to this treatise on Job "the production of a
+silly talkative man, neither learned nor modest."
+
+It is impossible not to feel, with regard to these two works, the
+sentiments which, as we have already seen, the Bishop of Avranches has
+so strongly expressed on one. "It is wonderful, that they should be
+sometimes cited in evidence by some theologians, without any mark of
+their being forgeries."
+
+Proceeding with our examination of the sentiments of Origen, I would
+here premise, that not the smallest doubt can be entertained that Origen
+believed the angels to be ministering spirits, real, active, zealous
+workmen and fellow-labourers with us in the momentous and awful business
+of our eternal salvation. He represents the angels as members of the
+same family with ourselves, as worshippers of the same God, as servants
+of the same master, as children of the same father, as disciples of the
+same heavenly teacher, as learners of one and the same heavenly
+doctrine. He contemplates them as members of our Christian
+congregations, as joining with us in prayer to our heavenly Benefactor,
+as taking pleasure when they hear in our {139} assemblies what is
+agreeable to the will of God, and as being present too not only
+generally in the Christian Church, but also with individual members of
+it[50]. But does Origen, therefore, countenance any invocation of them?
+Let us appeal to himself.
+
+ [Footnote 50: One or two references will supply abundant proof
+ of this: "I do not doubt that in our congregation angels are
+ present, not only in general to the whole Church, but also
+ individually with those of whom it is said, 'Their angels do
+ always behold the face of my Father who is in heaven.' A twofold
+ Church is here: one of men, the other of angels. If we say any
+ thing agreeably to reason and the mind of Scripture, the angels
+ rejoice to pray with us." And a little above, "Our Saviour,
+ therefore, as well as the Holy Spirit, who spoke by the
+ prophets, instructs not only men, but angels and invisible
+ powers."--Hom, xxiii. in Luc. vol. iii. p. 961.
+
+ "Whoever, therefore, confessing his sins, repents, or confesses
+ Christ before men in persecutions, is applauded by his brethren.
+ For there is joy and gladness to the angels in heaven over one
+ sinner that repenteth. By them, therefore, as by brethren (for
+ both men and angels are sons of the same Creator and Father)
+ they are praised."--In Genes. Hom. xvii. p. 110.]
+
+Celsus accused the Christians of being atheists, godless, men without
+God, because they would not worship those gods many and lords many, and
+those secondary, subordinate, auxiliary, and ministering divinities with
+which the heathen mythology abounded: Origen answers, we are not
+godless, we are not without an object of our prayer; we pray to God
+Almighty alone through the mediation only of his Son.
+
+"We must pray to God alone ([Greek: Mono gar proseukteon to epi pasi
+Theo]), who is over all things; and we must pray also to the
+only-begotten and first-born of every creature, the Word of God; and we
+must implore him as our High Priest to carry our prayer, first coming to
+him, to his God and our {140} God, to his Father and the Father of those
+who live agreeably to the word of God." [Cont. Cels. Sec. 8. c. xxvi. vol.
+i. p. 761.]
+
+But Celsus, in this well representing the weakness and failings of human
+nature, still urged on the Christian the necessity, or at all events the
+expediency, of conciliating those intermediate beings who executed the
+will of the Supreme Being, and might haply have much left at their own
+will and discretion to give or to withhold; and therefore the
+desirableness of securing their good offices by prayer. To this Origen
+answers:
+
+"The one God ([Greek: Hena oun ton epi pasi theon haemin
+exenmenisteon])--the God who is over all, is to be propitiated by us,
+and to be appeased by prayer; the God who is rendered favourable by
+piety and all virtue. But if he (Celsus) is desirous, after the supreme
+God, to propitiate some others also, let him bear in mind, that just as
+a body in motion is accompanied by the motion of its shadow, so also by
+rendering the supreme God favourable, it follows that the person has all
+his (God's) friends, angels, souls, spirits, favourable also; for they
+sympathize with those who are worthy of God's favour; and not only do
+they become kindly affected towards the worthy, but they also join in
+their work with those who desire to worship the supreme God; and they
+propitiate him, and they pray with us, and supplicate with us; so that
+we boldly say, that together with men who on principle prefer the better
+part, and pray to God, ten thousands of holy powers join in prayer
+UNASKED ([Greek: aklaetoi])," [UNBIDDEN, UNCALLED upon.] [Cont. Cels.
+lib. viii. Sec. 64. vol. i. p. 789.]
+
+What an opportunity was here for Origen to have stated, that though
+Christians do not call upon demons and the subordinate divinities of
+heathenism to aid {141} them, yet that they do call upon the ministering
+spirits, the true holy angels, messengers and servants of the most High
+God! But whilst speaking of them, and magnifying the blessings derived
+to man through their ministry, so far from encouraging us to ask them
+for their good offices, his testimony on the contrary is not merely
+negative; he positively asserts that when they assist mankind, it is
+without any request or prayer from man. Could this come from one who
+invoked angels?
+
+Another passage, although it adds little to the evidence of the above
+extract, I am unwilling to pass by, because it beautifully illustrates
+by the doctrine and practice of Origen the prayer, the only one adopted
+by the Anglican Church, offered by the Church to God for the succour and
+defence of the holy angels. Speaking of the unsatisfactory slippery road
+which they tread, who either depend upon the agency of demons for good,
+or are distressed by the fear of evil from them, Origen adds, "How far
+better ([Greek: poso Beltion]) were it to commit oneself to God who is
+over all, through Him who instructed us in this doctrine, Jesus Christ,
+and OF HIM to ask for every aid from the holy angels and the just, that
+they may rescue us from the earthly demons." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii. Sec.
+60. vol. i. p. 786.]
+
+In the following passage Origen answers the question of Celsus: "If you
+Christians admit the existence of angels, tell us what you consider
+their nature to be?" [Cont. Cels. lib. v. Sec. 4. p. 579.]
+
+"Come," replies Origen, "let us consider these points. Now we
+confessedly say, that the angels are ministering spirits, and sent to
+minister on account of those who are to be heirs of salvation; that they
+ascend, bearing with them the supplications of men into the most pure
+{142} heavenly places of the world; and that they again descend from
+thence, bearing to each in proportion to what is appointed by God for
+them to minister to the well-doers. And learning that these are, from
+their work, called angels ([Greek: aggeloi], messengers, ministers sent
+to execute some commission), we find them, because they are divine,
+sometimes called even gods in the Holy Scriptures; but not so, as for
+any injunction to be given to us to worship and adore, instead of God,
+those who minister, and bring to us the things of God. For every request
+and prayer, and supplication and thanksgiving, must be sent up to Him
+who is God above all, through the High Priest, who is above all angels,
+even the living Word of God. And we also make our requests to the Word,
+and supplicate Him, and moreover offer our prayer to Him; if we can
+understand the difference between the right use and the abuse of prayer.
+For it is not reasonable for us to call upon angels, without receiving a
+knowledge concerning them which is above man. But supposing the
+knowledge concerning them, wonderful and unutterable as it is, had been
+received; that very knowledge describing their nature, and those to whom
+they are respectively assigned, would not give confidence in praying to
+any other than to Him who is sufficient for every thing, God who is
+above all, through our Saviour, the Son of God, who is the word, and
+wisdom, and the truth, and whatsoever else the writings of the prophets
+of God, and the Apostles of Jesus say concerning Him. But for the angels
+of God to be favourable to us, and to do all things for us, our
+disposition towards God is sufficient; we copy them to the utmost of
+human strength, {143} as they copy God. And our conception concerning
+his Son, the Word, according to what is come to us, is not opposed to
+the more clear conception of the holy angels concerning Him, but is
+daily approximating towards it in clearness and perspicuity."
+
+Again, he thus writes: "But Celsus wishes us to dedicate the
+first-fruits unto the demons; but we to Him who said, Let the earth
+bring forth grass, &c. But to whom we give the first-fruits, to him we
+send up also our prayers; having a great High Priest who is entered into
+the heavens, Jesus the Son of God; and this confession we hold fast as
+long as we live, having God favourable unto us, and his only-begotten
+Son being manifested among us, Jesus Christ. But if we wish to have a
+multitude favourable unto us, we learn that thousand thousands stand by
+Him, and ten thousand thousands minister unto Him; who, regarding those
+as kinsfolks and friends who imitate their piety to God, work together
+for the salvation of them who call upon God and pray sincerely;
+appearing also, and thinking that they ought to listen to them, and as
+if upon one watchword to go forth for the benefit and salvation of those
+who pray to God, to whom they also pray." [Cont. Cels. lib. viii. Sec. 34.
+(Benedict, p. 766.)]
+
+After these multiplied declarations of Origen, not only confessing that
+Christians did not pray to the angels, but vindicating them from the
+charge of impiety brought against them by their enemies for their
+neglect of the worship of angels, is it possible to regard him as a
+witness in favour of prayer to angels?
+
+But it has been said that Origen in another passage (Cont. Cels. lib.
+viii. Sec. 13. p. 751.) {144} plainly implies, that he would not be
+unwilling to discuss the question of some worship being due to angels
+and archangels, provided the idea of that worship, and the acts of the
+worshippers, were first cleared of all misapprehension. And I would not
+that any Catholic, whether in communion with the Church of England or of
+Rome, should make any other answer than Origen here gave to Celsus. Let
+me speak freely on this point. I should not respect the memory of Origen
+as I do, had he taught differently. The word which he uses is the Greek
+word "therapeusis," precisely the same word with that which the learned
+in medicine now use to describe the means of healing diseases. It is a
+word of very wide import. It signifies the care which a physician takes
+of his patient; the service paid to a master; the attention given to a
+superior; the affectionate attendance of a friend; the allegiance of a
+subject; the worship of the Supreme Being. Origen says, Provided Celsus
+will specify what kind of "therapeusis" he would wish to be paid to
+those angels and archangels whose existence we acknowledge, I am ready
+to enter upon the subject with him. This is all he says. And we of the
+Anglican Church are ready from our hearts to join him. Call it by what
+name we may, we are never backward in acknowledging ourselves bound to
+render it. We pay to the angels and archangels, and all the company of
+heaven, the homage of respect, and veneration, and love. They are indeed
+our fellow-servants; they are, like ourselves, creatures of God's hand;
+but they are exalted far above us in nature and in office. By the grace
+of God, we would daily endeavour to become less distant from {145} them
+in purity, in zeal, in obedience. Origen here speaks not one word of
+adoration, of invocation, of prayer. He speaks of a feeling and a
+behaviour, which the Greeks called "therapeusis," and which we best
+render by "respect, veneration, and love." Far from us be the thought of
+lowering the holy angels in the eyes of our fellow-creatures; equally
+far from us be the thought of invoking them, of asking them even for
+their prayers. They are holy creatures and holy messengers: we will
+think and speak of them with reverence, and gratitude, and affection;
+but they are creatures and messengers still, and when we think or speak
+of the object of prayer, we think and speak solely and exclusively of
+God.
+
+With regard to Origen's opinion, as to the invocation of the souls of
+saints departed, a very few words will suffice. He clearly records his
+opinion that the faithful are still waiting for us, and that till we all
+rejoice together, their joy will not be full: he leaves among the
+mysteries not to be solved now the question whether the departed can
+benefit the human race at all; and he has added reflections, full of
+edifying and solemn admonition, which would dissuade his
+fellow-believers from placing their confidence in any virtues, or
+intercessions, or merits of saints, and in any thing except the mere
+mercy of God, through Jesus Christ, and our own individual labour in the
+work of the Lord.
+
+In his seventh homily on Leviticus, in a passage partly quoted by
+Bellarmin, we read[51]--"Not even the Apostles have yet received their
+joy, but even they are waiting, in order that I also may become a
+partaker of {146} their joy. For the saints departing hence do not
+immediately receive all the rewards of their deserts; but they wait even
+for us, though we be delaying and dilatory[52]. For they have not
+perfect joy as long as they grieve for our errors, and mourn for our
+sins." Then, having quoted the Epistle to the Hebrews, he
+proceeds,--"You see, therefore, that Abraham is yet waiting to obtain
+those things that are perfect; so is Isaac and Jacob; and so all the
+prophets are waiting for us, that they might obtain eternal blessedness
+with us. Wherefore, even this mystery is kept, to the last day of
+delayed judgment."
+
+ [Footnote 51: Vol. ii. p. 222. Nondum enim receperunt laetitiam
+ suam, ne apostoli quidem, &c. But see Huetius on Origen, lib.
+ ii. q. 11. No. 10.]
+
+ [Footnote 52: He thinks it probable, that the saints departed
+ feel an interest in the welfare of men on earth. See vol. iv. p.
+ 273.]
+
+Modern Roman Catholic writers tell us, that we must consider Origen here
+as only referring to the reunion of the soul with the body; but his
+words cannot be so interpreted. The cause of the saints still waiting
+for their consummation of bliss, is stated to be the will of God, that
+all the faithful should enter upon their full enjoyment of blessedness
+together.
+
+Again: it may be asked, whether the following passage could have come
+from the pen of one who prayed to the saints, as already reigning with
+Christ in heaven.
+
+"But now whether the saints who are removed from the body and are with
+Christ, act at all, and labour for us, like the angels who minister to
+our salvation; or whether, again, the wicked removed from the body act
+at all according to the purpose of their own mind, like the bad angels,
+with whom, it is said by Christ, that they will be sent into eternal
+fires;--let this too be {147} considered among the secret things of God,
+mysteries not to be committed to writing." [Epist. ad Rom. lib. ii.
+(Benedict. vol. iv. p. 479.) "Jam vero si etiam," &c.]
+
+In a passage found in Origen's Comment on Ezekiel's text, "Though Noah,
+Daniel, and Job, were in it, they should deliver neither son nor
+daughter, they should deliver only their own souls by their
+righteousness," [Hom. iii. vol. iii. p. 372.] independently of the
+testimony borne to the point before us, we read a very interesting and
+awakening lesson of general application:--
+
+"First, let us expound the passage agreeably to its plain sense, in
+consequence of the ignorance of some who maintain the ideas of their own
+mind to be the truth of God, and often say, 'Every one of us will be
+able by his prayers to snatch whomsoever he will from hell,' and
+introduce iniquity to the Lord; not seeing that the righteousness of the
+righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be
+upon him; so that each shall die in his own sin, and each live in his
+own person. My father being a martyr profits me nothing, if I shall not
+live well, and adorn the nobleness of my race,--that is, his testimony
+and confession, by which he was glorified in Christ. It profiteth not
+the Jews to say, 'We were not born of fornication, we have one father,
+the Lord;' and, a little after, 'Abraham is our father.' Whatever they
+may say, whatever they will assume, if they have not the faith of
+Abraham they make their boast in vain; for they will not be saved on
+account of their being children of Abraham. Since, therefore, some have
+formed incorrect notions, we have necessarily brought in the plain sense
+of the passage as to the letter, saying, Noah, Daniel, and Job will not
+rescue sons or daughters; they only will be saved. Let no {149} one of
+us put his trust in a just father, a holy mother, chaste brethren.
+Blessed is the man who hath his hope in himself, and in the right way.
+But to those who place confident trust in the saints, we bring forward
+no improper example,--'Cursed is the man whose hope is in man;' and
+again, 'Trust ye not in man.' And this also, 'It is good to trust in the
+Lord rather than in princes[53].' If we must hope in some object,
+leaving all others, let us hope in the Lord, saying, 'Though a host of
+men were set against me, yet shall not my heart be afraid.'"
+
+ [Footnote 53: These observations may perhaps refer more
+ especially to the saints still on earth; but they apply to all
+ helpers, save God alone.]
+
+He finishes the homily thus: "The righteous see three periods; the
+present, the period of change when the Lord will judge, and that which
+will be after the resurrection,--that is, the eternity of life in heaven
+in Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen."
+
+Can this confessor of the Christian faith have ever taught his
+fellow-believers to plead the merits of the saints, or to pray for their
+intercessions? How strongly are the above sentiments contrasted with a
+passage in the third of the spurious homilies called In Diversos; the
+first clause of which is referred to by Bellarmin, as containing
+Origen's approbation of giving honour to the saints[54].
+
+ [Footnote 54: I hardly need detain the reader by any proof of
+ the spuriousness of this passage; the whole work from which it
+ is taken is rejected altogether by the Benedictine editors:
+ "Reliqua ejusmodi spuria omittenda censuimus, qualia sunt ...
+ Homiliae in diversos;" and they have not allowed a single line of
+ it to appear in their volumes, not even in the small
+ character.--Vol. iv. p. 1.]
+
+"The memory of these (the Innocents) is always {149} celebrated, as is
+right, in the Churches. These, therefore, since they were unjustly or
+impiously put to death in peace and rest, having suffered much for the
+name of the Lord, were taken from this world, to remain in the eternal
+Church for ever in Christ. But their parents for the merits of their
+suffering will receive a worthy recompense of reward from the just and
+eternal Lord God." Here we have strongly marked indeed the difference
+between Origen himself, and the errors fastened upon him by the design
+or ignorance of subsequent times.
+
+Were not his testimony a subject of great moment, I should plead guilty
+to having detained my readers too long on Origen; and yet I cannot
+dismiss him without first refreshing our minds with the remembrance of
+some of his beautiful reflections on a Christian's prayer. We need not
+read them with a controversial eye, and they may be profitable to us
+all.
+
+"I think, then, (says this early teacher in Christ's school) that when
+proceeding to prayer, a Christian will be more readily disposed, and be
+in a better tone for the general work of prayer, if he will first tarry
+a little, and put himself into the right frame, casting off every
+distracting and disturbing thought, and with his best endeavour
+recalling to mind the vastness of HIM to whom he is drawing near, and
+how unholy a thing it is to approach him with a carelessness and
+indifference, and, as it were, contempt; laying aside also every thing
+foreign to the subject;--so to come to prayer as one who stretcheth
+forth his soul first, before his hands; and lifts up his mind first,
+before his eyes, to God; and before he stands up, raising from the
+ground the leading [150} principle of his nature, and lifting that up to
+the Lord of all. So far casting away all remembrance of evil towards any
+of those who may seem to have injured him, as he wishes God not to
+remember evil against him, who has himself been guilty, and has
+trespassed against many of his neighbours, or in whatever he is
+conscious to have done contrary to right reason." [De Oratione, vol. i.
+Sec. 31. p. 267.]
+
+"Having divided prayer into its several parts" (he continues), "I may
+bring my work to a close. There are then four parts of prayer requiring
+description, which I have found scattered in the Scriptures, all of
+which every one should embody in his prayer:--
+
+"First, we must offer glory (doxologies) to the best of our ability in
+the opening and commencement of our prayer, to God through Christ who is
+glorified with Him in the Holy Spirit, who is praised together. After
+this each person should offer general thanksgivings both for the
+blessings granted to all, and for those which he has individually
+obtained from God. After the thanksgiving, it appears to me right, that
+becoming, as it were, a bitter accuser of his own sins to God, he should
+petition first of all for a remedy to release him from the habit which
+impels him to transgress, and then for remission of the past. And after
+the confession, I think he ought in the fourth place, to add a
+supplication for great and heavenly things, both individual and
+universal, and for his relations and friends. After all, he should close
+his prayer with an ascription of glory to God through Christ in the Holy
+Ghost." [Sect. 33. p. 271.] {151}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION VI.--SUPPLEMENTARY SECTION ON ORIGEN.
+
+
+I have above intimated my intention of reserving for a separate section
+our examination of a passage ascribed to Origen, in which he is
+represented as having invoked an angel to come down from heaven, to
+succour him and his fellow-creatures on earth. The passage purports to
+be part of Origen's comment on the opening verse of the prophecy of
+Ezekiel, "The heavens were opened." After the fullest investigation, and
+patient weighing of the whole section, I am fully persuaded, first, that
+the passage is an interpolation, never having come from the pen of
+Origen; and secondly, that, whoever were its author, it can be regarded
+only as an instance of those impassioned apostrophes, which are found in
+great variety in the addresses of ancient Christian orators. But since
+some of the most respected writers of the Church of Rome have regarded
+it as genuine, and deemed it worthy of being cited in evidence, I feel
+it incumbent to state at length, for those readers who may desire to
+enter at once fully into the question, the reasons on which my judgment
+is founded; whilst others, who may perhaps consider the discussion of
+the several points here as too great an interruption to the general
+argument, may for the present pass this section, and reserve it for
+subsequent inquiry.
+
+It will be, in the first place, necessary to quote the whole passage
+entire, however long; for the mere extract of that portion which is
+cited as Origen's prayer to an {152} angel, might leave a false
+impression as to the real merits of the case.
+
+"The heavens are opened. The heavens were closed, and at the coming of
+Christ they were opened, IN ORDER THAT THEY BEING LAID OPEN THE HOLY
+GHOST MIGHT COME UPON HIM in the appearance of a dove. For he could not
+come to us unless he had first descended on one who partook of his own
+nature. Jesus ascended up on high, he led captivity captive, he received
+gifts for men. He who descended is the same who ascended above all
+heavens, that he might fill all things; and he gave some as apostles,
+some as prophets, some as evangelists, some as pastors and masters, for
+the perfecting of the saints." [Vol. iii. p. 358. Hom. i. in Ezek.]
+
+"[The heavens were opened. It is not enough for one heaven to be opened:
+very many are opened, that not from one, but from all, angels may
+descend to those who are to be saved; angels who ascended and descended
+upon the Son of man, and came to him, and ministered to him. Now the
+angels descended because Christ first descended, fearing to descend
+before the Lord of all powers and things commanded. But when they saw
+the chieftain of the army of heaven dwelling in earthly places, then
+they entered through the opened road, following their Lord, and obeying
+his will, who distributes them as guardians of those that believe on his
+name. Thou yesterday wast under a devil, to-day thou art under an angel.
+Do not ye, saith the Lord, despise one of the least of those who are in
+the Church? Verily, I say unto you, that their angels through all things
+see the face of the Father who is in heaven. The angels attend on thy
+salvation; they were granted for the ministry of the Son of God, and
+{153} they say among themselves, If he descended, and descended into a
+body, if he is clothed in mortal flesh, and endured the cross, and died
+for man, why are we resting idle? Why do we spare ourselves? Haste away!
+Let all of us angels descend from heaven! Thus also was there a
+multitude of the heavenly host praising and blessing God when Christ was
+born. All things are full of angels. COME, ANGEL, take up one who by the
+word is converted from former error, from the doctrine of demons, from
+iniquity speaking on high, and taking him up like a good physician,
+cherish him, and instruct him. He is a little child, to-day he is born,
+an old man again growing young; and undertake him, granting him the
+baptism of the second regeneration; and summon to thyself other
+companions of thy ministry, that you all may together train for the
+faith those who have been sometime deceived. For there is greater joy in
+heaven over one sinner repenting, than over ninety and nine just persons
+who need no repentance. Every creature exults, rejoices with, and with
+applause addresses those who are to be saved; for the expectation of the
+creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God. And although
+those who have interpolated the apostolical writings are unwilling that
+such passages should be in their books as may prove Christ to be the
+Creator, yet every creature waiteth for the sons of God when they shall
+be freed from sin, when they shall be taken away from the hand of
+Zabulon[55], when they shall be regenerated by Christ. But now it is
+time that we touch somewhat on the present place. The Prophet sees not a
+vision, but visions of God. {154} Why did he see not one, but many
+visions? Hear the Lord promising and saying, I have multiplied visions.
+8. 'The fifth month.' This was the fifth year of the captivity of king
+Joachim. In the thirtieth year of Ezekiel's age, and the fifth of the
+captivity of Joachim, the prophet is sent to the Jews. The most merciful
+Father did not despise the people, nor leave them a long time
+unadmonished. It is the fifth year. How much time intervened? Five years
+elapsed since they were captives in bondage.]
+
+(The portion between brackets is what I regard as an interpolation.)
+
+ [Footnote 55: This word is frequently used for "Diabolum." Thus
+ in a hymn used in the Roman ritual on Michaelmas-day we read,
+ "Michaelem in virtute conterentem Zabulum."]
+
+"Immediately the Holy Spirit descends. He opened the heavens, that they
+who were oppressed by the yoke of bondage might see those things which
+were seen by the prophet. For when he says, The heavens were opened, in
+some measure they see with the eyes of their heart what he had seen even
+with the eyes of his flesh."
+
+Now the question is, Can this apostrophe to an angel be admitted as
+evidence that Origen held, and in his own person acted upon the doctrine
+of the Invocation of Angels?
+
+The nature of the present work precludes us from entering at length on
+the broad question, how far we can with safety regard the several
+writings which now purport to be translations of Origen's compositions,
+as on the whole the works of that early Christian writer. A multitude of
+those works which, until almost the middle of the sixteenth century,
+were circulated as Origen's, have long been by common consent excluded
+from the catalogue of his works[56]. On this subject I {155} would refer
+any one, who desires to enter upon the inquiry, to the several prefaces
+of the Benedictine editors, who point out many sources of information,
+as well from among their friends as from those with whom they differ.
+Our inquiry must be limited within far narrower bounds, though I trust
+our arguments may assist somewhat in establishing the principles on
+which the student may at first guide himself in the wider range of
+investigation.
+
+ [Footnote 56: See preface to vol. iv. of the Benedictine
+ edition.]
+
+We will first look to the external evidence bearing on the passage in
+question, and then to the internal character of the passage itself.
+
+Origen's Commentaries on Ezekiel were divided into no fewer than
+twenty-five volumes, which he is said to have begun in Caesarea of
+Palestine, and to have finished in Athens. Of these only one single
+fragment remains, namely, part of the twenty-first volume[57]. Jerome
+says that he translated fourteen of Origen's homilies on Ezekiel. Of
+these not one passage in the original language of Origen is known to be
+in existence. We must now, therefore, either receive the existing
+translations generally as Origen's, (whether they are Jerome's
+translations or not,) or we must consider Origen's homilies on Ezekiel
+as altogether lost to us. But supposing that we receive these works as
+containing, on the whole, traditionary translations of Origen, the
+genuineness of any one passage may yet become the subject of fair
+criticism. And whilst some persons reject whole masses of them
+altogether, the history of his works cannot but suggest some very
+perplexing points of suspicion and doubt.
+
+ [Footnote 57: See Benedictine edition, vol. iii. p. 351. and
+ Eusebius, Eccl. Hist. lib. vi. c. 6. there referred to.] {156}
+
+The great body of his homilies, Origen probably delivered extempore in
+the early part of his ministry to the Christians of Caesarea. Eusebius
+tells us, that not before Origen had reached his sixtieth year did he
+sanction the notaries (persons well known to history and corresponding
+to the short-hand writers[58] of the present day) in publishing any of
+his homilies. [Eccles. Hist. lib. vi. c. 36.] But the Benedictine
+editor, De la Rue, conceives that those men might surreptitiously and
+against the preacher's wishes have published some of Origen's homilies.
+Be this as it may. Suppose that the homilies on Ezekiel were published
+by Origen himself, and were translated by Jerome himself, our doubts are
+not removed even by that supposition. The same editor in the same
+preface tells us, "It is known to the learned that it was Jerome's
+habit, in translating Greek, sometimes to insert some things of his
+own[59]." Not that I for a moment conceive the passage under
+consideration to have come in its Latin dress from the pen of Jerome;
+for my conviction being that it is an interpolation of a much later
+date, I mention the circumstance to show, that even when Jerome, with
+his professed accuracy, is the translator, we can in no case feel sure
+that we are reading the exact and precise sentiments of Origen.
+
+ [Footnote 58: The Latin word "notarius" (notary) does not come
+ so near as our own English expression, "short-hand writer," to
+ the Greek word used by Eusebius,--"tachygraphus,"
+ "quick-writer." The report of Eusebius as to the homilies of
+ Origen having been delivered extempore, and taken down by these
+ "quick-writers," is confirmed by Pamphilus the martyr, as quoted
+ by Valesius, in the annotations on this passage of
+ Eusebius.--Apol. Orig. lib. i.]
+
+ [Footnote 59: Cui in vertendis Graecis sciunt eruditi solemne
+ esse nonnulla interdum de suo inserere.] {157}
+
+Ruffinus, his celebrated contemporary, accused Jerome of many
+inaccuracies in his translations; and yet what were the principles of
+translation adopted by Ruffinus himself, as his own, we are not left to
+infer; for we learn it from his own pen. His voluntary acknowledgment in
+the peroration which he added to Origen's Comment on the Epistle of St.
+Paul to the Romans, strongly and painfully exhibits to us how little
+dependence can safely be placed on such translations whenever the
+original is lost; how utterly insufficient and unsatisfactory is any
+evidence drawn from them, as to the real genuine sentiments and
+expressions of the author. Ruffinus informs us, that with regard to many
+of the various works of Origen, he changed the preacher's extemporary
+addresses, as delivered in the Church, into a more explanatory form,
+"adding, supplying, filling up what he thought wanting[60]."
+
+ [Footnote 60: Dum supplere cupimus ea quae ab Origene in
+ auditorio Ecclesiae extempore (non tam explanationis quam
+ aedificationis intentione) perorata sunt.... Si addere quod
+ videar, et explere quae desunt.--Orig. vol. iv. p. 688.]
+
+Moreover, he proceeds so far as to tell us[61] that his false {158}
+friends had remonstrated with him for not publishing the works under his
+own name, instead of retaining Origen's, his changes having been so
+great; a point, which he was far from unwilling to acknowledge. This
+must appear to every one unsatisfactory in the extreme, and to shake
+one's confidence in any evidence drawn from such a source. Indeed, the
+Benedictine editor, with great cause and candour, laments this course of
+proceeding on the part of Ruffinus, as throwing a doubt and uncertainty,
+and suspicion, over all the works so tampered with. "This one thing
+(observes that honest editor) would the learned desire, that Ruffinus
+had spared himself the labour of filling up what he thought deficient.
+For since the Greek text has perished, it can scarcely with certainty be
+distinguished, where Origen himself speaks, or where Ruffinus obtrudes
+his own merchandise upon us." This is more than enough to justify our
+remarks. I must, however, refer to the conduct of another editor and
+translator of Origen, of a similar tendency. It unhappily shows the
+disposition to sacrifice every thing to the received opinions of the
+Church of Rome, rather than place the whole evidence of antiquity before
+the world, and abide by the result. How many works this principle, in
+worse hands, may have mutilated, or utterly buried in oblivion, and left
+to perish, it is impossible to conjecture; that the principle is
+unworthy the spirit of Christianity will not now be questioned. That
+editor and translator, in his advertisement on the Commentary upon St.
+John, thus professes the principles which he had adopted: "Know,
+moreover, that I have found nothing in this book which {159} seemed to
+be inconsistent with the decrees of holy Mother Church: for had I found
+any, I would not have translated the book, or would have marked the
+suspected place." [Quoted by the Benedictine, vol. iv. p. viii.] The
+Benedictine proceeds to say, that the writer had not kept his word, but
+had allowed many heterodox passages to escape, whilst he had
+deliberately withdrawn others.
+
+ [Footnote 61: His words, as indicative of his principles of
+ translation, and bearing immediately on the question, as to the
+ degree of authority which should be assigned to the remains of
+ Origen, when the original is lost, deserve a place here: "I am
+ exposed to a new sort of charge at their hands; for thus they
+ address me,--In your writings, since very many parts in them
+ (plurima in eis) are considered to be of your own production,
+ give the title of your own name, and write, for example, The
+ Books of Explanations of Ruffinus on the Epistle to the
+ Romans,--but the whole of this they offer me, not from any love
+ of me, but from hatred to the author. But I, who consult my
+ conscience more than my fame, even if I am seen to add some
+ things, and to fill up what are wanting, or to shorten what are
+ too long, yet I do not think it right to steal the title of him,
+ who laid the foundations of the works, and supplied the
+ materials for the buildings. Yet, in truth, it may be at the
+ option of the reader, when he shall have approved of the work,
+ to ascribe the merits to whom he will."]
+
+Many works probably, of the earliest ages, have been wholly or in part
+lost to us from the working of the same principle in its excess. Rather
+than perpetuate any sentiments at variance with the received doctrines
+of the Church, it was considered the duty of the faithful to let works,
+in themselves valuable, but containing such sentiments, altogether
+perish, or to exclude the objectionable passages.
+
+I would now invite you to examine the passage itself, and determine
+whether it does not bear within it internal evidence of its having been
+altogether interpolated.
+
+In the first place, on the words upon which it professes to be a
+comment, the author had already given his comment, and assigned to them
+another meaning. "The heavens were opened," he says: "Before the time of
+Christ the heavens were shut; but at his advent they were opened, THAT
+THE HOLY SPIRIT MIGHT DESCEND FIRST ON HIM;" quoting also among others
+the passage which speaks of Christ taking captivity captive. And then
+after the passage in question, in which he assigns a totally different
+reason for the opening of the heavens; without any allusion to the
+intervening ideas, he carries on, and concludes the comment which he had
+begun,--in words which fit on well with the close of that comment, but
+which, as they stand now at the close of the intervening passage about
+the angels, are abrupt and incoherent--"Forthwith the Holy Spirit {160}
+descended;" recurring also again to the idea which he had before
+introduced of Christ benefiting those who were in captivity. A passage
+which affixes to the words commented upon, a different interpretation
+from one already given in the same paragraph; and which forces itself
+abruptly and incoherently in the middle of a brief comment, must offer
+itself to our examination under strong grounds of suspicion, that it has
+been interpolated. But when we examine the substance of the passage, its
+sentiments, the ideas conveyed, and the associations suggested, and then
+think of the author to whom it is ascribed, few probably will be
+disposed to regard it as a faithful mirror in which to contemplate the
+real sentiments of Origen.
+
+How utterly unworthy of the sublime burst of Christian eloquence which
+now delights us in undoubted works of Origen, is this strange and
+degrading fiction! The true Origen THERE represents the tens of
+thousands of angelic spirits ten thousand times told, as ever
+surrounding the throne of God, and ministering for the blessing of those
+in whose behalf God himself wills them to serve. [Vol. i. p. 767. Contr.
+Cels. viii. 34.] Here he represents the revelation of the holiest of
+holies as a throwing open of the various divisions or compartments of
+the celestial kingdom for all the angels to hasten forth together, from
+their several places of indolence and carelessness and self-indulgence,
+(for such he represents their state to have been,) to visit this earth.
+Surely such a comment would better suit the mythology of the cave and
+dens of AEolus and his imprisoned winds (velut agmine facto qua data
+porta ruunt) than the awfully sublime revelation vouchsafed to the
+prophet Ezekiel. And how unworthy and degrading is that representation
+of the {161} heavenly host, resting inactive, and sparing themselves
+from toil, until they witnessed Christ's descent and humiliation; and
+then when chid and put to shame and rebuke, and mutually roused to
+action by their fellows, coming down to visit this earth, and rushing
+through the opened portals of heaven.
+
+Again, we see how incoherent is the whole section which contains the
+alleged prayer to angels: "Thou wast yesterday under a demon, to-day
+thou art under an angel: the angels minister to thy salvation; they are
+granted for the ministry of the Son of God, &c. All things are full of
+angels. Come, Angel, take up one who is converted from his ancient
+error, &c. And call to thee other companions of thy ministry, that all
+of you alike may train up to the faith those who were once deceived."
+Indeed the passage seems to carry within itself its own condemnation so
+entirely, that what we have before alleged, both of internal and
+external evidence, may appear superfluous. Surely the conceit of a
+preacher of God's word addressing an angel, (which of them he thus
+individually addresses does not appear; for he says not "My Angel," as
+though he were appealing to one whom he regarded as his guardian, the
+view gratuitously suggested in the marginal note of the Benedictine
+editor, "the invocation of a guardian angel,") and bidding some one
+angel, as a sort of summoner, to go and call to himself all the angels
+of heaven to come in one body, and instruct those who are in error, is,
+even as a rhetorical apostrophe, as unworthy the mind of a Christian
+philosopher, as it is in the light of a prayer totally inconsistent with
+the plain sentiments of Origen on the very subject of angelic
+invocation. Even had Origen not left us his deliberate opinions in works
+of undoubted genuineness, such a {162} strange, incoherent, and childish
+rhapsody could never be relied upon by sober and upright men as a
+precedent sanctioning a Christian's prayer to angels; no one would rely
+upon such evidence in points of far less moment, even were it
+uncontradicted by the same witness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION VII.--ST. CYPRIAN.
+
+
+In the middle of the third century, Cyprian [Jerom, vol. iv. p. 342.], a
+man of substance and a rhetorician of Carthage, was converted to
+Christianity. He was then fifty years of age; and his learning, virtues,
+and devotedness to the cause which he had espoused, very soon raised him
+to the dignity, the responsibility, and, in those days, the great
+danger, of the Episcopate. (Cyprian is said to have been converted about
+A.D. 246, to have been consecrated A.D. 248, and to have suffered
+martyrdom A.D. 258.) Many of his writings of undoubted genuineness are
+preserved, and they have been appealed to in every age as the works of a
+faithful son of the Catholic Church. On the subject of prayer he has
+written very powerfully and affectingly; but I find no expression which
+can by possibility imply that he practised or countenanced the
+invocation of saints and angels. I have carefully examined every
+sentence alleged by its most strenuous defenders, and I cannot extract
+from them one single grain of evidence which can bear the test of
+inquiry. Even did the passages quoted require to be taken in the sense
+affixed to them {163} by those advocates, they prove nothing; they do
+not bear even remotely upon the subject, whilst I am persuaded that to
+every unprejudiced mind a meaning will appear to have been attached to
+them which the author did not intend to convey.
+
+The first quotation to which our attention is called is from the close
+of his treatise De Habitu Virginum, which contains some very edifying
+reflections. In the last clause of that treatise the advocates for the
+invocation of saints represent Cyprian as requesting the virgins to
+remember him in their prayers at the throne of grace when they shall
+have been taken to heaven. "As we have borne the image of Him who is of
+the earth, let us also bear the image of him who is from heaven. This
+image the virgin-state bears,--integrity bears it, holiness and truth
+bear it; rules of discipline mindful of God bear it, retaining justice
+with religion, firm in the faith, humble in fear, strong to endure all
+things, gentle to receive an injury, readily disposed to pity, with one
+mind and with one heart in brotherly peace. All which ye ought, O good
+virgins, to observe, to love and fulfil; ye who, retired for the service
+of God and Christ, with your greater and better part are going before
+towards the Lord to whom you have devoted yourselves. Let those who are
+advanced in age exercise rule over the younger; ye younger, offer to
+your equals a stimulus; encourage yourselves by mutual exhortations; by
+examples emulous of virtue invite each other to glory; remain firm;
+conduct yourselves spiritually; gain the end happily. Only remember us
+then, when your virgin-state shall begin to be honoured." [Tantum
+mementote tunc nostri, cum incipiet in vobis virginitas honorari.--Page
+180.] {164}
+
+The second instance, from the close of his letter to Cornelius, puts
+before us a beautiful act of friendship and brotherly affection worthy
+of every Christian brother's and friend's imitation. But how it can be
+applied in supporting the cause of the invocation of saints, I cannot
+see. The supporters of that doctrine say that Cyprian suggests to his
+friend, still living on earth, that whichever of the two should be first
+called away, he should continue when in heaven to pray for the survivor
+on earth. Suppose it to be so. That has not any approximation to our
+praying to one who is already dead and gone to his reward. But Cyprian
+surely intended to convey a very different meaning, namely this, that
+the two friends should continue to pray, each in his place, mutually for
+each other and for their friends, and relieve each other's wants and
+necessities whilst both survived; and whenever death should remove the
+one from earth to happiness, the survivor should not forget their bond
+of friendship, but should still continue to pray to God for their
+brothers and sisters. The passage translated to the letter, runs thus:
+"Let us be mutually mindful of each other, with one mind and one heart.
+On both sides, let us always pray for each other; let us by mutual love
+relieve each other's pressures and distresses; and if either of us from
+hence, by the speed of the Divine favour, go on before the {165} other,
+let our love persevere before the Lord; for our brothers and sisters
+with the Father's mercy let not prayer cease. My desire, most dear
+brother, is that you may always prosper." [Epist. 57. Benedict, p.
+96.--Memores nostri invicem simus concordes atque unanimes: utrobique
+pro nobis semper oremus, pressuras et angustias mutua caritate
+relevemus, et si quis istinc nostrum prior divinae dignationis celeritate
+praecesserit, perseveret apud Dominum nostra dilectio; pro fratribus et
+sororibus nostris apud misericordiam Patris non cesset oratio. Opto te,
+frater carissime, semper bene valere.--This epistle is by some editors
+numbered as the 60th, by others as the 61st, the 7th, and the 69th, &c.]
+
+Whether the above view of this passage be founded in reason or not, it
+matters little to the point at issue. Let both these passages be
+accepted in the sense assigned to them by some Roman Catholic writers,
+yet there is not a shadow of analogy between the language and conduct of
+Cyprian, and the language and conduct of those who now invoke saints
+departed. In each case Cyprian, still in the body, was addressing
+fellow-creatures still sojourning on earth. The very utmost which these
+passages could be forced to countenance would be, that the righteous,
+when in heaven, may be mindful in their prayers of their friends, who
+are still exposed to the dangers from which they have themselves finally
+escaped, and who, when both were on earth, requested them to remember
+the survivors in their prayers. But this is a question totally different
+from our addressing them in supplication and prayer; a difference which
+I am most anxious that both myself and my readers should keep in mind
+throughout.
+
+In the extract from Cyprian's letter, a modern author having rendered
+the single word "utrobique," by the words "in this world and the next" I
+am induced to add a few further observations on the passage. (The Latin
+original and the version here referred to, will be placed side by side
+in the Appendix.) It will, I think, appear to most readers on a careful
+examination of the passage, that the expression "utrobique[62]" "on both
+sides," or "on both parts," whatever be its precise {166} meaning, so
+far from referring to "this world and the next," must evidently be
+confined to the condition of both parties now in this life, because it
+stands in direct contradistinction to what follows, the supposed case of
+the death of either of the two; and because it applies no less to the
+mutual relief of each other's sufferings and afflictions during their
+joint lives, than to their mutual prayers: it cannot mean that all the
+mutual benefits to be derived from their mutual remembrance of each
+other, were to come solely through the means of their prayers. They were
+doubtless mutually to pray for each other; but, in addition to their
+prayers, they were also to relieve each other's pressures and
+difficulties with mutual love, and that too before the event afterwards
+contemplated, namely, the removal of one of them by death.
+
+ [Footnote 62: Utrobique is rendered by Facciolati [Greek:
+ hekaterothi]--"in utraque parte, utrimque."]
+
+Bishop Fell thus comments on the passage: "The sense seems to be, When
+either of us shall die; whether I, who preside at Carthage, or you, who
+are presiding at Rome, shall be the survivor, let the prayer to God of
+him whose lot shall be to remain the longest among the living,
+persevere, and continue." "Meanwhile," continues the Bishop[63], "we by
+no means doubt that souls admitted into heaven apply to God, the best
+and greatest of Beings, that he would have compassion on those who are
+dwelling on the earth. But it does not thence follow, that prayers
+should be offered to the saints. THE MAN WHO PETITIONS THEM MAKES THEM
+GODS (Deos qui rogat ille facit)." [Oxford, 1682, p. 143.] Rigaltius,
+himself {167} a Roman Catholic, doubts whether, when Cyprian wrote this
+letter, he had any idea before his mind of saints departed praying for
+the living. He translates "utrobique" very much as I have done, "with
+reciprocal love, with mutual charity." His last observations on this
+passage are very remarkable. After having confessed the sentiments to be
+worthy of a Christian, that the saints pray for us, and having argued
+that Cyprian could not have thought it necessary to ask a saint to
+retain his brotherly kindness in heaven, for he could not be a saint if
+he did not continue to love his brethren, he thus concludes: "In truth
+it is a pious and faithful saying, That of those who having already put
+off mortality are made joint-heirs with Christ, and of those who
+surviving on earth will hereafter be joint-heirs with Christ, the Church
+is one, and is by the Holy Spirit so well joined together as not to be
+torn asunder by the dissolution of the body. They pray to God for us,
+and we praise God for them, and thus with mutual affection (utrobique)
+we always pray for each other." [Paris, 1666. p. 92.]
+
+ [Footnote 63: See the note of the Benedictine editors on this
+ passage (p. 467), in which they refer to the sentiments of
+ Rigaltius, Pamelius, and Bishop Fell, whom they call "the most
+ illustrious Bishop of Oxford."]
+
+I will detain you only by one or two more extracts from Cyprian; one
+forming part of the introduction to his Comment on the Lord's Prayer,
+which is fitted for the edification of Christians in every age; the
+other closing his treatise on Mortality, one of those beautiful
+productions by which, during the plague which raged at Carthage in the
+year 252, he comforted and exhorted the Christians, that they might meet
+death without fear or amazement, in sure and certain hope of eternal
+blessedness in heaven. The sentiments in the latter passage will be
+responded to by every good Catholic, whether in communion with the
+Church of Rome or {168} with the Church of England; whilst in the former
+we are reminded, that to pray as Cyprian prayed, we must address
+ourselves to God alone in the name and trusting to the merits only of
+his blessed Son.
+
+"He who caused us to live, taught us also to pray, with that kindness
+evidently by which He deigns to give and confer on us every other
+blessing; that when we speak to the Father in the prayer and
+supplication which his Son taught, we might the more readily be heard.
+He had already foretold, that the hour was coming when the true
+worshippers should worship the Father in spirit and in truth; and He
+fulfilled what He before promised, that we, who have received the spirit
+and truth from his sanctification, may from his instruction offer
+adoration truly and spiritually. For what prayer can be more spiritual
+than that which is given to us by Christ, by whom even the Holy Spirit
+is sent to us? What can be a more true prayer with the Father than that
+which came from the lips of the Son, who is Truth? So that to pray
+otherwise than He taught, is not only ignorance, but a fault; since He
+has himself laid it down and said, Ye reject the Commandment of God to
+establish your own traditions. Let us pray then, most beloved brethren,
+as our teacher, God, has instructed us. It is a welcome and friendly
+prayer to petition God from his own, to mount up to his ears by the
+prayer of Christ. Let the Father recognize the words of his Son. When we
+offer a prayer let Him who dwelleth inwardly in our breast, Himself be
+in our voice; and since we have Him as our advocate with the Father for
+our sins, when as sinners we are petitioning for our sins let us put
+forth the words of our Advocate." [De Orat. Dom. p. 204.]
+
+"We must consider, (he says at the close of his {169} treatise on the
+Mortality [Page 236.],) most beloved brethren, and frequently reflect
+that we have renounced the world, and are meanwhile living here as
+strangers and pilgrims. Let us embrace the day which assigns each to his
+own home ... which restores us to paradise and the kingdom of heaven,
+snatched from hence and liberated from the entanglements of the world.
+What man, when he is in a foreign country, would not hasten to return to
+his native land?... We regard paradise as our country.... We have begun
+already to have the patriarchs for our parents. Why do we not hasten and
+run that we may see our country, and salute our parents? There a large
+number of dear ones are waiting for us, of parents, brothers, children;
+a numerous and full crowd are longing for us; already secure of their
+own immortality, and still anxious for our safety. To come to the sight
+and the embrace of these, how great will be the mutual joy to them and
+to us! What a pleasure of the kingdom of heaven is there without the
+fear of dying, and with an eternity of living! How consummate and
+never-ending a happiness! There is the glorious company of the apostles;
+there is the assembly of exulting prophets; there is the unnumbered
+family of martyrs crowned for the victory of their struggles and
+suffering; there are virgins triumphing, who, by the power of chastity,
+have subdued the lusts of the flesh and the body; there are the merciful
+recompensed, who with food and bounty to the poor have done the works of
+righteousness, who keeping the Lord's commands have transferred their
+earthly inheritance into heavenly treasures. To these, O most dearly
+beloved brethren, let us hasten with most eager longing; {170} let us
+desire that our lot may be to be with these speedily; to come speedily
+to Christ. Let God see this to be our thought; let our Lord Christ
+behold this to be the purpose of our mind and faith, who will give more
+abundant rewards of his glory to them, whose desires for himself have
+been the greater."
+
+Such is the evidence of St. Cyprian.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION VIII.--LACTANTIUS.
+
+
+Cyprian suffered martyrdom about the year 260. Towards the close of this
+century, and at the beginning of the fourth, flourished Lactantius. He
+was deeply imbued with classical learning and philosophy. Before he
+became a writer (as Jerome informs us [Jerom, vol. iv. part ii. p. 119.
+Paris, 1706]) he taught rhetoric at Nicomedia; and afterwards in extreme
+old age he was the tutor of Caesar Crispus, son of Constantine, in Gaul.
+Among many other writings which Jerome enumerates, he specifies the
+book, "On the Anger of God," as a most beautiful work. Bellarmin,
+however, speaks of him disparagingly, as one who had fallen into many
+errors, and was better versed in Cicero than in the Holy Scriptures. His
+testimony is allowed by the supporters of the adoration of spirits and
+angels to be decidedly against them; they do not refer to a single
+passage likely to aid their cause; and they are chiefly anxious to
+depreciate his evidence. I will call your attention only to two passages
+in his works. The {171} one is in his first book on False Religion: "God
+hath created ministers, whom we call messengers (angels);... but neither
+are these gods, nor do they wish to be called gods, nor to be
+worshipped, as being those who do nothing beyond the command and will of
+God." [Vol. i. p. 31.]
+
+The other passage is from his work on a Happy Life: "Nor let any one
+think that souls are judged immediately after death. For all are kept in
+one common place of guard, until the time come when the great Judge will
+institute an inquiry into their deserts. Then those whose righteousness
+shall be approved, will receive the reward of immortality; and those
+whose sins and crimes are laid open shall not rise again, but shall be
+hidden in the same darkness with the wicked--appointed to fixed
+punishments." [Chap. xxi. p. 574.]
+
+This composition is generally believed to have been written about the
+year 317.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IX.--EUSEBIUS.
+
+
+The evidence of Eusebius, on any subject connected with primitive faith
+and practice, cannot be looked to without feelings of deep interest. He
+flourished about the beginning of the fourth century, and was Bishop of
+Caesarea, in Palestine. His testimony has always been appealed to in the
+Catholic Church, as an authority not likely to be gainsaid. He was a
+voluminous writer, and his writings were very diversified in their
+character. {172} Whatever be our previous sentiments we cannot too
+carefully examine the remains of this learned man. But in his writings,
+historical, biographical, controversial, or by whatever name they may be
+called, overflowing as they are with learning, philosophical and
+scriptural, I can find no one single passage which countenances the
+decrees of the Council of Trent; not one passage which would encourage
+me to hope that I prayed as the primitive Church was wont to pray, if by
+invocation I requested an angel or a saint to procure me any favour, or
+to pray for me. The testimony of Eusebius has a directly contrary
+tendency.
+
+Among the authorities quoted by the champions of the invocation of
+saints, I can find only three from Eusebius; and I sincerely lament the
+observations which truth and justice require me to make here, in
+consequence of the manner in which his evidence has been cited. The
+first passage to which I refer is quoted by Bellarmin from the history
+of Eusebius, to prove that the spirit of a holy one goes direct from
+earth to heaven. This passage is not from the pen of Eusebius; and if it
+were, it would not bear on our inquiry. The second is quoted by the same
+author, from the Evangelica Praeparatio, to prove that the primitive
+Christians offered prayers to the saints. Neither is this from the pen
+of Eusebius. The third Extract, from the account of the martyrdom of
+Polycarp, is intended to prove that the martyrs were worshipped. Even
+this, one of the most beautiful passages in ancient history, as it is
+represented by Bellarmin and others, is interpolated.
+
+The first passage, which follows a description of the {173} martyr
+Potamiaena's sufferings, is thus quoted by Bellarmin: "In this manner the
+blessed virgin, Potamniaena, emigrated from earth to heaven." [Hoc modo
+beata Virgo emigravit e terris ad coelum. Vol. ii. p. 854.] And such,
+doubtless, is the passage in the translation of Eusebius, ascribed to
+Ruffinus [Basil, 1535. p. 134]; but the original is, "And such a
+struggle was thus accomplished by this celebrated virgin;" ([Greek: kai
+ho men taes aoidimou koraes toioutos kataegoisisto athlos]; Tale
+certamen ab hac percelebri et gloriosa virgine confectum fait.); and
+such is the Parisian translation of 1581.
+
+The second misquotation is far more serious. Bellarmin thus quotes
+Eusebius: "These things we do daily, who honouring the soldiers of true
+religion as the friends of God, approach to their respective monuments,
+and make OUR PRAYERS TO THEM, as holy men, by whose intercession to God,
+we profess to be not a little aided." [Haec nos, inquit, quotidie
+factitamus qui veras pietatis milites ut Dei amicos honorantes, ad
+monumenta quoque eorum accedimus, votaque ipsis facimus tanquam viris
+sanctis quorum intercessione ad Deum non parum juvari profitemur.--p.
+902. He quotes it as c. 7.]
+
+By one who has not by experience become familiar with these things it
+would scarcely be believed, that whilst the readers of Bellarmin have
+been taught to regard these as the words of Eusebius, in the original
+there is no mention whatever made of the intercession of the saints;
+that there is no allusion to prayer to them; that there is no admission
+even of any benefit derived from them at all. This quotation Bellarmin
+makes from the Latin version, published in Paris in 1581, or from some
+common source: it is word for word the same. We must either allow him to
+be ignorant of the truth, or to have designedly preferred error. {174}
+The copy which I have before me of the "Evangelica Praeparatio," in Greek
+and Latin, was printed in 1628, and dedicated by Viger Franciscus, a
+priest of the order of Jesuits, to the Archbishop of Paris.
+
+Eusebius, marking the resemblance in many points between Plato's
+doctrine and the tenets of Christianity, on the reverence which,
+according to Plato, ought to be paid to the good departed, makes this
+observation: "And this corresponds with what takes place on the death of
+those lovers of God, whom you would not be wrong in calling the soldiers
+of the true religion. Whence also it is our custom to proceed to their
+tombs, and AT THEM [the tombs] to make our prayers, and to honour their
+blessed souls, inasmuch as these things are with reason done by us."
+[Greek: kai tauta de armozei epi tae ton theophilon teleutae ous
+stratiotas taes alaethous eusebeius ouk an hamartois eipon
+paralambanesthai othen kai epi tas thaekas auton ethos haemin parienai
+kai tas euchas para tautais poieisthai, timan te tas makarias auton
+psychas, os eulogos kai touton uph haemon giguomenon.] This translation
+agrees to a certain extent with the Latin of Viger's edition ("Quae
+quidem in hominum Deo carissimorum obitus egregie conveniunt, quos verae
+pietatis milites jure appellaris. Nam et eorum sepulchra celebrare et
+preces ibi votaque nuncupare et beatas illorum animas venerari
+consuevimus, idque a nobis merito fieri statuimus"); though the
+translator there has employed words more favourable to the doctrine of
+the saints' adoration, than he could in strictness justify.
+
+The celebrated letter from the Church of Smyrna (Euseb. Cantab. 1720.
+vol. i. p. 163), relating the martyrdom of Polycarp, one of the most
+precious relics of Christian antiquity, has already been examined by us,
+when we were inquiring into the recorded {175} sentiments of Polycarp;
+and to our reflections in that place we have little to add. The
+interpolations to which we have now referred, are intended to take off
+the edge of the evidence borne by this passage of Eusebius against the
+invocation of saints. First, whereas the Christians of Smyrna are
+recorded by Eusebius to have declared, without any limitation or
+qualification whatever, that they could never worship any fellow-mortal
+however honoured and beloved, the Parisian edition limits and qualifies
+their declaration by interpolating the word "as God," implying that they
+would offer a secondary worship to a saint. Again, whereas Eusebius in
+contrasting the worship paid to Christ, with the feelings of the
+Christians towards a martyr, employs only the word "love," Bellarmin,
+following Ruffinus, interpolates the word "veneramur" after "diligimus,"
+a word which may be innocently used with reference to the holy saints
+and servants of God, though it is often in ancient writers employed to
+mean the religious worship of man to God. Still how lamentable is it to
+attempt by such tampering with ancient documents to maintain a cause,
+whatever be our feelings with regard to it!
+
+With two more brief quotations we will close our report of Eusebius.
+They occur in the third chapter of the third book of his Demonstratio
+Evangelica, and give the same view of the feelings and sentiments of the
+primitive Christians towards the holy angels, which we have found Origen
+and all the other fathers to have acknowledged.
+
+"In the doctrine of his word we have learned that there exists, after
+the most high God, certain powers, {176} in their nature incorporeal and
+intellectual, rational and purely virtuous, who ([Greek: choreuousas])
+keep their station around the sovereign King,--the greater part of whom,
+by certain dispensations of salvation, are sent at the will of the
+Father even as far as to men; whom, indeed, we have been taught to know
+and to honour, according to the measure of their dignity, rendering to
+God alone, the sovereign King, the honour of worship." ([Greek:
+gnorizein kai timain kata to metron taes axias edidachthaemen, mono toi
+pambasilei Theoi taen sebasmion timaen aponemontes]) Again: "Knowing the
+divine, the serving and ministering powers of the sovereign God, and
+honouring them to the extent of propriety; but confessing God alone, and
+Him alone worshipping." ([Greek: theias men dynameis hypaeretikas tou
+pambasileos Theou kai leitourgikas eidotes, kai kata to prosaekon
+timontes monon de Theon homologountes, kai monon ekeinon sebontes])
+[Demonst. Evang. Paris, 1628. p. 106.; Praepar. Evang. lib. vii. c. 15.
+p. 237.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION X.--APOSTOLICAL CANONS AND CONSTITUTIONS.
+
+
+The works known by the name of the Apostolical Constitutions and
+Apostolical Canons, though confessedly not the genuine productions of
+the Apostles, or of their age, have been always held in much veneration
+by the Church of Rome. The most learned writers fix their date at a
+period not more remote than the beginning of the fourth century. (See
+Cotelerius; vol. i. p. 194 and 424. Beveridge, in the same vol. p. 427.
+Conc. Gen. Florence, 1759, tom. i. p. 29 and 254.) I invite the reader
+{177} to examine both these documents, but especially the Constitutions,
+and to decide whether they do not contain strong and convincing
+evidence, that the invocation of saints was not practised or known in
+the Church when they were written. Minute rules are given for the
+conducting of public worship; forms of prayer are prescribed to be used
+in the Church, by the bishops and clergy, and by the people; forms of
+prayer and of thanksgiving are recommended for the use of the faithful
+in private, in the morning, at night, and at their meals; forms, too,
+there are of creeds and confessions;--but not one single allusion to any
+religious address to angel or saint; whilst occasions most opportune for
+the introduction of such doctrine and practice repeatedly occur, and are
+uniformly passed by. Again and again prayer is directed to be made to
+the one only living and true God, exclusively through the mediation and
+intercession of the one only Saviour Jesus Christ. Honourable mention is
+made of the saints of the Old Testament, and the apostles and martyrs of
+the New; directions are also given for the observance of their festivals
+[Book viii. p. 415]; but not the shadow of a thought appears that their
+good offices could benefit us; much less the most distant intimation
+that Christians might invoke them for their prayers and intercessions.
+There is indeed very much in these early productions of the Christian
+world to interest every Catholic Christian; and although a general
+admiration of the principles for the most part pervading them does not
+involve an entire approbation of them all, yet perhaps few would think
+the time misapplied which they should devote to the examination of these
+documents. {178}
+
+In book v. c. 6. of the Constitutions, the martyr is represented as
+"trusting in the one only true God and Father, through Jesus Christ, the
+great High Priest, the Redeemer of souls, the Dispenser of rewards; to
+whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen." [Cotel. vol. i. p. 304.]
+
+In the same book and in the following chapter we find an exceedingly
+interesting dissertation on the general resurrection, but not one word
+of saint or martyr being beforehand admitted to glory; on the contrary,
+the declaration is distinct, that not the martyrs only, but all men will
+rise. Surely such an opportunity would not have been lost of stating the
+doctrine of martyrs being now reigning with Christ, had such been the
+doctrine of the Church at that early period.
+
+In the eighth chapter is contained an injunction to honour the martyrs
+in these words: "We say that they should be in all honour with you, as
+the blessed James the bishop and our holy fellow-minister Stephen were
+honoured with us. For they are blessed by God and honoured by holy men,
+pure from all blame, never bent towards sins, never turned away from
+good,--undoubtedly to be praised. Of whom David spake, 'Honourable
+before God is the death of his saints;' and Solomon, 'The memory of the
+just is with praise.' Of whom the prophet also said, 'Just men are taken
+away.'" [p. 309.]
+
+And in book viii. c. 13. we read this exhortation,--"Let us remember the
+holy martyrs, that we may be counted worthy to be partakers of their
+conflict." [p. 404.]
+
+Does this sound any thing at all like adoration or invocation? The word
+which is used in the above {179} passage, _honour_ [[Greek: time] p.
+241], is employed when (book ii. c. 28.) the respect is prescribed which
+the laity ought to show to the clergy.
+
+To the very marked silence as to any invocation or honour, to be shown
+to the Virgin Mary, I shall call your attention in our separate
+dissertation on the worship now offered to her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION XI.--SAINT ATHANASIUS.
+
+
+The renowned and undaunted defender of the Catholic faith against the
+errors which in his day threatened to overwhelm Gospel-truth, Athanasius
+(the last of those ante-Nicene writers into whose testimony we have
+instituted this inquiry), was born about the year 296, and, after having
+presided in the Church as Bishop for more than forty-six years, died in
+373, on the verge of his eightieth year. It is impossible for any one
+interested in the question of primitive truth to look upon the belief
+and practice of this Christian champion with indifference. When I first
+read Bellarmin's quotations from Athanasius, in justification of the
+Roman Catholic worship in the adoration of saints, I was made not a
+little anxious to ascertain the accuracy of his allegations. The inquiry
+amply repaid me for my anxiety and the labour of research; not merely by
+proving the unsoundness of Bellarmin's representation, but also by
+directing my thoughts more especially, as my acquaintance with his {180}
+works increased, to the true and scriptural views taken by Athanasius of
+the Christian's hope and confidence in God alone; the glowing fervour of
+his piety centering only in the Lord; his sure and certain hope in life
+and in death anchored only in the mercies of God, through the merits and
+mediation of Jesus Christ alone.
+
+Bellarmin, in his appeal to Athanasius as a witness in behalf of the
+invocation of saints, cites two passages; the one of which, though
+appearing in the edition of the Benedictines, amongst the works called
+doubtful, has been adjudged by those editors [Vol. ii. p. 110 and 122]
+to be not genuine; the other is placed by them among the confessedly
+spurious works, and is treated as a forgery.
+
+The first passage is from a treatise called De Virginitate, and even
+were that work the genuine production of Athanasius, would make against
+the religious worship of the saints rather than in its favour, for it
+would show, that the respect which the author intended to be paid to
+them, was precisely the same with what he would have us pay to holy men
+in this life, who might come to visit us. "If a just man enter into
+thine house, thou shalt meet him with fear and trembling, and shalt
+worship before his feet to the ground: for thou wilt not worship him,
+but God who sent him."
+
+The other passage would have been decisive as to the belief of
+Athanasius, had it come from his pen. "Incline thine ear, O Mary, to our
+prayers, and forget not thy people. We cry to thee. Remember us, O Holy
+Virgin. Intercede for us, O mistress, lady, queen, and mother of God."
+[Vol. ii. p. 390-401.]
+
+Had Bellarmin been the only writer, or the last who cited this passage
+as the testimony of St. Athanasius, {181} it would have been enough for
+us to refer to the judgment of the Benedictine editors, who have classed
+the homily containing these words among the spurious works ascribed to
+Athanasius; or rather we might have appealed to Bellarmin himself. For
+it is very remarkable, that though in his anxiety to enlist every able
+writer to defend the cause of the invocation of saints, he has cited
+this passage in his Church Triumphant as containing the words of
+Athanasius, without any allusion to its decided spuriousness, or even to
+its suspicious character; yet when he is pronouncing his judgment on the
+different works assigned to Athanasius, declaring the evidence against
+this treatise to be irresistible, he condemns it as a forgery. [Bellarm.
+de Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis, Cologne, 1617, vol. vii. p. 50.]
+
+Since, however, this passage has been cited in different Roman Catholic
+writers of our own time as containing the words of Athanasius, and in
+evidence of his genuine belief and practice, and that without an
+allusion even to any thing doubtful and questionable in its character,
+it becomes necessary to enter more in detail into the circumstances
+under which the passage is offered to our notice.
+
+The passage is found in a homily called The Annunciation of the Mother
+of God. How long this homily has been discarded as spurious, or how long
+its genuineness had been suspected before the time of Baronius, I have
+not discovered; but certainly two centuries and a half ago, and
+repeatedly since, it has been condemned as totally and indisputably
+spurious, and has been excluded from the works of Athanasius as a
+forgery, not by members of the Reformed Church, but {182} by most
+zealous and steady adherents to the Church of Rome, and the most
+strenuous defenders of her doctrines and practice.
+
+The Benedictine editors[64], who published the remains of St. Athanasius
+in 1698, class the works contained in the second volume under two heads,
+the doubtful and the spurious; and the homily under consideration is
+ranked, without hesitation, among the spurious. In the middle of that
+volume they not only declare the work to be unquestionably a forgery,
+assigning the reasons for their decision, but they fortify their
+judgment by quoting at length the letter written by the celebrated
+Baronius, more than a century before, to our countryman, Stapleton. Both
+these documents are very interesting.
+
+ [Footnote 64: Here I would observe, that though the Benedictine
+ editors differ widely from each other in talent, and learning,
+ and candour, yet, as a body, they have conferred on Christendom,
+ and on literature, benefits for which every impartial and
+ right-minded man will feel gratitude. In the works of some of
+ these editors, far more than in others, we perceive the same
+ reigning principle--a principle which some will regard as an
+ uncompromising adherence to the faith of the Church; but which
+ others can regard only in the light of a prejudice, and a rooted
+ habit of viewing all things through the eyes of Rome.]
+
+The Benedictine editors begin their preface thus: "That this discourse
+is spurious, there is NO LEARNED MAN WHO DOES NOT NOW ADJUDGE ... The
+style proves itself more clear than the sun, to be different from that
+of Athanasius. Besides this, very many trifles show themselves here
+unworthy of any sensible man whatever, not to say Athanasius ... and a
+great number of expressions unknown to Athanasius ... so that it savours
+of inferior Greek. And truly his subtle disputation {183} on the
+hypostasis of Christ, and on the two natures in Christ, persuades us,
+that he lived after the councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon; of which
+councils moreover he uses the identical words, whereas his dissertation
+on the two wills in Christ seems to argue, that he lived after the
+spreading of the error of the Monothelites. But (continue these
+Benedictine editors) we would add here the dissertation of Baronius on
+this subject, sent to us by our brethren from Rome. That illustrious
+annotator, indeed, having read only the Latin version of Nannius, which
+is clearer than the Greek, did not observe the astonishing perplexity of
+the style[65]."
+
+ [Footnote 65: Even in the Bibliotheca Patrum Concionatoria the
+ homily is declared to be not the work of Athanasius, but to have
+ been written after the sixth general council. "It is evident,"
+ say the editors, "that it is the monument of a very learned man,
+ though he has his own blemishes, on which, for the most part, we
+ have remarked in the margin." Paris, 1662. p. 336.]
+
+The dissertation which the Benedictine editors append, was contained in
+a letter written by Baronius to Stapleton, in consequence of some
+animadversions which Stapleton had communicated to Cardinal Allen on the
+judgment of Baronius. The letter is dated Rome, November, 1592. The
+judgment of Baronius on the spurious character of this homily had been
+published to the world some time previously; for after some preliminary
+words of kindness and respect to his correspondent, Baronius proceeds to
+say, that when he previously published his sentiments on this homily, it
+was only cursorily and by the way, his work then being on another
+subject. Nevertheless he conceived, {184} that the little he had then
+stated would be sufficient to show, that the homily was not the
+production of Athanasius, and that all persons of learning, WHO WERE
+DESIROUS OF THE TRUTH, would freely agree with him; nor was he in this
+expectation disappointed; for very many persons expressed their
+agreement with him, congratulating him on separating legitimate from
+spurious children. He then states the arguments which the Benedictine
+editors adopted after him, and which we need not repeat. But he also
+urges this fact, that though Cyril had the works of Athanasius in his
+custody, and though both the disputing parties ransacked every place for
+sentiments of Athanasius countenancing their tenets, yet neither at
+Ephesus nor at Chalcedon was this homily quoted, though it must have
+altogether driven Eutyches and Nestorius from the field, so exact are
+its definitions and statements on the points then at issue. Baronius
+then adds, that so far from reversing the judgment which he had before
+passed against the genuineness of this homily, he was compelled in
+justice to declare his conviction, that it could not have been written
+till after the heresy of the Monothelites had been spread abroad. This
+we know would fix its date, at the very earliest, subsequently to the
+commencement of the SEVENTH century, three hundred years after
+Athanasius attended the Council of Nice. Among the last sentiments of
+Baronius in this letter, is one which implies a principle worthy of
+Christian wisdom, and which can never be neglected without injury to the
+cause of truth. "These sentiments concerning Athanasius I do not think
+are affirmed with any detriment to the Church; for the Church does not
+suffer a loss on this account; who being the pillar {185} and ground of
+the truth, very far shrinks from seeking, like AEsop's Jackdaw, helps and
+ornaments which are not her own: the bare truth shines more beautiful in
+her own naked simplicity." Were this principle acted upon uniformly in
+our discussions on religious points of faith or practice, controversy
+would soon be drawn within far narrower limits; and would gradually be
+softened into a friendly interchange of sentiments, and would well-nigh
+be banished from the world. No person does the cause of truth so much
+injury, as one who attempts to support it by arguments which will not
+bear the test of full and enlightened investigation. And however an
+unsound principle may be for a while maintained by unsound arguments,
+the momentary triumph must ultimately end in disappointment.
+
+Coccius also cites two passages as conveying the evidence of Athanasius
+on this same point; one from the spurious letter addressed to Felix, the
+pope; the other from the treatise to Marcellus, on the interpretation of
+the Psalms. On the former, I need not detain you by any observation; it
+would be fighting with a shadow. The latter, which only recognises what
+I have never affirmed or denied here,--the interest in our welfare taken
+by holy souls departed, and their co-operation with us when we are
+working out our own salvation,--contains a valuable suggestion on the
+principles of devotion.
+
+"Let no one, however, set about to adorn these Psalms for the sake of
+effect with words from without, [artificial and secular phrases,] nor
+transpose, nor alter the expressions. But let every one inartificially
+read and repeat what is written, that those holy persons who employed
+themselves in their production, recognising their own works, may join
+with us in prayer; or {186} rather that the Holy Spirit, who spake in
+those holy men, observing the words with which his voice inspired them,
+may assist us. For just as much as the life of those holy men is more
+pure than ours, so far are their words preferable to any production of
+our own."
+
+But whilst there is not found a single passage in Athanasius to give the
+faintest countenance to the invocation of saints, there are various
+arguments and expressions which go far to demonstrate that such a belief
+and such practices as are now acknowledged and insisted upon by the
+Church of Rome, were neither adopted nor sanctioned by him. Had he
+adopted that belief and practice for his own, he would scarcely have
+spoken, as he repeatedly has, of the exclusion of angels and men from
+any share in the work of man's restoration, without any expressions to
+qualify it, and to protect his assertions from being misunderstood.
+Again, he bids us look to the holy men and holy fathers as our examples,
+in whose footsteps we should tread, if we would be safe; but not a hint
+escapes him that they are to be invoked.
+
+I must detain you by rather a long quotation from this father, and will,
+therefore, now do nothing more than refer you to two passages expressive
+of those sentiments to which I have above alluded. In the thirteenth
+section of his Treatise on the Incarnation of the Word of God, he
+argues, that neither could men restore us to the image of God, nor could
+angels, but the word of God, Jesus Christ, &c. [Vol. i. part i. p. 58.]
+In his Epistle to Dracontius, he says, "We ought to conduct ourselves
+agreeably to the principles of the saints and fathers, and to imitate
+them,--assured that if we {187} swerve from them, we become alienated
+also from their communion." [Vol. i. part i, p. 265.]
+
+The passage, however, to which I would invite the reader's patient and
+impartial thoughts, occurs in the third oration against the Arians, when
+he is proving the unity of the Father and the Son, from the expression
+of St. Paul in the eleventh verse of the third chapter of his first
+Epistle to the Thessalonians.
+
+"Thus then again ([Greek: outo g' oun palin]), when he is praying for
+the Thessalonians, and saying, 'Now our God and Father himself and the
+Lord Jesus Christ direct our way to you,' he preserves the unity of the
+Father and the Son. For he says not 'may THEY direct ([Greek:
+kateuthunoien]),' as though a twofold grace were given from Him AND Him,
+but 'may HE direct ([Greek: katenthunai]),' to show that the Father
+giveth this through the Son. For if there was not an unity, and the Word
+was not the proper offspring of the Father's substance, as the
+eradiation of the light, but the Son was distinct in nature from the
+Father,--it had sufficed for the Father alone to have made the gift, no
+generated being partaking with the Maker in the gifts. But now such a
+giving proves the unity of the Father and the Son. Consequently, no one
+would pray to receive any thing from God AND the angels, or from any
+other created being; nor would any one say 'May God AND the angels give
+it thee;' but from the Father and the Son, because of their unity and
+the oneness of the gift. For whatever is given, is given through the
+Son,--nor is there any thing which the Father works except through the
+Son; for thus the receiver has the gracious favour without fail. But if
+the patriarch Jacob, blessing his descendants Ephraim and Manasseh,
+said, 'The God who nourished {188} me from my youth unto this day, the
+Angel who delivered me from all the evils, bless these lads;' he does
+not join one of created beings, and by nature angels, with God who
+created them; nor dismissing Him who nourished him, God, does he ask the
+blessing for his descendants from an angel, but by saying 'He who
+delivered me from all the evils,' he showed that it was not one of
+created angels, but the WORD OF GOD; and joining him with the Father, he
+supplicated him through whom also God delivers whom he will. For he used
+the expression, knowing him who is called the Messenger of the great
+counsel of the Father to be no other than the very one who blessed and
+delivered from evil. For surely he did not aspire to be blessed himself
+by God, and was willing for his descendants to be blessed by an angel.
+But the same whom he addressed, saying, I will not let Thee go, except
+thou bless me (and this was God, as he says, 'I saw God face to face'),
+Him he prayed to bless the sons of Joseph. The peculiar office of an
+angel is to minister at the appointment of God; and often he went
+onwards to cast out the Amorite, and is sent to guard the people in the
+way; but these are not the doings of him, but of God, who appointed him
+and sent him,--whose also it is to deliver whom he will." [Vol i. p.
+561.]
+
+"For this cause David addressed no other on the subject of deliverance
+but God Himself. But if it belongs to no other than God to bless and
+deliver, and it was no other who delivered Jacob than the Lord Himself,
+and the patriarch invoked for his descendants Him who delivered him, it
+is evident that he connected no one in his prayer except His Word, whom
+for this reason he called an angel, because he alone reveals the
+Father." {189}
+
+"But this no one would say of beings produced and created; for neither
+when the Father worketh does any one of the angels, or any other of
+created beings, work the things; for no one of such beings is an
+effective cause, but they themselves belong to things produced. The
+angels then, as it is written, are ministering spirits sent to minister;
+and the gifts given by Him through the Word they announce to those who
+receive them."
+
+Now if the invocation of angels had been practised by the Church at that
+time, can it be for a moment believed, that a man of such a mind as was
+the mind of Athanasius, a mind strong, clear, logical, cultivated with
+ardent zeal for the doctrines of the Church, and fervent piety, would
+have suffered such passages as these to fall from him, without one
+saving clause in favour of the invocation of angels? He tells us in the
+most unqualified manner, that they act merely as ministers; ready
+indeed, and rejoicing to be employed on errands of mercy, but not going
+one step without the commands of the Lord, or doing one thing beyond his
+word. Had the idea been familiar to the mind of Athanasius, of the
+lawfulness, the duty, the privilege, the benefit of invoking them, would
+he have avoided the introduction of some words to prevent his
+expressions from being misunderstood and misapplied, as subsequent
+writers did long before the time when the denial of the doctrine might
+seem to have made such precaution more necessary?
+
+I close then the catalogue of our witnesses before the Council of Nicaea
+with the testimony of St. Athanasius; whose genuine and acknowledged
+works afford not one jot or tittle in support of the doctrine and
+practice of the invocation of angels and saints, as now insisted upon by
+the Church of Rome; and the direct {190} tendency of whose evidence is
+decidedly hostile both to that doctrine and that practice.
+
+I have seen it observed by some who are satisfied, that the records of
+primitive antiquity do not contain such references to the invocation of
+saints and angels, as we might have expected to find had the custom then
+prevailed, that the earliest Christians kept back the doctrine and
+concealed it, though they held it; fearing lest their heathen neighbours
+should upbraid them with being as much polytheists as themselves[66].
+This is altogether a gratuitous assumption, directly contrary to
+evidence, and totally inconsistent with their conduct. Had those first
+Christians acted upon such a debasing principle, they would have kept
+back and concealed their worship of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, as
+exposing them to a similar charge. They were constantly upbraided with
+worshipping a crucified {191} mortal; but instead of either meeting that
+charge by denying that they worshipped Jesus as their God, or of
+concealing the worship of Him, lest they should expose themselves again
+to such upbraidings, they publicly professed, that He whom the Jews had
+murdered, they believed in as the Son of God, Himself their God. They
+gloried in the doctrine of the ever-blessed Trinity, and did not fear
+what men might do to them, or say of them in consequence. Had they
+believed in the duty of invoking saints and angels, the high principle
+of Christian integrity would not have suffered them to be ashamed to
+confess it, or to practise openly what they believed.
+
+ [Footnote 66: Bishop Morley, (London, 1683,) in a letter written
+ whilst he was in exile at Breda, to J. Ulitius, refers to
+ Cardinal Perron, "Replique a la Resp. du Roy de la Grande Bret."
+ p. 1402 and 4, for this sentiment: "The Fathers do not always
+ speak what they think, but conceal their real sentiments, and
+ say that which best serves the cause which they sustain, so as
+ to protect it against the objections of the gentiles. The
+ Fathers, as much as in them lies, and as far as they can, avoid
+ and decline all occasions of speaking about the invocation of
+ saints then practised in the Church, fearing lest to the
+ gentiles there might appear a sort of similarity, although
+ untrue and equivocal, between the worship paid to the saints by
+ the Church, and by the Pagans to their false divinities; and
+ lest the Pagans might thence seize a handle, however unfair, of
+ retorting upon them that custom of the Church." Had a member of
+ the Anglican Church thus spoken of the Fathers, and thus pleaded
+ in their name guilty of subterfuge and duplicity, he would have
+ been immediately charged with irreverence and wanton insult, and
+ that with good reason. These sentiments of the Cardinal are in
+ p. 982 of the Paris edition of 1620.] {192}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART II.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+STATE OF WORSHIP AT THE TIME OF THE REFORMATION.
+
+
+One of the points proposed for our inquiry was the state of religious
+worship, with reference to the invocation of saints, at the time
+immediately preceding the reformation. Very far from entertaining a wish
+to fasten upon the Church of Rome now, what then deformed religion among
+us, in any department where that Church has practically reformed her
+services, I would most thankfully have found her ritual in a more
+purified state than it is. My more especial object in referring to this
+period is twofold: first, to show, that consistently with Catholic and
+primitive principles, the Catholic Christians of England ought not to
+have continued to participate in the worship which at that time
+prevailed in our country; and, secondly, by that example both to
+illustrate the great danger of allowing ourselves to countenance the
+very first stages of superstition, and also to impress upon our minds
+the duty of checking in its germ any the least deviation from the
+primitive principles of faith and worship; convinced that by the general
+tendency of human nature, one wrong step will, though imperceptibly, yet
+almost inevitably lead to another; and that only whilst we adhere with
+uncompromising steadiness {193} to the Scripture as our foundation, and
+to the primitive Church, under God, as a guide, can we be saved from the
+danger of making shipwreck of our faith.
+
+On this branch of our subject I propose to do no more than to lay before
+my readers the witness borne to the state of religion in England at that
+time, by two works, which have been in an especial manner forced upon my
+notice. Many other testimonies of a similar tendency might readily be
+adduced; but these will probably appear sufficient for the purposes
+above mentioned; and to dwell longer than is necessary on this point
+would be neither pleasant nor profitable.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION I.
+
+
+The first book to which I shall refer is called The Hours of the most
+blessed Virgin Mary, according to the legitimate use of the Church of
+Salisbury. This book was printed in Paris in the year 1526. The prayers
+in this volume relate chiefly to the Virgin: and I should, under other
+circumstances, have reserved all allusion to it for our separate inquiry
+into the faith and practice of the Church of Rome with regard to her.
+But its historical position and general character seemed to recommend
+our reference to it here. Without anticipating, therefore, the facts or
+the arguments, which will hereafter be submitted to the reader's
+consideration on the worship of the Virgin, I refer to this work now
+solely as illustrative of the lamentable state of superstition which
+three centuries ago overran our country.
+
+The volume abounds with forms of prayer to the Virgin, many of them
+prefaced by extraordinary notifications of indulgences promised to those
+who duly utter {194} the prayers. These indulgences are granted by Popes
+and by Bishops; some on their own mere motion, others at the request of
+influential persons. They guarantee remission of punishment for
+different spaces of time, varying from forty days to ninety thousand
+years; they undertake to secure freedom from hell; they promise pardon
+for deadly sins, and for venial sins to the same person for the same
+act; they assure to those who comply with their directions a change of
+the pain of eternal damnation into the pain of purgatory, and the pain
+of purgatory into a free and full pardon.
+
+It may be said that the Church of Rome is not responsible for all these
+things. But we need not tarry here to discuss the question how far it
+was then competent for a church or nation to have any service-book or
+manual of devotion for the faithful, without first obtaining the papal
+sanction. For clear it is beyond all question, that such frightful
+corruptions as these, of which we are now to give instances, were spread
+throughout the land; that such was the religion then imposed on the
+people of England; and it was from such dreadful enormities, that our
+Reformation, to whatever secondary cause that reformation is to be
+attributed--by the providence of Almighty God rescued us. No one laments
+more than I do, the extremes into which many opponents of papal Rome
+have allowed themselves to run; but no one can feel a more anxious
+desire than myself to preserve our Church and people from a return of
+such spiritual degradation and wretchedness; and to keep far from us the
+most distant approaches of such lamentable and ensnaring superstitions.
+In this feeling moreover I am assured that I am joined by many of the
+most respected and influential members of the Roman Catholic Church
+among us. {195} Still what has been may be; and it is the bounden duty
+of all members of Christ's Catholic Church, to whatever branch of it
+they belong, to join in guarding his sanctuary against such enemies to
+the truth as it is in HIM.
+
+At the same time it would not be honest and candid in me, were I to
+abstain from urging those, who, with ourselves, deprecate these
+excesses, to carry their reflections further; and determine whether the
+spirit of the Gospel does not require a total rejection, even in its
+less startling forms, of every departure from the principle of invoking
+God alone; and of looking for acceptance with Him solely to the
+mediation of his Son, without the intervention of any other merits. As
+we regard it, it is not a question of degree; it is a question of
+principle: one degree may be less revolting to our sense of right than
+another, but it is not on that account justifiable.
+
+The following specimens, a few selected from an overabundant supply,
+will justify the several particulars in the summary which I have above
+given:
+
+1. "The Right Reverend Father in God, Laurence[67], Bishop of Assaven,
+hath granted forty days of pardon to all them that devoutly say this
+prayer in the worship of our blessed Lady, being penitent, and truly
+confessed of all their sins. Oratio, 'Gaude Virgo, Mater Christi,' &c.
+Rejoice, Virgin, Mother of Christ. [Fol. 35.]
+
+ [Footnote 67: This was Laurence Child, who, by papal provision,
+ was made Bishop of St. Asaph, June 18, 1382. He is called also
+ Penitentiary to the Pope. Le Neve, p. 21. Beatson, vol. i. p.
+ 115.]
+
+2. "To all them that be in the state of grace, that daily say devoutly
+this prayer before our blessed Lady of Pity, she will show them her
+blessed visage, and warn them the day and the hour of death; and in
+their last {196} end the angels of God shall yield their souls to
+heaven; and[68] he shall obtain five hundred years, and so many Lents of
+pardon, granted by five holy fathers, Popes of Rome. [Fol. 38.]
+
+ [Footnote 68: The language in many of these passages is very
+ imperfect; but I have thought it right to copy them verbatim.]
+
+3. "This prayer showed our Lady to a devout person, saying, that this
+golden prayer is the most sweetest and acceptablest to me: and in her
+appearing she had this salutation and prayer written with letters of
+gold in her breast, 'Ave Rosa sine spinis'--Hail Rose without thorns.
+[Fol. 41.]
+
+4. "Our holy Father, Sixtus the fourth, pope, hath granted to all them
+that devoutly say this prayer before the image of our Lady the sum of
+XI.M. [eleven thousand] years of pardon. 'Ave Sanctissima Maria, Mater
+Dei, Regina Coeli,' &c. Hail most holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of
+Heaven. [Fol. 42.]
+
+5. "Our holy Father, Pope Sixtus, hath granted at the instance of the
+highmost and excellent Princess Elizabeth, late Queen of England, and
+wife to our sovereign liege Lord, King Henry the Seventh, (God have
+mercy on her sweet soul, and on all Christian souls,) that every day in
+the morning, after three tollings of the Ave bell, say three times the
+whole salutation of our Lady Ave Maria gratia; that is to say, at 6 the
+clock in the morning 3 Ave Maria, at 12 the clock at noon 3 Ave M., and
+at 6 the clock at even, for every time so doing is granted of the
+SPIRITUAL TREASURE OF HOLY CHURCH 300 days of pardon totiens quotiens;
+and also our holy father, the Archbishop of Canterbury and York, with
+other nine Bishops of this realm, have {197} granted 3 times in the day
+40 days of pardon to all them that be in the state of grace able to
+receive pardon: the which begun the 26th day of March, Anno MCCCCXCII.
+Anno Henrici VII.[69] And the sum of the indulgence and pardon for every
+Ave Maria VIII hondred days an LX totiens quotiens, this prayer shall be
+said at the tolling of the Ave Bell, 'Suscipe,' &c. Receive the word, O
+Virgin Mary, which was sent to thee from the Lord by an angel. Hail,
+Mary, full of grace: the Lord with thee, &c. Say this 3 times, &c. [Fol.
+42.]
+
+ [Footnote 69: Henry VII. began to reign in 1485.]
+
+6. "This prayer was showed to St. Bernard by the messenger of God,
+saying, that as gold is the most precious of all other metals, so
+exceedeth this prayer all other prayers, and who that devoutly sayeth it
+shall have a singular reward of our blessed Lady, and her sweet Son
+Jesus. 'Ave,' &c. Hail, Mary, most humble handmaid of the Trinity, &c.
+Hail, Mary, most prompt Comforter of the living and the dead. Be thou
+with me in all my tribulations and distresses with maternal pity, and at
+the hour of my death take my soul, and offer it to thy most beloved Son
+Jesus, with all them who have commended themselves to our prayers. [Fol.
+46.]
+
+7. "Our holy father, the Pope Bonifacius, hath granted to all them that
+devoutly say this lamentable contemplation of our blessed Lady, standing
+under the Cross weeping, and having compassion with her sweet Son Jesus,
+7 years of pardon and forty Lents, and also Pope John the 22 hath
+granted three hondred days of pardon. 'Stabat Mater dolorosa.' [Fol.
+47.]
+
+8. "To all them that before this image of Pity devoutly say 5 Pat. Nos.,
+and 5 Aves, and a Credo, piteously beholding these arms of Christ's
+passion, are {198} granted XXXII.M.VII hondred, and LV (32755) years of
+pardon; and Sixtus the 4th, Pope of Rome hath made the 4 and the 5
+prayer, and hath doubled his aforesaid pardon. [Fol. 54.]
+
+9. "Our holy Father the Pope John 22 hath granted to all them that
+devoutly say this prayer, after the elevation of our Lord Jesu Christ,
+3000 days of pardon for deadly sins. [Fol. 58.]
+
+10. "This prayer was showed to Saint Augustine by revelation of the Holy
+Ghost, and who that devoutly say this prayer, or hear read, or beareth
+about them, shall not perish in fire or water, nother in battle or
+judgment, and he shall not die of sudden death, and no venom shall
+poison him that day, and what he asketh of God he shall obtain if it be
+to the salvation of his soul; and when thy soul shall depart from thy
+body it shall not enter hell." This prayer ends with three invocations
+of the Cross, thus: "O Cross of Christ [cross] save us, O Cross of
+Christ [cross] protect us, O Cross of Christ [cross] defend us. In the
+name of the [cross] Father, [cross] Son, and Holy [cross] Ghost. Amen."
+[Fol. 62.]
+
+11. "Our holy Father Pope Innocent III. hath granted to all them that
+say these III prayers following devoutly, remission of all their sins
+confessed and contrite. [Fol. 63.]
+
+12. "These 3 prayers be written in the Chapel of the Holy Cross, in
+Rome, otherwise called Sacellum Sanctae Crucis septem Romanorum; who that
+devoutly say them shall obtain X.C.M. [ninety thousand] years of pardon
+for deadly sins granted of our holy Father, John 22, Pope of Rome. [Fol.
+66.]
+
+13. "Who that devoutly beholdeth these arms of {199} our Lord Jesus
+Christ, shall obtain six thousand years of pardon of our holy Father
+Saint Peter, the first pope of Rome, and of XXX [thirty] other popes of
+the Church of Rome, successors after him; and our holy Father, Pope John
+22, hath granted unto all them very contrite and truly confessed, that
+say these devout prayers following in the commemoration of the bitter
+passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, 3000 years of pardon for DEADLY SINS,
+and other 3000 for venial sins." [Fol. 68.]
+
+I will only add one more instance. The following announcement
+accompanies a prayer of St. Bernard: "Who that devoutly with a contrite
+heart daily say this orison, if he be that day in a state of eternal
+damnation, then this eternal pain shall be changed him in temporal pain
+of purgatory; then if he hath deserved the pain of purgatory it shall be
+forgotten and forgiven through the infinite mercy of God."
+
+It is indeed very melancholy to reflect that our country has witnessed
+the time, when the bread of life had been taken from the children, and
+such husks as these substituted in its stead. Accredited ministers of
+the Roman Catholic Church have lately assured us that the pardons and
+indulgences granted now, relate only to the remission of the penances
+imposed by the Church in this life, and presume not to interfere with
+the province of the Most High in the rewards and punishments of the
+next. But, I repeat it, what has been in former days may be again; and
+whenever Christians depart from the doctrine and practice of prayer to
+God alone, through Christ alone, a door is opened to superstitions and
+abuses of every kind; and we cannot too anxiously and too jealously
+guard and fence about, with all our power and skill, the fundamental
+principle, one God and one Mediator. {200}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET, ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS
+MARTYRDOM, DEC. 29.
+
+
+The other instance by which I propose to illustrate the state of
+religion in England before the reformation, is the service of Thomas
+Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, a canonized saint and martyr of the
+Church of Rome. The interest attaching to so remarkable a period in
+ecclesiastical history, and to an event so intimately interwoven with
+the former state of our native land, appears to justify the introduction
+of the entire service, rather than extracts from it, in this place.
+Whilst it bears throughout immediately on the subject of our present
+inquiry, it supplies us at the same time with the strong views
+entertained by the authors of the service, on points which gave rise to
+great and repeated discussion, not only in England, but in various parts
+also of continental Europe, with regard to the moral and spiritual
+merits or demerits of Becket, as a subject of the realm and a Christian
+minister. It is, moreover, only by becoming familiar in all their
+details with some such remains of past times, that we can form any
+adequate idea of the great and deplorable extent to which the legends
+had banished the reading and expounding of Holy Scriptures from our
+churches; and also how much the praises of mortal man had encroached
+upon those hours of public worship, which should be devoted to
+meditations on our Maker, Redeemer, and Sanctifier; to the exclusive
+praises of his holy name; and to supplications {201} to Him alone for
+blessings at his hand, and for his mercy through Christ.
+
+There is much obscurity in the few first paragraphs. The historical or
+biographical part begins at Lesson the First, and continues throughout,
+only interspersed with canticles in general referring to the incidents
+in the narrative preceding each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SERVICE OF THOMAS BECKET[70].
+
+ [Footnote 70: The copies which I have chiefly consulted for the
+ purposes of the present inquiry, are two large folio
+ manuscripts, in good preservation, No. 1512 and No. 2785 of the
+ Harleian MSS. in the British Museum. The service commences about
+ the 49th page, B. of No. 2785. This MS. is considered to be of a
+ date somewhere about 1430. The first parts of the service are
+ preserved also in a Breviary printed in Paris in 1556, with some
+ variations and omissions. There are various other copies in the
+ British Museum, as well printed as in manuscript.]
+
+Let them without change of vestments and without tapers in their hands,
+proceed to the altar of St. Thomas the Martyr, chanting the requiem, the
+chanter beginning,
+
+ _Req._ The grain lies buried beneath the straw;
+ The just man is slain by the spear of the wicked;
+ The guardian of the vine falls in the vineyard,
+ The chieftain in the camp, the husbandman in the threshing-floor.
+
+Then the prose is said by all who choose, in surplices before the altar.
+
+ "Let the Shepherd sound his trumpet of horn."
+
+Let the choir respond to the chant of the prose after every verse, upon
+the letter [super litteram]. {202}
+
+ That the vineyard of Christ might be free,
+ Which he assumed under a robe of flesh,
+ He liberated it by the purple cross.
+ The adversary, the erring sheep,
+ Becomes bloodstained by the slaughter of the shepherd.
+ The marble pavements of Christ
+ Are wetted, ruddy with sacred gore;
+ The martyr presented with the laurel of life.
+ Like a grain cleansed from the straw,
+ Is translated to the divine garners.
+
+But whilst the prose is being sung, let the priest incense the altar,
+and then the image of the blessed Thomas the Martyr; and afterwards
+shall be said with an humble voice: Pray for us, Blessed Thomas.
+
+_The Prayer[71]._ O God for whose Church the glorious {203} high-priest
+and martyr Thomas fell beneath the swords of the wicked, grant, we
+beseech thee, that all who implore his aid may obtain the salutary
+effect of their petition, through Christ.
+
+ [Footnote 71: This Collect is still preserved in the Roman
+ ritual, and is offered on the anniversary of Becket's death. In
+ a very ancient pontifical, preserved in the chapter-house of
+ Bangor, and which belonged to Anianus, who was Bishop of that
+ see (1268), among the "Proper Benedictions for the circuit of
+ the year," are two relating to Thomas Becket; one on the
+ anniversary of his death, the other on the day of his
+ translation. The former is couched in these words: "O God, who
+ hast not without reason mingled the birthday of the glorious
+ high-priest, Thomas, with the joys of thy nativity, by the
+ intervention of his merits" (ipsius mentis intervenientibus),
+ "make these thy servants venerate thy majesty with the reverence
+ of due honour. Amen. And as he, according to the rule of a good
+ shepherd, gave his life for his sheep, so grant thou to thy
+ faithful ones, to fear no tyrannical madness to the prejudice of
+ Catholic truth. Amen. We ask that they, by his example, for
+ obedience to the holy laws, may learn to despise persons, and by
+ suffering manfully to triumph over tyrannical madness. Amen."
+ The latter runs thus: "May God, by whose pity the bodies of
+ saints rest in the sabbath of peace, turn your hearts to the
+ desire of the resurrection to come. Amen. And may he who orders
+ us to bury with honour due the members of the saints whose death
+ is precious, by the merits of the glorious martyr, Thomas,
+ vouchsafe to raise you from the dust of vanity. Amen. Where at
+ length by the power of his benediction ye may be clothed with
+ doubled festive robes of body and soul. Amen."]
+
+ The shepherd slain in the midst of the flock,
+ Purchased peace at the price of his blood.
+ O joyous grief, in mournful gladness!
+ The flock breathes when the shepherd is dead;
+ The mother wailing, sings for joy in her son,
+ Because he lives under the sword a conqueror.
+ The solemnities of Thomas the Martyr are come.
+ Let the Virgin Mother, the Church, rejoice;
+ Thomas being raised to the highest priesthood,
+ Is suddenly changed into another man.
+ A monk, under [the garb of?] a clerk, secretly clothed with haircloth,
+ More strong than the flesh subdues the attempts of the flesh;
+ Whilst the tiller of the Lord's field pulls up the thistles,
+ And drives away and banishes the foxes from the vineyard.
+
+_The First Lesson._
+
+Dearest Brethren, celebrating now the birth-day of the martyr Thomas,
+because we have not power to recount his whole life and conversation,
+let our brief discourse run through the manner and cause of his passion.
+The blessed Thomas, therefore, as in the office of Chancellor, or
+Archdeacon, he proved incomparably strenuous {204} in the conduct of
+affairs, so after he had undertaken the office of pastor, he became
+devoted to God beyond man's estimation. For, when consecrated, he
+suddenly is changed into another man: he secretly put on the hair shirt,
+and wore also hair drawers down to the knee. And under the respectable
+appearance of the clerical garb, concealing the monk's dress, he
+entirely compelled the flesh to obey the spirit; studying by the
+exercise of every virtue without intermission to please God. Knowing,
+therefore, that he was placed a husbandman in the field of the Lord, a
+shepherd in the fold, he carefully discharged the ministry entrusted to
+him. The rights and dignities of the Church, which the public authority
+had usurped, he deemed it right to restore, and to recall to their proper
+state. Whence a grave question on the ecclesiastical law and the customs
+of the realm, having arisen between him and the king of the English, a
+council being convened, those customs were proposed which the king
+pertinaciously required to be confirmed by the signatures as well of the
+archbishop as of his suffragans. The archbishop with constancy refused,
+asserting that in them was manifest the subversion of the freedom of the
+Church. He was in consequence treated with immense insults, oppressed
+with severe losses, and provoked with innumerable injuries. At length,
+being threatened with death, (because the case of the Church had not yet
+become fully known, and the persecution seemed to be personal,) he
+determined that he ought to give place to malice. Being driven,
+therefore, into exile, he was honourably received by our lord the pope
+Alexander[72] at Senon, and recommended {205} with especial care to the
+Monastery of Pontinea (Pontigny).
+
+ [Footnote 72: Pope Alexander III. was at this time residing as a
+ refugee at Sens, having been driven from Italy a few years
+ before by Frederick Barbarossa.]
+
+ Malice, bent on the punishment of Thomas,
+ Condemns to banishment the race of Thomas.
+ The whole family goes forth together.
+ No order, sex, age, or condition
+ Here enjoys any privilege.
+
+_Lesson the Second._
+
+Meanwhile in England all the revenues of the archbishop are confiscated,
+his estates are laid waste, his possessions are plundered, and by the
+invention of a new kind of punishment, the whole kin of Thomas is
+proscribed together. For all his friends or acquaintance, or whoever was
+connected with him, by whatever title, without distinction of state or
+fortune, dignity or rank, age or sex, were alike exiled. For as well the
+old and decrepit, as infants in the cradle and women lying in
+childbirth, were driven into banishment; whilst as many as had reached
+the years of discretion were compelled to swear upon the holy
+[Gospels][73] that immediately on crossing the sea they would present
+themselves to the Archbishop of Canterbury; in order that being so
+oftentimes pierced even by the sword of sympathy, he would bend his
+strength of mind to the king's pleasure. But the man of God, putting his
+hand to deeds of fortitude, with constancy bore exile, reproaches,
+insults, the proscription of parents and friends, for the name of
+Christ; he was never, by any injury, at all broken or changed. For so
+great was the firmness of this confessor of Christ, that he seemed to
+teach all his fellow exiles, that every soil is the brave man's country.
+
+ [Footnote 73: Tactis sacrosanctis. It may mean reliques, or
+ other sacred things.] {206}
+
+ Thomas put his hands to deeds of fortitude,
+ He despised losses, he despised reproaches,
+ No injury breaks down Thomas:
+ The firmness of Thomas exclaimed to all,
+ "Every soil is the brave man's country."
+
+_Third Lesson._
+
+The king therefore hearing of his immoveable constancy, having directed
+commendatory letters by some abbots of the Cistertian order to the
+General Chapter, caused him to be driven from Pontinea. But the blessed
+Thomas fearing that, by occasion of his right, injury would befal the
+saints, retired of his own accord. Yet before he set out from thence he
+was comforted by a divine revelation: a declaration being made to him
+from heaven, that he should return to his Church with glory, and by the
+palm of martyrdom depart to the Lord. When he was disturbed and sent
+from his retreat at Pontinea, Louis, the most Christian king of the
+French, received him with the greatest honour, and supported him most
+courteously till peace was restored. But even he too was often, though
+in vain, urged not to show any grace of kindness towards a traitor to
+the king of England. The hand of fury proceeded further, and a cruelty
+dreadful for pious ears to hear. For whereas the Catholic Church prays
+even for heretics, and schismatics, and faithless Jews, it was forbidden
+that any one should assist him by the supplications of prayer. Exiled,
+then, for six continuous years, afflicted with varied and unnumbered
+injuries, and like a living stone squared by various cuttings and
+pressures for the building of the heavenly edifice, the more he was
+thrust at that he might fall, the more firm and immoveable was he
+enabled to stand. {207} For neither could gold so carefully tried be
+burned away, nor a house, founded on a firm rock, be torn down. Neither
+does he suffer the wolves to rage against the lambs, nor the vineyard to
+pass into a garden of herbs.
+
+ The best of men, holy, and renowned is banished,
+ Lest the dignity of the Church should yield to the unworthy.
+ The estates of the exiled man are the spoil of the malignant,
+ But when placed in the fire, the fire burns him not.
+
+_Fourth Lesson._
+
+At length by the exertions, as well of the aforesaid pontiff as of the
+king of the French, many days were appointed for re-establishing peace:
+and because the servant of God would not accept of peace, unless with
+safety to the honour of God, and the character of the Church, they
+departed in discord from each other. At length the supreme Pontiff,
+pitying the desolation of the Anglican Church, with difficulty at the
+last extorted by threatening measures, that peace should be restored to
+the Church. The realms indeed rejoiced, that the King had been
+reconciled to the Archbishop, whilst some believed that the affair was
+carried on in good faith, and others formed different conjectures.
+Consequently in the seventh year of his exile the noble pastor returned
+into England, that he might either rescue the sheep of Christ from the
+jaws of the wolves, or sacrifice himself for the flock intrusted to his
+care. He is received by the clergy and the people with incalculable joy;
+all shedding tears, and saying, Blessed is he who cometh in the name of
+the Lord. But after a few days he was again afflicted by losses and
+miseries beyond measure and number. Whoever offered to him, {208} or to
+any one connected with him, a cheerful countenance was reckoned a public
+enemy. In all these things his mind was unbroken; but his hand was still
+stretched out for the liberation of the Church. For this he incessantly
+sighed; for this he persevered in watchings, fastings, and prayers; to
+obtain this he ardently desired to sacrifice himself.
+
+ From the greatest joy of affairs,
+ The greatest wailing is in the Church,
+ For the absence of so great a patron.
+ But when the miracles return,
+ Joy to the people returns.
+ The crowd of sick flock together,
+ And obtain the grace of benefits.
+
+_Fifth Lesson._
+
+Now on the fifth day after the birth-day of our Lord, four persons of
+the palace came to Canterbury, men indeed of high birth, but famous for
+their wicked deeds; and having entered, they attack the archbishop with
+reproachful words, provoke him with insults, and at length assail him
+with threats. The man of God modestly answered, to every thing, whatever
+reason required, adding that many injuries had been inflicted upon him
+and the Church of God, since the re-establishment of peace, and there
+was no one to correct what was wrong; that he neither could nor would
+dissemble thereafter, so as not to exercise the duties of his function.
+The men, foolish in heart, were disturbed by this, and having loudly
+given utterance to their iniquity they forthwith went out. On their
+retiring, the prelate proceeded to the Church, to offer the evening
+praises to Christ. The mail-clad satellites of Satan followed him from
+behind with drawn swords, a {209} large band of armed men accompanying
+them. On the monks barring the entrance to the Church, the priest of
+God, destined soon to become a victim of Christ, running up re-opened
+the door to the enemy; "For," said he, "a Church must not be barricaded
+like a castle." As they burst in, and some shouted with a voice of
+phrenzy, "Where is the traitor?" others, "Where is the Archbishop?" the
+fearless confessor of Christ went to meet them. When they pressed on to
+murder him, he said, "For myself I cheerfully meet death for the Church
+of God; but on the part of God I charge you to do no hurt to any of
+mine"--imitating Christ in his passion, when he said, "If ye seek me,
+let these go their way." Then rush the ravening wolves on the pious
+shepherd, degenerate sons on their own father, cruel lictors on the
+victim of Christ, and with fatal swords cut off the consecrated crown of
+his head; and hurling down to the ground the Christ [the anointed] of
+the Lord, in savage manner, horrible to be said, scattered the brains
+with the blood over the pavement.
+
+ Thus does the straw press down the grain of corn;
+ Thus is slain the guard of the vineyard in the vineyard;
+ Thus the general in the camp, the shepherd in the fold, the
+ husbandman in the threshing-floor.
+ Thus the just, slain by the unjust, has changed his house of
+ clay for a heavenly palace.
+ Rachel, weeping, now cease thou to mourn
+ That the flower of the world is bruised by the world.
+ When the slain Thomas is borne to his funeral,
+ A new Abel succeeds to the old.
+ The voice of blood, the voice of his scattered brains,
+ Fills heaven with a marvellous cry. {210}
+
+_Sixth Lesson._
+
+But the last words of the martyr, which from the confused clamour could
+scarcely be distinguished, according to the testimony of those who stood
+near, were these,--"To God, and the blessed Mary, and Saint Dionysius,
+and the holy patrons of this Church, I commend myself and the cause of
+the Church[74]." Moreover, in all the torments which this unvanquished
+champion of God endured, he sent forth no cry, he uttered no groan, he
+opposed neither his arm nor his garment to the man who struck him, but
+held his head, which he had bent towards the swords, unmoved till the
+consummation came; prostrated as if for prayer, he fell asleep in the
+Lord. The perpetrators of the crime, returning into the palace of the
+holy prelate, that they might make the passion of the servant more fully
+resemble the passion of his Lord, divided among them his garments, the
+gold and silver and precious vessels, choice horses, and whatever of
+value they could find, allotting what each should take. These things
+therefore the soldiers did. Who, without weeping, can relate the rest?
+So great was the sorrow of all, so great the laments of each, that you
+would think the prophecy were a second time fulfilled, "A voice is heard
+in Rama, lamentation and great mourning." Nevertheless the divine mercy,
+when temptation was multiplied, made a way to escape; and by certain
+visions, giving as it were a prelude to the future miracles, [declared
+that] the martyr was thereafter to be glorified by wonders, that joy
+would return after sorrow, {211} and a crowd of sick would obtain the
+grace of benefits.
+
+ [Footnote 74: I have already suggested a comparison between this
+ prayer and the commendatory prayer of the Martyr Polycarp, page
+ 92.]
+
+ O Christ Jesus[75], BY THE WOUNDS OF THOMAS,
+ Loosen the sins which bind us;
+ Lest the enemy, the world, or the works of the flesh.
+ Bear us captive to hell.
+ By[76] THEE, O Thomas ...
+ Let the right hand of God embrace us.
+
+ The satellites of Satan rushing into the temple
+ Perpetrate an unexampled, unheard-of, crime.
+ Thomas proceeds to meet their drawn swords:
+ He yields not to threats, to swords, nor even to death.
+
+ Happy place! Happy Church,
+ In which the memory of Thomas lives!
+ Happy the land which gave the prelate!
+ Happy the land which supported him in exile!
+ Happy Father! succour us miserable,
+ That we may be happy, and joined with those above!
+
+ [Footnote 75:
+
+ Christe Jesu per Thomae vulnera,
+ Quae nos ligant relaxa scelera
+ Ne captivos ferant ad infera
+ Hostis, mundus, vel carnis opera.
+ ]
+
+ [Footnote 76:
+
+ Per te, Thoma, post laevae munera
+ Amplexetur nos Dei dextera.
+ ]
+
+_Seventh Lesson._
+
+Jesus said unto his disciples, I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd
+layeth down his life for the sheep.
+
+THE HOMILY OF S. GREGORY, POPE.
+
+Ye have heard, most dear brethren, from the reading of the Gospel, your
+instruction; ye have heard also {212} your danger. For behold! he who is
+not from any gift happening to him, but who is essentially good, says, I
+am the good shepherd; and he adds the character of the same goodness,
+which we may imitate, saying, The good shepherd layeth down his life for
+his sheep. He did what he taught; he showed what he commanded. The good
+shepherd laid down his life for his sheep; that in our sacrament he
+might change his body and blood, and satisfy, by the nourishment of his
+flesh, the sheep which he had redeemed. Here is shown to us the way,
+concerning the contempt of death, which we should follow; the character
+is placed before us to which we should conform. [In the first place, we
+should of our pity sacrifice our external good for his sheep; and at
+last, if it be necessary, give up our own life for the same sheep. From
+that smallest point we proceed to this last and greater. But since the
+soul by which we live is incomparably better than the earthly substance
+which we outwardly possess, who would not give for the sheep his
+substance, when he would give his life for them? And there are some who,
+whilst they love their earthly substance more than the sheep, deservedly
+lose the name of shepherd: of whom it is immediately added, But the
+hireling who is not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the
+wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep and fleeth. He is called not a
+shepherd, but a hireling, who feeds the Lord's sheep not for inward
+love, but with a view to temporal wages. He is a mercenary who seeks
+indeed the place of shepherd, but seeks not the gain of souls.]
+
+(The sentences between brackets are not in MS. No. 1512.)
+
+ To Thomas all things yield and are obedient:
+ Plagues, diseases, death, and devils, {213}
+ Fire, air, land, and seas.
+ Thomas filled the world with glory.
+ The world offers obeisance to Thomas[77].
+
+ [Footnote 77:
+
+ Thomae cedunt et parent omnia:
+ Pestes, morbi, mors, et daemonia,
+ Ignis, aer, tellus, et maria.
+ Thomas mundum replevit gloria.
+ Thomae mundus praestat obsequia.
+ ]
+
+_Eighth Lesson._
+
+In good truth, the holy Thomas, the precious champion of God, was to be
+worthily glorified. For if the cause, yea, forasmuch as the cause makes
+the martyr, did ever a title of holy martyrs exist more glorious?
+Contending for the Church, in the Church he suffered; in a holy place,
+at the holy time of the Lord's nativity, in the midst of his
+fellow-priests and the companies of the religious: since in the agony of
+the prelate all the circumstances seemed so to concur, as perpetually to
+illustrate the title of the sufferer, and reveal the wickedness of his
+persecutors, and stain their name with never-ending infamy. But so did
+the divine vengeance rage against the persecutors of the martyr, that in
+a short time, being carried away from the midst, they nowhere appeared.
+And some, without confession, or the viaticum, were suddenly snatched
+away; others tearing piecemeal their own fingers or tongues; others
+pining with hunger, and corrupting in their whole body, and racked with
+unheard-of tortures before their death, and broken up by paralysis;
+others bereft of their intellects; others expiring with madness;--left
+manifest proofs that they were suffering the penalty of unjust
+persecution and premeditated murder. Let, therefore, the Virgin Mother,
+the Church, rejoice that the new martyr has borne away the triumph over
+the {214} enemies. Let her rejoice that a new Zacharias has been for her
+freedom sacrificed in the temple. Let her rejoice that a new Abel's
+blood hath cried unto God for her against the men of blood. For the
+voice of his blood shed, the-voice of his brain scattered by the swords
+of those deadly satellites, hath filled heaven at once and the world
+with its far-famed cry.
+
+ Thomas shines with new miracles;
+ He adorns with sight those who had lost their eyes;
+ He cleanses those who were stained with the spots of leprosy;
+
+ He looses those that were bound with the bonds of death.
+
+_Ninth Lesson._
+
+For at the cry of this blood the earth was moved and trembled. Nay,
+moreover, the powers of the heavens were moved; so that, as if for the
+avenging of innocent blood, nation rose against nation, and kingdom
+against kingdom; nay, a kingdom was divided against itself, and terrors
+from heaven and great signs took place. Yet, from the first period of
+his martyrdom, the martyr began to shine forth with miracles, restoring
+sight to the blind, walking to the lame, hearing to the deaf, language
+to the dumb. Afterwards, cleansing the lepers, making the paralytic
+sound, healing the dropsy, and all kinds of incurable diseases;
+restoring the dead to life; in a wonderful manner commanding the devils
+and all the elements: he also put forth his hand to unwonted and
+unheard-of signs of his own power; for persons deprived of their eyes
+merited by his merits to obtain new members. But some {215} who presumed
+to disparage his miracles, struck on a sudden, were compelled to publish
+them even unwillingly. At length, against all his enemies the martyr so
+far prevailed, that almost every day you might see that to be repeated
+in the servant which is read of the Only-begotten: "They who spoke evil
+of thee shall come unto thee, and adore the traces of thy feet." Now the
+celebrated champion and martyr of God, Thomas, suffered in the year from
+the incarnation of the Lord, according to Dionysius, 1171, on the fourth
+of the kalends of January, on the third day of the week, about the
+eleventh hour, that the birth-day of the Lord might be for labour, and
+his for rest; to which rest the same our God and Lord Jesus Christ
+vouchsafe to bring us; who with the Father and the Holy Spirit liveth
+and reigneth God, for ever and ever. Amen.
+
+ O good Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS,
+ Forgive us our debts;
+ Visit the house, the gate, the grave;
+ And raise us from the threefold death.
+ What has been lost by act, in mind, or use,
+ Restore with thy wonted pity.
+ Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.
+
+N.B. This appears to be the end of the first service in honour of Thomas
+Becket[78]; and at this point {216} another service seems to commence,
+with a kind of new heading, "In the commemoration of St. Thomas[79]."
+
+ [Footnote 78: All the Lessons between this passage and "In
+ Lauds," are wanting in MS. 1512.]
+
+ [Footnote 79: Another Feast was kept in honour of his
+ translation, on the 7th of July.]
+
+_The First Lesson._
+
+When Archbishop Theobald, of happy memory, in a good old age, slept with
+his fathers, Thomas, archdeacon of the Church of Canterbury, is solemnly
+chosen, in the name of the Holy Trinity, to be archbishop and primate of
+all England, and afterwards is consecrated. Then pious minds entertained
+firm hope and confidence in the Lord[80].
+
+ [Footnote 80: There is much of obscurity in the next paragraph.
+ Reference seems to be made to his twofold character of a regular
+ and a secular clergyman, and to his improved state morally. The
+ Latin is this: "Erat autem piis mentibus spes firma et fiducia
+ in Domino, quod idem consecratus utriusque hominis, habitu
+ mutato moribus melioratus praesideret. Probatissimum siquidem
+ tenebatur sedem illam sedem sanctorum esse sanctam recipere aut
+ facere, vel citius et facile indignum abicere, quod et in beato
+ Thoma Martyre misericorditer impletum est."]
+
+_Second Lesson._
+
+Therefore the chosen prelate of God being elected, and anointed with the
+sanctifying of the sacred oil, immediately obtained a most hallowed
+thing, and was filled with manifold grace of the Holy Spirit. For
+walking in newness of life, a new man, he was changed into another man,
+all things belonging to whom were changed for the better; and with so
+great grace did he consecrate the commencement of his bishopric, that
+clothing himself with a monk's form secretly, he fulfilled the work and
+merit of a monk. {217}
+
+_Third Lesson._
+
+But he, who after the example of the Baptist, with constancy had
+conceived in a perfect heart that the zeal of righteousness should be
+purified, studied also to imitate him in the garb of penitence. For
+casting off the fine linen which hitherto he had been accustomed to use,
+whilst the soft delicacies of kings pleased him, he was clothed on his
+naked body with a most rough hair shirt. He added, moreover, hair
+drawers, that he might the more effectually mortify the flesh, and make
+the spirit live. But these, as also the other exercises of his spiritual
+life, very few indeed being aware of it, he removed from the eyes and
+knowledge of men by superadding other garments, because he sought glory
+not from man, but from God. Even then the man of virtue entering upon
+the justifications of God, began to be more complete in abstinence, more
+frequent in watching, longer in prayer, more anxious in preaching. The
+pastoral office intrusted to him by God, he executed with so great
+diligence, as to suffer the rights neither of the clergy nor of the
+Church to be in any degree curtailed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There seems here also to be another commencement, for the next lesson is
+called the First.
+
+_Lesson First._
+
+So large a grace of compunction was he wont to possess, between the
+secrets of prayer or the solemnities of masses, that with eyes trained
+to weeping he would be wholly dissolved in tears; and in the office
+{218} of the altar his appearance was as though he was witnessing the
+Lord's passion in the flesh. Knowing also that mercy softens justice,
+and that pity hath the promise of the life that now is, and of that
+which is to come, therefore towards the poor and the afflicted did he
+bear the bowels of mercy piteously, and was anxious to reach the poor by
+the blessings of his alms.
+
+_Lesson Second._
+
+The more humble of those whom a character for religion raised high, he
+made his acquaintance and intimates; and that he might learn from them
+to hunger and thirst after righteousness, he enjoyed more frequently
+their secret conversation. Towards such servants and soldiers of Christ
+this merciful man preferred to be liberal and abundant in food and
+raiment, he who determined in himself to be moderate and sparing. For
+what would he deny to Christ, who for Christ was about to shed his
+blood? He who owed his coat or cloak to one who asked it, desired to
+add, moreover, his own flesh. For he knew that the man would never
+freely give his own flesh, who showed himself greedy of any temporal
+thing.
+
+_Lesson Third._
+
+Hitherto the merciful Lord, who maketh poor and enricheth, bringeth low
+and lifteth up, wished to load his servant with riches, and exalt him
+with honours; and afterwards he was pleased to try him with adversity.
+By trying whether he loved Him, He proved it the more certainly; but He
+supplied grace more abundantly. For with the temptation He made a way to
+escape, that he might be able to bear it. Therefore, the envious enemy,
+considering that the new prelate {219} and the new man was flourishing
+with so manifold a grace of virtues, devised to send a burning blight of
+temptation, which might suffocate the germ of his merits already put
+forth. Nor was there any delay. He who severs a man from his God, and
+one friend from his neighbour, sowed irreconcileable quarrels between
+the king and the archbishop.
+
+Pray for us, O blessed Thomas.
+
+_In Lauds._
+
+ A grain falls and gives birth to an abundance of corn.
+ The alabaster-box is broken, and the odour of the
+ ointment is powerful.
+ The whole world vies in love to the martyr,
+ Whose wonderful signs strike all with astonishment.
+ The water for Thomas five times changing colour,
+ Once was turned into milk, four times into blood.
+ At the shrine[81] of Thomas four times the light
+ came down,
+ And to the glory of the saint kindled the wax-tapers.
+ DO THOU BY THE BLOOD OF THOMAS, WHICH HE[82]
+ SHED FOR THEE;
+ MAKE US, O CHRIST, ASCEND,
+ Whither Thomas has ascended.
+
+ Extend[83] succour to us, O Thomas,
+ Guide those who stand, {220}
+ Raise up those who fall,
+
+ Correct our morals, actions, and life;
+
+ And guide us into the way of peace.
+
+ [Footnote 81: Ad Thomae memoriam.]
+
+ [Footnote 82: Tu per Thomae sanguinem quem pro te impendit, Fac
+ nos, Christe, scandere, quo Thomas ascendit.]
+
+ [Footnote 83:
+
+ Opem nobis, O Thoma, porrige,
+ Rege stantes, jacentes erige,
+ Mores, actus, et vitam corrige,
+ Et in pacis nos viam dirige.
+ ]
+
+_Final Anthem._
+
+ Hail, O Thomas, the Rod of Justice;[84]
+ The Brightness of the World;
+ The Strength of the Church;
+ The Love of the People;
+ The Delight of the Clergy.
+ Hail, glorious Guardian of the Flock;
+ Save those who rejoice in thy glory.
+
+ [Footnote 84: Salve, Thomas, Virga Justitiae, Mundi Jubar, Robur
+ Ecclesiae, Plebis Amor, Cleri Delicia. Salve Gregis Tutor
+ egregie, Salva tuae gaudentes gloriae.]
+
+The end of the service of Thomas of Canterbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now for a few moments only let us meditate on this service. I have
+already referred to the lamentable practice of substituting biographical
+legends for the word of God. And what is the tendency of this service?
+What impression was it likely to make, and to leave on minds of ordinary
+powers and instruction? Must it not, of necessity, tend to withdraw them
+from contemplating Christ, and to fix their thoughts on the powers, the
+glory, the exaltation, the merits of a fellow-sinner? It will be said,
+that they will look beyond the martyr, and trace the blessings, here
+enumerated, to Christ, as their primary cause, and will think of the
+merits of Thomas as efficacious only through the merits of their
+Saviour; that in their invocation of Thomas they will implore him only
+to pray for them. But can this be so? Does not the ascription of
+miracles to him {221} and to his power; does not the very form of
+enumerating those miracles tend much to exalt the servant to an equality
+with the Master?
+
+Whilst Thomas by being thus, in words at least, presented to the people
+as working those miracles by his own power, (for there is throughout a
+lamentable absence of immediate ascription of glory to God,) is raised
+to an equality with Christ our Lord; many passages in this service have
+the tendency also of withdrawing the minds of the worshippers from an
+implicit and exclusive dependence on the merits of Christ alone, and of
+tempting them to admit the merits of Thomas to share at least with
+Christ in the work of grace and salvation. Let us place some texts of
+Scripture and some passages of this service side by side.
+
+[Transcriber's note: They are shown here one after the other.]
+
+_Scripture._
+
+But after that the kindness and love of God towards man appeared, not by
+works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he
+saved us.--Titus iii. 4, 5.
+
+He who spared not his own Son, but gave him up for us all, how shall he
+not with him also freely give us all things?--Rom. viii. 32.
+
+The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin.--1 John i. 7.
+
+One Mediator.--1 Tim. ii. 5.
+
+Who also maketh intercession for us.--Rom. viii. 34.
+
+He ever liveth to make intercession for them.--Heb. vii. 25.
+
+_Service of Thomas Becket._
+
+O Christ Jesus, by the wounds of Thomas loosen the sins which bind us.
+
+O blessed Jesus, BY THE MERITS OF THOMAS, forgive us our debts, raise us
+from the threefold death, and restore what has been lost with thy
+accustomed pity.
+
+Do thou, O Christ, by the blood of Thomas, which he shed for thee, make
+us ascend whither Thomas has ascended.
+
+Holy Thomas, pray for us.
+
+And if this service thus seems to mingle the merits of Christ, the
+merits of his blood and of his death, with {222} the merits of a mortal
+man, the immediate address to that mortal as the giver of good things
+temporal and spiritual, very awfully trespasses on that high, exclusive,
+and incommunicable prerogative of the one Lord God Omnipotent, which his
+Spirit hath proclaimed solemnly and repeatedly, and which he has fenced
+around against all invasion with so many warnings and denunciations.
+
+_Scripture._ _Service of Becket_
+
+1. O thou that hearest prayer, 1. For they sake, O Thomas,
+unto thee shall all flesh come.-- let the right hand of God embrace
+Ps. lxv. [vulg. lxiv.] 2. us.
+
+By prayer and supplication,
+with thanksgiving, let your requests
+be made known unto God.--Phil.
+iv. 6.
+
+2. Lord, be thou my helper.-- 2. Send help to us, O Thomas;
+Ps. xxx. [xxix.] 10.
+
+3. Thou shalt guide me by thy 3. Guide thou those who stand;
+counsel.--Ps. lxxiii. [lxxii.] 24.
+
+He, The Holy Spirit, shall guide
+you into all truth.--John xvi. 13.
+
+4. The Lord upholdeth all that 4. Raise up those who fall;
+fall, and raiseth up all those that
+be bowed down.--Psalm cxlv.
+[cxliv.] 14.
+
+5. Create in me a clean heart, 5. Correct our morals, actions
+O God.--Ps. li. [l.] 10. and life;
+
+6. The steps of a good man are 6. And guide us into the way
+ordered by the Lord. Though of peace.
+he fall, he shall not be utterly
+cast down, for the Lord upholdeth
+him.--Ps. xxxvii. [xxxvi.]
+23.
+
+The day-spring from on high
+hath visited us, to guide our feet
+into the way of peace.--Luke i.
+78, 79.
+
+And then again, in celebrating the praises of a mortal {223} man,
+recourse is had to language which can fitly be used only in our hymns
+and praises to the supreme Lord of our destinies, the eternal Creator,
+Redeemer, and Comforter, the only wise God our Saviour.
+
+_Address to Thomas._ _Language of Scripture._
+
+1. Hail, Thomas, Rod of Justice! 1. There shall come a rod out
+ of the stem of Jesse. Ye denied
+ the Holy One, and the Just--Isaiah
+ xi. 1. Acts iii. 14.
+
+2. The brightness of the world. 2. The brightness of his glory.
+ I am the light of the world--Heb.
+ i. 3. John viii. 12.
+
+3. The strength of the Church. 3. I can do all things through
+ Christ, that strengthened me.
+ Christ loved the Church, and
+ gave himself for it.--Phil. iv. 13.
+ Eph. v. 25.
+
+4. The love of the people: the 4. Grace be with all them that
+delight of the Clergy. love our Lord Jesus Christ in
+ sincerity. Delight thyself in the
+ Lord.--Eph. vi. 24. Ps. xxxvii. 4.
+
+5. Hail, glorious Guardian of 5. Our Lord Jesus, that great
+the Flock. Save those who rejoice Shepherd of the sheep. Give ear,
+in thy glory. O Shepherd of Israel; come and
+ save us. He that glorieth, let him
+ glory in the Lord.--Heb. xiii. 20.
+ Psalm lxxx. [lxxix.] 1. 1 Cor.
+ i. 31.
+
+Can that worship become the disciples of the Gospel and the Cross, which
+addresses such prayers and such praises to the spirit of a mortal man?
+Every prayer, and every form of praise here used in honour of Thomas
+Becket, it would well become Christians to offer to the Giver of all
+good, trusting solely and exclusively to the mediation of Christ Jesus
+our Lord for acceptance; and pleading-only the merits of his most
+precious blood. {224} And yet I am bound to confess, that in principle,
+in spirit, and in fact, I can find no substantial difference between
+this service of Thomas of Canterbury, and the service which all in
+communion with the Church of Rome are under an obligation to use even at
+the present hour.
+
+This point remains next for our inquiry, and we will draw from the
+well-head. I would, however, first suggest the application of a general
+test for ascertaining the real _bona-fide_ nature of these prayers and
+praises. The test I would apply is, to try with the change only of the
+name, substituting the holiest name ever named in heaven or in earth for
+the name of Thomas of Canterbury--whether these prayers and praises
+should not be offered to the Supreme Being alone through the atoning
+merits of his Blessed Son; whether they are not exclusively appropriate
+to HIM.
+
+To (Thomas/God Almighty) all things bow and are obedient.
+
+Plagues, diseases, death, and devils,
+Fire, air, land, and sea.
+(Thomas/The Almighty) fills the world with glory.
+
+The world offers obeisance to (Thomas/Almighty God).
+
+(The Martyr Thomas/Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ) began to shine
+forth with miracles [John ii. 11]; restoring sight to the blind [Luke
+vii. 21]; walking to the lame; hearing to the deaf; speech to the dumb;
+cleansing to the lepers [Matt. xi. 5]; making the paralytic sound [Matt.
+iv. 24]; healing the dropsy [Luke xiv. 4]; and all kinds of incurable
+diseases [Luke iv. 40]; restoring the dead to {225} life [Luke viii. 43.
+55]; in a wonderful manner commanding the devils [Matt. viii. 16], and
+all the elements [Luke viii. 25]. He put forth his hand to unwonted and
+unheard-of signs of his own power [Mark ii. 12. John ix. 30].
+
+Do thou, O Lord, by the blood of (Thomas/Christ) cause us to ascend
+whither (Thomas/Christ) has ascended. (O Thomas/O God), send help to us.
+Guide those who stand; raise up those who fall; correct our morals,
+actions, and life; and guide us into the way of peace.
+
+Hail, (Thomas!/Jesus!) Rod of Justice, the Brightness of the world, the
+Strength of the Church, the Love of the people, the Delight of the
+Clergy. Hail, Glorious Guardian of the flock! Save Thou those who
+delight in Thy glory.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We shall apply this same test to many of the collects and prayers used,
+and of necessity to be used, because they are authorized and appointed,
+even at the present day, in the ministrations of the Church of Rome. The
+impiety in many of those instances is not couched in such startling
+language; but it is not the less real. God forbid that we should charge
+our fellow-creatures with idolatry, who declare that they offer divine
+worship to the Supreme Being only; or that we should pronounce any
+professed Christian to have cast off his {226} dependence on the merits
+of Christ alone, who assures us that he looks for mercy only through
+those merits. But I know and feel, that according to the standard of
+Christian truth, and of the pure worship of Almighty God, which the
+Scriptures and primitive antiquity compel me to adopt, I should stain my
+own soul with the guilt of idolatry, and with the sin of relying on
+other merits than Christ's, were I myself to offer those prayers.
+
+That this service excited much disgust among the early reformers, we
+learn from various writers[85]. On the merits of the struggle between
+Becket and his king; on the question of Becket's moral and religious
+worth, (a question long and often discussed among the exercises of the
+masters of Paris in the full assembly of the Sorbonne[86],) or on the
+motives which influenced Henry the Eighth, I intend not to say one word:
+those points belong not to our present inquiry. It may not, however, be
+thought irrelevant here to quote a passage {227} from the ordinance of
+this latter monarch for erasing Becket's service out of the books, and
+his name from the calendar of the saints.
+
+ [Footnote 85: See Mornay "De la Messe," Saumur, 1604. p. 826.
+ Becon, in his "New Year's Gift," London, 1564, p. 183, thus
+ speaks: "What saint at any time thought himself so pure,
+ immaculate, and without all spot of sin, that he durst presume
+ to die for us, and to avouch his death to be an oblation and
+ sacrifice for our lives to God the Father, except peradventure
+ we will admit for good payment these and such like blasphemies,
+ which were wont full solemnly to be sung in the temples unto the
+ great ignominy of the glorious name of God, and the dishonour of
+ Christ's most precious blood." Then quoting the lines from the
+ service of Thomas Becket, on which we have above commented, he
+ adds, "I will let pass many more which are easy to be searched
+ and found out." Becon preached and wrote in the reign of Henry
+ VIII. and was then persecuted for his religion, as he was
+ afterwards in the reign of Mary.]
+
+ [Footnote 86: We are told that forty-eight years after his
+ death, the masters of Paris disputed whether Thomas was a
+ condemned sinner, or admitted into heaven.]
+
+In Henry the Eighth's proclamation, dated Westminster, 16th November, in
+the thirtieth year of his reign, printed by Bertholet, is the following
+very curious passage:--
+
+ "ITEM, for as moche as it appereth now clerely, that Thomas
+ Becket, sometyme Archbyshop of Canterburie, stubburnly to
+ withstand the holsome lawes establyshed agaynste the enormities
+ of the clergie, by the kynges highness mooste noble progenitour,
+ kynge HENRY the Seconde, for the common welthe, reste, and
+ tranquillitie of this realme, of his frowarde mynde fledde the
+ realme into Fraunce, and to the bishop of Rome, mayntenour of
+ those enormities, to procure the abrogation of the sayd lawes,
+ whereby arose moch trouble in this said realme, and that his
+ dethe, which they untruely called martyrdome, happened upon a
+ reskewe by him made, and that, as it is written, he gave
+ opprobrious wordes to the gentyllmen, whiche than counsayled hym
+ to leave his stubbernesse, and to avoyde the commocion of the
+ people, rysen up for that rescue. And he not only callyd the one
+ of them bawde, but also toke Tracy by the bosome, and violently
+ shoke and plucked hym in suche maner, that he had almoste
+ overthrowen hym to the pavement of the Churche; so that upon
+ this fray one of their company, perceivynge the same, strake
+ hym, and so in the thronge Becket was slayne. And further that
+ his canonization was made onely by the bysshop of Rome, bycause
+ he had ben a champion of maynteyne his usurped auctoritie, and a
+ bearer of the iniquitie of the clergie, for these and for other
+ great and urgent causes, longe to recyte, the Kynge's {228}
+ Maiestie, by the advyse of his counsayle, hath thought expedient
+ to declare to his lovynge subjectes, that notwithstandynge the
+ sayde canonization, there appereth nothynge in his lyfe and
+ exteriour conversation, wherby he shuld be callyd a sainct, but
+ rather estemed to have ben a rebell and traytour to his prynce.
+ Therefore his Grace strayghtly chargeth and commandeth that from
+ henseforth the sayde Thomas Becket shall not be estemed, named,
+ reputed, nor called a sayncte, but bysshop Becket; and that his
+ ymages and pictures, through the hole realme, shall be putte
+ downe, and avoyded out of all churches, chapelles, and other
+ places; and that from henseforthe, the dayes used to be
+ festivall in his name shall not be observed, nor the service,
+ office, antiphoners, colletes, and prayers, in his name redde,
+ but rased and put out of all the bokes[87]."
+
+ [Footnote 87: In the Roman Breviary, adapted to England, several
+ biographical lessons are appointed for the Anniversary of "St.
+ Thomas, bishop and martyr," interspersed with canticles. In one
+ of these we read, "This is truly a martyr, who, for the name of
+ Christ, shed blood; who feared not the threats of judges, nor
+ sought the glory of earthly dignity. But he reached the heavenly
+ kingdom."--Norwich, 1830. Hiem. p. 251.] {229}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+COUNCIL OF TRENT.
+
+
+In the process of ascertaining the real state of doctrine and practice
+in the worship of the Church of Rome at the present day, we must first
+gain as clear and accurate a knowledge of the decree of the Council of
+Trent, as its words will enable us to form. Into the character of that
+Council, and of those who constituted it, our present investigation does
+not lead us to inquire. It is now, I believe, generally understood, that
+its decrees are binding on all who profess allegiance to the Sovereign
+Roman Pontiff; and that the man would be considered to have renounced
+the Roman Catholic Communion, who should professedly withhold his assent
+from the doctrines there promulgated as vital, or against the oppugners
+of which the Council itself pronounced an anathema.
+
+Ecclesiastical writers[88] assure us, that the wording of the decrees of
+that Council was in many cases on purpose framed ambiguously and
+vaguely. The latitude, however, of the expressions employed, does not in
+itself {230} of necessity imply any of those sinister and unworthy
+motives to which it has been usual with many writers to attribute it. In
+charity, and without any improbable assumption, it may be referred to an
+honest and laudable desire of making the terms of communion as wide as
+might be, with a view of comprehending within what was regarded the pale
+of the Catholic Church, the greatest number of those who professed and
+called themselves Christians. Be this as it may, the vagueness and
+uncertainty of the terms employed, compel us in many instances to have
+recourse to the actual practice of the Church of Rome, as the best
+interpreter of doubtful expressions in the articles of that Council. The
+decree which bears on the subject of this volume is drawn up in the
+following words:--
+
+ [Footnote 88: See Mosheim, xvi. Cent. c. i. vol. iv. p. 196.
+ London, 1811.]
+
+ "SESSION XXV.[89]
+
+ "On the invocation, veneration, and reliques of saints, and of
+ sacred images.
+
+ "The Holy Council commands all bishops and others bearing the
+ office and care of instruction, that according to the usage of
+ the Catholic and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive
+ times of the Christian religion, and the consent of holy
+ fathers, and decrees of sacred councils, they in the first place
+ should instruct the faithful concerning the intercession and
+ invocation of saints, the honour of reliques, and the lawful use
+ of images, teaching them, that the SAINTS REIGNING TOGETHER WITH
+ CHRIST, offer their own {231} prayers for men to God: that it is
+ good and profitable SUPPLIANTLY TO INVOKE THEM: and to fly to
+ their PRAYERS, HELP, and ASSISTANCE, for obtaining benefits from
+ God, by his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer
+ and Saviour. But that those who deny that the saints, enjoying
+ everlasting happiness in heaven, are to be invoked; or who
+ assert either that they do not pray for us; or that the
+ invocation of them to pray for us even as individuals is
+ idolatry, or is repugnant to the word of God, and is opposed to
+ the honour of the one Mediator of God and man, Jesus Christ; or
+ that it is folly, by voice or mentally, to supplicate those who
+ reign in heaven, hold impious sentiments.
+
+ "That the bodies also of the holy martyrs and others living with
+ Christ, which were living members of Christ, and a temple of the
+ Holy Ghost to be raised by Him to eternal life, and to be
+ glorified, are to be worshipped by the faithful; by means of
+ which many benefits are conferred on men by God; so that those
+ who affirm that worship and honour are not due to the reliques
+ of the saints, or that they and other sacred monuments are
+ unprofitably honoured by the faithful; and that the shrines of
+ the saints are frequented in vain for the purpose of obtaining
+ their succour, are altogether to be condemned, as the Church has
+ long ago condemned them, and now also condemns them."
+
+ [Footnote 89: The Latin, which will be found in the Appendix, is
+ a transcript from a printed copy of the Acts of the Council of
+ Trent, preserved in the British Museum, to which are annexed the
+ autograph signatures of the secretaries (notarii), and their
+ seals.]
+
+An examination of this decree, in comparison with the form and language
+of other decrees of the same Council, forces the remark upon us, That
+the Council does not assert that the practice of invoking saints has any
+foundation in Holy Scripture. The absence of all such declaration is the
+more striking and important, because in the very decree immediately
+preceding this, {232} which establishes Purgatory as a doctrine of the
+Church of Rome, the Council declares that doctrine to be drawn from the
+Holy Scriptures. In the present instance the Council proceeds no further
+than to charge with impiety those who maintain the invocation of saints
+to be contrary to the word of God. Many a doctrine or practice, not
+found in Scripture, may nevertheless be not contrary to the word of God;
+but here the Council abstains from affirming any thing whatever as to
+the scriptural origin of the doctrine and practice which it
+authoritatively enforces. In this respect the framers of the decree
+acted with far more caution and wisdom than they had shown in wording
+the decree on Purgatory; and with far more caution and wisdom too than
+they exercised in this decree, when they affirmed that the doctrine of
+the invocation of saints was to be taught the people according to the
+usage of the Catholic and Apostolic Church, received from the primitive
+times of the Christian religion, and the consent of the holy fathers. I
+have good hope that these pages have already proved beyond gainsaying,
+that the invocation of saints is a manifest departure from the usage of
+the Primitive Church, and contrary to the testimony of "the holy
+fathers." However, the fact of the Council not having professed to trace
+the doctrine, or its promulgation, to any authority of Holy Scripture,
+is of very serious import, and deserves to be well weighed in all its
+bearings.
+
+With regard to the condemnatory clauses of this decree, I would for
+myself observe, that I should never have engaged in preparing this
+volume, had I not believed, "that it was neither good nor profitable to
+invoke the saints, or to fly to their prayers, their assistance, and
+succour." I am bound, with this decree {233} before me, to pronounce,
+that it is a vain thing to offer supplications, either by the voice or
+in the mind, to the saints, even if they be reigning in heaven; and that
+it is also in vain for Christians to frequent the shrines of the saints
+for the purpose of obtaining their succour.
+
+I am, moreover, under a deep conviction, that the invocation of them is
+both at variance with the word of God, and contrary to the honour of the
+one Mediator between God and man, Jesus Christ.
+
+On this last point, indeed, I am aware of an anxious desire prevailing
+on the part of many Roman Catholics, to establish a distinction between
+a mediation of Redemption, and a mediation of Intercession: and thus by
+limiting the mediation of the saints and angels to intercession, and
+reserving the mediation of redemption to Christ only, to avoid the
+setting up of another to share the office of Mediator with Him, who is
+so solemnly declared in Scripture to be the one Mediator between God and
+man. But this distinction has no foundation in the revealed will of God;
+on the contrary, it is directly at variance with the words and with the
+spirit of many portions of the sacred volume. There we find the two
+offices of redemption and mediation joined together in Christ. "If any
+man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
+Righteous, and He is the propitiation for our sins." [1 John ii. 1, 2.
+Heb. ix. 12. vii. 25.] In the Epistle to the Hebrews, the same Saviour
+who is declared "by his own blood to have obtained eternal redemption,"
+is announced also as the Mediator of Intercession. "Wherefore he is able
+to save them to the uttermost who come unto God through him, seeing he
+ever liveth to make intercession for them." The {234} redemption wrought
+by Christ, and the intercession still made in our behalf by Christ, are
+both equally declared to us by the most sure warrant of Holy Scripture;
+of any other intercession by saints in glory, by angels, or Virgin, to
+be sought by our suppliant invocations to them, the covenant of God
+speaks not.
+
+It may be observed, that the enactment of this decree by the Council of
+Trent, has been chiefly lamented by some persons on the ground of its
+presenting the most formidable barrier against any reconciliation
+between the Church of Rome, and those who hold the unlawfulness of the
+invocation of saints. Indeed persons of erudition, judgment, piety, and
+charity, in communion with Rome, have not been wanting to express openly
+their regret, that decrees so positive, peremptory, and exclusive,
+should have been adopted. They would have been better satisfied with the
+terms of communion in the Church to which they still adhered, had
+individuals been left to their own responsibility on questions of
+disputable origin and doubtful antiquity, involving rather the subtilty
+of metaphysical disquisitions, than agreeable to the simplicity of
+Gospel truth, and essential Christian doctrine. On this point I would
+content myself with quoting the sentiments of a Roman Catholic author.
+Many of the facts alleged in his interesting comments deserve the
+patient consideration of every Christian. Here (observes the commentator
+on Paoli Sarpi's History of the Council of Trent[90]) the Council makes
+it a duty to pray to saints, though the ancient Church never regarded it
+as necessary. The practice cannot be proved to be introduced into public
+worship {235} before the sixth century; and it is certain, that in the
+ancient liturgies and sacramentaries no direct invocation is found. Even
+in our modern missals, being those of our ecclesiastical books in which
+the ancient form has been longest retained, scarcely is there a collect
+[those he means in which mention is made of the saints] where the
+address is not offered directly to God, imploring Him to hear the
+prayers of the saints for us; and this is the ancient form of
+invocation. It is true, that in the Breviaries and other ecclesiastical
+books, direct prayers to the saints have been subsequently introduced,
+as in litanies, hymns, and even some collects. But the usage is more
+modern, and cannot be evidence for ancient tradition. For this [ancient
+tradition] only some invocations addressed to saints in public harangues
+are alleged, but which ought to be regarded as figures of rhetoric,
+_apostrophes_, rather than real invocations; though at the same time
+some fathers laid the foundation for such a practice by asserting that
+one could address himself to the saints, and hope for succour from them.
+
+ [Footnote 90: Histoire du Conc. de Trent, par Fra. Paoli Sarpi,
+ traduit par Pierre Francois de Courayer. Amsterdam, note 31.
+ 1751. vol. iii. p. 182.]
+
+We have already alluded to the very great latitude of interpretation
+which the words of this Council admit. The expressions indeed are most
+remarkably elastic; capable of being expanded widely enough to justify
+those of the Church of Rome who allow themselves in the practice of
+asking for aid and assistance, temporal and spiritual, to be expected
+from the saints themselves; and at the same time, the words of the
+decree admit of being so far contracted as not in appearance palpably to
+contradict those who allege, that the Church of Rome never addresses a
+saint with any other petition, than purely and simply that the saint
+would by prayer intercede for the worshippers. The words "suppliantly
+{236} to invoke them," and "to fly to their prayers, HELP, and SUCCOUR,"
+are sufficiently comprehensive to cover all kinds of prayer for all
+kinds of benefits, whilst "the invocation of them to pray for us even
+individually," will countenance those who would restrict the faithful to
+an entreaty for their prayers only.
+
+Whatever may be the advantage of this latitude of interpretation, in one
+point of view it must be a subject of regret. Complaints had long been
+made in Christendom, that other prayers were offered to the saints,
+besides those which petitioned only for their intercession; and if the
+Council of Trent had intended it to be a rule of universal application,
+that in whatever words the invocations of the saints might be couched,
+they should be taken to mean only requests for their prayers, it may be
+lamented, that no declaration to that effect was given.
+
+The manner in which writers of the Church of Rome have attempted to
+reconcile the prayers actually offered in her ritual, with the principle
+of invoking the saints only for their prayers, is indeed most
+unsatisfactory. Whilst to some minds the expedient to which those
+writers have had recourse carries with it the stamp of mental
+reservation, and spiritual subterfuge, and moral obliquity; others under
+the influence of the purest charity will regret in it the absence of
+that simplicity, and direct openness in word and deed, which we regard
+as characteristic of the religion of the Gospel; and will deprecate its
+adoption as tending, in many cases inevitably, to become a most
+dangerous snare to the conscience. I will here refer only to the
+profession of that principle as made by Bellarmin. Subsequent writers
+seem to have adopted his sentiments, and to have expressed themselves
+very much in his words. {237}
+
+Bellarmin unreservedly asserts that Christians are to invoke the saints
+solely and exclusively for their prayers, and not for any benefits as
+from the saints themselves. But then he seems to paralyse that
+declaration by this refinement: "It must nevertheless be observed that
+we have not to do with words, but with the meaning of words; for as far
+as concerns the words, it is lawful to say, 'Saint Peter, have mercy on
+me! Save me! Open to me the entrance of heaven!' So also, 'Give to me
+health of body, Give me patience, Give me fortitude!' Whilst only we
+understand 'Save me, and have mercy upon me BY PRAYING for me: Give me
+this and that, BY THY PRAYERS AND MERITS.' For thus Gregory of
+Nazianzen, in his Oratio in Cyprianum; and the Universal Church, when in
+the hymn to the Virgin she says,
+
+ Mary, Mother of Grace,
+ Mother of Mercy,
+ Do thou protect us from the enemy,
+ And take us in the hour of death.
+
+"And in that of the Apostles,
+
+ 'To whose command is subject'
+ The health and weakness of all:
+ Heal us who are morally diseased;
+ Restore us to virtue.
+
+"And as the Apostle says of himself 'that I might save some,' [Rom. xi.]
+and 'that he might save all,' [I Cor. ix.] not as God, but Thy prayer
+and counsel."
+
+I wish not to enter upon the question how far this distinction is
+consistent with that openness and straightforward undisguised dealing
+which is alone allowable when we are contending for the truth; nor how
+far the {238} charge of moral obliquity and double dealing, often
+brought against it, can be satisfactorily met. But suppose for a moment
+that we grant (what is not the case) that in the metaphysical
+disquisitions of the experienced casuist such a distinction might be
+maintained, how can we expect it to be recognized, and felt, and acted
+upon by the large body of Christians? Abstractedly considered, such an
+interpretation in a religious act of daily recurrence by the mass of
+unlearned believers would, I conceive, appear to reflecting minds most
+improbable, if not utterly impossible. And as to its actual _bona-fide_
+result in practice, a very brief sojourn in countries where the religion
+of Rome is dominant, will suffice to convince us, that such subtilties
+of the casuist are neither received nor understood by the great body of
+worshippers; and that the large majority of them, when they pray to an
+individual saint to deliver them from any evil, or to put them in
+possession of some good, do in very deed look to the saint himself for
+the fulfilment of their wishes. It is a snare to the conscience only too
+evidently successful.
+
+And I regret to add, that in the errors into which such language of
+their prayers may unhappily betray them, they cannot be otherwise than
+confirmed as well by the recorded sentiments of men in past years, whom
+they have been taught to reverence, as by the sentiments which are
+circulated through the world now, even by what they are accustomed to
+regard as the highest authority on earth[91].
+
+ [Footnote 91: See in subsequent parts of this work the
+ references to Bonaventura, Bernardin Sen., Bernardin de Bust.,
+ &c.; and also the encyclical letter of the present (A.D. 1840)
+ reigning pontiff.]
+
+To this point, however, we must repeatedly revert {239} hereafter; at
+present, I will only add one further consideration. If, as we are now
+repeatedly told, the utmost sought by the invocation of saints is that
+they would intercede for the supplicants; that no more is meant than we
+of the Anglican Church mean when we earnestly entreat our
+fellow-Christians on earth to pray for us,--why should not the prayers
+to the saints be confined exclusively to that form of words which would
+convey the meaning intended? why should other forms of supplicating them
+be adopted, whose obvious and direct meaning implies a different thing?
+If we request a Christian friend to pray for us, that we may be
+strengthened and supported under a trial and struggle in our spiritual
+warfare, we do not say, "Friend, strengthen me; Friend, support me."
+That entreaty would imply our desire to be, that he would visit us
+himself, and comfort and strengthen us by his own kind words and
+cheering offices of consolation and encouragement. To convey our
+meaning, our words would be, "Pray for me; remember me in your
+supplications to the throne of grace. Implore God, of his mercy, to give
+me the strength and comfort of his Holy Spirit." If nothing more is ever
+intended to be conveyed, than a similar request for their prayers, when
+the saints are "suppliantly invoked," in a case of such delicacy, and
+where there is so much danger of words misleading, why have other
+expressions of every variety been employed in the Roman Liturgies, as
+well as in the devotions of individuals, which in words appeal to the
+saints, not for their prayers, but for their own immediate exertion in
+our behalf, their assistance, succour, defence, and comfort,--"Protect
+us from our enemies--Heal the diseases of our minds--Release us from our
+sin--Receive us at the hour of death?" {240}
+
+In the present work, however, were it not for the example and warning
+set us by this still greater departure from Scripture and the primitive
+Church, we need not have dwelt on this immediate point; because we
+maintain that any invocation of saint or angel, even if it were confined
+to a petitioning for their prayers and intercessions, is contrary both
+to God's word and to the faith and practice of the primitive, Catholic,
+and Apostolic Church. We now proceed to the next portion of our proposed
+inquiry,--the present state of Roman Catholic worship, with respect to
+the invocation of saints and angels. {241}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SECTION I.--PRESENT SERVICE IN THE CHURCH OF ROME.
+
+
+In submitting to the reader's consideration the actual state of Roman
+Catholic worship at the present hour, I disclaim all desire to fasten
+upon the Church of Rome any of the follies and extravagancies of
+individual superstition. Probably many English Roman Catholics have been
+themselves shocked and scandalized by the scenes which their own eyes
+have witnessed in various parts of continental Europe. It would be no
+less unfair in us to represent the excesses of superstition there forced
+on our notice as the genuine legitimate fruits of the religion of Rome,
+than it would be in Roman Catholics to affiliate on the Catholics of the
+Anglican Church the wild theories and revolting tenets of all who assume
+the name of opponents to Rome. Well indeed does it become us of both
+Churches to watch jealously and adversely as against ourselves the
+errors into which our doctrines, if not preserved and guarded in their
+purity and simplicity, might have a tendency to seduce the unwary. And
+whilst I am fully alive to the necessity of us Anglican Catholics
+prescribing to ourselves a {242} practical application of the same rule
+in various points of faith and discipline, I would with all delicacy and
+respect invite Roman Catholics to do likewise. Especially would I
+entreat them to reflect with more than ordinary scrutiny and solicitude
+on the vast evils into which the practice of praying to saints and
+angels, and of pleading their merits at the throne of grace, has a
+tendency to betray those who are unenlightened and off their guard; and
+unless my eyes and my ears and my powers of discernment have altogether
+often deceived and failed me, I must add, actually betrays thousands.
+Often when I have witnessed abroad multitudes of pilgrims prostrate
+before an image of the Virgin, their arms extended, their eyes fixed on
+her countenance, their words in their native language pouring forth her
+praises and imploring her aid, I have asked myself, If this be not
+religious worship, what is? If I could transport myself into the midst
+of pagans in some distant part of the world at the present day; or could
+I have mingled with the crowd of worshippers surrounding the image of
+Minerva in Athens, or of Diana in Ephesus, when the servants of the only
+God called their fellow-creatures from such vanities, should I have seen
+or heard more unequivocal proofs that the worshippers were addressing
+their prayers to the idols as representations of their deities? Would
+any difference have appeared in their external worship? When the
+Ephesians worshipped their "great goddess Diana and the image which fell
+down from Jupiter," could their attitude, their eyes, or their words
+more clearly have indicated an assurance in the worshipper, that the
+Spirit of the Deity was especially present in that image, than the
+attitude, the eyes, the words of the pilgrims at Einsiedlin for example,
+are indications of the same {243} belief and assurance with regard to
+the statue of the Virgin Mary? These thoughts would force themselves
+again and again on my mind; and though since I first witnessed such
+things many years have intervened, chequered with various events of
+life, yet whilst I am writing, the scenes are brought again fresh to my
+remembrance; the same train of thought is awakened; and the lapse of
+time has not in the least diminished the estimate then formed of the
+danger, the awful peril, to which the practice of addressing saints and
+angels in prayer, even in its most modified and mitigated form, exposes
+those who are in communion with Rome. I am unwilling to dwell on this
+point longer, or to paint in deeper or more vivid colours the scenes
+which I have witnessed, than the necessity of the case requires. But it
+would have been the fruit of a morbid delicacy rather than of brotherly
+love, had I disguised, in this part of my address, the full extent of
+the awful dread with which I contemplate any approximation to prayers,
+of whatever kind, uttered by the lips or mentally conceived, to any
+spiritual existence in heaven above, save only to the one God
+exclusively. It is indeed a dread suggested by the highest and purest
+feelings of which I believe my frame of mind to be susceptible; it is
+sanctioned and enforced by my reason; and it is confirmed and
+strengthened more and more by every year's additional reflection and
+experience. Ardently as I long and pray for Christian unity, I could not
+join in communion with a Church, one of whose fundamental articles
+accuses of impiety those who deny the lawfulness of the invocations of
+saints.
+
+But I return from this digression on the peril of idolatry, to which as
+well the theory as the practice of {244} the Roman Catholic Church
+exposes her members; and willingly repeat my disclaimer of any wish or
+intention whatever to fasten and filiate upon the Church of Rome the
+doctrines or the practice of individuals, or even of different sections
+of her communion. Still, in the same manner as I have referred to the
+extravagancies which offend us in many parts of Christendom now, I would
+recall some of the excesses into which renowned and approved authors of
+her communion have been betrayed. I seek not to fix on those members of
+the Roman Church who disclaim any participation in such excesses, the
+folly or guilt of others; but when we find many of the most celebrated
+among her sons tempted into such lamentable departures from primitive
+Christian worship, we are naturally led to ascertain whether the
+doctrine be not itself the genuine cause and source of the
+mischief;--whether the malady be not the immediate and natural effect of
+the tenet and practice operating generally, and not to be referred to
+the idiosyncrasy of the patient. A voice seems to address us from every
+side, when such excesses are witnessed, Firmly resist the beginnings of
+the evil; oppose its very commencement; it is not a question of degree,
+exclude the principle itself from your worship; give utterance to no
+invocation; mentally conceive no prayer to any being, save God alone;
+plead no other merits with Him than the merits of his only Son. Then,
+and then only, are you safe. Then, and then only, is your prayer
+catholic, primitive, apostolic, and scriptural.
+
+The[92] most satisfactory method of conducting this {245} branch of our
+inquiry seems to be, that we should examine the Roman Ritual with
+reference to those several and progressive stages to which I have before
+generally referred; from the mere rhetorical apostrophe to the direct
+prayer for spiritual blessings petitioned for immediately from the
+person addressed. I am neither anxious to establish the progress
+historically, nor do I wish to tie myself down in all cases to the exact
+order of those successive stages, in my present citation of testimonies
+from the Roman Ritual. My anxiety is to give a fair view of what is now
+the real character of Roman Catholic worship, rather than to draw fine
+distinctions. I shall therefore survey within the same field of view the
+two fatal errors by which, as we believe, the worship of the Church of
+Rome is rendered unfit for the family of Christ to acknowledge it
+generally as their own: I mean the adoration of saints, and the pleading
+of their merits at the throne of grace, instead of trusting to the alone
+exclusive merits of the one only Mediator Jesus Christ our Lord, and
+addressing God Almighty alone.
+
+ [Footnote 92: I believe the method best calculated to supply us
+ with the very truth is, as I have before observed, to trace the
+ conduct of Christians at the shrines of the martyrs, and follow
+ them in their successive departures further and further from
+ primitive purity and simplicity, on the anniversaries of those
+ servants of God. What was hailed there first in the full warmth
+ of admiration and zeal for the honour and glory of a national or
+ favourite martyr, crept stealthily, and step by step, into the
+ regular and stated services of the Church.]
+
+I. In the original form of those prayers in which mention was made of
+the saints departed, Christians addressed the Supreme Being alone,
+either in praise for the mercies shown to the saints themselves, and to
+the Church through their means; or else in supplication, that the
+worshippers might have grace to follow their example, and profit by
+their instruction. Such, for instance, is the prayer in the Roman
+ritual[93] on St. {246} John's day[94] which is evidently the foundation
+of the beautiful Collect now used in the Anglican Church,--"Merciful
+Lord, we beseech thee to cast thy bright beams of light upon thy Church,
+that it being enlightened by the doctrine of thy Apostle and Evangelist
+St. John, may so walk in the light of thy truth, that it may at length
+attain to the light of everlasting life, through Jesus our Lord. Amen."
+Such too is the close of the Prayer for the whole state of Christ's
+Church militant here on earth, offered in our Anglican service,--"We
+bless thy holy name for all thy servants departed this life in thy faith
+and fear, beseeching thee to give us grace so to follow their good
+examples, that with them we may be partakers of thy heavenly kingdom.
+Grant this, O Father, for the sake of Jesus Christ our only Mediator and
+Advocate. Amen."
+
+ [Footnote 93: The references will generally be given to the
+ Roman Breviary as edited by F.C. Husenbeth, Norwich, 1830. That
+ work consists of four volumes, corresponding with the four
+ quarters of the ecclesiastical year--Winter, Hiem.; Spring,
+ Vern.; Summer, _AEstiv_.; Autumn, Aut.; and the volumes will be
+ designated by the corresponding initials, H. V. AE. A.]
+
+ [Footnote 94: "Ecclesiam, tuam, Domine, benignus illustra, ut
+ beati Johannis Apostoli tui et evangelistae illuminata doctrinis,
+ ad dona perveniat sempiterna. Per Dominum."--Husen. H. p. 243.]
+
+II. The second stage supplies examples of a kind of rhetorical
+apostrophe; the speaker addressing one who was departed as though he had
+ears to hear. Were not this the foundation stone on which the rest of
+the edifice seems to have been built, we might have passed it by
+unnoticed. Of this we have an instance in the address to the Shepherds
+on Christmas-day. "Whom have ye seen, ye shepherds? Say ye, tell ye, who
+hath appeared on the earth? Say ye, what saw ye? Announce to us the
+nativity of Christ[95]."
+
+ [Footnote 95: Quem vidistis, Pastores? Dicite, Annunciate nobis.
+ In terris quis apparuit? Dicite quidnam vidistis? Et annunciate
+ Christi nativitatem.--H. 219.] {247}
+
+Another instance is seen in that beautiful song ascribed to Prudentius
+and used on the day of Holy Innocents:
+
+ "Hail! ye flowers of Martyrs." [Salvete flores martyrum. H. 249.]
+
+It is of the same character with other songs, said to be from the same
+pen, in which the town of Bethlehem is addressed, and even the Cross.
+
+ "O Thou of mighty cities." [O sola magnarum urbium. H. 306.]
+ "Bend thy boughs, thou lofty tree...."
+ [Flecte ramos arbor alta, &c. Aut. 344.]
+ "Worthy wast thou alone
+ To bear the victim of the world."
+
+Thus, on the feast of the exaltation of the Cross, this anthem is
+sung,--"O blessed Cross, who wast alone worthy to bear the King of the
+heavens and the Lord." [O crux benedicta, quae sola fuisti digna portare
+Regem coelorum et Dominum. Alleluia. A. 345.] Though unhappily, in an
+anthem on St. Andrew's day, this apostrophe becomes painful and
+distressing, in which not only is the cross thus apostrophised, but it
+is prayed to, as though it had ears to hear, and a mind to understand,
+and power to act,--"Hail, precious Cross! do thou receive the disciple
+of Him who hung upon thee, my master, Christ." [Salve, crux pretiosa
+suscipe discipulum ejus, qui pependit in te, magister meus Christus. A.
+547.] The Church of Rome, in this instance, gives us a vivid example of
+the ease with which exclamations and apostrophes are made the
+ground-work of invocations. In the legend of the day similar, though not
+the same, words form a part of the salutation, which St. Andrew is there
+said to have addressed {248} to the cross of wood prepared for his own
+martyrdom, and then bodily before his eyes. There are many such
+addresses to the Cross, in various parts of the Roman ritual. (See A.
+344.)
+
+In such apostrophes the whole of the Song of the Three Children abounds;
+and we meet with many such in the early writers.
+
+III. The third stage supplies instances of prayer to God, imploring him
+to allow the supplication of his saints to be offered for us. Of this we
+find examples in the Collects for St. Andrew's Eve and Anniversary, for
+the feast of St. Anthony, and various others.
+
+"We beseech thee, Almighty God, that he whose feast we are about to
+celebrate may implore thy aid for us," &c. [Quaesumus omnipotens Deus, ut
+beatus Andreas Apostolus cujus praevenimus festivitatem, tuum pro nobis
+imploret auxilium. A. 545.]
+
+"That he may be for us a perpetual intercessor." [Ut apud te sit pro
+nobis perpetuus intercessor. A. 551.]
+
+"We beseech thee, O Lord, let the intercession of the blessed Anthony
+the Abbot commend us, that what we cannot effect by our own merits, we
+may obtain by his patronage [Ejus patrocinio assequamur. H. 490.]:
+through the Lord."
+
+These prayers I could not offer in faith. I am taught in the written
+word to look for no other intercessor in heaven, than one who is eternal
+and divine, therefore I can need no other. Had God, by his revealed
+word, told me that the intercessions of his servants departed should
+prevail with Him, provided I sought that benefit by prayer, I should,
+without any misgiving, have implored Him to receive their {249} prayers
+in my behalf; but I can find no such an intimation in the covenant. In
+that covenant the word of the God of truth and mercy is pledged to
+receive those, and to grant the prayers of those who come to him through
+his blessed Son. In that covenant, I am strictly commanded and most
+lovingly invited to approach boldly the Supreme Giver of all good things
+myself, and to ask in faith nothing wavering, with an assurance that He
+who spared not his own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, will, with
+Him, also freely give us all things. In this assurance I place implicit
+trust; and as long as I have my being in this earthly tabernacle, I
+will, by his gracious permission and help, pray for whatever is needful
+for the soul and the body; I will pray not for myself only, but for all,
+individually and collectively, who are near and dear to me, and all who
+are far from me; for my friends, and for those who wish me ill; for my
+fellow Christians, and for those who are walking still in darkness and
+sin;--I will pray for mercy on all mankind. And I will, as occasion
+offers, desire others among the faithful on earth to pray for me; and
+will take comfort and encouragement and holy hope from the reflection
+that their prayers are presented to God in my behalf, and that they will
+continue to pray for me when my own strength shall fail and the hour of
+my departure shall draw nigh. But for the acceptance of my own prayers
+and of theirs I can depend on no other Mediator in the world of spirits,
+than on HIM, whom his own Word declares to be the one Mediator between
+God and men, who prayed for me when He was on earth, who is ever making
+intercession for me in heaven. I know of no other in the unseen world,
+by whom I can have access to the Father; I find no other offered to me,
+I seek no {250} other, I want no other. I trust my cause,--the cause of
+my present life, the cause of my soul's eternal happiness,--to HIM and
+to his intercession. I thank God for the blessing. I am satisfied; and
+in the assurance of the omnipotence of his intercession, and the perfect
+fulness of his mediation, I am happy.
+
+On this point it were well to compare two prayers both offered to God;
+the one pleading with Him the intercession of the passion of his only
+Son, the other pleading the prayers of a mortal man. The first prayer is
+a collect in Holy Week, the second is a collect on St. Gregory's Day.
+
+ We beseech thee, Almighty God, that we who among so many
+ adversities from our own infirmity fail, the passion of thy only
+ begotten Son interceding for us, may revive. V. 243.
+
+ O God, who hast granted the rewards of eternal blessedness[96]
+ to the soul of thy servant Gregory, mercifully grant that we who
+ are pressed down by the weight of our sins, may, by his prayers
+ with Thee, be raised up. V. 480.
+
+ [Footnote 96: I can never read this, and such passages as this,
+ without asking myself, can such an assertion be in accordance
+ with the inspired teaching?--"Judge nothing before the time,
+ until the Lord come, who both will bring to light the hidden
+ things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the
+ hearts: and then shall every man have praise of God." I Cor. iv.
+ 5.]
+
+IV. The next form of prayer to which I would invite your serious
+attention, is one from which my judgment and my feelings revolt far more
+decidedly even than from the last-mentioned; and I have the most clear
+denouncement of my conscience, that by offering it I should do a wrong
+to my Saviour, and ungratefully disparage his inestimable merits, and
+the full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice and satisfaction of his
+omnipotent {251} atonement: I mean those prayers, still addressed to
+God, which supplicate that our present and future good may be advanced
+by the merits of departed mortals, that by their merits our sins may be
+forgiven, and our salvation secured; that by their merits our souls may
+be made fit for celestial joys, and be finally admitted into heaven.
+
+Of these prayers the Roman Breviary contains a great variety of
+examples, some exceeding others very much in their apparent
+forgetfulness and disregard of the merits of the only Saviour, and
+consequently far more shocking to the reason and affections of us who
+hold it a point of conscience to make the merits of Christ alone, all in
+all, exclusive of any other to be joined with them, the only ground of
+our acceptance with God.
+
+We find an example of this prayer in the collect on the day of St.
+Saturnine. "O God, who grantest us to enjoy the birth-day of the blessed
+Saturnine, thy martyr, grant that we may be aided by his merits, through
+the Lord." [Ejus nos tribue meritis adjuvari per Dominum. A. 544.]
+
+Another example, in which the supplicants plead for deliverance from
+hell, to be obtained by the merits and prayers of the saint together, is
+the Collect for December 6th, the day of St. Nicolas.
+
+"O God, who didst adorn the blessed Pontiff Nicolas with unnumbered
+miracles, grant, we beseech Thee, that by his merits and prayers we may
+be set free from the fires of hell, through," &c. [Ut ejus meritis et
+precibus a gehennae incendiis liberemur. H. 436.]
+
+Another example, in like manner specifying both the merits and
+intercession of the departed saint, contains {252} expressions very
+unacceptable to many of those who are accustomed to make the Bible their
+study. It is a prayer to Joseph, the espoused husband of the Virgin
+Mary. Of him mention is made by name in the Gospel just before and just
+after the birth of Christ, as an upright, merciful man, to whom God on
+three several occasions made a direct revelation of his will, by the
+medium of a dream, with reference to the incarnate Saviour. Again, on
+the holy family visiting Jerusalem, when our Lord was twelve years of
+age, Mary, his mother, in her remonstrance with her Son, speaks to Him
+of Joseph thus: "Why hast Thou thus dealt with us? Behold thy father and
+I have sought Thee sorrowing." Upon which not one word was uttered by
+our Saviour that would enable us to form an opinion as to his own will
+with regard to Joseph. Our Lord seems purposely to have drawn their
+thoughts from his earthly connexion with them, and to have raised their
+minds to a contemplation of his unearthly, his heavenly, and eternal
+origin. "How is it that ye sought me? Wist ye not that I must be about
+my Father's business?" After this time, though the writings of the Holy
+Book, either historical, doctrinal, or prophetic, at the lowest
+calculation embrace a period of fourscore years, no allusion is made to
+Joseph as a man still living, or to his memory as one already dead. And
+yet he is one of those for the benefit of whose intercession the Church
+of Rome teaches her members to pray to God, and from whose merits they
+are taught to hope for succour.
+
+On the 19th of March the following Collect is offered to the Saviour of
+the world:--
+
+"We beseech thee, O Lord, that we may be succoured by the merits of the
+husband of thy most holy mother, {253} so that what we cannot obtain by
+our own power, may be granted to us by his intercession. Who livest,"
+&c. [V. 486.]
+
+It is anticipating our instances of the different stages observable in
+the invocation of saints, to quote here direct addresses to Joseph
+himself; still it may be well to bring at once to a close our remarks
+with regard to the worship paid to him. We find that in the Litany of
+the Saints, "St. Joseph, pray for us," is one of the supplications; but
+on his day (March 19) there are three hymns addressed to Joseph, which
+appear to be full of lamentable superstition, assigning, as they do, to
+him a share at least in the work of our salvation, and solemnly stating,
+as a truth, what, whether true or not, depends upon a groundless
+tradition, namely, that our blessed Lord and Mary watched by him at his
+death; ascribing to Joseph also that honour and praise, which the Church
+was wont to offer to God alone. The following are extracts from those
+hymns:
+
+First hymn. "Thee, Joseph, let the companies of heaven celebrate; thee
+let all the choirs of Christian people resound; who, bright in merits,
+wast joined in chaste covenant with the renowned Virgin. Others their
+pious death consecrates after death; and glory awaits those who deserve
+the palm. Thou alive, equal to those above, enjoyest God, more blessed
+by wondrous lot. O Trinity, most High, spare us who pray; grant us to
+reach heaven [to scale the stars] BY THE MERITS OF JOSEPH, that at
+length we may perpetually offer to thee a grateful song." [Te Joseph
+celebrent agmina coelitum. V. 485.]
+
+Second hymn. "O, Joseph, the glory of those in heaven, and the sure hope
+of our life, and the safeguard {254} of the world, benignly ACCEPT THE
+PRAISES WHICH WE joyfully sing TO THEE.... Perpetual praise to the most
+High Trinity, who granting to thee honours on high, give to us, BY THY
+MERITS, the joys of a blessed life." [Coelitum, Joseph, Decus. V. 486.]
+
+Third hymn. "He whom we, the faithful, worship with joy, whose exalted
+triumphs we celebrate, Joseph, on this day obtained by merit the joys of
+eternal life. O too happy! O too blessed! at whose last hour Christ and
+the Virgin together, with serene countenance, stood watching. Hence,
+conqueror of hell, freed from the bands of the flesh, he removes in
+placid sleep to the everlasting seats, and binds his temples with bright
+chaplets. Him, therefore, reigning, let us all importune, that he would
+be present with us, and that he obtaining pardon for our transgressions,
+would assign to us the rewards of peace on high. Be praises to thee, be
+honours to thee, O Trine God, who reignest, and assignest golden crowns
+to thy faithful servant for ever. Amen." [Iste, quem laeti colimus
+fideles. V. 490.]
+
+It is painful to remark, that in these last clauses the very same word
+is employed when the Church of Rome applies to Joseph to assign to the
+faithful the rewards of peace, and when she ascribes glory to God for
+assigning to his faithful servants crowns of gold. Indeed these hymns
+contain many expressions which ought to be addressed to the Saviour
+alone, whose "glory is in the heavens," who is "the hope of us on
+earth," and "the safeguard of the world."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Under this fourth head I will add only one more specimen. Would it were
+not to be found in the Roman {255} Liturgies since the Council of Trent:
+God grant it may ere long be wiped out of the book of Christian worship!
+It is a collect in which the Church of Rome offers this prayer to God
+the Son:--
+
+"O God, whose right hand raised the blessed Peter when walking on the
+waves, that he sank not; and rescued his fellow-apostle Paul, for the
+third time suffering shipwreck, from the depth of the sea; mercifully
+hear us, and grant that by the merits of both we may obtain the glory of
+eternity." [H. 149.]
+
+Now suppose for a moment it had been intended in any one prayer
+negatively to exclude the merits of Christ from the great work of our
+eternal salvation, and to limit our hopes of everlasting glory to the
+merits of St. Peter and St. Paul, could that object have been more
+effectually and fully secured than by this prayer? Not one word alluding
+to the redemption which is in Christ can be found in this prayer. The
+sentiment in the first member of the prayer refers us to the power
+exercised by the Son of God, and Son of man, when he was intabernacled
+in our flesh; and the second expression teaches us to contemplate the
+providence of our Almighty Saviour in his deeds of beneficence. But no
+reference, even by allusion, is here made to the merits of Christ's
+death--none to his merits as our great Redeemer; none to his merits as
+our never-ceasing and never-failing Intercessor. We are led to approach
+the throne of grace only with the merits of the two Apostles on our
+tongue. If those who offer it hope for acceptance through THE MEDIATION
+of Jesus Christ, and for the sake of his merits, that hope is neither
+suggested nor fostered by this prayer. The truth, as it is in Jesus,
+would compel us in addressing {256} Him, the Saviour of the world, to
+think of the merits of neither Peter nor Paul, of neither angel nor
+spirit. Instead of praying to him that we may obtain the glories of
+eternity for their merits, true faith in Christ would bid us throw
+ourselves implicitly on his omnipotent merits alone, and implore so
+great a blessing for his own mercy's sake. If we receive the whole
+truth, can it appear otherwise than a disparagement of his perfect and
+omnipotent merits, to plead with Him the merits of one, whom the Saviour
+himself rebuked with as severe a sentence as ever fell from his lips,
+"Get thee behind me, Satan, thou art an offence to me; for thou
+savourest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men;"
+[Matt. xvi. 23.] and of another who after his conversion, when speaking
+of the salvation wrought by Christ, in profound humility confesses
+himself to be a chief of those sinners for whom the Saviour died, "This
+is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus
+came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief?" [1 Tim. i.
+15.] We feel, indeed, a sure and certain hope that these two
+fellow-creatures, once sinners, but by God's grace afterwards saints,
+have found mercy with God, and will live with Christ for ever; but to
+pray for the same mercy at his gracious hands for the sake of their
+merits is repugnant to our first principles of Christian faith. When we
+think of merits, for which to plead for mercy, we can think of Christ's,
+and of Christ's alone.
+
+V. Our thoughts are next invited to that class of prayers which the
+Church of Rome authorizes and directs to be addressed immediately to the
+Saints themselves. {257} Of these there are different kinds, some far
+more objectionable than others, though all are directly at variance with
+that one single and simple principle, to which, as we believe, a
+disciple of the cross can alone safely adhere--prayer to God, and only
+to God. The words of the Council of Trent are, as we have already
+observed, very comprehensive on this subject. They not only declare it
+to be a good and useful thing supplicantly to invoke the saints reigning
+with Christ: but also for the obtaining of benefits from God, through
+Jesus Christ our Lord, who is our only Redeemer and Saviour, to fly to
+their prayers, HELP, and ASSISTANCE. Whether these last words can be
+interpreted as merely words of surplusage, or whether they must be
+understood to mean that the faithful must have recourse to some help and
+assistance of the saints beyond their intercession, is a question to
+which we need not again revert. If it had been intended to embrace other
+kinds of beneficial succour, and other help and assistance, perhaps it
+would be difficult to find words more expressive of such general aid and
+support as a human being might hope to derive, in answer to prayer from
+the Giver of all good. And certainly they are words employed by the
+Church, when addressing prayers directly to God. Be this as it may, the
+public service-books of the Church of Rome unquestionably, by no means
+adhere exclusively to such addresses to the saints, as supplicate them
+to pray for the faithful on earth. Many a prayer is couched in language
+which can be interpreted only as conveying a petition to them
+immediately for their assistance, temporal and spiritual.
+
+But let us calmly review some of the prayers, supplications,
+invocations, or by whatever name religious addresses now offered to the
+saints may be called; and {258} first, we will examine that class in
+which the petitioners ask merely for the intercession of the saints.
+
+We have an example of this class in an invocation addressed to St.
+Ambrose on his day, December 7; the very servant of Christ in whose
+hymns and prayers no address of prayer or invocation to any saint or
+martyr can be found.
+
+"O thou most excellent teacher, the light of the Holy Church, O blessed
+Ambrose, thou lover of the divine law, deprecate for us [or intercede
+for us with] the Son of God[97]."
+
+ [Footnote 97: H. 438. "Deprecare pro nobis Filium Dei." This
+ invocation to Ambrose is instantly followed by this prayer to
+ God: "O God, who didst assign to thy people the blessed Ambrose
+ as a minister of eternal salvation, grant, we beseech Thee, that
+ we may deserve to have him as our intercessor in heaven, whom we
+ had as a teacher of life on earth."]
+
+The Church of Rome has wisely availed herself of the pious labours of
+Ambrose, Bishop of Milan; and has introduced into her public worship
+many of the hymns usually ascribed to him. Would she had followed his
+example, and addressed her invocations to no one but our Creator, our
+Redeemer, and our Sanctifier! Could that holy man hear the supplications
+now offered to him, and could be make his voice heard in return among
+those who now invoke him, that voice, we believe, would only convey a
+prohibitory monition like that of the Angel to St. John when he fell
+down before him, See thou do it not; I am thy fellow-servant; worship
+God.
+
+It is needless to multiply instances of this fifth kind of invocation.
+In the "Litany of the Saints" more than fifty different saints are
+enumerated by name, and are invoked to pray and intercede for those who
+join in {259} it. Among the persons invoked are Raphael [AE. cxcii.],
+Gervasius, Protasius, and Mary Magdalene; whilst in the Litany [AE.
+cxcvi.] for the recommendation of the soul of the sick and dying, the
+names of Abel, and Abraham, are specified.
+
+Under this head I will call your attention only to one more example.
+Indeed I scarcely know whether this hymn would more properly be classed
+under this head, or reserved for the next; since it appears to partake
+of the nature of each. It supplicates the martyr to obtain by his
+prayers spiritual blessings, and yet addresses him as the person who is
+to grant those blessings. It implores him to liberate us by the love of
+Christ; but so should we implore the Father of mercies himself. Still,
+as the more safe course, I would regard it as a prayer to St. Stephen
+only to intercede for us. But it may be well to derive from it a lesson
+on this point; how easily the transition glides from one false step to a
+worse; how infinitely wiser and safer it is to avoid evil in its very
+lowest and least noxious appearance:
+
+"Martyr of God [or Unconquered Martyr], who, by following the only Son
+of the Father, triumphest over thy conquered enemies, and, as conqueror,
+enjoyest heavenly things; by the office of thy prayer wash out our
+guilt; driving away the contagion of evil; removing the weariness of
+life. The bands of thy hallowed body are already loosed; loose thou us
+from the bands of the world, by the love of the Son of God [or by the
+gift of God Most High]." [H. 237.]
+
+In the above hymn the words included within brackets are the readings
+adopted in the last English edition of the Roman Breviary; and in this
+place, when we are about to refer to many hymns now in use, it may be
+well to observe, that in the present day we find {260} various readings
+in the hymns as they are still printed for the use of Roman Catholics in
+different countries. In some instances the changes are curious and
+striking. Grancolas, in his historical commentary on the Roman Breviary
+(Venice, 1734, p. 84), furnishes us with interesting information as to
+the chief cause of this diversity. He tells us that Pope Urban VIII.,
+who filled the papal throne from 1623 to 1644, a man well versed in
+literature, especially in Latin poetry, and himself one of the
+distinguished poets of his time, took measures for the emendation of the
+hymns in the Roman Breviary. He was offended by the many defects in
+their metrical composition, and it is said that upwards of nine hundred
+and fifty faults in metre were corrected, which gave to Urban occasion
+to say that the Fathers had begun rather than completed the hymns.
+These, as corrected, he caused to be inserted in the Breviary. Grancolas
+proceeds to tell us that many complained of these changes, alleging that
+the primitive simplicity and piety which breathed in the hymns had been
+sacrificed to the niceties of poetry. "Accessit Latinitas, et recessit
+pietas." The verse was neater, but the thought was chilled.
+
+VI. But the Roman Church by no means limits herself to this kind of
+invocation; prayers are addressed to saints, imploring them to hear,
+and, as of themselves, to grant the prayers of the faithful on earth,
+and to release them from the bands of sin, without any allusion to
+prayers to be made by those saints. It grieves me to copy out the
+invocation made to St. Peter on the 18th of January, called the
+anniversary of the Chair of St. Peter at Rome; the words of our Blessed
+Lord himself, and of his beloved and inspired Apostle, seem to rise up
+in judgment against that prayer, and condemn it. It {261} will be well
+to place that hymn addressed to St. Peter, side by side with the very
+word of God, and then ask, Can this prayer be safe?
+
+1. Now, O good Shepherd, 1. Jesus saith, I am the good
+merciful Peter, Shepherd. John x. 11.
+
+2. Accept the prayers of us 2. Whatsoever ye shall ask in
+who supplicate, my name, that will I do. That
+ whatsoever ye shall ask the
+ Father in my name, he may give
+ it you. John xiv. 13; xv. 16.
+
+3. And loose the bands of our 3. The blood of Jesus Christ
+sins, by the power committed to his Son cleanseth us from all sin.
+thee, 1 John i. 7.
+
+4. By which thou shuttest 4. These things saith he that
+heaven against all by a word, is holy, he that is true, he that
+and openest it[98]. openeth and no man shutteth, and
+ shutteth and no man openeth.
+ Rev. iii. 7.
+
+ I am he that liveth and was
+ dead, and am alive for evermore,
+ and have the keys of hell and of
+ death. Rev. i. 18.
+
+ [Footnote 98: This hymn is variously read. In the edition of Mr.
+ Husenbeth (H. 497.) it is: "O Peter, blessed shepherd, of thy
+ mercy receive the prayers of us who supplicate, and loose by thy
+ word the bands of our sins, thou to whom is given the power of
+ opening heaven to the earth, and of shutting it when
+ open."--"Beate pastor, Petre, clemens accipe voces precantum,
+ criminumque vincula verbo resolve, cui potestas tradita aperire
+ terris coelum, apertum claudere." H. 497.]
+
+Let it not be answered that many a Christian minister is now called a
+good shepherd. Let it not be said that the very words of our ordination
+imply the conveyance of the power of loosing and binding, of opening and
+shutting the gates of heaven. When prayer is contemplated, we can think
+only of One, HIM, who has appropriated the title of Good Shepherd to
+{262} himself. And we must see that Peter cannot, by any latitude of
+interpretation, be reckoned now among those to whom the awful duty is
+assigned of binding and loosing upon earth.
+
+The same unsatisfactory associations must be excited in the mind of
+every one who takes a similar view of Christian worship with myself, by
+the following supplication to various saints on St. John's day:
+
+ "Let the heaven exult with praises[99],
+ Let the earth resound with joy; {263}
+ The sacred solemnities sing
+ The glory of the Apostles.
+ O ye Just Judges of the age,
+ And true lights of the world,
+ We pray you with the vows of our hearts,
+ Hear the prayers of your suppliants.
+ Ye who shut the heaven by a word,
+ And loose its bars,
+ Loose us by command, we beseech you,
+ From all our sins.
+ Ye to whose word is subject
+ The health and weakness of all,
+ Cure us who are diseased in morals,
+ Restore us to virtues.
+ So that when Christ shall come,
+ The Judge at the end of the world,
+ He may make us partakers
+ Of eternal joy.
+ To God the Father be Glory,
+ And to his only Son,
+ With the Spirit the Comforter,
+ Now and for ever. Amen[100]."
+
+ [Footnote 99: Having inserted in the text a translation of this
+ hymn from a copy with which I had been long familiar, I think it
+ right to insert here the two forms side by side. They supply an
+ example of the changes to which we have already alluded.
+
+ _Lille_, 1823. _Norwich_, 1830.
+
+ OLD VERSION. POPE URBAN'S VERSION.
+
+ Exultet coelum laudibus, Exultet orbis gaudiis,
+ Resultet terra gaudiis, Coelum resultet laudibus,
+ Apostolorum gloriam Apostolorum gloriam
+ Sacra canunt solemnia. Tellus et astra concinunt.
+ Vos saecli justi judices Vos saeculorum judices
+ Et vera mundi lamina, Et vera mundi lumina,
+ Votis precamur cordium Votis precamur cordium
+ Audite preces supplicum. Audite voces supplicum.
+ Qui coelum verbo clauditis Qui templa coeli clauditis
+ Serasque ejus solvitis, Serasque verbo solvitis,
+ Nos a peccatis omnibus Nos a reatu noxios
+ Solvite jussu, quaesumus. Solvi jubete quaesumus.
+ Quorum praecepto subditur Praecepta quorum protinus
+ Salus et languor omnium, Languor salusque sentiunt,
+ Sanate aegros moribus, Sanate mentes languidas,
+ Nos reddentes virtutibus. Augete nos virtutibus.
+ Ut cum judex advenerit Ut cum redibit arbiter
+ Christus in fine saeculi, In fine Christus saeculi,
+ Nos sempiterni gaudii Nos sempiterni gaudii
+ Faciat esse compotes. Concedat esse compotes.
+ Deo Patri sit gloria, Jesu, tibi sit gloria
+ Ejusque soli Filio, Qui natus es de virgine,
+ Cum Spiritu paracleto, Cum Patre et Almo Spiritu,
+ Et nunc et in perpetuum. In sempiterna saecula.
+
+ Amen. Amen.
+ (H. 243.)
+ ]
+
+ [Footnote 100: Or as in the present Roman Breviary:--
+
+ Let the world exult with joy,
+ Let the heaven resound with praise;
+ The earth and stars sing together
+ The glory of the Apostles.
+ Ye judges of the ages
+ And true lights of the world,
+ With the prayers of our hearts we implore,
+ Hear the voices of your suppliants.
+ Ye who shut the temples of heaven,
+ And loose its bars by a word,
+ Command ye us, who are guilty,
+ To be released from our sins; we pray.
+ Ye whose commands forthwith
+ Sickness and health feel,
+ Heal our languid minds,
+ Increase us in virtues,
+ That when Christ, the Judge, shall return,
+ In the end of the world,
+ He may grant us to be partakers
+ Of eternal joy.
+ Jesus, to thee be glory,
+ Who wast born of a virgin,
+ With the Father and the Benign Spirit,
+ Through eternal ages. Amen. {264}
+ ]
+
+Many a pious and humble Catholic of the Roman Communion, I have no
+doubt, would regard these prayers as little more than an application to
+Peter and the rest of the Apostles for absolution, and would interpret
+its several clauses as an acknowledgment only of that power, which
+Christ himself delegated to them of binding and loosing sins on earth.
+But the gulf fixed between these prayers, and the lawful use of the
+power given to Christ's ordained ministers on earth, is great indeed. To
+satisfy the mind of this, it is not necessary to enter upon even the
+confines of the wide field of controversy, as to what was really
+conveyed by Christ to his Apostles. I would ask only two questions.
+Could any of us address these same words to one of Christ's ministers on
+earth? And could we address our blessed Saviour himself in stronger or
+more appropriate language, as the Lord of our destinies--the God who
+heareth prayer--the Physician of our souls?
+
+Suppose for example we were celebrating the anniversary of Christ's
+Nativity, of his Resurrection, or his Ascension, what word in this hymn,
+expressive of {265} power, and honour, and justice, and mercy, would not
+be appropriate? What word would not apply to Him, in most perfect
+accordance with Scripture language? And can we without offence, without
+doing wrong to his great Name, address the same to our fellow-servants,
+even though we may believe them to be with Him in glory?
+
+ Let the heaven exult with praises--
+ Let the earth resound with joy;
+ The sacred solemnities sing
+ The glory of the Lord.
+ O Thou just Judge of the age,
+ And true light of the world,
+ We pray Thee with the supplications of our hearts
+ Hear the prayers of Thy suppliants,
+ Thou who shuttest the heavens by a word,
+ And loosest its bars.
+ Loose us by command, we beseech Thee,
+ From all our sins.
+ Thou to whose word is subject
+ The health and weakness of all,
+ Cure us who are diseased in morals,
+ Restoring us to virtue.
+ So that when Thou shalt come,
+ The Judge at the end of the world,
+ Thou mayest make us partakers
+ Of eternal joy.
+ Glory to Thee, O Lord,
+ Who wast born of a virgin,
+ With the Father and the Holy Spirit,
+ For ever and ever. Amen.
+
+Only for a moment let us see how peculiarly all these expressions are
+fitting in a hymn of prayer and praise {266} to our God and Saviour,
+recalling to our minds the words of inspiration; and then again let us
+put the question to our conscience, Is this language fit for us to use
+to a fellow-creature?
+
+Let the heaven exult with praises, Let the heavens rejoice, and
+Let the earth resound with joy: let the earth be glad ... (exultet
+ is the very word used in the Vulgate
+ translation of the Psalm)--before
+ the Lord, for He cometh
+ to judge the earth.--Ps. xcvi
+ (xcv). 11.
+
+The holy solemnities sing Ye shall have a song, as in the
+The glory of the Lord. night when a holy solemnity is
+ kept ... And the Lord shall cause
+ His glorious voice to be heard.
+ Isa. xxx. 29. Let the heaven
+ and earth praise Him. Ps. lxix
+ (lxviii). 34.
+
+Thou just Judge of mankind, All judgment is committed
+And true light of the world, unto the Son. John v. 22. That
+ was the true Light, which lighteth
+ every man that cometh into
+ the world. John i. 9.
+
+With the prayers of our hearts we With my whole heart have I
+ pray Thee, sought Thee. Ps. cxix (cxviii).
+Hear the prayers of Thy suppliants. 10. Hear my prayer, O God.
+ Ps. lxi (lx). 1. Whom have I in
+ heaven but Thee? Ps. lxxiii
+ (lxxii). 25. And this is the
+ confidence that we have in Him,
+ that if we ask any thing according to
+ His will, He heareth us. 1 John
+ v. 14.
+
+Thou who shuttest heaven by I have the keys of death and of
+ Thy word, hell. These things saith He that
+And loosest its bars, is holy, He that is true: He
+ that hath the key of David. He
+ that openeth and no man shutteth,
+ and shutteth and no man {267}
+ openeth. I have set before thee
+ an open door, and no man can
+ shut it. Rev. i. 18; iii. 7,8
+
+Release us by command, we pray Thy sins be forgiven thee.
+Thee, Matt. ix. 22. Bless the Lord, O
+From all our sins. my soul ... who forgiveth all
+ thine iniquities. Ps. ciii. 2. This
+ is your blood of the New Testament,
+ which is shed for many
+ for the remission of sins. Matt.
+ xxvi. 28. Have mercy upon me,
+ O God ... according to the
+ multitude of Thy tender mercies,
+ blot out my transgressions. Wash
+ me throughly from mine iniquity,
+ and cleanse me from my
+ sin. Ps. li (l).
+
+Thou to whose word is subject Bless the Lord, O my soul ...
+The health and weakness of all, who healeth all thy diseases. Ps.
+ ciii (cii). 2, 3.
+
+Do Thou heal us who are morally Create in me a clean heart, O
+diseased, God, and renew a right spirit
+Restoring us to virtue; within me. Ps. li. 10 (4.)
+That when Thou, the Judge, shalt
+appear in the end of the world,
+Thou mayest grant us to be
+partakers of eternal joy.
+
+This would be a Christian prayer, a primitive prayer, a scriptural
+prayer, a prayer well fitting mortal man to utter by his tongue and from
+his heart, to the God who heareth prayer; and him who shall in sincere
+faith offer such a prayer, Christ will never send empty away. But if
+this prayer, fitted as it seems only to be addressed to God, be offered
+to the soul of a departed saint--I will not talk of blasphemy, and
+deadly sin, and idolatry,--I will only ask members of the Church of Rome
+to weigh all these things well, one by one. These are not subjects for
+crimination and recrimination. {268}
+
+We have had far too much of those unholy weapons on both sides. Speaking
+the truth in love, I should be verily guilty of a sin in my own
+conscience were I, with my views of Christian worship, to offer this
+prayer to the soul of a man however holy, however blessed, however
+exalted.
+
+The next part of our work will be given exclusively to the worship of
+the Blessed Virgin Mary. {269}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SECTION I.--THE VIRGIN MARY.
+
+
+The worship of the blessed Virgin Mary is so highly exalted in the
+Church of Rome, as to require the formation of a new name to express its
+high character. Neither could the Latin language provide a word which
+would give an adequate idea of its excellence, nor could any word
+previously employed by the writers in Greek, meet the case
+satisfactorily. The newly invented term Hyperdulia, meaning "a service
+above others," seems to place the service of the Virgin on a footing
+peculiarly its own, as raised above the worship of the saints departed,
+and of the angels of God, cherubim and seraphim, with all the hosts of
+principalities and powers in heavenly places. The service of the Virgin
+Mary thus appears not only to justify, but even to require a separate
+and distinct examination in this volume. The general principles,
+however, which we have already endeavoured to establish and illustrate
+with regard as well to the study of the Holy Scriptures as to the
+evidence of primitive antiquity, are equally applicable here; and with
+those principles present to our minds, {270} we will endeavour now to
+ascertain the truth with regard to the worship of the Virgin as now
+witnessed in the Roman Catholic Church.
+
+Of the Virgin Mary, think not, brethren of the Church of Rome, that a
+true member of the Anglican branch of the Catholic Church will speak
+disparagingly or irreverently. Were such an one found among us, we
+should say of him, he knows not what spirit he is of. Our church, in her
+Liturgy, her homilies, her articles, in the works too of the best and
+most approved among her divines and teachers, ever speaks of Saint Mary,
+the blessed Virgin, in the language of reverence, affection, and
+gratitude.
+
+She was a holy virgin and a holy mother. She was highly favoured,
+blessed among women. The Lord was with her, and she was the mother of
+our only Saviour. She was herself blessed, and blessed was the fruit of
+her womb. We delight in the language of our ancestors, in which they
+were used to call her "Mary, the Blissful Maid." Should any one of those
+who profess and call themselves Christians and Catholics, entertain a
+wish to interrupt the testimony of every succeeding age, and to
+interpose a check to the fulfilment of her own recorded prophecy, "All
+generations shall call me blessed," certainly the Anglican Catholic
+Church will never acknowledge that wish to be the genuine desire of one
+of her own sons. The Lord hath blessed her; yea, and she shall be
+blessed.
+
+But when we are required either to address our supplications to her, or
+else to sever ourselves from the communion of a large portion of our
+fellow-Christians, we have no room for hesitation; the case offers us no
+alternative. Our love of unity must yield to our love {271} of truth; we
+cannot join in that worship which in our conscience we believe to be a
+sin against God. Whether we are right or wrong in this matter, God will
+himself judge: and, compared with his acquittal and approval, the
+severity of man's judgment cannot turn us aside from our purpose. But
+before any one pronounces a sentence of condemnation against us, or of
+approval on himself, it well becomes him patiently and dispassionately
+to weigh the evidence; lest his decision may not be consistent with
+justice and truth.
+
+In addition to what has been already said on the general subject of
+addressing our invocation to any created being--to any one among the
+principalities and thrones, dominions, powers, angels, archangels, and
+all the hosts of heaven, to any one among the saints, martyrs,
+confessors, and holy men departed hence in the Lord--I would submit to
+my brethren of the Roman Catholic Church some considerations
+specifically applicable to the case of the blessed Virgin, and to the
+practice of the Church of Rome in the religious worship paid to her.
+
+First, it will be well for us to possess ourselves afresh of whatever
+light is thrown on this subject by the Scriptures themselves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--EVIDENCE OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.
+
+
+The first intimation given to us that a woman was in the providence of
+God appointed to be the instrument, or channel by which the Saviour of
+mankind should be brought into the world, was made immediately after the
+Fall, and at the very first dawn of the day of salvation. {272} I am
+fully aware how the various criticisms on the words in which that first
+promise of a Saviour is couched, have been the well-spring of angry
+controversy. I will not enter upon that field. The authorized English
+version thus renders the passage: "I will put enmity between thee and
+the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head,
+and thou shalt bruise his heel." [Gen. iii. 15.] The Roman Vulgate,
+instead of the word "it," reads "she." Surely such a point as this
+should be made a subject of calm and enlightened criticism, without
+warmth or heart-burnings on either side. But for our present purpose, it
+matters little what turn that controversy may take. I believe our own to
+be the true rendering: but whether the word dictated here by the Holy
+Spirit to Moses should be so translated as to refer to the seed of the
+woman generally, as in our authorized version, or to the male child, the
+descendant of the woman, as the Septuagint renders it, or to the word
+"woman" itself; and if the latter, whether it refer to Eve, the mother
+of every child of a mortal parent, or to Mary, the immediate mother of
+our Saviour: whatever view of that Hebrew word be taken, no Christian
+can doubt, that before the foundations of the world were laid, it was
+foreordained in the counsels of the Eternal Godhead, that the future
+Messiah, the Redeemer of Mankind, should be of the seed of Eve, and in
+the fulness of time be born of a Virgin of the name of Mary, and that in
+the mystery of that incarnation should the serpent's head be bruised. I
+wish not to dwell on this, because it bears but remotely and
+incidentally on the question at issue. I will, therefore, pass on,
+quoting {273} only the words of one of the most laborious among Roman
+Catholic commentators, De Sacy. "The sense is the same in the one and in
+the other, though the expression varies. The sense of the Hebrew is, The
+Son of the Woman, Jesus Christ, Son of God, and Son of a Virgin, shall
+bruise thy head, and by establishing the kingdom of God on earth,
+destroy thine. The sense of the Vulgate is, The woman, by whom thou hast
+conquered man, shall bruise thy head, not by herself, but by Jesus
+Christ." [Vol. i. p. 132.]
+
+The only other passage in which reference appears to be made in the Old
+Testament to the Mother of our Lord, contains that celebrated prophecy
+in the seventh chapter of Isaiah, about which I am not aware that any
+difference exists between the Anglican and the Roman Churches. "A Virgin
+shall conceive and bear a Son, and shall call his name Immanuel."
+[Isaiah vii. 4.]
+
+I find no passage in the Old Testament which can by any inferential
+application be brought to bear on the question of Mary's being a proper
+object of invocation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the New Testament, mention by name is made of the Virgin Mary by St.
+Matthew, St. Mark, and St. Luke, and by St. John in his Gospel, as the
+Mother of our Lord, but not by name; and by no other writer. Neither St.
+Paul in any one of his many Epistles, though he mentions the names of
+many of our Lord's disciples, nor St. James, nor St. Peter, who must
+often have seen her during our Lord's ministry, nor St. Jude, nor St.
+John in any of his three Epistles, or in the {274} Revelation (though,
+as we learn from his own Gospel, she had of especial trust been
+committed to his care)--no one of these either mentions her as living,
+or alludes to her memory as dead.
+
+The first occasion on which any reference is made in the New Testament
+to the Virgin Mary is the salutation of the Angel, as recorded by St.
+Luke in the opening chapter of his Gospel. The last occasion is when she
+is mentioned by the same Evangelist, as "Mary the Mother of Jesus," in
+conjunction with his brethren and with the Apostles and the women all
+continuing in prayer and supplication, immediately after the ascension
+of our blessed Lord. Between these two occasions the name of Mary occurs
+under a variety of circumstances, on every one of which we shall do well
+to reflect.
+
+The first occasion, we have already said, is the salutation of Mary by
+the angel, announcing to her that she should be the Mother of the Son of
+God. Surely no daughter of Eve was ever so distinguished among women;
+and well does it become us to cherish her memory with affectionate
+reverence. The words addressed to her when on earth by the angel in that
+announcement, with a little variation of expression, are daily addressed
+to her by the Roman Catholic Church, now that she is no longer seen, but
+is removed to the invisible world. "Hail, thou that art highly
+favoured!" (or as the Vulgate reads it, "full of grace") "the Lord is
+with thee. Blessed art thou among women." [Luke i. 28.] On the
+substitution of the expression, "full of grace," for "highly favoured,"
+or, as our margin suggests, "graciously accepted, or much graced," I am
+not desirous {275} of troubling you with any lengthened remark. I could
+have wished that since the Greek is different in this passage, and in
+the first chapter of St. John, where the words "full of grace" are
+applied to our Saviour, a similar distinction had been observed in the
+Roman translation. But the variation is unessential. The other
+expression, "Blessed art thou among women," is precisely and identically
+the same with the ascription of blessedness made by an inspired tongue,
+under the elder covenant, to another daughter of Eve. "Blessed above
+women," or (as both the Septuagint and the Vulgate render the word)
+"Blessed among women shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be."
+[Judges v. 24.] We can see no ground in such ascription of blessedness
+for any posthumous adoration of the Virgin Mary.
+
+The same observation applies with at least equal strictness to that
+affecting interview between Mary and Elizabeth, when, enlightened
+doubtless by an especial revelation, Elizabeth returned the salutation
+of her cousin by addressing her as the Mother of her Lord, and hailing
+her visit as an instance of most welcome and condescending kindness,
+"Whence is this to me, that the mother of my Lord should come unto me?"
+[Luke i. 43.] Members of the Anglican Church are taught to refer to this
+event in Mary's life with feelings of delight and gratitude. On this
+occasion she uttered that beautiful hymn, "The Song of the blessed
+Virgin Mary," which our Church has selected for daily use at Evening
+Prayer. These incidents bring before our minds the image of a spotless
+Virgin, humble, pious, obedient, holy: a chosen servant of God--an
+exalted pattern for her fellow-creatures; but still a fellow-creature,
+and a fellow-servant: {276} a virgin pronounced by an angel blessed on
+earth. But further than this we cannot go. We read of no power, no
+authority, neither the power and influence of intercession, nor the
+authority or right of command being ever, even by implication, committed
+to her; and we dare not of our own minds venture to take for granted a
+statement of so vast magnitude, involving associations so awful. We
+reverence her memory as a blessed woman, the virgin mother of our Lord.
+We cannot supplicate any blessing at her hand; we cannot pray to her for
+her intercession.
+
+The angel's announcement to Joseph, whether before or after the birth of
+Christ, the visit of the Magi, the flight into Egypt, and the return
+thence, in the record of all of which events by St. Matthew the name of
+Mary occurs, however interesting and important in themselves, seem to
+require no especial attention with reference to the immediate subject of
+our inquiry. To Joseph the angel speaks of the blessed Virgin as "Mary
+thy wife." [Matt. i. 20.] In every other instance she is called "The
+young child's mother," or "His mother."
+
+In relating the circumstances of Christ's birth the Evangelist employs
+no words which seem to invite any particular examination. Joseph went up
+into the city of David to be taxed with Mary his espoused wife; and
+there she brought forth her first-born son, and wrapped him in swaddling
+clothes, and laid him in a manger. And the shepherds found Mary and
+Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger. And Mary kept all these things,
+and pondered them in her heart. [Luke ii. 19.]
+
+Between the birth of Christ, and the flight into Egypt, St. Luke records
+an event to have happened by no means unimportant--the presentation of
+Christ in {277} the temple. "And when the days of her purification
+according to the law of Moses were accomplished, they brought him to
+Jerusalem to present him to the Lord. And he (Simeon) came by the Spirit
+into the temple; and when the parents brought in the child Jesus to do
+for him after the custom of the law, then took he him up in his arms,
+and blessed God, and said, Lord, &c. And Joseph and his mother marvelled
+at those things which were spoken of him. And Simeon blessed them, and
+said unto Mary his mother, Behold, this child is set for the fall and
+rising again of many in Israel; and for a sign that shall be spoken
+against, (yea, a sword shall pierce through thine own soul also) that
+the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed." [Luke ii. 28.] In this
+incident it is worthy of remark, that Joseph and Mary are both mentioned
+by name, that they are both called the parents of the young child; that
+both are equally blessed by Simeon; and that the good old Israelite,
+illumined by the spirit of prophecy, when he addresses himself
+immediately to Mary, speaks only of her future sorrow, and does not even
+most remotely or faintly allude to any exaltation of her above the other
+daughters of Abraham. "A sword shall pass through thine own soul also,"
+a prophecy, as St. Augustine interprets it, accomplished when she
+witnessed the sufferings and death of her Son. (See De Sacy, vol. xxxii.
+p. 138.)
+
+The next occasion on which the name of the Virgin Mary is found in
+Scripture, is the memorable visit of herself, her husband, and her Son,
+to Jerusalem, when he was twelve years old. And the manner in which this
+incident is related by the inspired Evangelist, so far from intimating
+that Mary was destined to be an object of worship to the believers in
+her Son, affords {278} evidence which exhibits strongly a bearing the
+direct contrary. Here again Joseph and Mary are both called his parents:
+Joseph is once mentioned by name, and so is Mary. If the language had
+been so framed as on purpose to take away all distinction of preference
+or superiority, it could not more successfully have effected its
+purpose. But not only so, of the three addresses recorded as having been
+made by our blessed Lord to his beloved mother (and only three are
+recorded in the New Testament), the first occurs during this visit to
+Jerusalem. It was in answer to the remonstrance made by Mary, "Son, why
+hast thou thus dealt with us? Behold, thy father and I have sought thee
+sorrowing." [Luke ii. 48.] "How is it that ye sought me? Knew ye not
+that I must be about my Father's business?"--[or in my Father's house,
+as some render it.] He lifts up their minds from earth to heaven, from
+his human to his eternal origin. He makes no distinction here,--"Wist YE
+not." Again, I would appeal to any dispassionate person to pronounce,
+whether this reproof, couched in these words, countenances the idea that
+our blessed Lord intended his human mother to receive such divine honour
+from his followers to the end of time as the Church of Rome now pays?
+and whether St. Luke, whose pen wrote this account, could have been made
+cognizant of any such right invested in the Virgin?
+
+The next passage calling for our consideration is that which records the
+first miracle: "And the third day there was a marriage in Cana of
+Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there, and both Jesus was called
+and his disciples to the marriage. And when they wanted wine (when the
+wine failed), the mother of {279} Jesus saith unto him, They have no
+wine. Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine
+hour is not yet come." [John ii. 1.]
+
+I have carefully read the comments on this passage, which different
+writers of the Roman Catholic communion have recommended for the
+adoption of the faithful, and I desire not to make any remarks upon
+them. Let the passage be interpreted in any way which enlightened
+criticism and the analogy of Scripture will sanction, and I would ask,
+after a careful weighing of this incident, the facts, and the words in
+all their bearings, would any unprejudiced mind expect that the holy and
+beloved person, towards whom the meek and tender and loving Jesus
+employed this address, was destined by that omniscient and omnipotent
+Saviour to be an object of those religious acts with which, as we shall
+soon be reminded, the Church of Rome now daily approaches her?
+
+It is pain and grief to me thus to extract and to comment upon these
+passages of Holy Writ. The feelings of affection and of reverence
+approaching awe, with which I hold the memory of that blessed Virgin
+Mother of my Lord, raise in me a sincere repugnance against dwelling on
+this branch of our subject, beyond what the cause of the truth as it is
+in Jesus absolutely requires; and very little more of the same irksome
+task awaits us. You will of course expect me to refer to an incident
+recorded with little variety of expression, and with no essential
+difference, by the first three Evangelists. St. Matthew's is the most
+full account, and is this,--"While he yet talked to the people, behold
+his mother and his brethren stood without desiring to speak with him.
+Then one said unto him, {280} Behold, thy mother and thy brethren stand
+without, desiring to speak with thee. But he answered and said unto him
+that told him, Who is my mother, and who are my brethren? And he
+stretched forth his hand toward his disciples and said, Behold my mother
+and my brethren. For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is
+in heaven, the same is my brother and sister and mother." [Matt. xii.
+46.] Or, as St. Luke expresses it,--"And he answered and said unto them,
+My mother and my brethren are these, who hear the word of God and do
+it." [Luke viii. 21.]
+
+Humanly speaking, could a more favourable opportunity have presented
+itself to our blessed Lord of referring to his beloved mother, in such a
+manner as to exalt her above her fellow daughters of Eve,--in such a
+manner too, as that Christians in after days, when the Saviour's bodily
+presence should have been taken away from them, and the extraordinary
+communications of the Spirit of truth should have been withdrawn, might
+have remembered that He had spoken these things, and have been
+countenanced by his words in doing her homage? But so far is this from
+the plain and natural tendency of the words of her blessed Son, that,
+had He of acknowledged purpose (and He has condescended to announce to
+us, in another place (John xiii. 19, &c.), the purpose of his words)
+wished to guard his disciples, whilst the world should last, against
+being seduced by any reverence and love which they might feel towards
+Himself into a belief that they ought to exalt his mother above all
+other created beings, and pay her holy worship, we know not what words
+He could have adopted more fitted for that purpose. There was nothing in
+the communication which seemed to call for {281} such a remark. A plain
+message announces to Him as a matter of fact one of the most common
+occurrences of daily life. And yet He fixes upon the circumstance as the
+groundwork not only of declaring the close union which it was his good
+pleasure should exist between obedient and true believers and Himself,
+but of cautioning all against any superstitious feelings towards those
+who were nearly allied to Him by the ties of his human nature. With
+reverence I would say, it is as though He desired to record his
+foreknowledge of the errors into which his disciples were likely to be
+seduced, and warned them beforehand to shun and resist the temptation.
+The evidence borne by this passage against our offering any religious
+worship to the Virgin, on the ground of her having been the mother of
+our Lord, seems clear, strong, direct, and inevitable. She was the
+mother of the Redeemer of the world, and blessed is she among women; but
+that very Redeemer Himself, with his own lips, assures us that every
+faithful servant of his heavenly Father shall be equally honoured with
+her, and possess all the privileges which so near and dear a
+relationship with Himself might be supposed to convey.--Who is my
+mother? Or, who are my brethren? Behold my mother and my brethren!
+Whosoever shall do the will of my Father in heaven, the same is my
+brother, and my sister, and my mother.
+
+No less should we be expected in this place to take notice of that most
+remarkable passage of Holy Scripture, [Luke xi. 27.] in which our
+blessed Lord is recorded under different circumstances to have expressed
+the same sentiments, but in words which will appear to many even more
+strongly indicative of his desire to prevent any {282} undue exaltation
+of his mother. "As he spake these things, a certain woman of the company
+lifted up her voice and said unto him, Blessed is the womb that bare
+thee, and the paps which thou hast sucked." On the truth or wisdom of
+that exclamation our Lord makes no remark; He refers not to his mother
+at all, not even to assure them (as St. Augustine in after-ages taught,
+see De Sacy, vol. xxxii. p. 35.), that however blessed Mary was in her
+corporeal conception of the Saviour, yet far more blessed was she
+because she had fully borne Him spiritually in her heart. He alludes not
+to his mother except for the purpose of instantly drawing the minds of
+his hearers from contemplating any supposed blessedness in her, and of
+fixing them on the sure and greater blessedness of his true, humble,
+faithful, and obedient disciples, to the end of time. "But he said, Yea,
+rather [or, as some prefer, yea, verily, and] blessed are they that hear
+the word of God, and keep it." Again, it must be asked, could such an
+exclamation have been met by such a reply, had our Lord's will been to
+exalt his mother, as she is now exalted by the Church of Rome? Rather,
+we would reverently ask, would He have given this turn to such an
+address, had He not desired to check any such feeling towards her?
+
+That most truly affecting and edifying incident recorded by St. John as
+having taken place whilst Jesus was hanging in his agony on the cross,
+an incident which speaks to every one who has a mind to understand and a
+heart to feel, presents to us the last occasion on which the name of the
+Virgin Mother of our Lord occurs in the Gospels. No paraphrase could add
+force, or clearness, or beauty to the simple narrative of the
+Evangelist; no exposition could bring out its parts more prominently or
+{283} affectingly. The calmness and authority of our blessed Lord, his
+tenderness and affection, his filial love in the very midst of his
+agony, it is impossible to describe with more heart-stirring and
+heart-soothing pathos than is conveyed in the simple language of him
+whom the Saviour at that awful hour addressed, as He committed his
+mother to him of especial trust. But not one syllable falls from the
+lips of Christ, or from the pen of the beloved disciple, who records
+this act of his blessed Master's filial piety, which can by possibility
+be construed to imply, that our blessed Lord intended Mary to be held in
+such honour by his disciples, as would be shown in the offering of
+prayer and praise to her after her dissolution. He who could by a word,
+rather by the mere motion of his will, have bidden the whole course of
+nature and of providence, so to proceed as that all its operations
+should provide for the health and safety, the support and comfort of his
+mother--He, when He was on the cross, and when He was on the point of
+committing his soul into the hands of his Father, leaves her to the care
+of one whom He loved, and whose sincerity and devotedness to Him He had,
+humanly speaking, long experienced. He bids him treat Mary as his own
+mother, He bids Mary look to John as to her own son for support and
+solace: "Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother, and his
+mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene. When
+Jesus, therefore, saw his mother and the disciple standing by whom he
+loved, he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son; then saith he to
+the disciple, Behold thy mother." [John xix. 25.] And He added no more.
+If Christ willed that his beloved mother should end her days in peace,
+removed equally {284} from want and the desolation of widowhood on the
+one hand, and from splendour and notoriety on the other, nothing could
+be more natural than such conduct in such a Being at such a time. But if
+his purpose was to exalt her into an object of religious adoration, that
+nations should kneel before her, and all people do her homage, then the
+words and the conduct of our Lord at this hour seem altogether
+unaccountable: and so would the words of the Evangelist also be, "And
+from that hour that disciple took her unto his own home."
+
+After this not another word falls from the pen of St. John which can be
+made to bear on the station, the character, the person, or circumstances
+of Mary. After his resurrection our Saviour remained on earth forty days
+before He finally ascended into heaven. Many of his interviews and
+conversations with his disciples during that interval are recorded in
+the Gospel. Every one of the four Evangelists relates some act or some
+saying of our Lord on one or more of those occasions. Mention is made by
+name of Mary Magdalene, of Mary [the mother] of Joses, of Mary [the
+mother] of James, of Salome, of Joanna, of Peter, of Cleophas, of the
+disciple whom Jesus loved, at whose house the mother of our Lord then
+was; of Thomas, of Nathanael. The eleven also are mentioned generally.
+But by no one of the Evangelists is reference made at all to Mary the
+mother of our Lord, as having been present at any one of those
+interviews; her name is not alluded to throughout.
+
+On one solitary occasion subsequently to the ascension of Christ,
+mention is made of Mary his mother, in company with many others, and
+without any further distinction to separate her from the rest: "And when
+{285} they were come in (from having witnessed the ascension of our
+Saviour), they went up into an upper room, where abode both Peter, and
+James, and John, and Andrew, Philip, and Thomas, Bartholomew and
+Matthew, James the son of Alphaeus, and Simon Zelotes, and Judas the
+brother of James. These all continued with one accord in prayer and
+supplication with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his
+brethren." [Acts i. 13.] Not one word is said of Mary having been
+present to witness even the ascension of her blessed Son; we read no
+command of our Lord, no wish expressed, no distant intimation to his
+disciples that they should even show to her marks of respect and honour;
+not an allusion is there made to any superiority or distinction and
+preeminence. Sixty years at the least are generally considered to be
+comprehended within the subsequent history of the New Testament before
+the Apocalypse was written; but neither in the narrative, nor in the
+Epistles, nor yet in the prophetic part of the Holy Book, is there the
+most distant allusion to Mary. Of him to whose loving care our dying
+Lord committed his beloved mother of especial trust, we hear much. John,
+we find, putting forth the miraculous power of Christ at the Beautiful
+Gate of the Temple; we find him imprisoned and arraigned before the
+Jewish authorities; but not one word is mentioned as to what meanwhile
+became of Mary. We find John confirming the Church in Samaria; we find
+him an exile in the island of Patmos; but no mention is made of Mary.
+Nay, though we have three of his epistles, and the second of them
+addressed to one "whom he loved in the truth," we find neither from the
+tongue nor from the pen of St. John, one single allusion to the mother
+of our Lord alive or dead. And then, whatever may have been the matter
+{286} of fact as to St. Paul, neither the many letters of that Apostle,
+nor the numerous biographical incidents recorded of him, intimate in the
+most remote degree that he knew any thing whatever concerning her
+individually. St. Paul does indeed refer to the human nature of Christ
+derived from his human mother, and had he been taught by his Lord to
+entertain towards her such sentiments as the Roman Church now professes
+to entertain, he could not have had a more inviting occasion to give
+utterance to them. But instead of thus speaking of the Virgin Mary, he
+does not even mention her name or state at all, but refers only in the
+most general way to her nature and her sex as a daughter of Adam: "But
+when the fulness of time was come, God sent forth his Son, MADE OF A
+WOMAN, made under the law; to redeem them that were under the Law, that
+we might receive the adoption of sons." [Gal. iv. 4.] From a time
+certainly within a few days of our Saviour's ascension the Scriptures
+are totally silent throughout as to Mary, whether in life or in death.
+
+Here we might well proceed to contrast this view which the Scriptures of
+eternal truth give of the blessed Virgin Mary with the authorized and
+appointed worship of that branch of the Christian Church which is in
+communion with Rome. We must first, however, here also examine the
+treasures of Christian antiquity, and ascertain what witness the
+earliest uninspired records bear on this immediate point. {287}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.--EVIDENCE OF PRIMITIVE WRITERS.
+
+
+Closing the inspired volume, and seeking at the fountain-head for the
+evidence of Christian antiquity, what do we find? For upwards of three
+centuries and a half (the limit put to our present inquiry) we discover
+in no author, Christian or heathen, any trace whatever of the invocation
+of the Virgin Mary by Catholic Christians. I have examined every passage
+which I have found adduced by writers of the Church of Rome, and have
+searched for any other passages which might appear to deserve
+consideration as bearing favourably on their view of the subject; and
+the worship of the Virgin, such as is now insisted upon by the Council
+of Trent, prescribed by the Roman ritual, and practised in the Church of
+Rome, is proved by such an examination to have had neither name, nor
+place, nor existence among the early Christians. Forgive my importunity
+if I again and again urge you to join us in weighing these facts well;
+and to take your view of them from no advocate on the one side or the
+other. Search the Scriptures for yourselves, search the earliest writers
+for yourselves, and for yourselves search with all diligence into the
+authentic and authorized liturgies of your own Church, your missals, and
+breviaries, and formularies. Hearsay evidence, testimony {288} taken at
+second or third hand, vague rumours and surmises will probably expose
+us, on either side, to error. Let well-sifted genuine evidence be
+brought by an upright and an enlightened mind to bear on the point at
+issue, and let the issue joined be this, Is the practice of praying to
+the Virgin, and praising her, in the language of the prayers and praises
+now used in the prescribed formularies of the Roman Church, primitive.
+Catholic, Apostolical?
+
+I am aware that among those who adhere to the Tridentine Confession of
+faith, there are many on whom this investigation will not be allowed to
+exercise any influence.
+
+The sentiments of Huet, wherever they are adopted, would operate to the
+total rejection of such inquiries as we are instituting in this work.
+His words on the immaculate conception of the Virgin are of far wider
+application than the immediate occasion on which he used them, "That the
+blessed Mary never conceived any sin in herself is in the present day an
+established principle of the Church, and confirmed by the Council of
+Trent. In which it is our duty to acquiesce, rather than in the dicta of
+the ancients, if any seem to think otherwise, among whom must be
+numbered Origen." [Origen's Works, vol. iv. part 2, p. 156.]
+
+In this address, however, we take for granted that the reader is open to
+conviction, desirous of arriving at the truth, and, with that view,
+ready to examine and sift the evidence of primitive antiquity.
+
+In that investigation our attention is very soon called to the
+remarkable fact, that, whereas in the case of the invocation of saints
+and angels, the defenders of that doctrine and practice bring forward a
+great variety of passages, in which mention is supposed to be made of
+{289} those beings as objects of honour and reverential and grateful
+remembrance, the passages quoted with a similar view, as regards the
+Virgin Mary, are very few indeed: whilst the passages which intimate
+that the early Christians paid her no extraordinary honour (certainly
+not more than we of the Anglican Church do now) are innumerable.
+
+I have thought that it might be satisfactory here to refer to each
+separately of those earliest writers, whose testimony we have already
+examined on the general question of the invocation of saints and angels,
+and, as nearly as may be, in the same order.
+
+In the former department of our investigation we first endeavoured to
+ascertain the evidence of those five primitive writers, who are called
+the Apostolical Fathers; and, with regard to the subject now before us,
+the result of our inquiry into the same works is this:
+
+1. In the Epistle ascribed to BARNABAS we find no allusion to Mary.
+
+2. The same must be affirmed of the book called The Shepherd of HERMAS.
+
+3. In CLEMENT of Rome, who speaks of the Lord Jesus having descended
+from Abraham according to the flesh, no mention is made of that daughter
+of Abraham of whom he was born.
+
+4. IGNATIUS in a passage already quoted (Ad Eph. vii. p. 13 and 16)
+speaks of Christ both in his divine and human nature as Son of God and
+man, and he mentions the name of Mary, but it is without any adjunct or
+observation whatever, "both of Mary and of God." In another place he
+speaks of her virgin state, and the fruit of her womb; and of her having
+borne our God Jesus the Christ; but he adds no {290} more; not even
+calling her "The blessed," or "The Virgin." In the interpolated Epistle
+to the Ephesians, the former passage adds "the Virgin" after "Mary," but
+nothing more.
+
+5. In the Epistle of POLYCARP we find an admonition to virgins (Page
+186), how they ought to walk with a spotless and chaste conscience, but
+there is no allusion to the Virgin Mary.
+
+JUSTIN MARTYR. In this writer I do not find any passage so much in point
+as the following, in which we discover no epithet expressive of honour,
+or dignity, or exaltation, though it refers to Mary in her capacity of
+the Virgin mother of our Lord:--"He therefore calls Himself the Son of
+Man, either from his birth of a virgin, who was of the race of David,
+and Jacob, and Isaac, and Abraham, or because Abraham himself was the
+father of those persons enumerated, from whom Mary drew her origin."
+[Trypho, Sec. 100. p. 195.] And a little below he adds, "For Eve being a
+virgin and incorrupt, having received the word from the serpent, brought
+forth transgression and death; but Mary the Virgin having received faith
+and joy (on the angel Gabriel announcing to her the glad tidings, that
+the Spirit of the Lord should come upon her, and the power of the
+Highest overshadow her) answered, Be it unto me according to thy word.
+And of her was born He of whom we have shown that so many Scriptures
+have been spoken; He by whom God destroys the serpent, and angels and
+men resembling [the serpent]; but works a rescue from death for such as
+repent of evil and believe in Him." One more passage will suffice, "And
+according to the command of God, Joseph, taking Him with Mary, went into
+Egypt." [Trypho, Sec. 102. p. 196.] {291}
+
+Among those "Questions" to which we have referred under the head of
+Justin Martyr's works, but which are confessedly of a much less remote
+date, probably of the fifth century, an inquiry is made, How could
+Christ be free from blame, who so often set at nought his parent? The
+answer is, that He did not set her at nought; that He honoured her in
+deed, and would not have hurt her by his words;--but then the respondent
+adds, that Christ chiefly honoured Mary in that view of her maternal
+character, under which all who heard the word of God and kept it, were
+his brothers and sisters and mother; and that she surpassed all women in
+virtue. [Qu. 136. p. 500.]
+
+IRENAEUS. To the confused passage relied upon by Bellarmin, in which
+Irenaeus is supposed to represent Mary as the advocate of Eve, we have
+already fully referred (page 120 of this work). In that passage there is
+no allusion to any honour paid, or to be paid to her, nor to any
+invocation of her. In every passage to which my attention has been
+drawn, Irenaeus speaks of the mother of our Lord as Mary, or the Virgin,
+without any adjunct, or term of reverence.
+
+CLEMENT of Alexandria speaks of the Virgin, and refers to an opinion
+relative to her virgin-state, but without one word of honour. [Stromat.
+vii. 16. p. 889.]
+
+TERTULLIAN[101]. The passages in which this ancient writer refers to the
+mother of our Lord are very far from countenancing the religious worship
+now paid to her by Roman Catholics: "The brothers of the Lord had not
+believed on him, as it is contained in the Gospel published {292} before
+Marcion. His mother likewise is not shown to have adhered to him;
+whereas others, Marys and Marthas, were frequently in his company." (See
+Tert. De carne Christi, c. 7. (p. 364. De Sacy, 29. 439.)) And he tells
+us that Christ was brought forth by a virgin, who was also about to be
+married once after the birth, that the two titles of sanctity might be
+united in Christ by a mother who was both a virgin and also once
+married[102].
+
+ [Footnote 101: Paris, 1675. De carne Christi, vii. p. 315. De
+ Monogamia, vii. p. 529. N.B. Both these treatises were probably
+ written after he became a Montanist.]
+
+ [Footnote 102: On the works once ascribed to Methodius, but now
+ pronounced to be spurious, see above, p. 131.]
+
+ORIGEN thus speaks: "Announcing to Zacharias the birth of John, and to
+Mary the advent of our Saviour among men." [Comment on John, Sec. 24. vol.
+iv. p. 82.] In his eighth homily on Leviticus, he refers to Mary as a
+pure Virgin. [Vol. ii. p. 228.] In the forged work of later times, the
+writer, speaking of our Saviour, says, "He had on earth an immaculate
+and chaste mother, this much blessed Virgin Mary." [Hom. iii. in
+Diversos.]
+
+In CYPRIAN we do not find one word expressive of honour or reverence
+towards the Virgin Mary. Nor is her name mentioned in the letter of his
+correspondent Firmilian, Bishop of Cappadocia.
+
+LACTANTIUS speaks of "a holy virgin" [Vol. i. p. 299.] chosen for the
+work of Christ but not one other word of honour, or tending to
+adoration; though whilst dwelling on the incarnation of the Son of God,
+had he or his fellow-believers paid religious honour to her, he could
+scarcely have avoided all allusion to it.
+
+EUSEBIUS speaks of the Virgin Mary, but is altogether silent as to any
+religious honour of any kind being due to her. In the Oration of the
+Emperor Constantine (as it is recorded by Eusebius), direct mention is
+made of the "chaste virginity," and of the maid who was mother {293} of
+God, and yet remained a virgin. But the object present to the author's
+mind was so exclusively God manifest in the flesh, that he does not
+throughout even mention the name of Mary, or allude to any honour paid
+or due to her. [Cantab. 1720. Sec. 11. p. 689. and Sec. 19. p. 703.]
+
+ATHANASIUS, bent ever on establishing the perfect divinity and humanity
+of Christ, thus speaks: "The general scope of Holy Scripture is to make
+a twofold announcement concerning the Saviour, that He was always God,
+and is a Son; being the Word and the brightness and wisdom of the
+Father, and that He afterwards became man for us, taking flesh of the
+Virgin Mary, who bare God ([Greek: taes theotokou])." [Athan. Orat. iii.
+Cont. Arian. p. 579.]
+
+The work which we have already examined, called The Apostolical
+Constitutions, compiled probably about the commencement of the fourth
+century, cannot be read without leaving an impression clear and powerful
+on the mind, that no religious honour was paid to the Virgin Mary at the
+time when they were written; certainly not more than is now cheerfully
+paid to her memory by us of the Anglican Church. Take, for example, the
+prayer prescribed to be used on the appointment of a Deaconess; the
+inference from it must be, that others with whom the Lord's Spirit had
+dwelt, were at least held in equal honour with Mary: "O Eternal God,
+Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, Maker of male and female, who didst
+fill with thy Spirit Miriam, and Hannah, and Holda, and didst not
+disdain that thy Son should be born of a woman," &c. [Book viii. c. 20.]
+Thus, {294} too, in another passage, Mary is spoken of just as other
+women who had the gift of prophecy; and of her equally and in
+conjunction with the others it is said, that they were not elated by the
+gift, nor lifted themselves up against the men. "But even have women
+prophesied; in ancient times Miriam, the sister of Aaron and Moses;
+after her Deborah; and afterwards Huldah and Judith; one under Josiah,
+the other under Darius; and the mother of the Lord also prophesied, and
+Elizabeth her kinswoman; and Anna; and in our day the daughters of
+Philip; yet they were not lifted up against the men, but observed their
+own measure. Therefore among you also should any man or woman have such
+a grace, let them be humble, that God may take pleasure in them." [Book
+viii. c. 2.]
+
+In the Apostolical Canons I find no reference to Mary; nor indeed any
+passage bearing on our present inquiry, except the last clause of all,
+containing the benediction. In this passage not only is the prayer for
+spiritual blessings addressed to God alone, but it is offered
+exclusively through the mediation of Christ alone, without alluding to
+intercessions of angels saints, or the Virgin: "Now may God, the only
+unproduced Being, the Creator of all things, unite you all by peace in
+the Holy Ghost; make you perfect unto every good work, not to be turned
+aside, unblameable, not deserving reproof; and may He deem you worthy of
+eternal life with us, by the mediation of his beloved Son Jesus Christ
+our God and Saviour: with whom be glory to Him the Sovereign God and
+Father, in the Holy Ghost the Comforter, now and ever, world without
+end. Amen." [Vol. i. p. 450.]
+
+I have not intentionally omitted any ancient author {295} falling within
+the limits of our present inquiry, nor have I neglected any one passage
+which I could find bearing testimony to any honour paid to the Virgin.
+The result of my research is, that I have not discovered one solitary
+expression which implies that religious invocation and honour, such as
+is now offered to Mary by the Church of Rome, was addressed to her by
+the members of the primitive Catholic Church. {296}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.--THE ASSUMPTION OF THE VIRGIN MARY.
+
+
+By the Church of England, two festivals are observed in grateful
+commemoration of two events relating to Mary as the mother of our
+Lord:--the announcement of the Saviour's birth by the message of an
+angel, called, "The Annunciation of the blessed Virgin Mary," and "The
+Presentation of Christ in the Temple," called also, "The Purification of
+Saint Mary the Virgin." In the service for the first of these
+solemnities, we are taught to pray that, as we have known the
+incarnation of the Son of God by the message of an angel, so by his
+Cross and Passion we may be brought to the glory of his resurrection. In
+the second, we humbly beseech the Divine Majesty that, as his
+only-begotten Son was presented in the Temple in the substance of our
+flesh, so we may be presented unto Him with pure and clean hearts by the
+same, his Son Jesus Christ our Lord. These days are observed to
+commemorate events declared to us on the most sure warrant of Holy
+Scripture; and these prayers are primitive and evangelical. They pray
+only to God for spiritual blessings through his Son. The second prayer
+was used in the Church {297} from very early times, and is still
+retained in the Roman Breviary (Hus. Brev. Rom. H. 536.); whereas,
+instead of the first[103], we find there unhappily a prayer now
+supplicating that those who offer it, "believing Mary to be truly the
+Mother of God, might be aided by her intercessions with Him." [V. 496.]
+
+ [Footnote 103: This collect also is found in the Roman Missal,
+ as a Prayer at the Post Communion; though it does not appear in
+ the Breviarium Romanum.]
+
+In the Roman Catholic Church, on the other hand, feasts are observed to
+the honour of the Virgin Mary, in which the Anglican Church cannot join;
+such as the Nativity of the Virgin Mary, and the immaculate conception
+of her by her mother. On the origin and nature of these feasts it is not
+my intention to dwell. I can only express my regret, that by appointing
+a service and a collect commemorative of the Conception of the
+Virgin[104] in her mother's womb, and praying that the observance of
+that solemnity may procure the votaries an increase of peace, the Church
+of Rome has given countenance to a superstition, against which at its
+commencement, so late as the 12th century, St. Bernard strongly
+remonstrated, in an epistle to the monks of Lyons; a superstition which
+has been supported and explained by discussions in no way profitable to
+the head or the heart. [Epist. 174. Paris, 1632, p. 1538.]
+
+ [Footnote 104: Ut quibus beatae Virginis partus exstitit salutis
+ exordium, conceptionis ejus votiva solemnitas pacis tribuat
+ incrementum. H. 445.]
+
+Of all these institutions however in honour of the Virgin, the Feast of
+the ASSUMPTION appears to be as it were the crown and the
+consummation[105]. This festival {298} is kept to celebrate the
+miraculous taking up (assumptio) of the Virgin Mary into heaven. And its
+celebration, in Roman Catholic countries, is observed in a manner worthy
+a cause to which our judgment would give deliberately its sanction; in
+which our feelings would safely and with satisfaction rest on the
+firmness of our faith; from joining in which a truly pious mind would
+have no ground for inward misgiving, nor for the aspiration, Would it
+were founded in truth!
+
+ [Footnote 105: "The Assumption of the Virgin Mary is the
+ greatest of all the festivals which the Church celebrates in her
+ honour. It is the consummation of all the other great mysteries
+ by which her life was rendered most wonderful. It is the
+ birthday of her true greatness and glory, and the crown of all
+ the virtues of her whole life, which we admire single in her
+ other festivals." Alban Butler, vol. viii. p. 175.]
+
+Before such a solemn office of praise and worship were ever admitted
+among the institutions of the religion of truth, its originators and
+compilers should have built upon sure grounds; careful too should they
+also be who now join in the service, and so lend it the countenance of
+their example; more especially should those sift the evidence well, who,
+by their doctrine and writings, uphold, and defend, and advance it; lest
+they prove at the last to love Rome rather than the truth as it is in
+Jesus. So solemn, so marked, a religious service in the temples and at
+the altar of HIM who is the truth, a service so exalted above his
+fellows, ought beyond question to be founded on the most sure warrant of
+Holy Scripture, or at the least on undisputed historical evidence, as to
+the alleged matter of fact on which it is built,--the certain,
+acknowledged, uninterrupted, and universal testimony of the Church
+Catholic from the very time. They incur a momentous responsibility who
+aid in propagating for religious truths the inventions of men[106].
+
+ [Footnote 106: Very different opinions are held by Roman
+ Catholic writers as to the antiquity of this feast. All, indeed,
+ maintain that it is of very ancient introduction; but whilst
+ some, with Lambecius (lib. viii. p. 286), maintain the antiquity
+ of the festival to be so remote, that its origin cannot be
+ traced; and thence infer that it was instituted by a silent and
+ unrecorded act of the Apostles themselves; others (among whom
+ Kollarius, the learned annotator on the opinion of Lambecius)
+ acknowledged, that it was introduced by an ordinance of the
+ Church, though not at the same time in all countries of
+ Christendom. That annotator assigns its introduction at Rome to
+ the fourth century; at Constantinople to the sixth; in Germany
+ and France to the ninth.] {299}
+
+But what is the real state of the case with regard to the fact of the
+Assumption of the Virgin Mary? It rests (as we shall soon see) on no
+authentic history; it is supported by no primitive tradition. I profess
+my surprise to have been great, when I found the most celebrated
+defenders of the Roman Catholic cause, instead of citing such evidence
+as would bear with it even the appearance of probability, appealing to
+histories written more than a thousand years after the alleged event, to
+forged documents and vague rumours. I was willing to doubt the
+sufficiency of my research; till I found its defenders, instead of
+alleging and establishing by evidence what God was by them said to have
+done, contenting themselves with asserting his omnipotence, in proof
+that the doctrine implied no impossibility; dwelling on the fitness and
+reasonableness of his working such a miracle in the honour of her who
+was chosen to be the mother of his eternal Son; and whilst they took the
+fact as granted, substituting for argument glowing and fervent
+descriptions of what might have been the joy in heaven, and what ought
+to be the feelings of mortals on earth.
+
+At every step of the inquiry into the merits of this case, the principle
+recurs to the mind, that, as men really and in earnest looking onward to
+a life after this, our duty is to ascertain to the utmost of our {300}
+power, not what God could do, not what we or others might pronounce it
+fit that God should do, but what He has done; not what would be
+agreeable to our feelings, were it true, but what, whether agreeably or
+adversely to our feelings or wishes, is proved to be true. The very
+moment a Christian writer refers me from evidence to possibilities, I
+feel that he knows not the nature of Christianity; he throws me back
+from the sure and certain hope of the Gospel to the "beautiful fable" of
+Socrates,--"It were better to be there than here, IF THESE THINGS ARE
+TRUE."
+
+But let us inquire into the facts of the case.
+
+First, I would observe that it is by no means agreed among all who have
+written upon the subject, what was the place, or what was the time of
+the Virgin's death. Whilst some have maintained that she breathed her
+last at Ephesus, the large majority assert that her departure from this
+world took place at Jerusalem. And as to the time of her death, some
+have assigned it to the year 48 of the Christian era, about the time at
+which Paul and Barnabas (as we read in Holy Scripture) returned to
+Antioch; whilst others refer it to a later date. I am not, however,
+aware of any supposition which fixes it at a period subsequent to that
+at which the canon of Scripture closes. Epiphanius indeed, towards the
+close of the fourth century, reminding us that Scripture is totally and
+purely silent on the subject as well of Mary's death and burial, as of
+her having accompanied St. John in his travels or not, without alluding
+to any tradition as to her assumption, thus sums up his sentiments: "I
+dare to say nothing; but considering it, I observe silence." [Epiph.
+vol. i. p. 1043.] {301}
+
+Should any of my readers have deliberately adopted as the rule of their
+faith the present practice of the Church of Rome, I cannot hope that
+they will take any interest in the following inquiry; but I have been
+assured, by most sensible and well-informed members of that Church, that
+there is a very general desire entertained to have this and other
+questions connected with our subject examined without prejudice, and
+calmly placed before them. To such persons I trust this chapter may not
+appear altogether unworthy of their consideration. Those who would turn
+from it on the principle to which we have here alluded, will find
+themselves very closely responding to the sentiments professed by St.
+Bernard, "Exalt her who is exalted above the choirs of angels to the
+heavenly kingdom. These things the Church sings to me of her, and has
+taught me to sing the same to others. For my part, what I have received
+from it, I am secure in holding and delivering; which also, I confess, I
+am not OVER-SCRUPULOUS in admitting. (Quod non scrupulosius fateor
+admiserim.) I have received in truth from the Church that that day is to
+be observed with the highest veneration on which she was TAKEN up
+(assumpta) from this wicked world, and carrying with her into heaven
+feasts of the most celebrated joys[107]."
+
+ [Footnote 107: See Lambecius, book viii. p. 286. The letter of
+ St. Bernard is addressed to the Canons of Lyons on the
+ Conception of the holy Mary. Paris, 1632, p. 1538. His
+ observations in that letter, with a view of discountenancing the
+ rising superstition, in juxtaposition with these sentiments, are
+ well deserving the serious consideration of every one.]
+
+Let us then, with the authorized and enjoined service of the Church of
+Rome for the 15th of August before us, examine the evidence on which
+that religious {302} service, the most solemn consummation of all the
+rest, is founded.
+
+In the service of the Assumption, more than twice seven times is it
+reiterated in a very brief space, and with slight variations of
+expression, that Mary was taken up into heaven; and that, not on any
+general and indefinite idea of her beatific and glorified state, but
+with reference to one specific single act of divine favour, performed at
+a fixed time, effecting her assumption, as it is called, "to-day." [AEs.
+595.] "To-day Mary the Virgin ascended the heavens. Rejoice, because she
+is reigning with Christ for ever." "Mary the Virgin is taken up into
+heaven, to the ethereal chamber in which the King of kings sits on his
+starry throne." "The holy mother of God hath been exalted above the
+choirs of angels to the heavenly realms." "Come, let us worship the King
+of kings, to whose ethereal heaven the Virgin Mother was taken up
+to-day." And that it is her bodily ascension, her corporeal assumption
+into heaven, and not merely the transit of her soul[108] from mortal
+life to eternal bliss, which the Roman Church maintains and propagates
+by this service, is put beyond doubt by the service itself. In the
+fourth and sixth reading[109], or lesson, for example, we find these
+{303} sentences:--"She returned not into the earth but is seated in the
+heavenly tabernacles." "How could death devour, how could those below
+receive, how could corruption invade, THAT BODY, in which life was
+received? For it a direct, plain, and easy path to heaven was prepared."
+
+ [Footnote 108: Lambecius, indeed (book viii. p. 306), distinctly
+ affirms, that one object which the Church had in view was to
+ condemn the HERESY of those who maintain that the reception of
+ the Virgin into heaven, was the reception of her soul only, and
+ not also of her body. "Ut damnet eorum haeresin qui sanctissimae
+ Dei genetricis rcceptionem in coelum ad animam ipsius tantum,
+ non vero simul etiam ad corpus pertinere existimant."]
+
+ [Footnote 109: Non reversa est in terram, sed ... in coelestibus
+ tabernaculis collocatum. Quomodo mois devoraret, quomodo inferi
+ susciperent, quomodo corruptio invaderit CORPUS ILLUD in quo
+ vita suscepta est? Huic recta plana et facilis ad coelum parata
+ est via. AEs. 603, 604.]
+
+Now, on what authority does this doctrine rest? On what foundation stone
+is this religious worship built? The holy Scriptures are totally and
+profoundly silent, as to the time, the place, the manner of Mary's
+death. Once after the ascension of our Lord, and that within eight days,
+we find mentioned the name of Mary promiscuously with others; after
+that, no allusion is made to her in life or in death; and no account, as
+far as I can find, places her death too late for mention to have been
+made of it in the Acts of the Apostles. The historian, Nicephorus
+Callistus, refers it to the 5th year of Claudius, that is about A.D. 47:
+after which period, events through more than fifteen years are recorded
+in that book of sacred Scripture.
+
+But closing the holy volume, what light does primitive antiquity enable
+us to throw on this subject?
+
+The earliest testimony quoted by the defenders of the doctrine, that
+Mary was at her death taken up bodily into heaven, is a supposed entry
+in the Chronicon of Eusebius, opposite the year of our Lord 48. This is
+cited by Coccius without any remark; and even Baronius rests the date of
+Mary's assumption upon this testimony. [Vol. i. 403.] The words referred
+to are these,--"Mary the Virgin, the mother of Jesus, was taken up into
+heaven; as some write that it had been revealed to them." {304}
+
+Now, suppose for one moment that this came from the pen of Eusebius
+himself, to what does it amount? A chronologist in the fourth century
+records that some persons, whom he does not name, not even stating when
+they lived, had written down, not what they had heard as matter of fact,
+or received by tradition, but that a revelation had been made to them of
+a fact alleged to have taken place nearly three centuries before the
+time of that writer. But instead of this passage deserving the name of
+Eusebius as its author, it is now on all sides acknowledged to be
+altogether a palpable interpolation. Suspicions, one would suppose, must
+have been at a very remote date suggested as to the genuineness of this
+sentence. Many manuscripts, especially the seven in the Vatican, were
+known to contain nothing of the kind; and the Roman Catholic editor of
+the Chronicon at Bordeaux, A.D. 1604, tells us that he was restrained
+from expunging it, only because nothing certain as to the assumption of
+the Virgin could be substituted in its stead. [P. 566.] Its spuriousness
+however can no longer be a question of dispute or doubt; it is excluded
+from the Milan edition of 1818, by Angelo Maio and John Zohrab; and no
+trace of it is to be found in the Armenian[110] version, published by
+the monks of the Armenian convent at Venice, in 1818.
+
+ [Footnote 110: The author visited that convent whilst this
+ edition of the Chronicon of Eusebius was going through the
+ press, and can testify to the apparent anxiety of the monks to
+ make it worthy of the patronage of Christians.]
+
+The next authority, to which we are referred, is a letter[111] said to
+have been written by Sophronius the {305} presbyter, about the
+commencement of the fifth century. The letter used to be ascribed to
+Jerome; Erasmus referred it to Sophronius; but Baronius says it was
+written "by an egregious forger of lies," ("egregius mendaciorum
+concinnator,") who lived after the heresies of Nestorius and Eutyches
+had been condemned. I am not at all anxious to enter upon that point of
+criticism; that the letter is of very ancient origin cannot be doubted.
+This document would lead us to conclude, that so far from the tradition
+regarding the Virgin's assumption being general in the Church, it was a
+point of grave doubt and discussion among the faithful, many of whom
+thought it an act of pious forbearance to abstain altogether from
+pronouncing any opinion on the subject. Whoever penned the letter, and
+whether we look to the sensible and pious sentiments contained in it, or
+to its undisputed antiquity, the following extract cannot fail to be
+interesting[112].
+
+ [Footnote 111: The letter is entitled "Ad Paulam et Eustochium
+ de Assumptione B.M. Virginis." It is found in the fifth volume
+ of Jerome's works, p. 82. Edit. Jo. Martian.]
+
+ [Footnote 112: Baronius shows great anxiety (Cologne, 1609, vol.
+ i. p. 408) to detract from the value of this author's testimony,
+ whoever he was; sharply criticising him because he asserts, that
+ the faithful in his time still expressed doubts as to the matter
+ of fact of Mary's assumption. By assigning, however, to the
+ letter a still later date than the works of Sophronius, Baronius
+ adds strength to the arguments for the comparatively recent
+ origin of the tradition of her assumption. See Fabricius
+ (Hamburgh, 1804), vol. ix. p. 160.]
+
+"Many of our people doubt whether Mary was taken up together with her
+body, or went away, leaving the body. But how, or at what time, or by
+what persons her most holy body was taken hence, or whither removed, or
+whether it rose again, is not known; although some will maintain that
+she is already revived, and is clothed with a blessed immortality with
+Christ in heavenly places, which very many affirm also of the blessed
+{306} John, the Evangelist, his servant, to whom being a virgin, the
+virgin was intrusted by Christ, because in his sepulchre, as it is
+reported, nothing is found but manna, which also is seen to flow forth.
+Nevertheless which of these opinions should be thought the more true we
+doubt. Yet it is better to commit all to God, to whom nothing is
+impossible, than to wish to define rashly[113] by our own authority any
+thing, which we do not approve of.... Because nothing is impossible with
+God, we do not deny that something of the kind was done with regard to
+the blessed Virgin Mary; although for caution's sake (salva fide)
+preserving our faith, we ought rather with pious desire to think, than
+inconsiderately to define, what without danger may remain unknown." This
+letter, at the earliest, was not written until the beginning of the
+fifth century.
+
+ [Footnote 113: These last words, stamping the author's own
+ opinion, "Which we do not approve of," are left out in the
+ quotation of Coccius.]
+
+Subsequent writers were not wanting to fill up what this letter declares
+to have been at its own date unknown, as to the manner and time of
+Mary's assumption, and the persons employed in effecting it. The first
+authority appealed to in defence of the tradition relating to the
+assumption of the Virgin[114], is usually cited as a well-known work
+written by Euthymius, who was contemporary with Juvenal, Archbishop of
+Jerusalem. And the testimony simply quoted as his, offers to us the
+following account of the miraculous transaction[115]:--
+
+ [Footnote 114: Coccius heads the extract merely with these
+ words: "Euthumius Eremita Historiae Ecclesiasticae, lib. iii. c.
+ 40;" assigning the date A.D. 549.]
+
+ [Footnote 115: This version by Coccius differs in some points
+ from the original. Jo. Dam. vol. ii. p. 879.]
+
+"It has been above said, that the holy Pulcheria {307} built many
+churches to Christ at Constantinople. Of these, however, there is one
+which was built in Blachernae, in the beginning of Marcian I's _reign_ of
+divine memory. These, therefore, namely, Marcian and Pulcheria, when
+they had built a venerable temple to the greatly to be celebrated and
+most holy mother of God and ever Virgin Mary, and had decked it with all
+ornaments, sought her most holy body, which had conceived God. And
+having sent for Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, and the bishops of
+Palestine, who were living in the royal city on account of the synod
+then held at Chalcedon, they say to them, 'We hear that there is in
+Jerusalem the first and famous Church of Mary, mother of God and ever
+Virgin, in the garden called Gethsemane, where her body which bore the
+Life was deposited in a coffin. We wish, therefore, her relics to be
+brought here for the protection of this royal city. But Juvenal
+answered, 'In the holy and divinely inspired Scripture, indeed, nothing
+is recorded of the departure of holy Mary, mother of God. But from an
+ancient and most true tradition we have received, that at the time of
+her glorious falling asleep, all the holy Apostles who were going
+through the world for the salvation of the nations, in a moment of time
+borne aloft, came together at Jerusalem. And when they were near her,
+they had a vision of angels, and divine melody of the highest powers was
+heard: and thus with divine and more than heavenly glory, she delivered
+her holy soul into the hands of God in an unspeakable manner. But that
+which had conceived God being borne with angelic and apostolic psalmody,
+with funeral rites, was deposited in a coffin in Gethsemane. In this
+place the chorus and singing of the angels continued for three whole
+days. But {308} after three days, on the angelic music ceasing, since
+one of the Apostles had been absent, and came after the third day, and
+wished to adore the body which had conceived God, the Apostles, who were
+present, opened the coffin; but the body, pure and every way to be
+praised, they could not at all find. And when they found only those
+things in which it had been laid out and placed there, and were filled
+with an ineffable fragrancy proceeding from those things, they shut the
+coffin. Being astounded at the miraculous mystery, they could form no
+other thought, but that He, who in his own person had vouchsafed to be
+clothed with flesh, and to be made man of the most holy Virgin, and to
+be born in the flesh, God the Word, and Lord of Glory, and who after
+birth had preserved her virginity immaculate, had seen it good after she
+had departed from among the living, to honour her uncontaminated and
+unpolluted body by a translation before the common and universal
+resurrection."
+
+Such is the passage offered to us in its insulated form, as an extract
+from Euthymius. To be enabled, however, to estimate its worth, the
+inquirer must submit to the labour of considerable research. He will not
+have pursued his investigation far, before he will find, that a thick
+cloud of uncertainty and doubt hangs over this page of ecclesiastical
+history. Not that the evidence alleged in support of the reputed miracle
+can leave us in doubt as to the credibility of the tradition; for that
+tradition can scarcely be now countenanced by the most zealous and
+uncompromising maintainers of the assumption of the Virgin. What I would
+say is, that the question as to the genuineness and authenticity of the
+works by which the tradition is said to have been preserved, is far more
+difficult and complicated, than {309} those writers must have believed,
+who appeal to such testimony without any doubt or qualification. The
+result of my own inquiries I submit to your candid acceptance.
+
+The earliest author in whose reputed writings I have found the
+tradition, is John Damascenus, a monk of Jerusalem, who flourished
+somewhat before the middle of the eighth century. The passage is found
+in the second of three homilies on the "Sleep of the Virgin," a term
+generally used by the Greeks as an equivalent for the Latin word
+"Assumptio." The original publication of these homilies in Greek and
+Latin is comparatively of a late date. Lambecius, whose work is dated
+1665, says he was not aware that any one had so published them before
+his time[116]. But not to raise the question of their genuineness, the
+preacher's introduction of this passage into his homily is preceded by a
+very remarkable section, affording a striking example of the manner in
+which Christian orators used to indulge in addresses and appeals not
+only to the spirits of departed men, but even to things which never had
+life. The speaker here in his sermon addresses the tomb of Mary, as
+though it had ears to hear, and an understanding to comprehend; and then
+represents the tomb as having a tongue to answer, and as calling forth
+from the preacher and his congregation an address of admiration and
+reverence. Such apostrophes as these cannot be too steadily borne in
+mind, or too carefully weighed, when any argument is sought to be drawn
+from similar salutations offered by ancient Christian orators to saint,
+or angel, or the Virgin.
+
+ [Footnote 116: Vol. viii. p. 281. Le Quien, who published them
+ in 1712, refers to earlier homilies on the Dormitio Virginis.
+ Jo. Damas. Paris, 1712. vol. ii. p. 857.] {310}
+
+The following are among the expressions in which the preacher, in the
+passage under consideration, addresses the Virgin's tomb: "Thou, O Tomb,
+of holy things most holy (for I will address thee as a living being),
+where is the much desired and much beloved body of the mother of God?"
+[Vol. ii. p. 875.] The answer of the tomb begins thus, "Why seek ye her
+in a tomb, who has been taken up on high to the heavenly tabernacles?"
+In reply to this, the preacher first deliberating with his hearers what
+answer he should make, thus addresses the tomb: "Thy grace indeed is
+never-failing and eternal," &c. [P. 881.] By the maintainers of the
+invocation of saints, many a passage far less unequivocal and less
+cogent than this has been adduced to show, that saints and martyrs were
+invoked by primitive worshippers.
+
+We find John Damascenus thus introducing the passage of Euthymius, "Ye
+see, beloved fathers and brethren, what answer the all-glorious tomb
+makes to us; and that these things are so, in the EUTHYMIAC HISTORY, the
+third book and fortieth chapter, is thus written word for word." [P.
+877.]
+
+Lambecius maintains, that the history here quoted by John Damascenus was
+not an ecclesiastical history, written by Euthymius, who died in A.D.
+472, but a biographical history concerning Euthymius himself, written by
+an ecclesiastic, whom he supposes to be Cyril, the monk, who died in
+A.D. 531. This opinion of Lambecius is combated by Cotelerius; the
+discussion only adding to the denseness of the cloud which involves the
+whole tradition. But whether the work quoted had Euthymius for its
+author or its subject, the work itself is lost; and an epitome only of
+such a work has come down to {311} our time. In that abridgment the
+passage quoted by Damascenus is not found.
+
+The editor of John Damascenus, Le Quien, in his annotations on this
+portion of his work, offers to us some very interesting remarks, which
+bear immediately on the agitated question as to the first observance of
+the feast of the Assumption, as well as on the tradition itself. Le
+Quien infers, from the words of Modestus, patriarch of Jerusalem, that
+scarcely any preachers before him had addressed their congregations on
+the departure of the Virgin out of this life; he thinks, moreover, that
+the Feast of the Assumption was at the commencement of the seventh
+century only recently instituted. Though all later writers affirm that
+the Virgin was buried in the valley of Jehoshaphat, in the garden of
+Gethsemane, the same editor says, that this could not have been known to
+Jerome, who passed a great part of his life in Bethlehem, and yet
+observes a total silence on the subject; though in his "Epitaph on
+Paula," [Jerome, Paris, 1706. Vol. iv. p. 670-688, ep. 86.] he
+enumerates all the places in Palestine consecrated by any remarkable
+event. Neither, he adds, could it have been known to Epiphanius, who,
+though he lived long in Palestine, yet declares that nothing was known
+as to the death or burial of the Virgin. [Vol. ii, p. 858.]
+
+Again, in his remarks upon the writings falsely attributed to Melito,
+the same editor says, that since this Pseudo-Melito speaks many jejune
+things of the Virgin Mary, (such for example as at the approach of death
+her exceeding fear of being exposed to the wiles of Satan,) he
+concludes, from that circumstance, that the work was written before the
+Council of Ephesus; alleging this very remarkable reason, that "after
+that {312} time there BEGAN TO BE ENTERTAINED, as was right, not only in
+the East, but also in the West, a far better estimate of the parent of
+God." [P. 880.]
+
+Many of the remarks of this editor would appear to savour of prejudice
+had they come from the pen of one who denied the reality of the
+assumption, or oppugned the honour and worship now paid by members of
+the Church of Rome to the Virgin. Nor could the suspicion of such
+prejudice be otherwise than increased by the insinuation which the same
+editor throws out against the honesty of Archbishop Juvenal, and on the
+possibility of his having invented the whole story, and so for sinister
+purposes deceived Marcian and Pulcheria; just as he fabricated the
+writings which he forged for the purpose of securing the primacy of
+Palestine; a crime laid to the charge of Juvenal by Leo the Great, in
+his letter to Maximus, Bishop of Antioch. [P. 879. See Leo. vol. i. p.
+1215. Epist. cxix.]
+
+It is moreover much to be regretted that in making the extract from John
+Damascenus those who employ it as evidence of primitive belief, have not
+presented it to their readers whole and entire. In the present case the
+system of quoting garbled extracts is particularly to be lamented,
+because the paragraphs omitted in the quotation carry in themselves
+clear proof that Juvenal's answer, as it now appears in John Damascenus,
+could not have been made by Juvenal to Marcian and Pulcheria. For in it
+is quoted from Dionysius the Areopagite by name, a passage still found
+in the works ascribed to him; whereas by the judgment of the most
+learned Roman Catholic writers, those spurious works did not make their
+appearance in Christendom till the beginning of the sixth century, fifty
+years after the Council of Chalcedon, to assist at which {313} Juvenal
+is said to have been present in Constantinople when the emperor and
+empress held the alleged conversation with him.
+
+The remainder of the passage from the history of Euthymius, rehearsed in
+this oration of John Damascenus, is as follows: "There were present with
+the Apostles at that time both the most honoured Timothy the Apostle,
+and first bishop of the Ephesians, and Dionysius the Areopagite,
+himself, as the great Dionysius testifies in the laboured words
+concerning the blessed Hierotheus, himself also then being present, to
+the above-named apostle Timothy, saying thus, Since with the inspired
+hierarchs themselves, when we also as thou knowest, and yourself, and
+many of our holy brethren had come together to the sight of the body
+which gave the principle of life; and there was present too James the
+brother of the Lord ([Greek: adelphotheos]), and Peter the chief and the
+most revered head of the apostles ([Greek: theologon]); then it seemed
+right, after the spectacle, that all the hierarchs (as each was able)
+should sing of the boundless goodness of the divine power. After the
+apostles, as you know, he surpassed all the other sacred persons, wholly
+carried away, and altogether in an ecstasy, and feeling an entire
+sympathy with what was sung; and by all by whom he was heard, and seen,
+and known (and he[117] knew it not), he was considered to be an inspired
+and divine hymnologist. And why should I speak to you about the things
+there divinely said, for unless I have even forgotten myself, I know
+that I have often heard from you some portions also of those inspired
+canticles? And the royal personages having heard this, requested of
+Juvenal the archbishop, that the holy coffin, with the {314} clothes of
+the glorious and all-holy Mary, mother of God, sealed up, might be sent
+to them. And this, when sent, they deposited in the venerable temple of
+the Mother of God, built in Blachernae; and these things were so."
+
+ [Footnote 117: This seems confused in the original ([Greek: kai
+ eginosketo, kai ouk eginoske]). The whole passage is involved in
+ great obscurity.]
+
+It is a fact no less lamentable than remarkable, that out of the lessons
+appointed by the Church of Rome for the feast of the Assumption, to be
+read to believers assembled in God's house of prayer, three of those
+lessons are selected and taken entirely from this very oration of John
+Damascenus[118].
+
+ [Footnote 118:
+
+ The Fourth Lesson begins "Hodie sacra et animata arca."
+ The Fifth " " "Hodie virgo immaculata."
+ The Sixth " " "Eva quae serpentis," &c.--AE. 603.
+
+ These contain the passages to which we have before referred as
+ fixing the belief of the Church of Rome to be in the CORPOREAL
+ assumption of Mary. "Quomodo corruptio invaderet CORPUS ILLUD in
+ quo vita suscepta est? [Greek: pos diaphthora tou zoodochon
+ katatolmaeseie somatos.]"]
+
+This, then, is the account nearest to the time of the supposed event;
+and yet can any thing be more vague, and by way of testimony, more
+worthless? A writer near the middle of the sixth century refers to a
+conversation, said to have taken place in the middle of the fifth
+century; in this reported conversation at Constantinople, the Bishop of
+Jerusalem is represented to have informed the Emperor and Empress of an
+ancient tradition, which was believed, concerning a miraculous event,
+said to have taken place nearly four hundred years before, that the body
+was taken out of a coffin without the knowledge of those who had
+deposited it there: Whilst the primitive and inspired account, recording
+most minutely the journeys and proceedings of some of those very
+persons, and the letters of others, makes no mention at all of any
+transaction of the kind; and of {315} all the intermediate historians
+and ecclesiastical writers not one gives the slightest intimation that
+any rumour of it had reached them[119].
+
+ [Footnote 119: Baronius appears not to have referred to this
+ history of Euthymius, but he refers to Nicephorus, and also to a
+ work ascribed to Melito, c. 4, 5. Nicephorus, Paris, 1630. vol.
+ i. p. 168. lib. ii. c. 21. Baronius also refers to lib. 15. c.
+ 14. This Nicephorus was Patriarch of Constantinople. He lived
+ during the reign of our Edward the First, or Edward the Second,
+ and cannot, therefore, be cited in any sense of the word as an
+ ancient author writing on the events of the primitive ages;
+ though the manner in which his testimony is appealed to would
+ imply, that he was a man to whose authority on early
+ ecclesiastical affairs we were now expected to defer.]
+
+Another authority to which the writers on the assumption of the Virgin
+appeal, is that of Nicephorus Callistus, who, at the end of the
+thirteenth or the beginning of the fourteenth century, dedicated his
+work to Andronicus Palaeologus. The account given by Nicephorus is this:
+
+In the fifth year of Claudius, the Virgin at the age of fifty-nine, was
+made acquainted with her approaching death. Christ himself then
+descended from heaven with a countless multitude of angels, to take up
+the soul of his mother; He summoned his disciples by thunder and storm
+from all parts of the world. The Virgin then bade Peter first, and
+afterwards the rest of the Apostles, to come with burning torches[120].
+The Apostles surrounded her bed, and "an outpouring of miracles flowed
+forth." The blind beheld the sun, the deaf heard, the lame walked, and
+every disease fled away. The Apostles and others sang, as the coffin was
+borne from Sion to Gethsemane, angels preceding, surrounding, and
+following it. {316} A wonderful thing then took place. The Jews were
+indignant and enraged, and one more desperately bold than the rest
+rushed forward, intending to throw down the holy corpse to the ground.
+Vengeance was not tardy; for his hands were cut off from his arms[121].
+The procession stopped; and at the command of Peter, on the man shedding
+tears of penitence, his hands were joined on again and restored whole.
+At Gethsemane she was put into a tomb, but her Son transferred her to
+the divine habitation.
+
+ [Footnote 120: This author here quotes the forged work ascribed
+ to Dionysius the Areopagite, to which we have before referred.]
+
+ [Footnote 121: This tradition seems to have been much referred
+ to at a time just preceding our Reformation. In a volume called
+ "The Hours of the most blessed Mary, according to the legitimate
+ rite of the Church of Salisbury," printed in Paris in 1526, from
+ which we have made many extracts in the second part of this
+ work, the frontispiece gives an exact representation of the
+ story at the moment of the Jew's hands being cut off. They are
+ severed at the wrist, and are lying on the coffin, on which his
+ arms also are resting. In the sky the Virgin appears between the
+ Father and the Son, the Holy Dove being seen above her. The same
+ print occurs also in another part of the volume.]
+
+Nicephorus then refers to Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, as the
+authority on which the tradition was received, that the Apostles opened
+the coffin to enable St. Thomas (the one stated to have been absent) to
+embrace the body; and then he proceeds to describe the personal
+appearance of the Virgin. [Vol. i. p. 171.]
+
+I am unwilling to trespass upon the patience of my readers by any
+comment upon such evidence as this. Is it within the verge of
+credibility that had such an event as Mary's assumption taken place
+under the extraordinary circumstances which now invest the tradition, or
+under any circumstances whatever, there would have been a total silence
+respecting it in the Holy Scriptures? {317} That the writers of the
+first four centuries should never have referred to such a fact? That the
+first writer who alludes to it, should have lived in the middle of the
+fifth century, or later; and that he should have declared in a letter to
+his contemporaries that the subject was one on which many doubted; and
+that he himself would not deny it, not because it rested upon probable
+evidence, but because nothing was impossible with God; and that nothing
+was known as to the time, the manner, or the persons concerned, even had
+the assumption taken place? Can we place any confidence in the relation
+of a writer in the middle of the sixth century, as to a tradition of
+what an archbishop of Jerusalem attending the council of Chalcedon, had
+told the sovereigns at Constantinople of a tradition, as to what was
+said to have happened nearly four hundred years before, whilst in the
+"Acts" of that Council, not the faintest trace is found of any allusion
+to the supposed fact or the alleged tradition, though the transactions
+of that Council in many of its most minute circumstances are recorded,
+and though the discussions of that Council brought the name and
+circumstances of the Virgin Mary continually before the minds of all who
+attended it?
+
+This, however, is a point of too great importance to be dismissed
+summarily; and seems to require us to examine, however briefly, into the
+circumstances of that Council. {318}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.--COUNCILS OF CONSTANTINOPLE, EPHESUS, AND THE GENERAL
+COUNCIL OF CHALCEDON
+
+
+The legend on which the doctrine of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary is
+founded professes to trace the tradition to Juvenal, Archbishop of
+Jerusalem, when he was sojourning in Constantinople for the purpose of
+attending the General Council of Chalcedon. To the Emperor and Empress,
+who presided at that council, Juvenal is said to have communicated the
+tradition, as received in Palestine, of the miraculous taking up of
+Mary's body into heaven. This circumstance seems, as we have already
+intimated, of itself, to require us to examine the records of that
+Council, with the view of ascertaining whether any traces may be found
+confirmatory of the tradition, or otherwise; and since that Council
+cannot be regarded as an insulated assembly, but as a continuation
+rather or resumption of the preceding minor Councils of Constantinople
+and Ephesus, we must briefly refer to the occasion and nature generally
+of that succession of Christian synods. I am not aware that in the
+previous Councils any thing had transpired {319} which could be brought
+as evidence on the subject of our inquiry. The questions which had
+disturbed the peace of Christendom, and which were agitated in these
+Councils, inseparable from a repeated mention of the Virgin Mary's name,
+afforded an opportunity at every turn for an expression of the
+sentiments of those who composed the Councils, and of all connected with
+them, including the Bishop of Rome himself, towards her. It would be
+altogether foreign from the purpose of this address to enter in any way
+at large upon the character and history of those or the preceding
+Councils, yet a few words seem necessary, to enable us to judge of the
+nature and weight of the evidence borne by them on the question
+immediately before us.
+
+The source of all the disputes which then rent the Church of HIM who had
+bequeathed peace as his last and best gift to his followers, was the
+anxiety to define and explain the nature of the great Christian mystery,
+the Incarnation of the Son of God; a point on which it were well for all
+Christians to follow only so far as the Holy Scriptures lead them by the
+hand. All parties appealed to the Nicene Council; though there seems to
+have been, to say the least, much misunderstanding and unnecessary
+violence and party spirit on all sides. The celebrated Eutyches of
+Constantinople was charged with having espoused heterodox doctrine, by
+maintaining that in Christ was only one nature, the incarnate Word. On
+this charge he was accused before a Council held at Constantinople in
+A.D. 448. His doctrine was considered to involve a denial of the human
+nature of the Son of God. The Council condemned him of heresy, deposed,
+and excommunicated him. From this proceeding Eutyches appealed to a
+General Council. A council (the authority of which, however, {320} has
+been solemnly, but with what adequate reason we need not stop to
+examine, repudiated), was convened at Ephesus in the following year, by
+the Emperor Theodosius. The proceedings of this assembly were
+accompanied by lamentable unfairness and violence. Eutyches was
+acquitted, and restored by this council[122]; and his accusers were
+condemned and persecuted; Flavianus, Archbishop of Constantinople, who
+had summoned the preceding council, being even scourged and exiled. In
+his distress that patriarch sought the good offices of Leo, Bishop of
+Rome, who espoused his cause, but who failed nevertheless of inducing
+Theodosius to convene a General Council. His successor Marcian, however,
+consented; and in the year 451 the Council of Chalcedon was convened,
+first meeting at Nice, and by adjournment being removed to Chalcedon. In
+this council all the proceedings as well of the Council of
+Constantinople as of Ephesus, were rehearsed at length; and from a close
+examination of the proceedings of those three councils, only one
+inference seems deducible, namely, that the invocation and worship of
+saints and of the Virgin Mary had not then obtained that place in the
+Christian {321} Church, which the Church of Rome now assigns to it; a
+place, however, which the Church of England, among other branches of the
+Catholic Church, maintains that it has usurped, and cannot, without a
+sacrifice of the only sound principle of religious worship, be suffered
+to retain.
+
+ [Footnote 122: The sentiments of Eutyches, even as they are
+ recorded by the party who charged him with heresy, seem to imply
+ so much of soundness in his principles, and of moderation in his
+ maintenance of those principles, that one must feel sorrow on
+ finding such a man maintaining error at any time. The following
+ is among the records of transactions rehearsed at Chalcedon:
+ "He, Eutyches, professed that he followed the expositions of the
+ holy and blessed Fathers who formed the Councils of Nicaea and
+ Ephesus, and was ready to subscribe to them. But if any where it
+ might chance, as he said, that our fathers were deceived and led
+ astray, that as for himself he neither accepted nor accused
+ those things, but he only on such points investigated the divine
+ Scriptures as more to be depended upon [Greek: os
+ bebaioteras]."]
+
+The grand question then agitated with too much asperity, and too little
+charity, was, whether by the incarnation our blessed Saviour became
+possessed of two natures, the divine and human. Subordinate to this, and
+necessary for its decision, was involved the question, What part of his
+nature, if any, Christ derived from the Virgin Mary? Again and again
+does this question bring the name, the office, the circumstances, and
+the nature of that holy and blessed mother of our Lord before these
+Councils. The name of Mary is continually in the mouth of the accusers,
+the accused, the judges, and the witnesses; and had Christian pastors
+then entertained the same feelings of devotion towards her; had they
+professed the same belief as to her assumption into heaven, and her
+influence and authority in directing the destinies of man, and in
+protecting the Church on earth; had they habitually appealed to her with
+the same prayers for her intercession and good offices, and placed the
+same confidence in her as we find now exhibited in the authorized
+services of the Roman Ritual, it is impossible to conceive that no
+signs, no intimation of such views and feelings, would, either directly
+or incidentally, have shown themselves, somewhere or other, among the
+manifold and protracted proceedings of these Councils. I have searched
+diligently, but I can find no expression as to her nature and office, or
+as to our feelings and conduct towards Mary, in which, as a {322}
+Catholic of the Anglican Church, I should not heartily acquiesce. I can
+find no sentiment implying invocation, or religious worship of any kind,
+or in any degree; I find no allusion to her Assumption.
+
+Pope Leo, who is frequently in these documents [Vol. v. p. 1418.] called
+Archbishop of Rome, in a letter to Julianus, Bishop of Cos, speaks of
+Christ as born of "A Virgin," "The blessed Virgin," "The pure, undefiled
+Virgin;" and in a letter to the empress Pulcheria, he calls Mary simply
+"The Virgin Mary." In his celebrated letter to Flavianus, not one iota
+of which (according to the decree of the Roman council under Pope
+Gelasius) was to be questioned by any man on pain of incurring an
+anathema, Pope Leo says that Christ was conceived by the Holy Ghost in
+the womb of the Virgin Mary his mother, who brought him forth with the
+same virgin purity as she had conceived him. Flavianus, Archbishop of
+Constantinople, in his Declaration of faith to the Emperor Theodosius,
+affirms, that Christ was born "of Mary, the Virgin--of the same
+substance with the Father according to his Godhead--of the same
+substance with his mother according to his manhood." [Vol. vi. p. 539.]
+He speaks of her afterwards as "The holy Virgin."
+
+There is, indeed, one word used in a quotation from Cyril of Alexandria,
+and adopted in these transactions, which requires a few words of
+especial observation. The word is _theotocos_[123], which the Latins
+were accustomed {323} to transfer into their works, substituting only
+Roman instead of Greek characters, but which afterwards the authors of
+the Church of Rome translated by Deipara, and in more recent ages by Dei
+Mater, Dei Genetrix, Creatoris Genetrix, &c. employing those terms not
+in explanation of the twofold nature of Christ's person, as was the case
+in these Councils, but in exaltation of Mary, his Virgin mother. This
+word was adopted by Christians in much earlier times than the Council of
+Chalcedon; but it was employed only to express more strongly the
+Catholic belief in the union of the divine and human nature in Him who
+was Son both of God and man; and by no means for the purpose of raising
+Mary into an object of religious adoration. The sense in which it was
+used was explained in the seventh Act of the Council of Constantinople,
+(repeated at Chalcedon) as given by Cyril of Alexandria. "According to
+this sense of an unconfused union, we confess the holy Virgin to be
+theotocos, because that God the Word was made flesh, and became man, and
+from that very conception united with himself the temple received from
+her."
+
+ [Footnote 123: [Greek: Theotokos]. To those who would depend
+ upon this word _theotocos_ as a proof of the exalted honour in
+ which the early Christians held the Virgin, and not as
+ indicative of an anxiety to preserve whole and entire the
+ doctrine of the union of perfect God and perfect man in Christ,
+ deriving his manhood through her, I would suggest the necessity
+ of weighing well that argument with this fact before them; that
+ to the Apostle James, called in Scripture the Lord's brother,
+ was assigned the name of Adelphotheos, or God's brother. This
+ name was given to James, not to exalt him above his
+ fellow-apostles, but to declare the faith of those who gave it
+ him in the union of the divine and human nature of Christ.--See
+ Joan. Damascenus, Hom. ii. c. 18. In Dormit. Virg. vol. ii. p.
+ 881. Le Quien, Paris, 1712. The Latin translation renders it
+ Domini frater.]
+
+Nothing in our present inquiry turns upon the real {324} meaning of that
+word _theotocos_. Some who have been among the brightest ornaments of
+the Anglican Church have adopted the translation "mother of God," whilst
+many others among us believe that the original sense would be more
+correctly conveyed by the expression "mother of Him who was God."
+
+I am induced here to lay side by side, with the second Article of our
+Anglican Church, the Confession of Faith from Cyril, first recited at
+Constantinople, then repeated at Ephesus, and afterwards again rehearsed
+at Chalcedon; in its last clause the expression occurs which gave rise
+to these remarks.
+
+ _Ancient Confession._
+
+ We confess that our Lord Jesus, the Christ, the only begotten
+ Son of God, perfect God and perfect man, from a reasonable soul
+ and body, begotten from everlasting of the Father according to
+ his Godhead, and in these last days, He the same for us and for
+ our salvation [was born] of Mary, the Virgin, according to his
+ manhood--of the same substance with the Father according to his
+ Godhead, of the same substance with us according to his manhood.
+ For of two natures there became an union. Wherefore we confess
+ one Christ, one Lord. According to this sense of the unconfused
+ union, we confess the holy Virgin to be theotocos, because that
+ God the Word was made flesh, and became man, and from that very
+ conception united with himself the temple received from her.
+
+ [Vol. vi. p. 736.]
+
+ _Second Article of Anglican Church._
+
+ The Son, which is the Word of the Father, begotten from
+ everlasting of the Father, the very and eternal God, and of one
+ substance with the Father, took man's nature in the womb of the
+ blessed Virgin, of her substance: so that two whole and perfect
+ natures, that is to say, the Godhead and Manhood, were joined
+ together in one Person, never to be divided, whereof is one
+ Christ, very God, and very man; who truly suffered, was
+ crucified, dead and buried, to reconcile his Father to us, and
+ to be a sacrifice, not only for original guilt, but also for
+ actual sins of men. {325}
+
+But there are other points in the course of these important proceedings
+to which I would solicit your especial attention, with the view of
+comparing the sentiments of the Bishop of Rome at that day, and also the
+expressions employed by other Chief Pastors of Christ's flock, with the
+language of the appointed authorized services of the Roman Church now,
+and the sentiments of her reigning Pontiff, and of his accredited
+ministers.
+
+The circumstances of the Church Catholic, as represented in Leo's letter
+in the fifth century, and the circumstances of the Church of Rome, as
+lamented by the present Pope in 1832[124], are in many respects very
+similar. The end desired by Leo and Flavianus, his brother pastor and
+contemporary, Bishop of Constantinople, and by Gregory, now Bishop of
+Rome, is one and the same, namely, the suppression of heresy, the
+prevalence of the truth, and the unity of the Christian Church. But how
+widely and how strikingly different are the foundations on which they
+respectively build their hopes for the attainment of that end!
+
+ [Footnote 124: "The encyclical letter of our most holy Father,
+ Pope Gregory, by divine providence, the sixteenth of that name,
+ to all patriarchs, primates, archbishops, and bishops."]
+
+The present Roman Pontiff's hopes, and desires, and exhortations are
+thus expressed[125]:--
+
+ [Footnote 125: This is the translation circulated in the Roman
+ Catholic Annual, p. 15, called, The Laity's Directory for the
+ year 1833; on the title page of which is this notice: "The
+ Directory for the Church Service, printed by Messrs. Keating and
+ Brown, is the only one which is published with the authority of
+ the Vicars Apostolic in England.--London, Nov. 12, 1829." Signed
+ "James, Bishop of Usula, Vic. Ap. Lond."]
+
+"That all may have a successful and happy issue, let us raise our eyes
+to the most blessed Virgin Mary, {326} WHO ALONE DESTROYS HERESIES, who
+is our GREATEST HOPE, yea, the ENTIRE GROUND OF OUR HOPE[126]. May she
+exert her patronage to draw down an efficacious blessing on our desires,
+our plans, and proceedings in the present straitened condition of the
+Lord's flock. We will also implore, in humble prayer, from Peter, the
+prince of the Apostles, and from his fellow-Apostle Paul, that you may
+all stand as a wall to prevent any other foundation than what hath been
+laid; and supported by this cheering hope, we have confidence that the
+author and finisher of faith, Jesus Christ, will at last console us all
+in the tribulations which have found us exceedingly."
+
+ [Footnote 126: On this word there is a note of reference to S.
+ Bern. Serm. de Nat. B.M.V. 7.]
+
+"To you, venerable brethren, and the flocks committed to your care, we
+most lovingly impart, as auspicious of celestial help, the Apostolic
+Benediction. Given at Rome from St. Mary Major's, August 15th, the
+Festival of the Assumption of the same blessed Virgin Mary, the year of
+our Lord 1832, of our Pontificate the Second."
+
+How deplorable a change, how melancholy a degeneracy is here evinced
+from the faith, and hopes, and sentiments of Christian bishops in days
+of old! In the expressed hopes of Leo and Flavianus, you will seek in
+vain for any reference or allusion "to the blessed Virgin Mary, as the
+destroyer of heresies, the greatest hope, the entire ground of a
+Christian's hope;" you will in vain seek for any exhortation for the
+faithful "to raise their eyes to her in order to obtain a merciful and
+happy issue." Equally vain would be your search for any "imploring in
+humble prayer," of Peter and Paul, or any even distant allusion to help
+from them. {327} To God and God alone are the faithful exhorted to pray;
+on God and God alone do those Christians express that their hopes rely;
+God alone they regard as the destroyer of heresy, the restorer of peace,
+and the protector of the Church's unity. "Their greatest hope, yea, the
+entire ground of their hope," the Being to be "implored in humble
+prayer," is not Mary, nor Peter, nor Paul, but God alone, the Creator,
+the Redeemer, the Sanctifier of Mary, and of Peter, and of Paul.
+
+Thus Flavian writing to Leo says, "Wherefore (in consequence of those
+errors, and heresies, and distractions, which he had deplored) we must
+be sober and watch unto prayer, and draw nigh to God." [Vol. v. 1330.]
+And again, "Thus will the heresy which has arisen, and the consequent
+commotion, be easily destroyed by your holy letters with the assistance
+of God." [Vol. v. 1355.] Thus Leo in his turn writing to Julian, Bishop
+of Cos, utters this truly Christian sentiment. "May the mercy of God, as
+we trust, grant that without the loss of any soul, against the darts of
+the devil the sound parts may be entirely preserved, and the wounded
+parts may be healed. May God preserve you safe and sound, most honoured
+brother!" [Vol. v. 1423.] Thus the same Bishop of Rome writing to
+Flavian, expresses his hopes in these words: "Confidently trusting that
+the help of God will be present, so that one who has been misled,
+condemning the vanity of his own thoughts, may be saved. May God
+preserve you in health and strength, most beloved brother!" [Vol. v.
+1390.]
+
+I will detain you by only one more reference to these most interesting
+documents. The whole Council of Chalcedon, at the conclusion of all, and
+when the {328} triumph was considered to have been secured over
+Eutyches, and their gratitude was expressed that the heresies had been
+destroyed--instead of referring to Mary as the "sole destroyer of
+heresies," shout, as if with the voice of one man, from every side, "It
+is God alone who hath done this!" [Vol. vii. p. 174.] Neither
+antecedently did their chief pastors exhort them to raise their eyes to
+Mary, and promise to "implore" the blessing they needed, "in humble
+prayer from Peter and Paul." Neither "in the straitened condition of the
+Lord's flock" did they invoke any other than God. And when truth
+prevailed, and the victory was won, whilst they were lavish of their
+grateful thanks to the emperor and his queen, who were present and had
+succoured them; of help from the invisible world they make no mention,
+save only of the Lord's; they had implored neither angel, nor saints,
+nor Virgin to be their protector and patron; no angel, nor saint, nor
+virgin, shared their praises;--God alone was exalted in that day.
+
+And, let not the answer, ever at hand when reference is thus made to the
+prayers or professions of individuals, whether popes or canonized
+saints, seduce any now from a pursuit of the very truth. These, it is
+said, "are the prayers and professions of individuals, it is unfair then
+to make the Church responsible for them; we appeal from them to the
+Church." But in this case the words of the Sovereign Pontiff are in good
+faith the words of the Church of Rome; not because I at all would
+identify the words of a Pope with the Church, but because the prayers of
+the Church of Rome in her authorized solemn services and acts of worship
+justify {329} Pope Gregory in every sentiment he utters, and every
+expression he employs. Does Gregory bid the faithful lift up their eyes
+to Mary the sole destroyer of heresies? The Roman ritual in the Lesser
+Office of the holy Virgin thus addresses her, "Rejoice, O Mary Virgin;
+thou alone hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world:" And again:
+"Under thy protection we take refuge, holy parent of God; despise not
+thou our prayers in our necessities, but from all dangers ever deliver
+us, O glorious and blessed Virgin." Does Gregory assure the faithful
+that he will implore in humble prayer of Peter and Paul? in doing so he
+is only treading in the very footsteps of the Roman Church itself. In an
+address, which we have already quoted (see p. 262), Peter is thus
+invoked. "Now O good shepherd, merciful Peter, accept the prayers of us
+who supplicate, and loose the bands of our sins, by the power committed
+to thee, by which thou shuttest heaven against all by a word, and
+openest it."
+
+These things are now; but from the beginning it was not so. {330}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+SECTION I.--PRESENT WORSHIP OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN IN THE AUTHORIZED AND
+ENJOINED SERVICES OF THE CHURCH OF ROME.
+
+
+When from examining the evidence of antiquity we turn to the present
+enjoined services of the Church of Rome, it is impossible not to be
+struck by the fact repeatedly forced upon our notice, that whereas the
+invocation of the Virgin seems to have been introduced at a period much
+later than those addresses to the martyrs which have already invited our
+attention, her worship now assumes so much higher a place, and claims so
+large a share in the public worship of the Roman Catholic portions of
+Christendom above martyrs, saints, and angels. The offices of the Virgin
+present instances of all those various and progressive stages of divine
+worship, which we have already exemplified in the case of the martyrs,
+from the first primitive and Christian practice of making the
+anniversary of the Saint a day either of especial praise and prayer to
+God for the mercies of redemption generally, or of returning thanks to
+God for the graces manifested in his holy servants now in peace, with
+prayers for light and strength to enable the worshippers to follow them,
+as they followed Christ--down to the last and worst stage, the
+consummation {331} of all, namely, prayer directly to saints and angels
+for protection, succour, and spiritual benefits at their hands.
+
+I. Of the first class is the following collect, retained almost word for
+word in our Anglican service.
+
+_On the day of the Purification._
+
+"Almighty and everlasting God, we humbly beseech thy majesty, that as
+thy only begotten Son was this day presented in the temple in substance
+of our flesh, so Thou wouldest cause us to be presented unto Thee with
+purified minds. Through the same."
+
+(Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, majestatem tuam supplices exoramus, ut
+sicut unigenitus Filius tuus hodierna die cum nostrae carnis substantia
+est praesentatus, ita nos facias purificatis tibi mentibus praesentari.
+Per eundem Dominum.--H. 536.)
+
+Such a prayer is founded on the facts of revelation, and is primitive,
+catholic, apostolic, and evangelical.
+
+II. Of the second progressive stage towards the adoration of the saints,
+the offices of the Virgin supply us with various instances; the case,
+namely, of the Christian orator being led by the flow of his eloquence
+to apostrophize the spirit of the Saint, and address him as though he
+were present, witnessing the celebration of his day, hearing the
+panegyrics uttered for his honour, and partaking with the congregation
+in their religious acts of worship.
+
+"O holy and spotless virginhood; with what praises to extol thee I know
+not: because Him, whom the heavens could not contain, thou didst bear in
+thy bosom. {332} Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit
+of thy womb. Thou art blessed, O Virgin Mary, who didst carry the Lord,
+the Creator of the world. Thou didst give birth to Him who made thee,
+and remainest a virgin for ever. [Beata es Virgo Maria, quae Dominum
+portasti Creatorem mundi: genuisti qui te fecit, et in aeternum permanes
+virgo.--Vern. clxii.] Hail, holy parent, who didst in child-birth bring
+forth the King who ruleth heaven and earth for ever and ever. Amen."
+[Salve sacra parens enixa puerpera regem, qui coelum terramque regit in
+saecula saeculorum. Amen.--Introit. at the mass on the Nativity of the
+Virgin.]
+
+In apostrophes like these, the members of the Anglican Church see
+nothing in itself harmful, so long as they are kept within due bounds.
+Many of the passages cited from the ancient writers in proof of their
+having espoused the doctrine, and exemplified in themselves the practice
+of invoking saints, are nothing more than these glowing addresses. They
+have been responded to by one of the brightest ornaments, and sweetest
+minstrels of the Anglican Church, whose apostrophe at the same time by
+its own words would guard us against the abuses and excesses in which in
+the Roman Catholic Church this practice, followed without restraint and
+indulged in with less and less of caution and soberness, unhappily
+ended; abuses against which also we cannot ourselves now be too
+constantly and carefully on our guard.
+
+ "Ave Maria! Blessed maid,
+ Lily of Eden's fragrant shade,
+ Who can express the love,
+ That nurtured thee so pure and sweet;
+ Making thy heart a shelter meet
+ For Jesus' holy Dove? {333}
+ Ave Maria! mother blest,
+ To whom, caressing and caress'd,
+ Clings the Eternal Child!
+ Favour'd beyond archangel's dream,
+ When first on thee with tenderest gleam
+ The newborn Saviour smiled.
+ Ave Maria! thou whose name,
+ ALL BUT ADORING love may claim,
+ Yet may we reach thy shrine;
+ For HE, thy Son and Saviour, vows,
+ To crown all lowly lofty brows
+ With love and joy like thine.
+ Bless'd is the womb that bare Him,--bless'd
+ The bosom where his lips were press'd;
+ But rather bless'd are they
+ Who hear his word and keep it well,
+ The living homes where Christ shall dwell,
+ And never pass away."
+
+ J. Keble's Christian Year. "The Annunciation."
+
+Would that no branch of the Church Catholic had ever passed the boundary
+line drawn here so exquisitely by this Anglican Catholic, from whose
+lips or pen no syllable could ever fall in disparagement of the holy
+Virgin, as blessed among women, and the holy mother of our Lord. To
+bring about the re-union of Christians would in that case have been a
+far more hopeful task than it is now.
+
+III. In the third stage, a prayer was offered to God, that He would
+permit the intercessions of the saints to help us; or the prayer
+contained the expression of a wish,--a desire not addressed either to
+God or to the saint, merely words expressive of the hope of the
+individual. The following are some of the many instances now contained
+in the Roman Breviary: {334}
+
+"May the Virgin of virgins herself intercede for us to the Lord. Amen."
+[Ipsa Virgo virginum intercedat pro nobis ad Dominum. Amen.--Vern.
+cxlviii.]
+
+In the Post-communion, on the day of the Assumption, this prayer is
+offered:--"Partakers of the heavenly table, we implore thy clemency, O
+Lord our God, that we who celebrate the Assumption of the mother of God,
+may, by her intercession, be freed from all impending evils. Through,"
+&c. [Mensae coelestis participes effecti imploramus clementiam tuam,
+Domine Deus noster, ut qui Assumptionem Dei Genetricis colimus, a
+cunctis malis imminentibus ejus intercessione liberemur. Per.--Miss.
+Rom.]
+
+"We beseech Thee, O Lord, let the glorious intercession of the blessed
+and glorious ever Virgin Mary protect us and bring us to life eternal."
+[Beatae et gloriosae semper Virginia Mariae, quaesumus, Domine, intercessio
+gloriosa nos protegat, et ad vitam producat aeternam.--Vern. clv.]
+
+"Pardon, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the offences of thy servants, that we,
+who cannot please Thee of our own act, may be saved by the intercession
+of the mother of thy Son, our Lord, who liveth with Thee." [Famulorum
+tuorum quaesumus, Domine, delictis ignosce, ut qui tibi placere de
+nostris actibus non valemus, Genetricis Filii tui, Domini nostri,
+intercessione salvemur, qui tecum vivit.--Vern. clxix.]
+
+On the vigil of the Epiphany, this prayer is offered in the
+Post-communion at the mass,--"Let this communion, O Lord, purge us from
+guilt, and by the intercession of the blessed Virgin, mother of God, let
+it make us partakers of the heavenly cure. Through the same." [Haec nos
+communio, Domine, purget a crimine, et intercedente beata Virgine Dei
+genetrice coelestis remedii faciat esse consortes. Per eundem.--Miss.
+Rom.]
+
+"Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord God, that we thy {335} servants may
+enjoy perpetual health of body and mind, and be freed from present
+sorrow, and enjoy eternal gladness, by the glorious intercession of the
+blessed Mary, ever Virgin. Through." [Concede nos famulos tuos,
+quaesumus, Domine Deus, perpetua mentis et corporis sanitate gaudere, et
+gloriosa beatae Mariae semper Virginis intercessione a praesenti liberari
+tristitia, et aeterna perfrui laetitia. Per Dominum.--Vern. cxlvi.]
+
+On the second Sunday after Easter, we find a further and more sad
+departure from the simplicity of Christian worship, in which the Church
+of Rome declares that the offerings made to God at the Lord's Supper
+were made for the honour of the Virgin.--"Having received, O Lord, the
+helps of our salvation, grant, we beseech Thee, that by the patronage of
+Mary, ever Virgin, we may be every where protected; in veneration of
+whom we make these offerings to thy Majesty." [Sumptis, Domine, salutis
+nostrae subsidiis, da, quaesumus, beatae Mariae semper Virginis patrociniis
+ubique protegi, _in cujus veneratione_ haec tuae obtulimus
+Majestati.--Post Commun. Mis. Rom.]
+
+On the octave of Easter, at the celebration of mass, in the Secret, the
+intercession of the Virgin is made to appear as essential a cause of our
+peace and blessedness as the propitiation of Christ; or rather, the two
+are represented as joint concurrent causes; as though the office of the
+Saviour was confined to propitiation, exclusive altogether of
+intercession, whilst the office of intercession was assigned to the
+Virgin.--"By thy propitiation, O Lord, and by the intercession of the
+blessed Mary, ever Virgin, may this offering be profitable to us for
+perpetual and present prosperity and peace." [Tua, Domine, propitiatione
+et beatae Marisae semper Virginis intercessione ad perpetuam atque
+prsesentem haec oblatio nobis profecerit prosperitatem et pacem.] {336}
+
+IV. A fourth station in this lamentable progress was evidenced when
+Christians at the tombs of martyrs implored, yet still in prayer to God,
+that He would, for the sake of the martyrs, and by their merits and good
+offices, grant to the petitioner some benefit temporal or spiritual. Of
+that practice, we have an example in this prayer: "O God, who didst
+deign to choose the blessed Virgin's womb in which to dwell, vouchsafe,
+we beseech thee, to make us, defended by her protection, to take
+pleasure in her commemoration." [Deus qui virginalem aulam beatae Mariae
+in qua habitares eligerere dignatus es, da, quaesumus, ut sua nos
+defensione munitos jucundos facias suae interesse commemorationi.--AEst.
+clvi.]
+
+"By the Virgin mother, may the Lord grant us health and peace. Amen."
+[Per Virginem Matrem concedat nobis Dominus salutem et pacem.
+Amen.--Vern. cxliii.]
+
+"By the prayers and merits of the blessed Mary, ever Virgin, and of all
+saints, may the Lord bring us to the kingdom of heaven." [Precibus et
+meritis beatae Mariae Virginis et omnium sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad
+regna coelorum.--Vern. cxlvii.]
+
+"May the Virgin Mary bless us, together with a pious offspring." [Nos
+cum prole pia benedicat Virgo Maria.--Vern. cxlvii.]
+
+V. The fifth grade involves a still more melancholy departure from
+Christian truth and primitive simplicity, when the prayer is no longer
+addressed to God, but is offered to the Virgin, imploring her to
+intercede with God for the supplicants, yet still asking nothing but her
+prayers.
+
+"Blessed mother, Virgin undefiled, glorious Queen of the world,
+intercede for us with the Lord." [Beata Mater, et intacta Virgo,
+gloriosa regina mundi, intercede pro nobis ad Dominum.--Aut. cxliv.]
+{337}
+
+"Blessed mother of God, Mary, perpetual Virgin, the temple of the Lord,
+the holy place of the holy Spirit, thou alone without example hast
+pleased our Lord Jesus Christ: Pray for the people, mediate for the
+clergy, intercede for the female sex who are under a vow." [Beata Dei
+Genitrix, Maria Virgo perpetua, templum Domini, sacrarium Spiritus
+Sancti, sola sine exemplo placuisti Domino nostro Jesu Christo; ora pro
+populo, interveni pro clero, intercede pro devoto femineo sexu.--Vern.
+clxiii.]
+
+ "Holy Mary, pray for us!
+ Holy mother of God, pray for us!
+ Holy Virgin of virgins, pray for us!"
+
+In the form of prayer called Litaniae Lauretanae, between the most solemn
+addresses to the ever blessed Trinity, and to the Lamb of God that
+taketh away the sins of the world, are inserted more than forty
+addresses to the Virgin, invoking her under as many varieties of title.
+She is appealed to as--The Mirror of Justice, The Cause of our Joy, The
+mystical Rose, The Tower of David, The Tower of Ivory, The House of
+Gold, The Arc of the Covenant, The Gate of Heaven, The Refuge of
+Sinners, The Queen of Angels, the Queen of all Saints. [Vern. ccxxxix.]
+
+In examining the case of the invocation of saints, we placed under this
+head, as the safer course, a kind of invocation which seemed to
+vacillate between this appeal to them merely for intercession, and the
+last consummation of all, direct prayer to them for blessings. We
+exemplified it by the hymn to St. Stephen. The following seems very much
+of the same character, addressed to the Virgin:--
+
+ "Hail, O Queen, Mother of mercy, our life, sweetness, and hope,
+ Hail! To thee we cry, banished sons {338} of Eve. To thee we
+ sigh, groaning and weeping in this valley of tears. Come then,
+ our Advocate, turn those compassionate eyes of thine on us, and
+ after this exile show to us Jesus, the blessed fruit of thy
+ womb. O merciful! O pious! O sweet Virgin Mary! [Salve, Regina,
+ Mater Misericordiae, vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra, salve. Ad te
+ clamamus exules filii Evae. Ad te suspiramus gementes et flentes
+ in hac lachrymarum valle. Eja ergo Advocata nostra, illos tuos
+ misericordes oculos ad nos converte, et Jesum benedictum fructum
+ ventris tui nobis post hoc exilium ostende. O clemens! O pia! O
+ dulcis Virgo Maria!]
+
+ "Pray for us, O holy Mother of God, that we may be made worthy
+ of the promises of Christ." [Ora pro nobis, Sancta Dei Genetrix,
+ ut digni efficiamur promissionibus Christi.--AEst. 151.]
+
+VI. Unhappily, in the appointed religious services of the Roman ritual,
+we have too many examples of prayer for benefits spiritual and temporal,
+addressed directly to the Virgin. It is in vain to say that all that is
+meant is to ask her intercession; the people will not, cannot, do not,
+regard it in that light. It is affirmed that when the Church of Rome
+guides and directs her sons and daughters to pray for specific benefits
+at the hands of the Virgin mother, without any mention of her prayers,
+without specifying that her petitions are all that they ask; yet they
+are taught only to ask for her intercession, and are not encouraged to
+look for the blessings as her gift and at her hands. But, can this be
+right and safe? In an act of all human acts the most solemn and holy,
+can recourse be had to such refinements without great danger?
+
+Among many others of a similar kind this invocation frequently recurs,
+"Deem me worthy to praise thee, {339} O sacred Virgin; give to me
+strength against thy enemies." [Dignare me laudare te, Virgo sacrata. Da
+mihi virtutem contra hostes tuos.--AEst. clvi.]
+
+The following seems to be among the most favourite addresses to the
+Virgin:--"Hail, Star of the Sea, kind Mother of God, and ever Virgin!
+Happy Gate of Heaven, taking that 'Hail!' from the mouth of Gabriel,
+establish us in peace,--changing the name of Eve. For the guilty, loose
+their bonds; bring forth light for the blind; drive away our evils;
+demand for us all good things. SHOW THAT THOU ART A MOTHER. Let Him who
+endured for us to be thy Son, through thee receive our prayers. O
+excellent Virgin, meek among all, us, FREED FROM FAULT, MAKE MEEK AND
+CHASTE; make our life pure; prepare a safe journey; that, beholding
+Jesus, we may always rejoice. Praise be to God the Father, glory to
+Christ most high, and to the Holy Spirit; one honour to the three.
+Amen."
+
+ [Ave Man's Stella,
+ Dei Mater alma,
+ Atque semper Virgo!
+ Felix coeli porta,
+ Sumens illud Ave
+ Gabrielis ore,
+ Funda nos in pace,
+ Mutans Evae nomen.
+ Solve vincla reis,
+ Profer lumen caecis,
+ Mala nostra pelle,
+ Bona cuncta posce.
+ MONSTRA TE ESSE MATREM;
+ Sumat per te preces,
+ Qui pro nobis natus
+ Tulit esse tuus.
+ Virgo singularis,
+ Inter omnes mitis,
+ Nos culpa solutos,
+ Mites fac et castos,
+ Vitam praesta puram,
+ Iter para tutum,
+ Ut videntes Jesum
+ Semper collaetemur.
+
+ Sit laus Deo Patri, summo Christo decus,
+ Spiritui Sancto, tribus honor unus. Amen.--AEst. 597.
+ ]
+
+In the body of this hymn, there is undoubtedly reference to an
+application to be made to the Son, &c.; but can it be fitting that such
+language as is here suggested to the Virgin, for her to use, should be
+addressed by a {340} mortal to God? can such a call upon her to show her
+power and influence over the eternal Son of the eternal Father be
+fitting--"Show that thou art a mother?" I confess that against what is
+here implied, my understanding and my heart entirely revolt.[127]
+
+ [Footnote 127: At the present day some versions, contrary to the
+ whole drift and plain sense and meaning of the passage, have
+ translated it, as though the prayer was, that Mary would, by her
+ maternal good offices in our behalf, prove to us that she was
+ our mother. An instance of what I mean occurs in a work called
+ "Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques," p. 353.
+
+ "Monstra te esse Matrem: Faites voir que vous etes veritablement
+ notre mere." In an English manual, first printed in 1688, and
+ then called "The Prince of Wales's Manual," the lines are thus
+ rendered--
+
+ Shew us a Mother's care,
+ To Him convey our prayer,
+ Who for our sake put on
+ The title of thy Son.
+
+ I rejoice to see an indication of a feeling of impropriety in
+ the sentiment in its plain, obvious meaning; still the change is
+ inadmissible. She is addressed above, in the second line, as the
+ mother of God; Jesus is immediately mentioned, in the very next
+ line, and through the entire stanza, as her Son; and the prayer
+ is, that through her that Being who endured to be her Son would
+ hear the prayers of the worshippers.
+
+ Since I first prepared this note for the press, I have found a
+ proof, that the obvious grammatical and logical meaning, "show
+ thyself to be His mother," is the sense in which it was received
+ and interpreted before the Reformation. In a work dedicated to
+ the "Youth of England studious of good morals," and entitled
+ "Expositio Sequentiarum," the only interpretation given to this
+ passage is thus expressed: "Show thyself to be a MOTHER, namely
+ BY APPEASING THY SON, and let thy Son take our prayers through
+ thee, who (namely, the Son born of the Virgin Mary,) for us
+ miserable sinners endured to be thy Son." "Monstra te esse
+ MATREM (sc.) placando TILIUM TUUM, et filius tuus sumat precem,
+ id est, deprecationes nostras per te qui (sc.) filius natus ex
+ Virgine Maria pro nobis (sc.) miseris peccatoribus tulit, id
+ est, sustinuit esse tuus filius." It must be observed, that this
+ work was expressly written for the purpose of explaining these
+ parts of the ritual according to the use of Sarum. It was
+ printed by the famous W. de Worde, at the sign of the Sun in
+ Fleet-street, 1508. The passage occurs in p. 33. b. This is by
+ no means the only book of the kind. I have before me one printed
+ at Basil, in 1504, and another at Cologne the same year. They
+ are evidently all drawn from some common source, but are not
+ reprints all of the same work, for there are in each some
+ variations. The Cologne edition tells us, that it was the
+ reprint of a familiar commentary long ago (jamdudum) published
+ on the hymns. All these join in construing the passage so as to
+ represent the prayer to the Virgin to be, that she would show
+ and prove that she was mother by appeasing her Son, and causing
+ him to hear our prayers. Nor can any other meaning be attached
+ to the translation of the words as given by Cardinal Du Perron
+ (Replique a la Rep. du Roy de la G. Bretagne. Paris, 1620, p.
+ 970). "Et pourtant quand l'Eglise dit a la saincte Vierge,
+ 'Defends nous de l'ennemy, et nous recoy a l'heure delamort,'
+ elle n'entend pas prier la Vierge qu'elle nous recoive par sa
+ propre virtu, mais par impetration de la grace de son Fils,
+ comme l'Eglise le temoigne en ces mots: 'Monstre que tu es mere,
+ recoive par toy nos prieres celuy, qui ne pour nous a eu
+ agreeable d'etre tien!'" This novel interpretation I have not
+ found in any one book of former days.] {341}
+
+Another prayer runs thus: "Under thy protection we take refuge, Holy
+Mother of God. Despise not our supplications in our necessities; but
+from all dangers ever deliver us, O glorious and Blessed Virgin." [Sub
+tuum praesidium confugimus, sancta Dei Genetrix; nostras deprecationes ne
+despicias in necessitatibus, sed a periculis cunctis libera nos semper,
+Virgo gloriosa et benedicta.--AEst. cxlvi.]
+
+Let us suppose the object of these addresses to be changed; and instead
+of the Virgin let us substitute the name of the ever-blessed God and
+Father of us all. The very words here addressed to the Virgin are
+offered to Him, and spoken of Him in some of the most affecting prayers
+and praises recorded in the Bible[128].
+
+ [Footnote 128: The identity of the prayers offered to the Virgin
+ with those offered in the Book of inspiration, or in the Roman
+ Ritual to the Almighty, becomes very striking, if we lay side by
+ side the authorized language of the Roman Liturgy, and the only
+ translation of the Scriptures authorized by the Roman Church.
+
+ _Roman Ritual in addressing the _Roman Ritual, or Translation
+ Virgin_ of the Bible, in addressing
+ the Almighty_.
+
+ Sub tuum praesidium confugimus. Dominus, firmamentum meum et
+ refugium meum. Ad te
+ confugi.--Ps. xvii. 1; cxlii.
+ 11.
+
+ Nostras deprecationes ne despicias Ne despexeris deprecationem
+ in necessitatibus. meam.--Ps. liv. 1.
+
+ Sed a periculis cunctis libera nos. Libera, Domine, animam servi
+ tui ab omnibus periculis
+ inferni. Hiem. ccvi.
+
+ Libera nos a malo. Orat. Dom.
+
+ A periculo mortis libera nos,
+ Domine.--Hiem. cciv.
+
+ Tu nos ab hoste protege. Eripe me de inimicis meis,
+ Domine.--Ps. cxlii. 11.
+
+ Et hora mortis SUSPICE. _Suscipe_, Domine, servum
+ tuum.--Hiem. ccvi. {342}
+ ]
+
+But another hymn in the office of the Virgin, addressed in part to the
+blessed Saviour himself, and partly to the Virgin Mary, is still more
+revolting to all my feelings with regard to religious worship. The
+Redeemer is only asked to remember his mortal birth; no blessing is here
+supplicated for at his hands; his protection is not sought; no
+deliverance of our souls at the hour of death is implored from Him;
+these blessings, and these heavenly benefits, and these divine mercies,
+are sought for exclusively at the hands of the Virgin alone. Can such a
+mingled prayer, can such a contrast in prayer, be the genuine fruit of
+that Gospel which bids us ask for all we need in prayer to God in the
+name and for the sake of his blessed Son?
+
+ "Author of our salvation, remember that once, by {343} being
+ born of a spotless virgin, thou didst take the form of our body!
+ Mary, mother of grace, mother of mercy, do thou protect us from
+ the enemy, and receive us at the hour of death. Glory to thee, O
+ Lord, who wast born of a Virgin, with the Father and the Holy
+ Spirit, through eternal ages. Amen[129]."
+
+ [Footnote 129:
+
+ Memento, Salutis Auctor, Tu nos ab hoste protege,
+ Quod nostri quondam corporis, Et hora mortis suscipe.
+ Ex illibata Virgine, Gloria tibi, Domine,
+ Nascendo formam sumpseris. Qui natus es de Virgine,
+ Maria mater gratiae, Cum Patre et Sancto Spiritu,
+ Mater misericordiae, In sempiterna saecula. Amen.
+
+ In the new version, (referred to in page 260 of the present
+ work,) this hymn stands thus:--
+
+ Memento, rerum Conctitor, Maria mater gratiae,
+ Nostri quod olim corporis, Dulcis parens clementiae,
+ Sacrata ab alvo Virginis, Tu nos ab hoste protege,
+ Nascendo forrnam sumpseris. In mortis hora suscipe, &c.
+
+ AEst. clv.]
+
+Could the beloved John, to whose kind and tender care our blessed Lord
+gave his mother of especial trust, have offered to her such a prayer as
+this? To God alone surely would he have prayed for deliverance from all
+evil and mischief. To God alone would he have prayed:--"In the hour of
+death, good Lord, deliver us, and all for Jesus Christ's sake, our only
+Saviour and Mediator."
+
+To one other example of the practice of the Church of Rome I must refer.
+The rubric in our Book of Common Prayer directs that "at the end of
+every Psalm throughout the year, shall be repeated, Glory be to the
+Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost: As it was in the
+beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen." In the
+Roman Breviary also we find this rubric: "This verse, _Gloria_, is
+always said in the end of all psalms, EXCEPT IT BE OTHERWISE {344}
+NOTED." [AEst. 3.] Such notifications occur at the end of various psalms.
+On the Feast of the Assumption [AEst. 595.], fourteen psalms are
+appointed to be used. At the close of every one of these psalms, without
+however any note that the Gloria is not to be said, there is appended an
+anthem to the Virgin. In some cases, so intimately is the anthem
+interwoven with the closing words of the psalm, as that under other
+circumstances it would induce us to infer that the Gloria was intended
+to be left out, especially as in the Parvum Officium of the Virgin [AEst.
+clv.], though to the various psalms anthems in the same manner have been
+annexed, yet the words "Gloria Patri et Filio" are inserted in each case
+between the psalm and the anthem. Be this as it may, the annexation of
+the anthem has a lamentable tendency to withdraw the thoughts of the
+worshippers from the truths contained in the inspired psalm, and to fix
+them upon Mary and her Assumption; changing the Church's address from
+the Eternal Being, alone invoked by the Psalmist, to one, who though a
+virgin blessed among women, is a creature of God's hand. Thus, at the
+conclusion of the 8th psalm; "O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is thy
+name in all the world," we find immediately annexed these two anthems,
+"The holy mother of God is exalted above the choirs of angels to the
+heavenly realms. The gates of paradise are opened to us by thee, [by
+thee, O Virgin [Quae gloriosa]] who glorious triumphest with the angels."
+Thus again, an anthem is attached to the last verse of the 95th (in the
+Hebrew and English versions the 96th). "He shall judge the earth in
+equity, and the people with his truth. Rejoice, {345} O Virgin Mary;
+thou alone hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world. Deem me
+worthy to praise thee, hallowed Virgin: Give me strength against thy
+enemies." To the 96th (97th), the latter clause of that address is
+repeated, with the addition of the following: "After the birth thou
+didst remain a virgin inviolate. Mother of God, intercede for us."
+
+An instance of the anthem being so intimately interwoven with the psalm,
+as to render the insertion of the "Gloria," between the two, to say the
+least, forced and unnatural, occurs at the close of the 86th (87th)
+psalm. The vulgate translation of the last verse, differing entirely
+from the English, is this: "As the habitation of all who rejoice is in
+thee." This sentence of the Psalmist is thus taken up in the Roman
+Ritual: "As the habitation of all us who rejoice is in THEE, Holy Mother
+of God."
+
+The object proposed by the Church from of old in concluding each psalm
+by an ascription of glory to the eternal Trinity, was to lead the
+worshipper to apply the sentiments of the psalm to the work of our
+salvation accomplished by the three Persons of the Godhead. The
+analogous end of these anthems in the present service of the Church of
+Rome is to fix the thoughts of the worshipper upon Mary. This practice
+unhappily sanctions the excesses into which Bonaventura and others have
+run in their departures from the purity and integrity of primitive
+worship.
+
+Cardinal du Perron informs us, that at the altar in the office of the
+mass, prayer is not made directly to any saint, but only obliquely, the
+address being always made to God. But if prayers are offered in other
+parts of the service directly to them, it is difficult to see what is
+gained by that announcement. Surely it is trifling {346} to make such
+immaterial distinctions. If as a priest I could address the following
+prayer to the Virgin in preparing for offering mass, why should I not
+offer a prayer to the same being during its celebration?
+
+"O mother of pity and mercy, blessed Virgin Mary, I a miserable and
+unworthy sinner, flee to thee with my whole heart and affection, and I
+pray thy most sweet pity, that as thou didst stand by thy most sweet Son
+hanging upon the cross, so thou wouldest vouchsafe mercifully to stand
+by me a miserable priest, and by all priests who here and in all the
+holy Church offer Him this day, that, aided by thy grace, we may be
+enabled to offer a worthy and acceptable victim in the sight of the most
+high and undivided Trinity. Amen." [O Mater pietatis et misericordiae,
+beatissima Virgo Maria, ego miser et indignus peccator ad te confugio
+toto corde et affectu. Et precor dulcissimam pietatem tuam, ut sicut
+dulcissimo Filio tuo in cruce pendenti astitisti, ita et mihi misero
+sacerdoti et sacerdotibus omnibus hic et in tota sancta ecclesia ipsum
+hodie offerentibus, clementer assistere digneris, ut tua gratia adjuti
+dignam et acceptabilem hostiam in conspectu summae et individuae
+Trinitatis offerre valeamus. Amen.--Rom. Brev. Hus. Hiem. p. ccxxxiii.]
+
+This is called, in the Roman Breviary, "A PRAYER to the blessed Virgin
+before the celebration of the mass," and is immediately followed by
+another prayer directed to be offered to any saint, male or female,
+whose feast is on that day celebrated. "O Holy N. behold I, a miserable
+sinner, DERIVING CONFIDENCE FROM THY MERITS, now offer the most holy
+sacrament of the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, FOR THY HONOUR
+AND GLORY. I humbly and devotedly pray thee that thou wouldest deign to
+intercede for me to-day, that I may be enabled to offer so great a
+sacrifice {347} worthily and acceptably, and to praise Him eternally
+with thee and with all his elect, and that I may live with Him for
+ever." [O sancte N. ecce ego miser peccator de tuis mentis confisus,
+offero nunc sacratissimura sacramentum corporis et sanguinis Domini
+nostri Jesu Christ! PRO TUO HONORE ET GLORIA; precor te humiliter et
+devote ut pro me hodie intercedere digneris, ut tantum sacrificium digne
+et acceptabiliter offerre valeam, ut Eum tecum et cum omnibus electis
+ejus aeternaliter laudare et cum eo semper regnare valeam.--Hiem.
+ccxxxiii.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such, Christian brethren, is the result of our inquiries into the real
+practice of the Church of Rome with regard to the worship of the Virgin
+Mary at the present day, in every part of the world where allegiance to
+that Church is acknowledged. Can we wonder that individuals, high in
+honour with that Church, have carried out the same worship to far
+greater lengths? I have ever present to my mind the principle of fixing
+upon the Church of Rome herself that only which is to be found in her
+canons, acknowledged decrees, and formularies. And unhappily of that
+which directly contravenes the Gospel-rule and primitive practice, far
+more than enough is found in her authorized rituals to compel all who
+hold to the Gospel and the integrity of primitive times, to withdraw
+their assent and consent from her worship. But with this principle
+before us, surely common justice and common prudence require that we
+should see for ourselves the practical workings of the system. "By their
+fruits ye shall know them," is a principle no less sanctioned by the
+Gospel than suggested by common sense and experience And, indeed, the
+shocking lengths to which priests, bishops, cardinals, and canonized
+persons have gone in this particular of the worship of the Virgin, might
+well {348} cause every upright and enlightened Roman Catholic to look
+anxiously to the foundation; to determine honestly, though with tender
+caution and pious care, for himself, whether the corruption be not in
+the well-head, whether the stream do not flow impregnated with the
+poison from the very fountain itself; whether the prayers authorized and
+directed by the Church of Rome to be offered to the Virgin be not in
+themselves at variance with the first principles of the Gospel--Faith in
+one God, the giver of every good, and in one Mediator and Intercessor
+between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, whose blood cleanseth from
+all sin: in a word, to see whether all the aberrations of her children
+in this department of religious duty have not their prototype in the
+laws and ordinances, the rules and injunctions, the example and practice
+of their mother herself.
+
+Indeed I am compelled here to say, that, however revolting to us as
+believers in Jesus, and as worshippers of the one true God, are those
+extravagant excesses into which the votaries of the Virgin Mary have
+run, I have found few of their most unequivocal ascriptions of divine
+worship to her, for a justification of which they cannot with reason
+appeal to the authorized ritual of the Church of Rome.
+
+In leaving this point of our inquiry, I would suggest two
+considerations: 1st, If it was intended that the invocation of the
+Virgin should be exclusively confined to requests, praying her to pray
+and intercede by prayer for the petitioners, why should language be
+addressed to her which in its plain, obvious, grammatical, and common
+sense interpretation conveys the form of direct prayers to her for
+benefits believed to be at her disposal? And, 2ndly, If the Church had
+{349} intended that her members, when they suppliantly invoked the
+Virgin Mary, and had recourse to her aid, should have offered to her
+direct and immediate prayers that she would grant temporal and spiritual
+benefits, to be dispensed at her own will, and by her own authority and
+power, in that case, what words could the Church have put into the mouth
+of the petitioners which would more explicitly and unequivocally have
+conveyed that idea?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN, CONTINUED.
+
+
+I have no intention of dwelling at any length on the extraordinary
+excesses to which the adoration of the Virgin Mary has been carried in
+the Church of Rome, I do not mean by obscure and illiterate or fanatical
+individuals, but by her celebrated prelates, doctors, and saints. My
+researches have brought to my knowledge such a mass of error and
+corruption in the worship of Christians as I never before had any
+conception of; and rather than bring it all forward, and exhibit it to
+others, I would turn my own eyes from it altogether. Still many reasons
+render it absolutely necessary that we should not pass over the subject
+entirely in silence. Few in England, I believe, are aware of the real
+facts of the case; and it well becomes us to guard ourselves and others
+against such melancholy results as would appear to be inseparable from
+the invocation and worship of the Virgin. If indeed we could be
+justified in regarding such palpable instances of her worship in its
+most objectionable form as the {350} marks of former and less
+enlightened times, most gladly would I draw a veil over them, and hide
+them from our sight for ever. But when I find the solemn addresses of
+the present chief authorities in the Church, nay, the epistles of the
+present sovereign Pontiff himself, cherishing, countenancing, and
+encouraging the selfsame evil departures from primitive truth and
+worship, it becomes a matter not of choice, but of necessity, to give
+examples at least of the deplorable excesses into which the highest and
+most honoured in that communion have been betrayed. On the present
+Pope's encyclical letter [A.D. 1840] we have already observed; and in
+this place I propose to examine only one more of those many excesses
+meeting us on every side, which characterize the public worship of the
+Virgin. The instance to which I refer seems to take a sort of middle
+station between the authorized enjoined services of the Church of Rome,
+and the devotions of individuals and family worship. It partakes on the
+one hand far too much of a public character to be considered in the
+light of private religious exercises; and on the other it wants that
+authority which would rank it among the appointed services of the
+Church. The devotional parts of the services are found neither in the
+Missals nor the Breviaries, and the adoption and celebration of the
+service seems to be left to the option and care of individuals. But the
+service is performed in the Churches,--a Priest presides,--the Host is
+presented to the adorations of the people,--and a sermon is preached by
+an appointed minister. The service to which I am referring is performed
+every evening through the entire month of May, and is celebrated
+expressly in honour of the Virgin Mary. {351}
+
+The month of May is dedicated to her, and is called Mary's month.
+Temporary altars are raised to her honour, surrounded by flowers and
+adorned with garlands and drapery; her image usually standing before the
+altar. Societies are formed chiefly for the celebration of the Virgin's
+praises, and in some Churches the effect, both to the eye and to the
+ear, corresponds with the preparation. One thing only is wanting--the
+proper object of worship. I have now before me a book of hymns published
+professedly for the religious fraternities in Paris, and used in the
+Churches there. [Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques a l'usage des confreries
+des Paroisses de Paris. Paris, 1839.] Many of these hymns are addressed
+to the Virgin alone; some without any reference to the Son of God and
+Man, the only Saviour, and without any allusion to the God of
+Christians; indeed, an address to a heathen Goddess more entirely
+destitute of Christianity can scarcely be conceived. I copy one hymn
+entire.
+
+ "Around the altars of Mary
+ Let us, her children, press;
+ To that mother so endeared
+ Let us address the sweetest prayers.
+ Let a lively and holy mirth
+ Animate us in this holy day:
+ There exists no sadness
+ For a heart full of her love.
+ Let us adorn this sanctuary with flowers;
+ Let us deck her revered altar;
+ Let us redouble our efforts to please her.
+ Be this month consecrated to her;
+ Let the perfume of these crowns
+ Form a delicious incense, {352}
+ Which ascending even to her throne
+ May carry to her both our hearts and our prayers.
+ Let the holy name of Mary
+ Be for us a name of salvation!
+ Let our softened soul
+ Ever pay to her a sweet tribute of love.
+ Let us join the choirs of angels
+ The more to celebrate her beauty;
+ And may our songs of praise
+ Resound in eternity.
+ O holy Virgin! O our mother!
+ Watch over us from fhe height of heaven;
+ And when from this sojourning of misery,
+ We present our prayers to you;
+ O sweet, O divine Mary!
+ Lend an ear to our sighs,
+ And after this life
+ Make us to taste of immortal pleasures."
+
+ [Autour des autels de Marie
+ Nous ses enfants, empressons-nous;
+ A cette Mere si cherie,
+ Adressons les voeux les plus doux.
+ Qu'une vive et sainte allegresse
+ Nous anime dans ce saint jour;
+ Il n'existe point de tristesse
+ Pour un coeur plein de son amour.
+ Ornons des fleurs ce sanctuaire,
+ Parons son autel revere,
+ Redoublons d'efforts pour lui plaire.
+ Que ce mois lui soi, consacre;
+ Que le parfume de ces couronnes
+ Forme un encens delicieux,
+ Qui s'elevant jusqu'a son trone,
+ Lui porte et nos coeurs et nos voeux.
+ Que le nom sacre de Marie
+ Soit pour nous un nom de salut;
+ Que toujours notre ame attendrie,
+ D'amour lui paie un doux tribut.
+ Unissons-nous aux choeurs des anges,
+ Pour mieux celebrer sa beaute.
+ Et puissent nos chants de louanges
+ Retentir dans l'eternite.
+ O Vierge sainte! o notre Mere!
+ Veillez sur nous du haut des cieux;
+ Et de ce sejour de misere,
+ Quand nous vous presentons nos voeux,
+ O douce, o divine Marie!
+ Pretez l'oreille a nos soupirs;--
+ Et faites qu'apres cette vie,
+ Nous goutions d'immortels plaisirs.
+
+ --"Cantiques a l'usage des Confreries." Paris, 1839, p. 175.]
+
+In the course of the present work I have already suggested the propriety
+of trying the real import, {353} the true intent, and meaning and force
+of an address to a Saint, by substituting the holiest name ever uttered
+on earth, for the name of the Saint to whom such address is offered; and
+if the same words, without any change, form a prayer fit to be offered
+by us sinners to the Saviour of the world, then to ask ourselves, Can
+this be right? I would earnestly recommend the application of the same
+test here; and in many other of the prayers now offered (for many such
+there are now offered) by Roman Catholics to the Virgin. Suppose,
+instead of offering these songs of praise and prayer, and self-devotion
+to Mary in the month of May, we were to offer them, on the day of his
+nativity, to our blessed Lord, would they not form an act of faith in
+Him as our Saviour and our God?
+
+ "Around the altar of Jesus,
+ Let us, his children, press;
+ To that Saviour so endeared
+ Let us address the sweetest prayers. {354}
+ Let a lively and holy mirth
+ Animate us in this holy day:
+ There exists no sadness
+ For a heart full of his love.
+ Let the holy name of Jesus
+ Be for us a name of salvation!
+ Let our softened soul
+ Ever pay to HIM a sweet tribute of love.
+ O holy Jesus! O our Saviour!
+ Watch over us from the height of heaven;
+ And when from this sojourning of misery,
+ We present our prayers to Thee;
+ O sweet, O divine Redeemer,
+ Lend an ear to our sighs; and after this life,
+ Make Thou us to taste of immortal pleasures."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--BONAVENTURA.
+
+
+I will now briefly call your attention to the devotional works of the
+celebrated Bonaventura. He is no ordinary man; and the circumstances
+under which his works were commended to the world are indeed remarkable.
+I know not how a Church can give the impress of its own name and
+approval in a more full or unequivocal manner to the works of any human
+being, than the Church of Rome has stamped her authority on the works of
+this her saint.
+
+In the "Acta Sanctorum", [Antwerp, 1723, July 14, p. 811-823.] it is
+stated, that this celebrated man was born in 1221, and died in 1274. He
+passed through all degrees of ecclesiastical dignities, {355} short only
+of the pontifical throne itself. He was of the order of St. Francis, and
+refused the archbishopric of York, when it was offered to him by Pope
+Clement the Fourth, in 1265; whose successor, Gregory the Tenth,
+elevated him to the dignity of cardinal bishop. His biographer expresses
+his astonishment, that such a man's memory should have been so long
+buried with his body; but adds, that the tardiness of his honours was
+compensated by their splendour.
+
+More than two centuries after his death, his claims to canonization were
+urged upon Sixtus the Fourth; and that Pope raised him to the dignity of
+saint; the diploma of his canonization bearing date 18 kalends of May,
+1482, the eleventh year of that pope's reign.
+
+Before a saint is canonized by the Pope, it is usually required, that
+miracles wrought by him, or upon him, or at his tomb, be proved to the
+satisfaction of the Roman court[130]. We need not dwell on the nature of
+an inquiry into a matter-of-fact, alleged to have been done by an
+individual two hundred years before; and whose memory is said to have
+lain buried with his corpse. Among the miracles specified, it is
+recorded, that on one occasion, when he was filled with solemn awe and
+fear at the celebration of the Lord's Supper, God, by an angel, took a
+particle of the consecrated host from the hands of the priest, and
+gently placed it in the holy man's mouth. But, with these transactions,
+I am not anxious to interfere, except so far as to ascertain the degree
+of authority with which any pious Roman Catholic must be induced to
+invest Bonaventura as a teacher and instructor in the doctrines of
+Christianity, authorized and appointed by his Church. The case stands
+thus:--Pope Sixtus IV. states in his {356} diploma, that the proctor of
+the order of Minors, proved by a dissertation on the passage of St.
+John, "There are three that bear record in heaven," that the blessed
+Trinity had borne testimony to the fact of Bonaventura being a saint in
+heaven: the Father proving it by the attested miracles; the Son, in the
+WISDOM OF HIS DOCTRINE; the Holy Spirit, by the goodness of his life.
+The pontiff then adds, in his own words, "He so wrote on divine
+subjects, THAT THE HOLY SPIRIT SEEMS TO HAVE SPOKEN IN HIM." [Page 831.
+"Ea de divinis rebus scripsit, ut in eo Spiritus Sanctus locutus
+videatur."] A testimony referred to by Pope Sixtus the Fifth.
+
+ [Footnote 130: See the canonization of St. Bonaventura in the
+ Acta Sanctorum.]
+
+This latter pontiff was crowned May 1, 1585, more than a century after
+the canonization of Bonaventura, and more than three centuries after his
+death. By his order, the works of Bonaventura were "most carefully
+emendated." The decretal letters, A.D. 1588, pronounced him to be an
+acknowledged doctor of Holy Church, directing his authority to be cited
+and employed in all places of education, and in all ecclesiastical
+discussions and studies. The same act offers plenary indulgence to all
+who assist at the mass on his feast, in certain specified places, with
+other minor immunities on the conditions annexed. [Page 837.]
+
+In these documents Bonaventura[131] is called the Seraphic Doctor; and I
+repeat my doubt, whether it is possible for any human authority to give
+a more full, entire, and unreserved sanction to the works of any human
+being than the Church of Rome has given to {357} the writings of
+Bonaventura. And what do those works present to us, on the subject of
+the Invocation and worship of the Virgin Mary?
+
+ [Footnote 131: The edition of his works which I have used was
+ published at Mentz in 1609; and the passages referred to are in
+ vol. vi. between pp. 400 and 500.]
+
+Taking every one of the one hundred and fifty psalms[132], Bonaventura
+so changes the commencement of each, as to address them not as the
+inspired Psalmist did, to the Lord Jehovah, the One only Lord God
+Almighty, but to the Virgin Mary; inserting much of his own composition,
+and then adding the Gloria Patri to each. It is very painful to refer to
+these prostitutions of any part of the Holy Book of revealed truth; but
+we must not be deterred from looking this evil in the face. A few
+examples, however, will suffice.
+
+ [Footnote 132: It is curious to find the Cardinal Du Perron, in
+ his answer to our King James, declaring that he had never seen
+ nor met with this Psalter in his life, and he was sure it was
+ never written by Bonaventura; alleging that it was not mentioned
+ by Trithemius or Gesner. The Vatican editors, however, have set
+ that question at rest. They assure us that they have thrown into
+ the appendix all the works about the genuineness of which there
+ was any doubt, and that Bonaventura wrote many works not
+ mentioned by Trithemius, which they have published from the
+ Vatican press. Of this Psalter there is no doubt. See Cardinal
+ Du Perron, Replique a la Rep. du Roi de Grand Bretagne. Paris,
+ 1620, p. 974.]
+
+In the 30th psalm. "In thee, O Lord, have I trusted; let me not be
+confounded for ever," &c., the Psalter of the Virgin substitutes these
+words: [In te, Domina, speravi; non confundar in aeternum, &c. &c. In
+manus tuas, Domina, commendo spiritum meum, totam vitam meam, et diem
+ultimum meum.--P. 480.]
+
+"In thee, O Lady, have I trusted; let me not be confounded for ever: in
+thy grace take me.
+
+"Thou art my fortitude and my refuge; my consolation and my protection.
+{358}
+
+"To thee, O Lady, have I cried, while my heart was in heaviness; and
+thou didst hear me from the top of the eternal hills.
+
+"Bring thou me out of the snare which they have hid for me; for thou art
+my succour.
+
+"Into thy hands, O Lady, I commend my spirit, my whole life, and my last
+day.--Gloria Patri," &c.
+
+In the 31st psalm we read, "Blessed are they whose hearts love thee, O
+Virgin Mary; their sins shall be mercifully blotted out BY THEE...."
+[Beati quorum corda te diligunt, Virgo Maria; peccata ipsorum A TE
+misericorditer diluentur.--P. 481.]
+
+In the 35th, v. 2. "Incline thou the countenance of God upon us; COMPEL
+HIM to have mercy upon sinners. O Lady, thy mercy is in the heaven, and
+thy grace is spread over the whole earth." [Inclina vultum Dei super
+nos. COGE illum peccatoribus misereri; Domina, in coelo misericordia
+tua, et gratia diffusa est super terram.]
+
+In the 67th, instead of, "Let God arise, and let his enemies be
+scattered," the Psalter of the Virgin has,
+
+"Let Mary arise, and let her enemies be scattered." [Exurgat Maria, et
+dissipentur inimici ejus.--P. 483.]
+
+In the opening of the 93rd psalm there is a most extraordinary, rather,
+as it sounds to me, a most impious and blasphemous comparison of the
+Supreme God with the Virgin Mary, in reference to the very Attribute,
+which shines first, last, and brightest in HIM,--His eternal mercy. Nay,
+it draws the contrast in favour of the Virgin, and against God. Most
+glad should I be, to find that I had misunderstood this passage; and
+that it admits of another acceptation[133]. But I fear its real meaning
+is beyond controversy.
+
+ [Footnote 133: A similar idea indeed pervades some addresses to
+ the Virgin of the present day, representing the great and only
+ potentate as her heavenly husband, in himself full of rage, but
+ softened into tenderness towards her votaries by her influence.
+ See a hymn, in the Paris collection already referred to, p. 353,
+ &c. of this work (Nouveau Recueil de Cantiques, p. 183).
+
+ Daignez, Marie, en ce jour Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day
+ Ecouter nos soupirs, To hear our sighs,
+ Et seconder nos desirs. And to second our desires.
+ Daignez, Marie, en ce jour Vouchsafe, Mary, on this day
+ Recevoir notre encens, notre amour. To receive our incense, our
+ love.
+ Du celeste epoux Calm the rage
+ Calmez le courroux, Of thy heavenly husband,
+ Qu'il se montre doux Let HIM show himself kind
+ A tous qui sont a vous. To all those who are thine.
+ Du celeste epoux Of thy heavenly husband
+ Calmez le courroux, Calm the rage,
+ Que son coeur s'attendrisse sur nous. Let his heart be softened
+ towards us. {359}
+ ]
+
+"The Lord is a God of vengeance; but thou, O Mother of Mercy, bendest to
+be merciful." [Deus ultionum Dominus; sed tu, Mater Misericordiae, ad
+miserandum inflectis.--P. 485.]
+
+The well known and dearly valued penitentiary psalm (129th) "De
+profundis," is thus addressed to Mary:--
+
+"Out of the depths have I called to thee, O Lady:
+
+"O Lady, hear my voice. Let thine ears be attent to the voice of thy
+praise and glorifying: deliver me from the hand of my enemies: confound
+their imaginations and attempts against me. Rescue me in the evil day;
+and, in the day of death, forget not my soul. Carry me into the haven of
+safety: let my name be enrolled among the just." [De profundis clamavi
+ad te, Domina: Domina, exaudi vocem meam. Fiant aures tuae intendentes in
+vocem laudis et glorificationis tuae. Libera me de manu adversariorum
+meorum: confunde ingenia et conatus eorum contra me. Erue me in die
+mala: et in die mortis ne obliviscaris animae meae. Deduc me ad portum
+salutis: inter justos scribatur nomen meum.--P. 489.] {360}
+
+But, as the penitential psalms are thus turned, from Him to whom the
+Psalmist addressed them, so his hymns of praise to Jehovah, are made to
+flow through the same channel to the Virgin. And all nature in the sea,
+on the earth, in the heavens, and heaven of heavens, is called upon to
+praise and glorify Mary. Thus, in the 148th psalm, we read,--
+
+"Praise our Lady of heaven, glorify her in the highest. Praise her, all
+ye men and cattle, ye birds of the heaven, and fishes of the sea. Praise
+her, sun and moon; ye stars and circles of the planets. Praise her,
+cherubim and seraphim, thrones and dominions, and powers. Praise her,
+all ye legions of angels. Praise her, all ye orders of spirits above."
+[Laudate Dominam nostram de coelis: glorificate eam in excelsis. Laudate
+eam omnes homines et jumenta: volucres coeli et pisces maris. Laudate
+eam sol et luna: stellae, et circuli planetarum. Laudate eam cherubim et
+seraphim: throni et dominationes, et potestates. Laudate eam omnes
+legiones angelorum. Laudate eam omnes ordines spirituum supernorum.--P.
+491.]
+
+The last sentence of the psalms is thus rendered,--"Let every spirit
+[_or_ every thing that hath breath] praise our Lady."
+
+To this Psalter are added many hymns changed in the same manner. One,
+entitled, "A Canticle, like that of Habakkuk iii." presents to us an
+address to the Virgin Mary, of the very words which our blessed Saviour
+most solemnly addressed to his heavenly Father.
+
+O Lord, I have heard thy O Lady, I have heard thy report,
+speech, and was afraid, &c. &c. and was astonished; I considered
+ thy works, O Lady, and
+ I was afraid at thy work. In the
+ midst of the years thou hast revived
+ it. {361}
+
+ I will confess to thee, O Lady,
+ because thou hast hid these things
+ from the wise, and hast revealed
+ them to babes.
+
+ Thy glory hath covered the
+ heavens, and the earth is full of
+ thy mercy.
+
+ Thou, O Virgin, wentest forth
+ for the salvation of thy people,
+ for salvation with thy Christ [thy
+ anointed].
+
+ O thou Blessed, our salvation
+ rests in thy hands. Remember
+ our poverty, O thou pious One.
+
+ WHOM THOU WILLEST, HE
+ SHALL BE SAVED; AND HE FROM
+ WHOM THOU TURNEST AWAY THY
+ COUNTENANCE, GOETH INTO DESTRUCTION.
+
+[Domina, audivi auditionem tuam, et obstupui: consideravi opera tua, et
+expavi, Domina, opus tuum: circa medium annorum vivificasti illud.
+
+Confitebor tibi, Domina: quia abscondisti haec a sapientibus: et
+revelasti ea parvulis. Operuit coelos gloria tua, et misericordia tua
+plena est terra.
+
+Egressa es, Virgo, in salutem populi tui: in salutem cum Christo tuo. O
+Benedicta, in manibus tuis est reposita nostra salus; recordare, pia,
+paupertatis nostrae.
+
+Quem vis, ipse salvus erit, et a quo avertis vultum tuum, vadit in
+interitum.--G.P., &c.]
+
+The song of the Three Children is altered in the same manner. In it as
+well as in the Canticle of Zacharias, these prayers are introduced;
+
+"O Mother of Mercy, have mercy upon us miserable sinners; who neglect to
+repent of our past sins, and commit every day many to be repented of."
+[Miserere, misericordiae Mater, nobis miseris peccatoribus, qui retroacta
+peccata poenitere negligimus, ac multa quotidie poenitenda committimus.]
+{362}
+
+The Te Deum is thus lamentably perverted:
+
+"We praise thee, Mother of God; we acknowledge thee, Mary the Virgin.
+[Te Matrem Dei laudamus; Te Mariam Virginem profitemur.]
+
+"All the earth doth worship thee, spouse of the eternal Father.
+
+"To thee all Angels and Archangels, Thrones and Principalities,
+faithfully do service....
+
+"To thee the whole angelic creation with incessant voice proclaim,
+
+"Holy! Holy! Holy! Mary, parent, mother of God, and virgin!...
+
+"... Thou with thy Son sittest at the right hand of the Father....
+
+"O Lady, SAVE THY PEOPLE, that we may partake of the inheritance of thy
+Son.
+
+"And rule us and guard us for ever....
+
+"Day by day we salute thee, O pious One; and we desire to praise thee in
+mind and voice even for ever.
+
+"Vouchsafe, O sweet Mary, now and for ever, to keep us without sin.
+
+"Have mercy upon us, O pious One; have mercy upon us.
+
+"Let thy great mercy be with us, because we put our trust in thee, O
+Virgin Mary.
+
+"In thee, sweet Mary, do we hope, defend thou us eternally. {363}
+
+"Praise becomes thee, empire becomes thee; to thee be virtue and glory
+for ever and ever. Amen."
+
+[SALVUM FAC POPULUM tuum, Domina, ut simus participes haereditatis Filii
+tui,
+
+Et rege nos et custodi nos in aeternum.
+
+Dignare, Dulcis Maria, mine et semper nos sine delicto conservare.
+Miserere, Pia, nobis! miserere nobis! Fiat misericordia tua magna
+nobiscum, quia in te, Virgo Maria, confidimus. In te, Dulcis Maria,
+speramus, nos defendas in aeternum. Te decet laus, te decet imperium,
+tibi virtus et gloria in saecula saeculorum, Amen.]
+
+Can this by any the most subtle refinement be understood to be a mere
+request to her to pray for us?
+
+The Athanasian Creed is employed in the same manner; and it is very
+remarkable that the Assumption itself of the Virgin into heaven is there
+specified as one of the points to be believed on pain of losing all
+hopes of salvation.
+
+"Whosoever will be saved, before all things it is necessary that he hold
+firm the faith concerning the Virgin Mary: which except a man keep whole
+and undefiled, without doubt he shall perish everlastingly....
+[Quicunque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est ut teneat de Maria
+firmam fidem.]
+
+"Whom at length He took up (assumpsit) unto heaven, and she sitteth at
+the right hand of her Son, not ceasing to pray to her Son for us. [Quam
+demum ipse in coelum assumpsit, et sedit ad dexteram Filii, non cessans
+pro nobis Filium exorare.]
+
+"This is the faith concerning Mary the Virgin, which except every one
+believe faithfully and firmly he cannot be saved." [Haec est fides de
+Maria Virgine: quam nisi quisque fideliter firmiterque crediderit,
+salvus esse non poterit.]
+
+In the Litany addressed to her, these sentences are found.
+
+"Holy Mary, whom all things praise and venerate, pray for us,--be
+propitious,--spare us, O Lady.
+
+"From all evil deliver us, O Lady.
+
+"In the devastating hour of death, deliver us, O Lady.
+
+"From the horrible torments of hell, deliver us, O Lady.
+
+"We sinners do beseech thee to hear us.
+
+"That thou wouldest vouchsafe to give eternal rest {364} to all the
+faithful departed, we beseech thee to hear us. &c. &c."
+
+ [Sancta Maria, quam omnia laudant
+ Et venerantur, ora pro nobis.
+ Propitia esto. Parce nobis, Domina.
+ Ab omni malo libera nos, Domina.
+ In hora mortis devastante libera nos, Domina.
+ Ab inferni horribili cruciamine libera nos, Domina.
+ Peccatores te rogamus, audi nos.
+ Ut cunctis fidelibus defunctis requiem
+ AEternam donare digneris, te rogamus, audi nos.]
+
+I will add to this catalogue of prayers and praises to the Virgin, only
+the translation of one prayer more from the same canonized Saint; it
+contains a passage often referred to, but the existence of which has
+been denied. It stands, however, in his works, vol. vi. page 466.
+
+"Therefore, O Empress, and our most benign Lady, by THY RIGHT OF MOTHER
+COMMAND thy most beloved Son [JURE MATRIS IMPERA tuo dilectissimo
+Filio], our Lord, Jesus Christ, that He vouchsafe to raise our minds
+from the love of earthly things to heavenly desires, who liveth and
+reigneth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now let any man of common understanding and straightforward principles
+say, whether any, the most ingenious refinement can interpret all this
+to mean merely that Bonaventura invoked the Virgin Mary to pray for him,
+or for his fellow-creatures. It looks as though he were resolved on set
+purpose to exalt her to an equality with the Almighty, when we find him
+not once, not casually, not in the fervent rapture of momentary
+excitement, but deliberately, through one hundred and fifty Psalms,
+applying to Mary the very words dictated by the Holy Spirit to the
+Psalmist, and consecrated {365} to the worship of the one supreme God;
+and then selecting the most solemn expressions by which the Christian
+Church approaches the Lord of heaven and earth, our Father, our Saviour,
+our Sanctifier: employing too the very words of her most solemn form of
+belief in the ever-blessed Trinity, and substituting Mary's name for the
+God of Christians. On the words, "By thy right of mother command thy
+Son," beyond the assertion of the fact that there they are to this day,
+I wish to add nothing, because the very denial of their existence often
+repeated shows, that many Roman Catholics themselves regard them as
+objectionable.
+
+But, if such a man as Bonaventura, one of the most learned and
+celebrated men of his age, could be tempted by the views cherished by
+the Church of Rome, to indulge in such language, what can be fairly
+expected of the large mass of persons who find that language published
+to the world with the highest sanction which their religion can give, as
+the work of a man whom the Almighty declared when on earth, by miracles,
+to be a chosen vessel, and to be under the guidance of the Holy Spirit;
+and of whom they are taught by the infallible testimony[134] of his
+canonization, that he is now reigning with Christ in heaven, and is
+himself the lawful and appointed object of religious invocation. I
+profess to you that I see no way by which Christians can hold and
+encourage this doctrine of the Invocation of Saints, without at the same
+time countenancing and cherishing what, were I to join in such
+invocation, would stain my soul with the guilt of idolatry. If the
+doctrine were confessedly Scriptural, come what would come, our duty
+would be to maintain it at all hazards, {366} and to brave every danger
+rather than from fear of consequences to renounce what we believe to
+have come from God; securing the doctrine at all events, and then
+putting forth our very best to guard against its perversion and abuse.
+But surely, it well becomes our brethren of the Church of Rome, to
+examine with most rigid and unsparing scrutiny into the very foundation
+of such a doctrine as this; a doctrine which in its mildest and most
+guarded form is considered by a very large number of their fellow
+Christians, as a dishonouring of God and of his Son, our Saviour; and
+which in its excess, an excess witnessed in the books of learned and
+sainted authors, and in the every day practice of worshippers, seems to
+be in no wise distinguishable from the practices of acknowledged
+polytheism, and pagan worship. If that foundation, after honest and
+persevering examination, approves itself as based sure and deep on the
+word of God, and the faith and practice of the apostles and the Church
+founded by them from the first, I have not another word to say, beyond a
+fervent prayer that the God in whom we trust would pour the bright beams
+of his Gospel abundantly into the hearts of all who receive that Gospel
+as the word of life. But were they my dying words to my dearest friend
+who had espoused that doctrine, I would say to him, Look well yourself
+to the foundation, because I am, after long examination, convinced,
+beyond a shadow of doubt that the doctrine and practice of the
+Invocation of Saints and Angels is as contrary to the doctrine and
+practice of the primitive Church, as it is in direct opposition to the
+express words of Scripture, and totally abhorrent from the spirit which
+pervades the whole of the Old, and the whole of the New Testament of
+God's eternal truth.
+
+ [Footnote 134: Bellarmin, in his Church Triumphant, maintains
+ that in the act of Canonization, the Church is infallible. Vol.
+ ii. p. 871.] {367}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION IV.--BIEL, DAMIANUS, BERNARDINUS DE BUSTIS, BERNARDINUS
+SENENSIS, &c.
+
+
+Unhappily these excesses in the worship of the Virgin Mary are not
+confined to Bonaventura, or to his age. We have too many examples of the
+same extravagant exaltation of her as an object of adoration and praise
+in men, whose station and abilities seemed to hold them forth to the
+world as burning and shining lights. Again, let me repeat, that in thus
+soliciting your attention to the doctrines and expressed feelings of a
+few from among the host of the Virgin's worshippers, I am far from
+believing that the enlightened Roman Catholics in England now are ready
+to respond to such sentiments. My desire is that all persons should be
+made aware of the excesses into which even celebrated teachers have been
+tempted to run, when they once admitted the least inroad to be made upon
+the integrity of God's worship; and I am anxious also, without offence,
+but with all openness, to caution my countrymen against encouraging that
+revival of the worship of the Virgin in England, to promote which the
+highest authorities in the Church of Rome have lately expressed their
+solicitude, intimating, at the same time, their regret that the worship
+of the Virgin at the present time has, in England, degenerated from its
+exaltation in former ages, and that England is now far behind her
+continental neighbours in her worship. Though these excessive departures
+from Gospel truth and the primitive worship of one God by one Mediator
+may not be the doctrines of all who belong to the Church of Rome, yet
+they are the tenets of some of her most {368} celebrated doctors, of men
+who were raised to her highest dignities in their lifetime, and solemnly
+enrolled by her among the saints of glory after their death. Their words
+and their actions are appealed to now in support of similar tenets and
+doctrines, though few, in this country at least, are found to put them
+forth in all their magnitude and fulness. But even in their mildest and
+least startling form these doctrines are awfully dangerous.
+
+The fact is, that the direct tendency of the worship of the Virgin, as
+practically illustrated in the Church of Rome, is to make GOD himself an
+object of FEAR, and the VIRGIN an object of LOVE; to invest Him, who is
+the Father of mercy and God of all comfort, with awfulness, and majesty,
+and with the terrors of eternal justice, and in direct and striking
+contrast to array the Virgin mother with mercy and benignity, and
+compassionate tenderness. Christians cannot be too constantly and too
+carefully on their guard against doing this wrong to our heavenly
+Father. His own inspired word invites us to regard Him not only as the
+God of love, but as Love itself. "God is love;" [1 John iv. 8.] and so
+far from terrifying us by representations of his tremendous majesty, and
+by declarations that we cannot ourselves draw nigh to God; so far from
+bidding us to approach Him with our suits and supplications through
+mediators whom we should regard as having, more than our blessed
+Redeemer, a fellow-feeling with us, and at the same time resistless
+influence with Him; his own invitation and assurance is, "Come unto me,
+and I will give you rest:" [Matt. xi. 28.] "No one cometh unto the
+Father but by me:" [John xiv. 6.] "Him that cometh to me I will {369} in
+no wise cast out:" [John vi. 37.] "Let us come boldly unto the throne of
+grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of
+need." [Heb. iv. 16.]
+
+How entirely opposed to such passages as these, breathing the spirit
+that pervades the whole Bible, are those doctrines which represent the
+Virgin Mary as the Mediatrix by whom we must sue for the divine
+clemency; as the dispenser of all God's mercies and graces; as the
+sharer of God's kingdom, as the fountain of pity, as the moderator of
+God's justice, and the appeaser of his wrath. "Show thyself a mother."
+"Compel thy Son to have pity." "By thy right of mother command thy Son."
+"God is a God of vengeance; but thou, Mary, dost incline to mercy;" such
+expressions convey sentiments and associations shocking to our feelings,
+and from which our reason turns away, when we think of God's
+perfections, and the full atonement and omnipotent intercession of his
+Son Christ our Redeemer. But it must not be disguised, that these are
+the very sentiments in which the most celebrated defenders of the
+worship of the Virgin, in the Church of Rome, teach their disciples to
+acquiesce, and in which they must have themselves fully acquiesced, if
+they practised what they taught. It is very painful to make such
+extracts as leave us no alternative in forming our opinions on this
+point; but it is necessary to do so, otherwise we may injure the cause
+of truth by suppressing the reality; a reality over which there seems to
+be a strong disposition, in the present day, in part at least, to draw a
+veil; an expedient which can only increase the danger.
+
+The first author, whose sentiments I would request you to weigh, is
+Gabriel Biel, a schoolman of great celebrity[135]. {370} In his
+thirty-second lecture, on the Canon of the Mass, he thus expresses
+himself, referring to a sermon of St. Bernard, "The will of God was,
+that we should have all through Mary.... You were afraid to approach the
+Father, frightened by only hearing of Him.... He gave you Jesus for a
+Mediator. What could not such a Son obtain with such a Father? He will
+surely be heard for his own reverence-sake; for the Father loveth the
+Son. But, are you afraid to approach even Him? He is your brother and
+your flesh; tempted through all, that He might become merciful. THIS
+BROTHER MARY GAVE TO YOU. But, perhaps, even in Him you fear the divine
+Majesty, because, although He was made man, yet He remained God. You
+wish to have an advocate even to Him. Betake yourself to Mary. For, in
+Mary is pure humanity, not only pure from all contamination, but pure
+also by the singleness of her nature[136]. Nor should I, with any doubt
+say, she too will be heard for her own reverence-sake. The Son, surely,
+will hear the Mother, and the Father will hear the Son."
+
+ [Footnote 135: Tubingen, 1499. Gabriel Biel, born at Spires
+ about A.D. 1425, was in A.D. 1484 appointed the first Professor
+ of Theology in the then newly founded University of Tubingen. He
+ afterwards retired to a monastery, and died A.D. 1495.]
+
+ [Footnote 136: This is a very favourite argument in the present
+ day, often heard in the pulpits on the Continent.]
+
+In his 80th lecture, the same author comments on this prayer, which is
+still offered in the service of the Mass:
+
+"Deliver us, we beseech thee, O Lord, from all evils past, present, and
+future; and by the intercession of the blessed and glorious ever-virgin
+mother of God, Mary, with thy blessed apostles, Peter and Paul, and
+Andrew, and all saints, mercifully grant peace in our days, that, aided
+by the help of thy mercy, we may be both ever {371} free from sin, and
+free from all disquietude. Through the same our Lord, &c."
+
+On this prayer Biel observes, "Again we ask, in this prayer, the defence
+of peace; and since we cannot, nor do we presume to obtain this by our
+own merit, ... therefore, in order to obtain this, we have recourse, in
+the second part of this prayer, to the suffrages of all his saints, whom
+He hath constituted, in the court of his kingdom, as our mediators, most
+acceptable to himself, whose prayers his love does not reject. But, of
+them, we fly, in the first place, to the most blessed Virgin, the Queen
+of Heaven, to whom the King of kings, the heavenly Father, has given the
+half of his kingdom; which was signified in Hester, the queen, to whom,
+when she approached to appease king Asuerus, the king said to her, Even
+if thou shalt ask the half of my kingdom, it shall be given thee. So the
+heavenly Father, inasmuch as He has justice and mercy as the more valued
+possessions of his kingdom, RETAINING JUSTICE TO HIMSELF, GRANTED MERCY
+to the Virgin Mother. We, therefore, ask for peace, by the intercession
+of the blessed and glorious Virgin." [Cum habeat justitiam et
+misericordiam tanquam potiora regni sui bona, justitia sibi retenta,
+misericordiam Matri Virgini concessit.]
+
+The very same partition of the kingdom of heaven, is declared to have
+been made between God himself and the Virgin by one who was dignified by
+the name of the "venerable and most Christian Doctor," John Gerson[137],
+who died in 1429; excepting that, instead of justice and mercy, Gerson
+mentions power and mercy as the two parts of which God's kingdom
+consists, and that, whilst power remained with the Lord, the part of
+mercy ceded "to the mother of Christ, and the reigning {372} spouse;
+hence, by the whole Church, she is saluted as Queen of Mercy."
+
+ [Footnote 137: Paris, 1606. Tract iv. Super "Magnificat," part
+ iii. p. 754. See Fabricius, vol. iii. p. 49. Patav. 1754.]
+
+I would next refer to a writer who lived four centuries before Biel, but
+whose works received the papal sanction so late as the commencement of
+the seventeenth century, Petrus Damianus, Cardinal and Bishop. His works
+were published at the command of Pope Clement VIII., who died A.D. 1604,
+and were dedicated to his successor, Paul V., who gave the copyright for
+fifteen years to the Editor, Constantine Cajetan, A.D. 1606. I will
+quote only one passage from this author. It is found in his sermon on
+the nativity of the Virgin, whom he thus addresses: "Nothing is
+impossible with thee, with whom it is possible to restore those in
+despair to the hope of blessedness. For how could that authority, which
+derived its flesh from thy flesh, oppose thy power? For thou approachest
+before that golden altar of human reconciliation not only asking, but
+commanding; a mistress, not a handmaid." [Accedis enim ante illud aureum
+humanae reconciliationis altare, non solum rogans, sed imperans; Domina,
+non ancilla. Paris, 1743. vol. ii. p. 107. Serm. 44.]
+
+I must now solicit your attention to the sentiments of two writers,
+whose partial identity of name has naturally led, in some instances, to
+the one being mistaken for the other, Bernardinus de Bustis, and
+Bernardinus Senensis. Bernardinus de Bustis, [Fabricius, vol. i. 215.]
+in the country of Milan, was the celebrated author of the "Office of the
+Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin," which was confirmed by the
+bull of Sixtus the Fourth, and has since been celebrated on the 8th of
+December.
+
+He composed different works in honour of the Virgin, {373} to one of
+which he gave the title "Mariale." In this work, with a great variety of
+sentiments of a similar tendency, he thus expresses himself:--
+
+"Of so great authority in the heavenly palace is that empress, that,
+omitting all other intermediate saints, we may appeal to her from every
+grievance.... With confidence, then, let every one appeal to her,
+whether he be aggrieved by the devil, or by any tyrant, or by his own
+body, or by divine justice;" [Cologne, 1607. Part iii. Serm. ii. p.
+176.] and then, having specified and illustrated the three other sources
+of grievance, he thus proceeds: "In the fourth place, he may APPEAL TO
+HER, if any one feels himself AGGRIEVED BY THE JUSTICE OF GOD [Licet ad
+ipsam appellare, si quis a Dei justitia se gravari sentit.] ... That
+empress, therefore, Hester, was a figure of this empress of the heavens,
+with whom God divided his kingdom. For, whereas God has justice and
+mercy, He retained justice to himself to be exercised in this world, and
+granted mercy to his mother; and thus, if any one feels himself to be
+aggrieved in the court of God's justice, let him appeal to the court of
+mercy of his mother." [Ideo si quis sentit se gravari in foro justitiae
+Dei, appellet ad forum misericordiae matris ejus.]
+
+For one moment, let us calmly weigh the import of these words:--Is it
+any thing short of robbing the Eternal Father of the brightest jewel in
+his crown, and sharing his glory with another? Is it not encouraging us
+to turn our eyes from the God of mercy as a stern and ruthless judge,
+and habitually to fix them upon Mary as the dispenser of all we want for
+the comfort and happiness of our souls?
+
+In another place, this same author thus exalts Mary:
+
+"Since the Virgin Mary is mother of God, and God is her Son; and every
+son is naturally inferior to his {374} mother, and subject to her; and
+the mother is preferred above, and is superior to her son, it follows
+that the blessed Virgin is herself superior to God, and God himself is
+her subject, by reason of the humanity derived from her;" [Part ix.
+Serm. ii. p. 605.] and again. "O the unspeakable dignity of Mary, who
+was worthy to command the Commander of all." [Part xii. Serm, ii. p.
+816.]
+
+I will detain you by only one more quotation from this famed Doctor. It
+appears to rob God of his justice and power, as well as of his mercy;
+and to turn our eyes to Mary for the enjoyment of all we can desire, and
+for safety from all we can dread. Would that Bernardine stood alone in
+the propagation of such doctrines. "We may say, that the blessed Virgin
+is chancellor in the court of heaven. For we see, that in the chancery
+of our lord the pope, three kinds of letters are granted: some are of
+simple justice, others are of pure grace, and the third mixed,
+containing justice and grace.... The third chancellor is he to whom it
+appertains to give letters of pure grace and mercy. And this office hath
+the blessed Virgin; and therefore she is called the mother of grace and
+mercy: but those letters of mercy she gives only in the present life.
+For, to some souls, as they are departing, she gives letters of pure
+grace; to others, of simple justice; and to others, mixed, namely, of
+justice and grace. For some were very much devoted to her, and to them
+she gives letters of pure grace, by which she COMMANDS, that glory be
+given to them without any pain of purgatory: others were miserable
+sinners, and not devoted to her, and to them she gives letters of simple
+justice, by which she COMMANDS that condign vengeance be done upon them;
+others were lukewarm and remiss in devotion, and to them she gives
+letters of justice and grace, by which {375} she COMMANDS that grace be
+given to them, and yet, on account of their negligence and sloth, some
+pain of purgatory be also inflicted on them." [Part xii. Serm. ii. On
+the twenty-second excellence, p. 825.]
+
+The only remaining author, to whom I will at present refer you, is a
+canonized saint, Bernardinus Senensis. A full account of his life, his
+miracles, and his enrolment among the saints in heaven, is found in the
+Acta Sanctorum, vol. v. under the 20th of May, the day especially
+dedicated to his honour. Eugenius IV. died before the canonization of
+Bernardine could be completed: the next pope, Nicholas V. on Whitsunday
+1450, in full conclave, enrolled him among the saints, to the joy, we
+are told, of all Italy. In 1461, Pius the Second said that Bernardine
+was taken for a saint even in his lifetime; and, in 1472, Sixtus IV.
+issued a bull, in which he extols the saint, and authorizes the
+translation of his body into a new church, dedicated, as others had
+been, to his honour.
+
+This Bernardine is equally explicit with others, in maintaining, that
+all the blessings which Christians can receive on earth are dispensed by
+Mary; that her princedom equals the princedom of the Eternal Father;
+that all are her servants and subjects, who are the subjects and
+servants of the Most High; that all who adore the Son of God should
+adore his virgin-mother, and that the Virgin has repaid the Almighty for
+all that He has done for the human race. Some of these doctrines were to
+me quite startling; I was not prepared for them; but I have been assured
+they find an echo in the pulpits in many parts of the continent. Very
+few quotations will suffice. [Opera, per John de la Haye. Paris, 1636.
+Five volumes bound in two.] {376}
+
+"As many creatures do service to the glorious Mary, as do service to the
+Trinity.... For he who is the Son of God, and of the blessed Virgin,
+wishing (so to speak) to make, in a manner, the princedom of his mother
+equal to the princedom of his father, he who was God, served his mother
+on earth. Moreover, this is true, all things, even the Virgin, are
+servants of the divine empire; and again, this is true, all things, even
+God, are servants of the empire of the Virgin." [Vol. iv. Serm. v. c.
+vi. p. 118.]
+
+"Therefore, all the angelic spirits are the ministers and servants of
+this glorious Virgin." [Serm. iii. c. iii. p. 104.]
+
+"To comprise all in a brief sentence, I do not doubt that God made all
+the liberations and pardons in the Old Testament on account of the
+reverence and love of this blessed maid, by which God preordained from
+eternity, that she should be, by predestination, honoured above all his
+works. On account of the immense love of the Virgin, as well Christ
+himself, as the whole most blessed Trinity, frequently grants pardon to
+the most wicked sinners." [Serm. v. c. ii. p. 116.]
+
+"By the law of succession, and the right of inheritance, the primacy and
+kingdom of the whole universe is due to the blessed Virgin. Nay, when
+her only Son died on the cross, since He had no one on earth to succeed
+Him of right, his mother, by the laws of all, succeeded, and by this
+acquired the principality of all. [Serm. v. c. vii. p. 118.] ... But, of
+the monarchy of the universe, Christ never made any testamentary
+bequest, because that could never be done without prejudice to his
+mother. Moreover, HE KNEW THAT A MOTHER CAN ANNUL THE {377} WILL OF HER
+SON, IF IT BE MADE TO THE PREJUDICE OF HERSELF." [Insuper noverat quod
+potest mater irritare Filii testamentum si in sui praejudicium sit
+confectum.--P. 118.]
+
+"The Virgin Mother[138], from the time she conceived God, obtained a
+certain jurisdiction and authority in every temporal procession of the
+Holy Spirit, so that no creature could obtain any grace of virtue from
+God except according to the dispensation of his Virgin mother[139]. As
+through the neck the vital breathings descend from the head into the
+body, so the vital graces are transfused from the head Christ into his
+mystical body, through the Virgin. I fear not to say, that this Virgin
+has a certain jurisdiction over the flowing of all graces. And, because
+she is the mother of such a Son of God, who produces the Holy Spirit;
+THEREFORE, ALL THE GIFTS, VIRTUES, AND GRACES OF THE HOLY SPIRIT ARE
+ADMINISTERED BY THE HANDS OF HERSELF, TO WHOM SHE WILL, WHEN SHE WILL,
+HOW SHE WILL, AND IN WHAT QUANTITY SHE WILL." [Serm. v. p. 119.]
+
+ [Footnote 138: Serm. v. c. viii. and Serm. vi. c. ii. p. 120 and
+ 122. There is an omission (probably by an error of the press) in
+ the first passage, which the second enables us to supply.]
+
+ [Footnote 139: This writer is constantly referring to St.
+ Bernard's doctrine, "No grace comes from heaven upon the earth,
+ but what passes through the hands of Mary."]
+
+"She is the queen of mercy, the temple of God, the habitation of the
+Holy Spirit, always sitting at the right hand of Christ in eternal
+glory. Therefore she is to be venerated, to be saluted, and to be adored
+with the adoration of hyperdulia. And therefore she sits at the right
+hand of the King, that as often as you adore Christ the king you may
+adore also the mother of Christ." [Serm. vi. p. 121.]
+
+"The blessed Virgin Mary alone has done more for {378} God; or as much
+(so to speak) as God hath done for the whole human race. For I verily
+believe that God will grant me indulgence if I now speak for the Virgin.
+Let us gather together into one what things God hath done for man, and
+let us consider what satisfaction the Virgin Mary hath rendered to the
+Lord." Bernardine here enumerates many particulars, placing one against
+the other, which for many reasons I cannot induce myself to transfer
+into these pages, and then he sums up the whole thus: "Therefore,
+setting each individual thing one against another, namely, what things
+God had done for man, and what things the blessed Virgin has done for
+God, you will see that Mary has done more for God, than God has for man;
+so that thus, on account of the blessed Virgin, (whom, nevertheless, He
+himself made,) God is in a certain manner under greater obligations to
+us than we are to Him." [Serm. vi. p. 120.]
+
+The whole treatise he finishes with this address to the Virgin:--
+
+"Truly by mere babbling are we uttering these thy praises and
+excellences; but we suppliantly pray thy immense sweetness. Do thou, by
+thy benignity, supply our insufficiencies, that we may worthily praise
+thee through the endless ages of ages. Amen."
+
+In closing these brief extracts I would observe, that by almost every
+writer in support of the worship of the Virgin, an appeal is made to St.
+Bernard[140] as their chief authority. Especially is the following
+passage quoted by many, either whole or in part, at almost every turn of
+their argument:--
+
+ [Footnote 140: The present Pope, in the same manner, refers to
+ him in his Encyclical Letter.--A.D. 1840.]
+
+"If thou art disturbed by the heinousness of thy crimes, and confounded
+by the foulness of thy conscience, {379} if terrified by the horror of
+judgment thou begin to be swallowed up in the gulf of despair, think of
+Mary, invoke Mary; let her not depart from thy heart, let her not depart
+from thy mouth. For whilst thinking of her, thou dost not err; imploring
+her, thou dost not despair; following her, thou dost not lose thy way;
+whilst she holds thee, thou dost not fall; whilst she protects thee,
+thou dost not fear; whilst she is thy leader, thou art not wearied;
+whilst she is favourable, thou reachest thy end[141]."
+
+ [Footnote 141: See Bern. Sen. vol. iv. p. 124. The passage is
+ found in Bernard, Paris, 1640. p. 25.]
+
+If the Virgin Mary is thus regarded as the source and well-head of all
+safety and blessing, we cannot wonder, that glory and praise are
+ascribed in the selfsame terms to her as to the Almighty. Cardinal
+Bellarmin closes the several portions of his writings with "Praise to
+God and the blessed Virgin Mary[142]." It is painful to reflect, that
+either the highest glory, due to that God who will not share his glory
+with another, is here ascribed to one of the creatures of his hand
+(however highly favoured and full of grace), or else that to the most
+high God is ascribed an inferior glory and praise, such as it is lawful
+for us to address to an exalted fellow-creature. Surely the only
+ascription fitting the lips and the heart of those who have been
+enlightened by the bright beams of Gospel truth, is Glory to God alone
+through Christ his Son.
+
+ [Footnote 142: Such ascriptions are very common. Joannes de
+ Carthagena, a most voluminous writer of homilies, adopts this as
+ the close of his sections: "Praise and glory to the Triune God,
+ to the Humanity of Christ, to the Blessed Virgin Mary his
+ mother, and to St. Joseph her dearest spouse."--Catholic
+ Homilies on the Sacred Secrets of the Mother of God, and Joseph,
+ p. 921. Paris, 1615.] {380}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SECTION V.--MODERN WORKS OF DEVOTION AMONG ROMAN CATHOLICS.
+
+
+It may perhaps be surmised, that the authors referred to in the last
+section lived many years ago, and that the sentiments of the faithful
+members of the Church of Rome have undergone material changes on these
+points. Assurances are given on every side, that the invocation of the
+saints and of the Virgin is nothing more than a request, that they would
+intercede with God, and implore his mercy for the suppliants. But
+whatever implicit reliance we may place on the good faith with which
+these declarations are made, we can discover no new key by which to
+interpret the forms of prayer and praise satisfactorily. Confessedly
+there are no changes in the authorized services. We discover no traces
+of change in the worship of private devotion. The Breviary and Missal
+contain the same offices of the Virgin Mary as in former days. The same
+sentiments are expressed towards her in public; the same forms of
+devotion[143], both in prayer and praise, are prepared for the use of
+individuals in their daily exercises. Whatever meaning is to be attached
+to the expressions employed, the prevailing expressions themselves
+remain the same as we found them to have been in past ages.
+
+ [Footnote 143: Works of this character abound in every place,
+ where Catholic books may be purchased.]
+
+Since I made these extracts from the learned and celebrated doctors and
+canonized saints of former ages, my attention has been invited to the
+language now {381} used in forms of devotion, the spirit of which
+implies similar views of the power and love of the Virgin Mary, as the
+fountain of mercies to mankind, and the dispenser of every heavenly
+blessing.
+
+At the head of these modern works, I was led to read over again the
+encyclical letter of the present sovereign pontiff, from the closing
+sentences of which I have already made extracts. And referring his words
+to a test which we have more than once applied in a similar case--that
+of changing the name of the person, and substituting the name of God, or
+his blessed Son, I cannot see how the spirit of his sentiments falls in
+the least below the highest degree of religious worship. His words, in
+the third paragraph of his letter, as they appear in the Laity's
+Directory for 1833, are these:--
+
+"But having at length taken possession of our see in the Lateran Basilic
+according to the custom and institution of our predecessors, we turn to
+you without delay, venerable brethren, and in testimony of our feelings
+towards you, we select for the date of our letter this most joyful day
+on which we celebrate the solemn festival of the most blessed Virgin's
+triumphant assumption into heaven, that she who has been through every
+great calamity our patroness and protectress, may WATCH OVER US WRITING
+TO YOU, AND LEAD OUR MIND BY HER HEAVENLY INFLUENCE to those counsels
+which may prove most salutary to Christ's flock."
+
+Let us substitute for the name of Mary, the holiest of all, The Eternal
+Spirit of Jehovah Himself; and will not these words be a proper vehicle
+of the sentiments of a Christian pastor? Let us fix upon Christmas-day,
+or Easter, or Holy Thursday, and what word expressive {382} of gratitude
+for past mercies to the supreme Giver of all good things, or of hope and
+trust in the guidance of the Spirit of counsel, and wisdom, and
+strength--of the most High God, who alone can order the wills and ways
+of men--might not a bishop of Christ's flock take from this declaration
+of the Sovereign Pontiff, and use in its first and natural sense, when
+speaking of the Lord Jehovah Himself? "We select for the date of our
+letter this most joyful day on which we celebrate the solemn festival of
+the most blessed Redeemer's nativity, (or glorious resurrection, or
+ascension,) that He who has been through every great calamity our patron
+and protector, may watch over us writing to you, and lead our mind by
+his heavenly influence to those counsels which may prove most salutary
+to Christ's flock."
+
+In these sentiments of the present Pope there is no allusion (as there
+is in the other clause) to Mary's prayers and intercessions. Looking to
+and weighing the words employed, and as far as words can be relied upon
+as interpreters of the thoughts, looking to the spirit of his
+profession, only one inference can be fairly drawn. However direct and
+immediate the prayers of the suppliants may be to the Virgin for her
+protection and defence from all dangers, spiritual and bodily, and for
+the guidance of the inmost thoughts in the right way, (blessings which
+we of the Anglican Catholic Church, following the footsteps of the
+primitive flock of Christ, have always looked for at the hand of God
+Almighty only, to be granted by Him for the sake of his blessed Son,)
+such petitioners to Mary would be sanctioned to the utmost by the
+principles and example of the present Roman Pontiff.
+
+We have already, when examining the records of {383} the Council of
+Chalcedon, compared the closing words of this encyclical letter with the
+more holy and primitive aspirations of the Bishops of Rome and
+Constantinople in those earlier days; and the comparison is striking
+between the sentiments now expressed in the opening parts of the same
+letter, and the spirit of the collects which were adopted for the use of
+the faithful, before the invocation of saints and of the Virgin had
+gained its present strong hold in the Church of Rome. For example, a
+collect at Vespers teaches us to pray to God as the source from whom all
+holy desires and all good counsels proceed [Hiem. 149.]; and on the
+fifth Sunday after Easter this prayer is offered: "O God, from whom all
+good things do come, grant, we pray Thee, that by thy inspiration we may
+think those things that be good; and by thy guidance may perform the
+same;" whilst on the fifth Sunday after the Epiphany, in a collect, the
+spirit of which is strongly contrasted with the sentiments in both parts
+of this encyclical letter, God is thus addressed: "We beseech thee, O
+Lord, with thy continual pity, guard thy family, that, leaning on the
+sole hope of heavenly grace, it may ever be defended by thy protection."
+[Ut quae in _sola_ spe gratiae coelestis innititur, tua semper protectione
+muniatur.--Hiem, 364. "Let us raise our eyes to the Blessed Virgin, who
+is our greatest hope, yea, the entire ground of our hope."]
+
+Similar materials are abundant. A whole volume, indeed, might readily be
+composed consisting solely of rules and instructions, confessions and
+forms of prayer, appertaining to the Virgin and the Saints, published by
+authority at the present day, both in our country and on the Continent,
+for the use of our Roman Catholic {384} brethren; but to which the word
+of God, and the doctrine and practice of the primitive Church, are in
+our estimation as much opposed as to the prayers of Bonaventura, or to
+the doctrine of either of the Bernardins. It would, however, be
+unprofitable to dwell on this subject at any great length. I will,
+therefore, only briefly refer to two publications of this sort, to which
+my own attention has been accidentally drawn: "The Imitation of the
+Blessed Virgin,"[144] and "The Little Testament of the Holy
+Virgin."[145]
+
+ [Footnote 144: "The Imitation of the Blessed Virgin, composed on
+ the plan of the Imitation of Christ. London, 1816. Approved by
+ T.R. Asselini, Doctor of Sorbonne, last Bishop of Boulogne. From
+ the French."]
+
+ [Footnote 145: "The Little Testament of the Holy Virgin,
+ translated from the French, and revised by a Catholic Priest.
+ Third Edition. Dublin, 1836."]
+
+The first professes to be "composed on the plan of the 'Imitation of
+Christ.'" This is, in itself, highly objectionable; its tendency is to
+exalt Mary, by association, to the same place in our hearts and minds,
+which Thomas a Kempis had laboured, in his "Imitation of Christ," to
+secure for the Saviour; and it reminds us of the proceedings of
+Bonaventura, who wrote psalms to the honour of the Virgin after the
+manner which David used in his hymns to the Lord of Glory. In this work
+we read the following prayer to the Virgin, which seems to be stained
+with the error, the existence of which elsewhere we have already
+noticed, of contrasting the justice and the stern dealings even of the
+Saviour, with the mercy, and loving-kindness, and fellow-feeling of
+Mary; making God an object of fear, Mary an object of love.
+
+"Mother of my Redeemer, O Mary, in the last moments {385} of my life, I
+implore thy assistance with more earnestness than ever. I find myself,
+as it were, placed between heaven and hell. Alas! what will become of
+me, if thou do not exert, in my behalf, thy powerful influence with
+Jesus?... I die with SUBMISSION since JESUS has ORDAINED it; but
+notwithstanding the natural horror which I have of death, I die with
+PLEASURE, because I die under THY protection." [Chap. xiii. p. 344.]
+
+In the fourteenth chapter the following passage occurs: "It is giving to
+the blessed Virgin a testimony of love particularly dear and precious to
+her, to make her holy spouse Joseph the first object of our devotion,
+next to that which consecrates us to her service.... The name of Joseph
+is invoked with singular devotion by all the true faithful. They
+frequently join it with the sacred names of Jesus and Mary. Whilst Jesus
+and Mary lived at Nazareth, if we had wished to obtain some favour from
+them, could we have employed a more powerful protector than St. Joseph?
+Will he now have less power and credit? GO THEREFORE TO JOSEPH, (Gen.
+xli. 55.) that he may intercede for you. Whatever favour you ask, God
+will grant it you at his request.... Go to Joseph in all your
+necessities; but especially to obtain the grace of a happy death. The
+general opinion that he died in the arms of Jesus and Mary has inspired
+the faithful with great confidence, that, through his intercession, they
+will have an end as happy and consoling as his. In effect, it has been
+remarked, that it is particularly at the hour of death that those who
+have been during their life careful to honour this great saint, reap the
+fruit of their devotion." [P. 347.]
+
+In this passage the unworthy idea, itself formed on a groundless
+tradition, is introduced of paying reverence {386} to one saint, in
+order to gratify and conciliate another. Joseph must be especially
+honoured in order to do what is most acceptable to Mary. Surely this
+tends to withdraw the mind from that habitual reference of all our
+actions immediately to God, which the primitive teachers were so anxious
+to cultivate in all Christians.
+
+In the "Little Testament of the Holy Virgin," the following (p. 46) is
+called, "A Prayer to the blessed Virgin." Can any words place more on an
+entire level with each other, the eternal Son of God and the Virgin?
+"Jesus and Mary?!"
+
+"O Mary! what would be our poverty and misery if the Father of Mercies
+had not drawn you from his treasury to give you to earth! Oh! my Life
+and Consolation, I trust and confide in your holy name. My heart wishes
+to love you; my mouth to praise you; my mind to contemplate you; my soul
+sighs to be yours. Receive me, defend me, preserve me; I cannot perish
+in your hands. Let the demons tremble when I pronounce your holy name,
+since you have ruined their empire; but we shall say with Saint Anselm,
+that he does not know God, who has not an idea sufficiently high of your
+greatness and glory. We shall esteem it the greatest honour to be of the
+number of your servants. Let your glory, blessed Mother, be equal to the
+extent of your name; reign, after God, over all that is beneath God;
+but, above all, reign in my heart; you will be my consolation in
+suffering, my strength in weakness, my counsel in doubt. At the name of
+Mary my hope shall be enlightened, my love inflamed. Oh! that I could
+deeply engrave the dear name on every heart, suggest it to every tongue,
+and make all celebrate it with me. Mary! sacred name, under which no one
+{387} should despair. Mary! sacred name, often assaulted, but always
+victorious. Mary! it shall be my life, my strength, my comfort! Every
+day shall I envoke IT AND THE DIVINE NAME OF JESUS. The Son will awake
+the recollection of the mother, and the mother that of the Son. JESUS
+AND MARY! this is what my heart shall say at the last hour, if my tongue
+cannot; I shall hear them on my death bed,--they shall be wafted on my
+expiring breath, and I with them, to see THEM, know THEM, bless and love
+THEM for eternity. Amen."
+
+There may, perhaps, be a reasonable ground for our hoping that these are
+not the sentiments entertained by the enlightened Roman Catholics of our
+country and age. Any one has a full right to say, "These are productions
+of individuals for which we and the Church to which we belong are not
+responsible, any more than the Church of England is responsible for all
+doctrines and sentiments expressed by writers in her communion! Even the
+sentiments above referred to of the present reigning pope, you have no
+right to allege as the doctrines of the Church!" But I would again
+venture to suggest to every one, who would thus speak, the duty of
+ascertaining for himself, whether the sentiments of those who at present
+fill the highest places, and which fully justify these devotional
+exercises and prayers to the Virgin and the Saints, be not themselves
+fully justified by the authorized ritual of the Roman Church. On this
+point are supplied, even in this volume, materials sufficiently
+diversified and abundant in quantity to enable any one to form a correct
+judgment.
+
+By two brief extracts I will now bring this branch of our inquiry to a
+close. The first is from the concluding paragraphs of a discourse lately
+delivered and {388} published. In principle, the sentiments here
+professed apparently admit not only of being identified with those of
+the authorized services of the Church of Rome, but also, though not so
+naked and revolting in appearance as the doctrines of Bonaventura, Biel,
+and the two Bernardins, yet in reality they equally depart from the
+simplicity of the Gospel, and are equally at direct variance with that,
+its first and its last principle, ONE GOD AND ONE MEDIATOR BETWEEN GOD
+AND MEN, THE MAN CHRIST JESUS.
+
+"Remember that this day you have put yourselves and your families under
+the protection of the ever-blessed Mother of God, and Her chaste Spouse,
+St. Joseph; of those who were chosen of God to protect the infancy of
+Jesus from the danger by a persecuting world. ENTREAT THEM TO PROTECT
+YOU AND YOURS FROM THE PERILS of a seducing and ensnaring world; to
+plead your interests in heaven, and secure by their intercession your
+everlasting crown. Loudly proclaim the praises of your heavenly Queen,
+but at the same time turn Her power to your everlasting advantage by
+your earnest supplications to HER." (See Appendix.)
+
+The other extract, which sanctions to the full whatever offerings of
+praise and ascriptions of glory we have found individuals making to the
+Virgin and to Saints, is from an announcement in, I believe, the last
+English edition of the Roman Breviary published, in its present form,
+under the sanction of the Pope himself.
+
+"To those who devoutly recite the following prayer after the office,
+Pope Leo the Tenth hath granted pardon (indulsit) for the defects and
+faults in celebrating it, contracted by human frailty.
+
+"To the most holy and undivided Trinity; to the manhood {389} of our
+crucified Lord Jesus Christ; to the fruitful spotlessness of the most
+blessed and most glorious and ever-Virgin Mary; and to the entire body
+of all the Saints, be eternal praise, honour, virtue, and glory, from
+every creature, and to us remission of all sins, through endless ages of
+ages. Amen." [Norwich, 1830. AEst.]
+
+On the indulgence for pardon given by Pope Leo the Tenth, more than 300
+years ago, for such defects and faults in celebrating a religious
+service as may be contracted by human frailty; and on the fact of the
+notification of that indulgence being retained, and set forth so
+prominently in the service books at the present day, I will say nothing.
+Whatever associations may be raised in our minds by these circumstances,
+the subject does not fall within our present field of inquiry. But to
+join the Holy Trinity with the Virgin Mother, and all the Saints in one
+and the same ascription of ETERNAL PRAISE, HONOUR, and GLORY, is as
+utterly subversive of the integrity of primitive Christian Worship, as
+it is repugnant to the plainest sense of holy Scripture, and derogatory
+to the dignity of that Supreme Being, who declares Himself to be a
+jealous God.
+
+It has, indeed, been maintained that such ascriptions of glory and
+praise jointly to God and his Saints, is sanctioned by the language of
+our blessed Saviour Himself when He speaks of his having given his glory
+to his disciples [John xvii. 22.], and of his second advent, when He
+shall come in his own glory, and in his Father's, and of the holy
+angels. [Luke ix. 26.] But between the two cases there is no analogy
+whatever; the inference is utterly fallacious. We know that the Lord of
+Hosts is the King of glory, and that his eternal Son shared the glory of
+his Father before the foundations {390} of the world were laid. We know,
+too, that the Almighty has been pleased to create beings of various
+degrees and orders, differing from each other in kind or in excellence
+according to his supreme will. Among those creatures of his hand are the
+angels whom we reverence and love, as his faithful servants and his
+ministers to us for good. But when we speak and think of religious
+adoration; of giving thanks; and ascribing eternal glory and honour, we
+have only one object in our minds,--the supreme Sovereign Lord of all.
+
+With regard to the gracious words of our Saviour in his prayer to the
+Father, on the eve of his death, St. Peter's acts and words supply us
+with a plain and conclusive comment. He was himself one of those to whom
+Christ had declared that He had given the glory which his Father had
+given to Him; and yet when Cornelius fell down at his feet to worship
+him, he took him up, saying, "Stand up; I myself also am a man." [Acts
+x. 26.] The Saviour was pleased to impart his glory to his Apostles,
+dividing to them his heavenly gifts severally as He willed. We praise
+Him for those graces which shone so brightly in them, and we pray to Him
+to enable us by his grace to follow them, as they followed his blessed
+steps. We reverence their memory, but we give God alone the praise.
+
+As to the other instance, the words of our Lord (assuring us that the
+angels should accompany Him at his second advent in their glory, the
+glory which He assigned to them in the order of creation,) no more
+authorize us to ascribe praise and glory by a religious act to them,
+when we praise the God of angels and men, than would {391} the assurance
+of an inspired apostle, that "there is one glory of the sun, another
+glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars," sanction us in
+joining those luminaries in the same ascription of glory with their
+Almighty Creator and ours. Just as reasonably would a pagan justify his
+worship of the sun, the moon, and the stars, by this passage of
+Scripture, as our Roman Catholic brethren would justify themselves by
+the former passage in their ascription of praise and glory to the holy
+angels, and saints, and the blessed Virgin. We honour the holy angels,
+we praise God for the glory which He has imparted to them, and for the
+share which He has been pleased to assign to them in executing his
+decrees of mercy in the heavenly work of our salvation; and we pray to
+HIM to grant that they may by his appointment succour and defend us on
+earth, through Jesus Christ our Lord. But we address no invocation to
+them; we ascribe no glory to them as an act of religious worship. By
+offering thanks and praise to God He declares that we honour HIM; by
+offering thanks and praise, and by ascribing glory and honour to angel,
+saint, or virgin, we make them gods. {392}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+We have now, my fellow Christians, arrived at the conclusion of the task
+which I proposed to undertake. I have laid before you, to the utmost of
+my abilities and means, the result of my inquiry into the evidence of
+holy Scripture and primitive antiquity, on the invocation of saints and
+angels, and the blessed Virgin Mary. In this inquiry, excepting so far
+as was necessary to elucidate the origin and history of the Roman
+Catholic tenet of the Assumption of the Virgin, we have limited our
+researches to the writers who lived before the Nicene Council. That
+Council has always been considered a cardinal point,--a sort of
+climacteric in the history of the early Church. It was the first Council
+to which all the bishops of Christendom were summoned; and the influence
+of its decrees is felt beneficially in the Catholic Church to this very
+day. In fixing upon this Council as our present boundary line, I was
+influenced by a conviction, that the large body of Christians, whether
+of the Roman, the Anglican, or any other branch of the Church Catholic,
+would consent to this as an indisputable axiom,--that what the Church
+Catholic did not believe or practise up to {393} that date of her
+existence upon earth, cannot be regarded as either Catholic or
+primitive, or apostolical. Ending with St. Athanasius, (who, though he
+was present at that Council, yet brings his testimony down through
+almost another half century, his death not having taken place till A.D.
+873, on the verge of his eightieth year,) we have examined the remains
+of Christian antiquity, reckoning forward to that Council from the times
+of the Apostles. We have searched diligently into the writings, the
+sentiments, and the conduct of those first disciples of our Lord. We
+have contemplated the words of our blessed Saviour himself, and the
+inspired narrative of his life and teaching. With the same object in
+view we have studied the prophets of the Old Testament, and the works of
+Moses; and we have endeavoured, at the fountainhead, to ascertain what
+is the mind and will of God, as revealed to the world from the day when
+He made man, on the question of our invoking the angels and saints to
+intercede with Him in our behalf, or to assist and succour us on the
+earth. And the result is this:--From first to last, the voice of God
+Himself, and the voices of the inspired messengers of heaven, whether
+under the patriarchal, the Mosaic, or the Christian dispensations, the
+voices too of those maintainers of our common faith in Christ, who
+prayed, and taught, in the Church, before the corruptions of a
+degenerate world had mingled themselves with the purity of Christian
+worship, combine all, in publishing, throughout the earth, one and the
+self-same principle, "Pray only to God; draw nigh to Him alone; invoke
+no other; seek no other in the world of spirits, neither angel, nor
+beatified saint; seek Him, and He will favourably, with mercy, hear your
+prayers." To this one {394} principle, when the Gospel announced the
+whole counsel of God in the salvation of man, our Lord himself, his
+Apostles, and his Church, unite in adding another principle of eternal
+obligation,--There is one Mediator between God and men, the man Christ
+Jesus; whatsoever the faithful shall ask the Father in the name of that
+Mediator, He will grant it to them: He is ever living to make
+intercession for those who believe in Him: Invoke we no other
+intercessor, apply we neither to saint nor angel, plead we the merits of
+no other. Let us lift up our hearts to God Almighty himself, and make
+our requests known to Him in the name, and through the mediation of
+Christ, and He will fulfil our desires and petitions as may be most
+expedient for us; He will grant to us, in this world, a knowledge of his
+truth, and in the world to come life everlasting!
+
+Watching the tide of evidence through its whole progress, we find it to
+flow all in this one direction. Here and there indeed attempts have been
+made to raise some mounds and barriers of human structure, in order to
+arrest its progress, and turn it from its straight course, but in vain;
+unchecked by any such endeavours, it rolls on in one full, steady,
+strong, and resistless current. Until we have long passed the Nicene
+Council, we find no one writer of the Christian Church, whose remains
+tell us, that he either himself invoked saints and angels, and the
+Virgin Mary, or was at all aware of any such practice prevailing in
+Christendom. Suppose, for one moment, that our doctrine is right; and
+then we find the whole tenour of the Old and New Testaments, and the
+ancient writers, in their plain meaning, agreeably to the interpretation
+of the most learned and unbiassed critics, fully coinciding in every
+respect with our view of God being the sole object of invocation, {395}
+and of the exclusive character of Christ's intercession, mediation, and
+advocacy. Suppose, for another moment, the Roman Catholic theory to be
+correct, then the whole general tenour and drift of Scripture must be
+evaded; the clearest statements and announcements must be explained away
+by subtle distinctions, gratuitous definitions, and casuistical
+refinements, altogether foreign from the broad and simple truths of
+Revelation; then, too, in ascertaining the sentiments of an author, not
+his general and pervading principles, evidenced throughout his writings,
+must be appealed to; but casual and insulated expressions must be
+contracted or expanded as may best seem to counteract the impression
+made by the testimony of those principles. We may safely ask, Is there
+such evidence, that the primitive Church offered invocations to saints
+and angels, and the Virgin, as would satisfy us in the case of any
+secular dispute with regard to ancient usage? On the contrary, is not
+the evidence clear to a moral demonstration, that the offering of such
+addresses is an innovation of later days, unknown to the primitive
+Christians till after the middle of the fourth century, and never
+pronounced to be an article of faith, until the Council of Trent, more
+than a thousand years after its first appearance in Christendom, so
+decreed it.
+
+The tendency, indeed, of some Roman Catholic writings, especially of
+late years, is to draw off our minds on these points from the written
+word of God, and the testimony of the earliest Church, and to dwell upon
+the possibility, the reasonableness of the doctrines of the Church of
+Rome in this respect, their accordance with our natural feelings, and
+their charitableness. But in points of such vast moment, in things
+concerning the soul's salvation, we can depend with satisfaction and
+{396} without misgiving, only on the sure word of promise; nothing short
+of God's own pledge of his own eternal truth can assure us, that all is
+safe. Such substitution of what may appear to us reasonable, and
+agreeable to our natural sentiments, and desirable if true, in place of
+the assurances of God's revealed Will, may correspond with the arguments
+of a heathen philosopher unacquainted with the truth as it is in Jesus,
+but cannot satisfy disciples of Him who brought life and immortality to
+light by his Gospel. Such questions as these, "Is there any thing
+unreasonable in this? Would not this be a welcome tenet, if true?" well
+became the lips of Socrates in his defence before his judges, but are in
+the strict sense of the word preposterous in a Christian. With the
+Christian the first question is, What is the truth? What is revealed?
+What has God promised? What has He taught man to hope for? What has He
+commanded man to do? By his own words, by the words and by the example
+of his inspired messengers, by the doctrine and practice of his Church,
+the witness and interpreter of the truth, how has He directed us to sue
+for his mercy and all its blessings? On what foundation, sure and
+certain, can we build our hopes that "He will favourably with mercy hear
+our prayers?" For in this matter, a matter of spiritual life and death,
+we can anchor our hope on no other rock than his sure word of promise.
+
+That sure word of promise, if I am a faithful believer, I have; but it
+is exclusive of any invocation by me of saint, or angel, or virgin. The
+pledge of heaven is most solemnly and repeatedly given; God, who cannot
+lie, has, in language so plain, that he may run who readeth it, assured
+me that if I come to HIMSELF by HIS SON, my prayer shall not be cast
+out, my suit shall {397} not be denied, I shall not be sent empty away.
+In every variety of form which language can assume, this assurance is
+ratified and confirmed. His own revealed will directs me to pray for my
+fellow-creatures, and to expect a beneficial effect from the prayers of
+the faithful upon earth in my behalf. To pray for them, therefore, and
+to seek their prayers, and to wait patiently for an answer to both, are
+acts of faith and of duty. And were it also appointed by God's will to
+be an act of faith and duty in a Christian to seek the prayers, and aid,
+and assistance, of saints and angels by supplicatingly invoking them,
+surely the same word of truth would have revealed that also. Whereas the
+reverse shows itself under every diversified state of things, from the
+opening of the sacred book to its very last page. The subtle distinction
+of religious worship into latria, dulia, and hyperdulia, the refined
+classification of prayer under the two heads of direct, absolute, final,
+sovereign, on the one hand, and of oblique, relative, transitory,
+subaltern, on the other, swell indeed many elaborate works of casuistry,
+but are not discoverable in the remains of primitive Christians, nor in
+the writings of God's word have they any place. I cannot find in the
+inspired Apostles any reference to the necessity, the duty, the
+lawfulness, the expediency of our seeking by prayer the good offices of
+the holy dead, or of the angels of light. In their successors the
+earliest inspired teachers and pastors of Christ's fold, I seek in vain
+for any precept, or example, or suggestion, or incidental allusion
+looking that way. Why then should a Christian wish to add to that which
+God has been pleased to appoint and to reveal? Why should I attempt to
+enter heaven through any other gate than {398} that gate which the Lord
+of heaven has opened for me? or why should I seek to reach that gate by
+any other way than the way which He has made for me; which He has
+Himself plainly prescribed to me; in which He has promised that his word
+shall be a lantern unto my feet; and along which those saints and
+servants of his, who received the truth from his own lips, and sealed it
+by their blood, have gone before?
+
+Whenever a maintainer of the doctrine and practice of invoking the
+Saints asks me, as we have lately been asked in these words, "May I not
+reasonably hope that their prayers will be more efficacious than my own
+and those of my friends? And, under this persuasion, I say to them, as I
+just now said to you, holy Mary, holy Peter, holy Paul, pray for me.
+What is there in reason or revelation to forbid me to do so?" To this
+and similar questions and suggestions, I answer at once, God has
+solemnly covenanted to grant the petitions of those who ask HIM for his
+mercy, in the name and for the sake of his Son; and in his holy word
+has, both by precept and example, taught us in this life to pray for
+each other, and to ask each other's prayers [James v. 16; I Tim. ii.
+1.]; but that He will favourably answer the prayers which we supplicate
+angels to offer, or which we offer to Himself through the merits and by
+the intercession of departed mortals, is no where in the covenant.
+Moreover, when God invites me and commands me to approach Him myself, in
+the name of his Son, and trusting to his merits, it is not Christian
+humility, rather it savours of presumption, and intruding into those
+things which we have not seen [Coloss. ii. 18.], to seek to prevail with
+Him by {399} pleading other merits, and petitioning creatures, however
+glorious, to interest themselves with Him in our behalf, angels and
+saints, of whose power even to hear us we have no evidence. When Jesus
+Himself, who knows both the deep counsels of the Eternal Spirit, and
+man's wants and weaknesses and unworthiness, and who loveth his own to
+the end, pledges his never-failing word, that whatsoever we ask the
+Father in his name, He will give it us, can it be less than an unworthy
+distrust of his truth and faithfulness to ask the Father for the merits
+and by the intercession of another? and as though in fear lest God
+should fail of his promise, or be unmindful of us Himself, to invoke
+angels and the good departed to make our wants known unto HIM, and
+prevail with HIM to relieve us?
+
+Surely it were wiser and safer to adhere religiously to that one way
+which cannot fail, than to adopt for ourselves methods and systems, for
+the success of which we have no guarantee; which may be unacceptable in
+his sight; and the tendency of which may be to bring down a curse and
+not a blessing.
+
+May the great Shepherd and Bishop of souls pour down upon his Church the
+abundance of his mercy, preserving those in the truth who now possess
+it, restoring it to those by whom it has been lost, and imparting it to
+all who are yet in darkness. And, whilst we speak the truth in love, and
+endeavour to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, may HE,
+for his own glory, and for the safety and comfort of his people, shed
+this truth abroad in our hearts, and enlighten us to receive it in all
+its fulness and integrity, and in the very sense in which the Holy
+Spirit, when He guided {400} the pen of St. Paul, willed the Church to
+interpret it, "There is one God and one Mediator between God and men,
+the man Christ Jesus."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services of
+Angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant, that as thy holy
+Angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by thy appointment they may
+succour and defend us on earth, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
+
+O Almighty God, who hast built thy Church upon the foundation of the
+Apostles and Prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the head corner-stone;
+Grant us so to be joined together in unity of spirit by their doctrine,
+that we may be made an holy temple, acceptable unto Thee, through Jesus
+Christ our Lord. Amen.
+
+O Almighty God, who hast knit together thine elect in one communion and
+fellowship, in the mystical body of thy Son Christ our Lord; Grant us
+grace, so to follow thy blessed Saints in all virtuous and godly living,
+that we may come to those unspeakable joys, which Thou hast prepared for
+them that unfeignedly love Thee; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
+{401}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Note.--Pages 107 and 110.
+
+The following is the original of the passages discussed in the text.
+Justin Martyr, Apol. I. p. 47. Sec. vi. Benedictine Edition by P. Maran.
+Paris, A.D. 1742.
+
+[Greek: Enthende kai atheoi keklaemetha; kai homologoumen ton toiouton
+nomizomenon theon atheoi einai, all' ouchi tou alaethestatou, kai patros
+dikaiosunaes kai sophrosunaes, kai ton allon areton, anepimiktou te
+kakias Theou; all' ekeinon te, kai ton par' autou huion elthonta kai
+didaxanta haemas tauta, kai ton ton allon hepomenon kai exomoioumenon
+agathon angelon straton, pneuma te to prophaetikon sebometha, kai
+proskunoumen, logoi kai alaetheiai timontes, kai panti boulomenoi
+mathein, hos edidachthaemen, aphthonos paradidontes.]
+
+Ibid. page 50, 51. sect. xiii.--[Greek: 'Atheoi men oun hos ouk esmen,
+ton daemiourgon toude tou pantos sebomenoi, ... ton didaskalon te touton
+genomenon haemin, kai eis touto genaethenta Iaesoun Christon ton
+staurothenta epi Pontiou Pilatou, tou genomenou en Ioudaiai epi chronois
+Tiberiou Kaisaros epitropou, huion autou tou ontos Theou mathontes, kai
+en deuterai chorai echontes, pneuma te prophaetikon en tritaei taxei,
+hoti meta logou timomen, apodeixomen....]
+
+Note.--Page 134.
+
+In the text it has been observed, that "Coccius in his elaborate work
+quotes the two following passages as Origen's, without expressing {402}
+any hesitation or doubt respecting their genuineness; in which he is
+followed by writers of the present day."
+
+The modern works, to which reference is here made, are chiefly the
+Lectures delivered by Dr. Wiseman, in the Roman Catholic Chapel in
+Moorfields in the year 1836, and the compilation of Messrs. Berington
+and Kirk [Berington and Kirk. London, 1830, p. 403.], from which Dr.
+Wiseman in his preface to his Lectures (p. ix.) informs us, that in
+general he had drawn his quotations of the Fathers. In citing the
+testimony of Origen in support of the invocation of saints, it is
+evident that Dr. Wiseman has drawn from that source; for whereas the two
+confessedly spurious passages, from the Lament, and from the Book on
+Job, are in that compilation quoted in the same page, Dr. Wiseman cites
+only the passage from the Lament, as from a work on the Lamentations,
+but gives his reference to the Book on Job. His words are these:--"Again
+he (Origen) thus writes on the Lamentations: 'I will fall down on my
+knees, and not presuming, on account of my crimes, to present my prayer
+to God, I will invoke all the saints to my assistance. O ye saints of
+heaven, I beseech you with a sorrow full of sighs and tears; fall at the
+feet of the Lord of mercies for me, a miserable sinner,'--Lib. ii. De
+Job." [Lectures on the Principal Doctrines and Practices of the Catholic
+Church, by Nicholas Wiseman, D.D. London, 1836. Vol. i. preface, p. ix.
+and vol. ii. p. 107.]
+
+When we find such passages as these, which have been so long ago and so
+repeatedly pronounced to be utterly spurious, yet cited in evidence at
+the present time, and represented as conveying the genuine testimony of
+Origen, we shall be pardoned for repeating the sentiments expressed so
+many years ago by the learned Bishop of Avranches with regard to the
+very work here cited, "It is wonderful that, WITHOUT ANY MARK OF THEIR
+BEING FORGERIES, they should be sometimes cited in evidence by some
+theologians."
+
+Note.--Page 151.
+
+The whole passage cited as Origen's comment on the words of Ezekiel,
+"The heavens are opened," is in the Latin version as follows. The Greek
+original, if it ever existed, is lost. The portion between brackets is
+the part suspected of being an interpolation.
+
+6. _Et aperti sunt coeli_. Clausi erant coeli, et ad adventum Christi
+aperti sunt, ut reseratis illis veniret super eum Spiritus Sanctus in
+specie columbae. Neque enirn poterat ad nos commeare nisi primum {403} ad
+suae naturae consortem descendisset. _Ascendit Jesus in altum, captivam
+duxit captivitatem, accepit dona in hominibus. Qui descendit, ipse est
+qui ascendit super omnes coelos ut impleret omnia. Et ipse dedit alios
+apostolos, alios prophetas, alios evangelistas, alios pastores et
+magistros in perfectionem sanctorum_.
+
+[7. _Aperti sunt coeli_. Non sufficit unum coelum aperiri: aperiuntur
+plurimi, ut descendant non ab uno, sed ab omnibus coelis angeli ad eos
+qui salvandi sunt. Angeli qui ascendebant et descendebant super Filium
+hominis, et accesserunt as eum, et ministrabant ei. Descenderunt autem
+angeli, quia prior descenderat Christus, metuentes descendere priusquam
+Dominus virtutum omnium rerumque praeciperet. Quando autem viderunt
+principem militiae coelestis in terrestribus locis commorari, tunc per
+apertam viam ingressi sunt sequentes Dominum suum, et parentes voluntati
+ejus qui distribuit eos custodes credentium nomini suo. Tu heri sub
+daemonio eras, hodie sub angelo. _Nolite_, inquit Dominus, _contemnere
+unum de minimis istis_ qui sunt in ecclesia. _Amen enim dico vobis, quia
+angeli eorum per omnia vident faciem Patris qui est in coelis_.
+Obsequuntur saluti tuae angeli, concessi sunt ad ministerium Filii Dei,
+et dicuntinter se: si ille descendit, et descendit in corpus; si mortali
+indutus est carne, et sustinuit crucem, et pro hominibus mortuus est,
+quit nos quiescimus? quid parcimus nobis? Eja omnes angeli descendamus e
+coelo. Ideo et multitudo militiae coelestis erat laudantium et
+glorificantium Deum, quando natus est Christus. Omnia angelis plena
+sunt: veni, angeli, suscipe sermone conversum ab errore pristino, a
+doctrina daemoniorum, ab iniquitate in altum loquente: et suscipiens eum
+quasi medicus bonus confove atque institue, parvulus est, hodie nascitur
+senex repuerascens: et suscipe tribuens ei baptismum secundae
+regenerationis, et advoca tibi alios socios ministerii tui, ut concti
+pariter eos qui aliquando decepti sunt, erudiatis ad fidem. _Gaudium
+enim est majus in coelis super unum peccatorem poenitentiam agentem,
+quam supra nonaginta novem justos quibus non opus est poenitentia_.
+Exultat omnis creatura, collaetatur et applaudit his qui salvandi sunt.
+Nam _expectatio creaturae revelationem filiorum Dei expectat_. Et licet
+nolint ii qui scripturas apostolicas interpolaverunt istiusmodi sermones
+inesse libris eorum quibus possit Creator Christus approbari, expectat
+tamen omnis creatura filios Dei, quando liberentur a delicto, quando
+auferentur de Zabuli manu, quando regenerentur a Christo. Verum jam
+tempus est, ut de praesenti loco aliqua tangamus. Vidit Propheta non
+visionem, sed visiones Dei. {404} Quare non vidat unam, sed plurimas
+visiones? Audi Dominum pollicentem atque dicentem: _Ego visiones
+multiplicavi_. 8. _Quinta mensis_. Hic annus quinta captivitatis regis
+Joachim. Trigesimo anno aetatis Ezekielis, et quinto captivitatis
+Joachim, Propheta mittiur ad Judaeos. Non despexit clementissimus pater,
+nec longo tempore incommonitum populum dereliquit. Quintus est annus.
+Quantum temporis intercessit? Quinque anni interfluxerunt ex quo captivi
+serviunt.]
+
+Statim descendit Spiritus Sanctus,--aperuit coelos, ut hi qui
+captivitatis jugo premebantur, viderent ea quae videbantur a Propheta.
+Dicente quippe eo, _Et aperti sunt coeli_, quodam modo et ipsi
+intuebantur oculis cordis quae ille etiam oculis carnis aspexerat.--Vol.
+iii. p. 358.
+
+Note.--Page 165.
+
+In a note on the Epistle of St. Cyprian to his brother, reference was
+made to the Appendix for a closer comparison of Cyprian's original
+letter with the modern translation of the passage under consideration.
+By placing the two versions in parallel columns side by side, we shall
+immediately see, that the mode of citing the testimony of St. Cyprian
+adopted in Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, from the compilation of Messrs.
+Berington and Kirk, is rather to substitute his own comment and
+inference, than to allow the witness to speak for himself in his own
+words. The whole paragraph, as it appears in Dr. Wiseman's Lectures, is
+this:--
+
+"St. Cyprian in the same century: 'Let us be mindful of one another in
+our prayers; with one mind and with one heart, in this world and in the
+next, let us always pray with mutual charity relieving our sufferings
+and afflictions. And may the charity of him, who, by the divine favour,
+shall first depart hence, still persevere before the Lord; may his
+prayer, for our brethren and sisters, not cease.' Therefore, after
+having departed this life, the same offices of charity are to continue,
+by praying for those who remain on earth." [Lect. xiii. vol. ii. p. 107,
+and Berington and Kirk, p. 430.]
+
+_St. Cyprian's words_. _Epist._ lvii. _p._ 96.
+
+_Translation adopted by Dr. Wiseman from Berington and Kirk._
+
+
+1. Memories nostri invicem simus,
+
+1. Let us be mindful of one
+another IN OUR PRAYERS; {405}
+
+2. Concordes atque unanimes, 2. With one mind and with
+ one heart.
+
+3. Utrobique. 3. In this world and in the next,
+
+4. PRO NOBIS semper oremus, 4. Let us always pray,
+
+5. Pressuras et angustias mutua 5. With mutual charity RELIEVING out
+caritate relevemus, sufferings and afflictions.
+
+6. Et si quis istinc nostrum 6. And may the CHARITY OF HIM,
+prior divinae dignationis celeritate who, by the divine facour, shall
+praecesserit, perseveret apud Dominum first depart hence, still persevere
+NOSTRA DILECTIO, before the Lord;
+
+7. Pro fratribus et sororibus 7. May HIS prayer, for our brethren
+nostris apud misericordiam patris and sisters, not cease.
+non cesset oratio.
+
+In this translation, by inserting the words, _in our prayers_, which are
+not in the original in the first clause; by rendering the adverb
+_utrobique_, IN THIS WORLD AND IN THE NEXT, in the third clause; by
+omitting the words _pro nobis, for each other_, which are in the
+original, in the fourth clause; by changing in the fifth the verb
+_relevemus, let us relieve_, implying another branch of their mutual
+kindness, into the participle _relieving_, which may imply, that the
+relief alluded to was also to be conveyed by the medium of their
+prayers; by substituting _the charity of him_, in place of _nostra
+dilectio, our charity_, in the sixth; and by inserting the word _his_,
+which is not in the original, before _prayer_, where the grammar of the
+sentence requires _our_, in the seventh clause;--by these means the
+translator makes Cyprian express a sentiment far removed from what the
+words of Cyprian, in their plain and natural sense, convey. It must,
+however, be borne in mind, as we have shown in our examination of the
+passage, that the sentiment of Cyprian, even as it is thus unduly
+extracted from his words, would not in the remotest degree countenance
+the invocation of saints. It would do no more than imply his belief,
+that the faithful departed may take an interest in the welfare of their
+surviving friends on earth, and promote that welfare by their prayers; a
+point which, in the preface, is mentioned as one of those topics, the
+discussion of which would be avoided in this inquiry, as quite distinct
+from the invocation of saints. {406}
+
+Note.--Page 176.
+
+An extract from Eusebius, unnoticed in the text of this work, has
+recently been cited as conveying his testimony in favour of the
+invocation of saints. I have judged it better to defer the consideration
+of it to the appendix. It has been cited in these terms: "In the fourth
+century Eusebius of Caesarea thus writes: 'May we be found worthy by the
+prayers and intercessions of all the saints.'" [Dr. Wiseman's Lectures,
+vol. ii. p. 107. Lect. xiii. Berington and Kirk, p. 431.] To form a just
+estimate of this alleged testimony, it is requisite that we have before
+us not only that incomplete clause, but the whole passage purporting to
+contain, in these words, the closing sentences of a commentary on
+Isaiah: [Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1707. Dr. Wiseman's reference is
+"Com. in Isai. Tom. ii. p. 593, ed. Paris, 1706."]
+
+"'And they shall be for a spectacle to all flesh.' To what flesh?
+Altogether to that which shall be somewhere punished? Nay, to that which
+shall of the heavenly vision be deemed worthy, concerning which it was
+said before, All flesh shall come to worship before me, of which may we
+also be deemed worthy by the prayers and intercessions of all the
+saints. Amen."
+
+In examining this passage I am willing for the present that all its
+clauses should be accepted as the genuine words of Eusebius, and
+accepted too in the meaning attached to them by those who have cited
+them. And to what do they amount? If these are indeed his expressions,
+Eusebius believed that the saints departed can forward our spiritual
+welfare by their prayers and ministering offices; and he uttered his
+desire that we might thus be benefited. Now whether we agree with him or
+not in that belief; whether we consider the faithful departed as able to
+take an interest in our welfare and to promote it, or regard such an
+opinion as without foundation in the word of God and in primitive
+doctrine; the belief implied and the wish expressed here by Eusebius,
+are widely indeed removed from the act of suppliantly invoking the
+saints departed, and resorting to them with entreaties for their prayers
+and intercessions in our behalf. These two things, although often
+confounded, are far from being equivalent; and by all who would
+investigate with fairness the subject of our inquiry, they must be
+carefully kept distinct. The invocation of saints being the single point
+in question, our business is to ascertain, not what opinions Eusebius
+may have {407} entertained as to the condition, and power, and offices
+of the saints departed, but whether he invoked them; whether he had
+recourse to them with supplications for their prayers, or aid and
+succour. And keeping this closely in view, even if we admit this passage
+to be genuine, and interpret it as those who have cited it wish it to be
+interpreted, we find in it no authority for the invocation of saints. A
+Christian would be no more countenanced by this language of Eusebius in
+suppliantly invoking departed saints, than he would in praying to the
+angels for their help and mediation be countenanced by the terms of the
+prayer in regard to them, addressed by the Anglican Church to God, "O
+everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the services of
+angels and men in a wonderful order; Mercifully grant, that as thy holy
+angels alway do Thee service in heaven, so by THY appointment they may
+succour and defend us on earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."
+Whoever petitions them, makes them Gods--Deos qui rogat ille facit.
+
+But whilst, for the sake of the argument, I have admitted this passage
+to be genuine, and correctly translated, and have shown that whether
+genuine or not, and even if it be thus correctly translated, it affects
+not in the least the issue of our inquiry, I do not feel at liberty to
+withhold the acknowledgment of my persuasion that in this concession I
+grant too much. For, in the first place, I am assured, that if the
+passage came from the pen of Eusebius, no one is justified in confining
+the desire and wish contained in it to the intercessions and prayers of
+the saints in heaven; and, secondly, I see reasons for inferring that
+the last clause was framed and attached to this work, not by Eusebius
+himself, but by some editor or scribe.
+
+In support of my first persuasion, I would observe that the very
+language of the writer of these comments on Isaiah and the Psalms
+precludes us from regarding the Saints departed as exclusively
+constituting those "holy ones" by whose intercessions and prayers he
+expresses his desire that our spiritual welfare may be promoted. In this
+very comment on Isaiah (ch. vi. 2. p. 376), when he is speaking of the
+heavenly inhabitants, and illustrates his views by God's dealings
+towards the children of men in this world, he employs this expression:
+"For as among men the Saints of God partake of more excellent graces."
+On the 67th (68th) Ps. v. 34, having interpreted the words, "his
+strength is in the clouds," as referring to the {408} prophets and
+teachers of divine wisdom, under the guidance of the Spirit, pouring
+heavenly truths upon the souls of men as the clouds drop rain on fertile
+lands, he proceeds thus to comment on the expression, "God is wonderful
+among his Saints." [Vol. i. p. 364. The English translation refers the
+word "holy" to places, not persons.] "These Saints are different from
+those before called Apostles and prophets. And who can they be, except
+those who out of all nations are deemed worthy of purity and holiness,
+among whom God is wonderful, giving to them power and strength?" Thus in
+perfect accordance with the language of this writer, the Saints, from
+whose prayers and intercessions he desires to derive spiritual benefits,
+may be the Saints of God on earth--in the same state with those saints
+still living in the flesh, whose prayers St. Paul desired to be offered
+up for himself, that by them a door of utterance to speak the mystery of
+Christ might be opened unto him [Coloss. i. 2; iv. 2, 3.]--and with
+those saints to whom the same Apostle wrote at Philippi: "To all the
+saints in Christ Jesus:" and to whom he sent the greetings of the saints
+who then surrounded him: "ALL the SAINTS salute you." [Phil i. 1; iv.
+22.]
+
+But before the closing words of this paragraph, whatever be its meaning,
+be acknowledged as the genuine and undoubted production of Eusebius, I
+would suggest the careful weighing of some considerations, which appear
+to me to involve serious difficulties.
+
+1. First, through all the voluminous works of Eusebius, I have found in
+no single passage any allusion to the prayers of saints departed, or to
+their ministering offices in our behalf, though numberless openings show
+themselves for the natural introduction of such a subject.
+
+2. Secondly, among all the various works and treatises of Eusebius, I
+have not found one which is closed by any termination of the kind; on
+the contrary, they all end with remarkable suddenness and abruptness,
+precisely as this comment would end, were the sentence under
+consideration removed. Each, indeed, of the books of his Ecclesiastical
+History, is followed by a notice of the close of the book, in some cases
+too that notice involving a religious sentiment: for example, at the
+close of the 10th book we read: "With the help of God, the end of the
+tenth book." But that these are appendages made by an editor or scribe
+is evident in itself, and moreover {409} in many instances is shown by
+such sentences as these, "And this we have found in a certain copy in
+the 8th volume:" "This is in some copies, as if omitted from the 8th
+book." I find no one instance of Eusebius bringing a chapter or a
+treatise to its close by any religious sentiment, or any termination of
+the nature here contemplated.
+
+It is also difficult to conceive that any author, having the flow and
+connexion of the whole passage present to his mind, would himself have
+appended this ejaculation as we now find it. We know that editors and
+scribes often attached a sentiment of their own to the closing words of
+an author. And it seems far more probable, that a scribe not having the
+full drift of the argument mainly before him, but catching the
+expression, "heavenly vision," appended such an ejaculation. That the
+writer himself should introduce such a sentence by the connecting link
+of a relative pronoun feminine, which must of necessity be referred, not
+as the grammatical construction would suggest to the feminine noun
+preceding it,--not to any word expressed or understood in the
+intervening clause preceding it,--not to the last word in the sentence
+even before that intervening clause, nor yet to the principal and
+leading subject immediately under discussion and thrice repeated,--but
+to a noun incidentally introduced, seems, to say the least, strange and
+unnatural. "And they shall be for a spectacle to all flesh. To what
+flesh? Altogether to that which shall be somewhere punished? Nay, to
+that which shall of the heavenly vision be deemed worthy, concerning
+WHICH it was said before, All FLESH shall come to worship before me, of
+which may we also be deemed worthy by the prayers and intercessions of
+all the saints. Amen." But the classical reader will appreciate these
+remarks more satisfactorily by examining them with reference to the
+passage in the original language.
+
+[Greek: Kai esontai eis orasin pasaei sarki. poiai de sarki; ae pantos
+pou taei kolasthaesomenaei; taes de epouraniou theas kataxiothaesomenaei
+peri HAES anotero elegeto aexei pasa sarx tou proskunaesai enopion mou,
+HAES kai haemeis axiotheiaemen euchais kai presbeiais panton ton hagion,
+amaen.]
+
+Note.--Page 181.
+
+ATHANASIUS.
+
+In the text I observed that some Roman Catholic writers of the present
+day had cited the homily there shown to be utterly spurious, {410} as
+the genuine work of St. Athanasius, and as recording his testimony in
+defence of the invocation of Saints. The passage there referred to Dr.
+Wiseman thus introduces, and comments upon.
+
+"St. Athanasius, the most zealous and strenuous supporter that the
+Church ever possessed of the divinity of Jesus Christ, and consequently
+of his infinite superiority over all the saints, thus enthusiastically
+addresses his ever-blessed Mother: 'Hear now, O daughter of David;
+incline thine ear to our prayers. We raise our cry to thee. Remember us,
+O most holy Virgin, and for the feeble eulogiums we give thee, grant us
+great gifts from the treasures of thy graces, thou who art full of
+grace. Hail, Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Queen and
+mother of God, intercede for us.' Mark well," continues Dr. Wiseman,
+"these words; 'grant us great gifts, from the treasures of thy graces;'
+as if he hoped directly to receive them from her. Do Catholics use
+stronger words than these? Or did St. Athanasius think or speak with us,
+or with Protestants?"
+
+In answer to these questions I reply with sure and certain confidence,
+first, that the genuine words of St. Athanasius himself prove him to
+have spoken and thought with the Anglican Church, and not with the Roman
+Church on the invocation of saints and angels, and the blessed Virgin
+Mary; and secondly, that whatever words Roman Catholics use, whether
+stronger or not than these, these words on which the above questions are
+put, never came forth from the pen of St. Athanasius. Their spuriousness
+is not a question of doubt or difficulty. It has been shown in the text
+that the whole homily has been for ages utterly repudiated, as a work
+falsely attributed to St. Athanasius. It is indeed very disheartening to
+those, whose object is the discovery and the establishment of the truth,
+to find works cited in evidence as the genuine productions of primitive
+Christian teachers, which have been so long ago, and so repeatedly, and
+that not by members of another communion, but by the most learned men of
+the Church of Rome, adjudged to be spurious. I do not mean that I think
+it not fully competent for a writer of the present day to call in
+question, and overrule and set aside the decisions of former editors, as
+to the genuine or the spurious character of any work. On the contrary I
+am persuaded that a field is open in that department of theology, which
+would richly repay all the time and labour and expense, which persons
+well qualified for the task could bestow upon its culture. What I lament
+is this, that after a work has been deliberately condemned as
+unquestionably {411} spurious, by competent and accredited judges for
+two centuries and a half at the least, that very work should be now
+cited as genuine and conclusive evidence, without any the most distant
+allusion to the judgment which had condemned it, or even to any
+suspicion of its being a forgery. In this instance, also, Dr. Wiseman
+has implicitly followed the compilation of Messrs. Berington and Kirk.
+This is evident, because the extract, as it stands word for word the
+same in his Lectures and their compilation, is not found as one passage
+in the spurious homily, but is made up of sentences selected from
+different clauses, and put together so as to make one paragraph. It is
+worthy of notice, that in quoting their authority, both Dr. Wiseman, and
+those whom he follows, refer us to the very volume in which the
+Benedictine editors declare that there was no learned man, who did not
+pronounce the work to be spurious; and in which also they quote at
+length the letter of Baronius which had proved it to be a forgery. [Dr.
+Wiseman's Lectures, vol. ii. p. 108, from Berington and Kirk, p. 430,
+431.]
+
+Note.--Page 231. (Decree of the Council of Trent.) [Canones et Decreta
+Sacros. OEcumen. et Genera. Concilii Tridentini, &c. Rom. fol. A.D.
+1564.]
+
+Mandat sancta Synodus omnibus Episcopis, et ceteris docendi munus
+curamque sustinentibus, ut juxta Catholicae, et Apostolicae Ecclesiae usum,
+a primaevis Christianae religionis temporibus receptum, sanctorumque
+Patrum consensionem, et sacrorum Conciliorum decreta, inprimis de
+Sanctorum intercessione, invocatione, Reliquiarum honore, et legitimo
+imaginum usu, fideles diligenter instruant, docentes eos, Sanctos, una
+cum Christo regnantes, orationes suas pro hominibus Deo offerre; bonum
+atque utile esse suppliciter eos invocare; et ob beneficia impetranda a
+Deo per Filium ejus Jesum Christum, Dominum nostrum, qui solus noster
+Redemptor et Salvator est, ad eorum orationes, opem, auxiliumque
+confugere: illos vero, qui negant sanctos aeterna felicitate in coelo
+fruentes, invocandos esse; aut qui asserunt, vel illos pro hominibus non
+orare, vel eorum, ut pro nobis etiam singulis orent, invocationem esse
+idololatriam, vel pugnare cum verbo Dei, adversarique honori unius
+Mediatoris Dei et hominum, Jesu Christi, vel stultum esse, in coelo
+regnantibus voce, vel mente supplicare, impie sentire. Sanctorum quoque
+Martyrum, et aliorum cum Christo viventium Sancta corpora, {412} quae
+viva membra fuerunt Christi, et templum Spiritus Sancti, ab ipso ad
+aeternam vitam suscitanda et glorificanda, a fidelibus veneranda esse;
+per quae multa beneficia a Deo hominibus praestantur: ita ut affirmantes,
+Sanctorum Reliquiis venerationem, atque honorem non deberi; vel eas,
+aliaque sacra monumenta a fidelibus inutiliter honorari; atque eorum
+opis impetrandae causa sanctorum memorias frustra frequentari; omnino
+damnandos esse, prout jampridem eos damnavit, et nunc etiam damnat
+Ecclesia. [De Invocatione, Veneratione, et Reliquiis Sanctorum, et
+Sacris Imaginibus, p. 202.]
+
+Note.--Pages 369 and 390.
+
+In a prefatory epistle, addressed to the "Chaplains, Wardens, and
+Brethren of the Holy Catholic Gild," in Huddersfield, Dr. Wiseman (p. 4)
+expresses himself thus: "Yesterday I laid the badge of your association
+at the feet of the sovereign pontiff, and it was most condescendingly
+and graciously received. But this is not all. As I had foretold, I found
+His Holiness fully informed of your establishment and public
+manifestation; and I had the satisfaction of hearing him express his
+WISH THAT SIMILAR INSTITUTIONS SHOULD REVIVE ALL OVER THE COUNTRY."
+
+Towards the close of the sermon, to which this preface is prefixed, and
+which was preached at St. Patrick's Chapel, Huddersfield, Sept. 26th,
+1839, and was printed at York in the present year [A.D. 1840], the
+preacher draws the comparison, referred to in page 370 of this work,
+between England and the continent, and between England as it is, and
+England as it once was, and as, in his view, it ought to be again. After
+describing the scenes which you may witness in Roman Catholic countries,
+"where you might see the poor and the afflicted crowding round some
+altar, where their pious confidence or experience of past favours leads
+them to hope that their prayers will best be heard through the
+intercession of our dear Lady," he thus proceeds: "Oh that the time had
+come, when a similar expression of our devout feelings towards her
+should publicly be made, and all should unite to show her that honour,
+that reverence, and love which she deserves from all Christians, and
+which has so long been denied her amongst us. There was a time when
+England was second to {413} no other country upon earth in the discharge
+of this holy duty; and it will be only PART OF THE RESTORATION OF OUR
+GOOD AND GLORIOUS DAYS OF OLD to revive to the utmost this part of
+ancient piety. Therefore do I feel sincere joy at witnessing the
+establishment of this excellent brotherhood, and its public
+manifestation in this town this day, both as a means of encouraging
+devotion and virtue, and as a return to one of the venerable
+institutions of our forefathers. Enter then fully into its spirit."
+
+["A Sermon delivered at St. Patrick's, Huddersfield, Sept. 26th, 1839,
+on occasion of the Holy Catholic Gild there established, by the Rev. N.
+Wiseman, D.D., Professor in the University of Rome. York, 1840," p. 22,
+23. The first quotation made in p. 390, is from this Sermon.]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Primitive Christian Worship, by James Endell Tyler
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