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Chapter 2 Rise and Progress of
Ecclesiastical Supremacy The first pastors of the Roman Church
aspired to no rank above their brethren. The labors in which
they occupied themselves were the same as those of the ordinary
ministers of the gospel. As pastors, they watched with
affectionate fidelity over their flock. and when occasion offered,
they added to the duties of the pastorate the labors of the evangelist. All of them were eminent for
their piety, and some of them to the graces of the Christian
added the accomplishments of the scholar. Clemens of Rome
may be cited as an instance. He was the most distinguished
Christian writer after the apostles of the first century. Even after
the gospel had found entrance within the walls of Rome, paganism
maintained its ground amongst the villages of the Campania.
Accordingly, it became the first care of the pastors of the metropolis
to plant the faith and found churches in the neighboring towns. They were led to embark in this
undertaking. not from the worldly and ambitious
views which began, in the course of time, to actuate their successors,
but from that pure zeal for the diffusion of Christianity for
which these early ages were distinguished. It was natural that churches
founded in these circumstances should cherish a peculiar veneration
for the men to whose pious labors they owed their existence, and
it was equally natural that they should apply to them for advice
in all cases of difficulty. That advice was at first purely
paternal, and implied neither superiority on the part of the
person who gave it, nor dependence on the part of those to whom
it was given. But in process of time, when the episcopate
at Rome came to be held by men of worldly spirit, lovers of
the preeminence, the homage at first voluntarily rendered by
equals to their equal, was exacted as a right, and the advice, at
first simply fraternal, took the form of a command, and was
delivered in a tone of authority. These beginnings of assumption
were small, but they were beginnings, and power is cumulative. It is
the law of its nature to grow at a continually accelerating
rate, which, though slow on the outset, becomes fearfully rapid
towards the end. And thus the pastors of Rome,
at first by imperceptible degrees, and at last by enormous strides,
reached their fatal preeminence. Such was the state of matters
in the first century, during which the authority of the presbyter
or bishop for these two titles were employed in primitive times
to distinguish the very same office and the same order of
men, and did not extend beyond the limits of the congregation
to which they ministered. But in the second century, another
element began to operate In that age, it became customary to regulate
the consideration and rank which the bishops of the Christian
Church enjoyed by that of the city in which they resided. It
is easy to see the influence and dignity which would then
accrue to the bishops of Rome, and the prospects of grandeur
and power which would thus open to the aspiring prelates, that's
another name for cardinal, who now occupied that sea. That's S-E-E. Rome was the mistress
of the world. During ages of conquest, her
dominion had been gradually extending till at last it had become universal
and supreme. And now she exercised a mysterious
and potent charm over the nations. Her laws were received and her
sway submitted to throughout the whole civilized earth. The first Rome was herein the
type of the second Rome. And if the spectacle which she
exhibited of a centralized and universal despotism did not suggest
to the aspiring prelates of the capital the first ideas of a
spiritual empire alike centralized and universal, there is no question
that it contributed most material aid towards the attainment of
such an object. An object which, we know, they
had early proposed and which they had begun with great vigor,
steadiness, and craft to prosecute. it acted as a secret but powerful
stimulant upon the minds of the Roman bishops themselves, and
it operated with all the force of a spell upon the imaginations
of those over whom they now began to arrogate power. And herein
we discover one of the grand springs of the papacy. as the
free states that formerly existed in the world had rendered up
their wealth, their independence, and their deities to form one
colossal empire. Why, asked the bishops of Rome,
should not the various churches throughout the world surrender
their individuality and their powers of self-government to
the metropolitan sea in order to form one mighty Catholic Church? Why should not Christian Rome
be the fountain of law and of faith to the entire world as
pagan Rome had been? Why should not the symbol of
unity presented to the world in the secular empire be realized
in the real unity of a Christian empire? If the occupant of the
temporal throne had been a king of kings, Why should not the
occupant of the spiritual chair be a bishop of bishops? That the bishops of Rome reasoned
in this way is a historical fact. The Council of Chalcedon established
the superiority of the Roman Sea on this very ground. quote, the fathers, close quote,
say they, quote, justly conferred the dignity on the throne of
the presbyter of Rome, because that was the imperial city, close
quote. The mission of the gospel is
to unite all nations into one family. Satan presented the world
with a mighty counterfeit of this union when he united all
nations under the despotism of Rome, that thus, by counterfeiting,
he might defeat the reality. The rise of provincial ecclesiastical
councils wrought in the same way. The Greeks, copying the
model of their The Mephitonic Council were the first to adopt
the plan of assembling the deputies of the churches of a whole province
to deliberate on affairs of consequence. The plan, in a short time, was
received throughout the whole empire. The Greeks called such
assemblies synods. The Latins termed them councils
and styled their laws or resolutions as canons. In order to temper
the deliberations and to execute the resolutions of the assembly,
it was requisite that one should be chosen as president, and the
dignity was usually conferred on the presbyter of greatest
weight for his piety and wisdom. that the tranquility of the church
might not be disturbed by annual elections, the person raised
by the suffrages of his brethren to the presidential chair was
continued in it for life. He was regarded only as the first
among equals. But the title of bishop began
now to acquire a new significance, and to raise itself above the
humble ablation of a presbyter. The election to the office of
perpetual president fell not unfrequently upon the bishop
of the metropolitan city, and thus the equality that reigned
among the pastors of the primitive church came to be still farther
disturbed. The fourth century found the
primitive simplicity of the church as regards the form of her government,
but little encroached upon. If we accept the perpetual president
of the provincial synod, a rank of equal honor and a title of
equal dignity were enjoyed by all the pastors or bishops of
the church. But this century brought great
changes along with it and paved the way for still greater changes
in the centuries that followed it. Under Constantine, the empire
was divided into four prefectures, and these four prefectures into
dioceses, and the diocese into provinces. In making this arrangement,
the state acted within its own province, but it stepped out
of it altogether when it began, as it now did, to fashion the
church upon the model of the empire. The ecclesiastical and
civil arrangements were made, as nearly as possible, to correspond. Pious emperors believed that,
in assimilating the two, they were doing both the state and
the church a service, and the imperial wishes were powerfully
seconded and formally sanctioned by ambitious prelates and intriguing
councils. The new arrangements, impressed
by a human policy upon the church, became every day more marked,
as did likewise the graduation of rank amongst the pastors. Bishop rose above bishop, not
according to the eminence of his virtue or the fame of his
learning, but according to the rank of the city in which his
charge lay. The chief city of a province
gave the title of Metropolitan, and likewise of Primate, to its
bishop. The metropolis of a diocese conferred
on its pastor the dignity of Exarch, spelled E-X-A-R-C-H. Over the exarchs were placed
four presidential patriarchs, according to the four Praetorian
prefects created by Constantine. But it is probable that the title
of patriarch, which is of Jewish origin, was at first common to
all bishops and gradually came to be employed as a term of dignity
and eminence. The first distinct recognition
of the order occurs in the Council of Constantinople in Anno Domini
381. At that time we find but three
of these great dignitaries in existence. They are the bishops
of Rome, Antioch, and Alexandria. But a fourth was now added. The
Council, taking into consideration that Constantinople was the residence
of the Emperor, decreed that the Bishop of Constantinople
should have the prerogative, next after the Bishop of Rome,
because his city was called New Rome. In the following century,
the Council of Chalcedon declared the bishops of these two cities
on a level as regarded their spiritual rank. But the practice
of Old Rome was more powerful than the decree of the fathers.
Despite the rising grandeur of her formidable rival, the city
on the Tiber continued to be the one city of the earth. and
her pastor to hold the foremost place among the patriarchs of
the Christian world. In no long time, wars broke out
between these four spiritual potentates. The primates of Alexandria
and Antioch threw themselves for protection upon the Patriarch
of the West. and the concessions they made
as the price of the succor, which was extended to them, tended
still more to enhance the importance of the Roman sea. This gradation
of rank necessarily led to a gradation of jurisdiction and power. First
came the bishop, who exercised authority in his parish, and
to whom the individual members of his flock were accountable.
Next came the Metropolitan, who administered the ecclesiastical
affairs of the province, exercised superintendence over all its
bishops, convened them in synods, and, assisted by them, heard
and determined all questions touching religion which arose
within the limits of his jurisdiction. He possessed, moreover, the privilege
of having his consent asked to the ordination of bishops within
his province. Next came the exarchs, or patriarchs,
who exercised authority over the metropolitans of the diocese,
and Eldiocesian synods, in which all matters pertaining to the
welfare of the church in the diocese were deliberated upon
and adjudicated. there needed but one step more
to complete this gradation of rank and authority, a primacy
among the exarchs. In due time, an arch-patriarch
arose. As might have been foreseen,
the seat of the prince of the patriarchs was Rome, a gradation
which aimed at making the civil and ecclesiastical arrangements
exactly to correspond and which fixed the chief seats of the
two authorities at the same places, made it inevitable that the primate
of all Christendom should appear nowhere but at the metropolis
of the Roman world. It was now seen what a tower
of strength was Rome. Her prestige alone had lifted
her bishop from the humble rank of presbyter to the preeminent
dignity of arch-patriarch, and in this she gave the world a
pledge of the future dominion and grandeur of her popes. A gradation of rank and titles,
however suitable to the genius and conducive to the ends of
a temporal monarchy, consorts but ill with the character and
objects of a spiritual kingdom. In fact, it forms a positive
and powerful obstruction to the development of the one and the
attainment of the other. It is only as a spiritual agent
that the Church can be serviceable to society. She can make the
task of government easy only by eradicating the passions of
the human heart. A sound policy would have dictated
the necessity of preserving intact this spiritual element, seeing
the Church as powerful in proportion as she is spiritual. With a most
infatuated persistency, the very opposite policy was pursued.
Religion was robbed of her rights as a co-ordinate power. She was
bound round with the trappings of state. The spiritual was enchained. The carnal had free scope given
it. And then the church was asked
to do her office as a spiritual institute. A defunct organization,
she was required to impart life. The condition under which alone
it appears possible for both church and state to preserve
their independence and vigor is not incorporation, but co-ordination. God created society as he created
man at the beginning. not one, but twain, that's two. There is a secular body and there
is a spiritual body upon the earth. We must accept the fact
and deal with it in a way as will allow of the great ends
being gained which God intended to serve by ordaining this order
of things. If we attempt to incorporate
the two, the common error hitherto We contradict the design of God
by making one what he created twain. All former attempts at
amalgamation have ended in the dominancy of the one principle,
the subserviency of the other, and the corruption and injury
of both. If, on the other hand, we aim at effecting a total disseverance,
we not less really violate the constitution of society and arrive
at the same issue as before, when we virtually banish the
one principle and install the other in undivided and absolute
supremacy. Coordination is the only solution
of which the problem admits, and it is the true solution,
because it is an acceptance of the fact as God has ordained
it. It declares that society is neither
matter solely nor spirit solely, but both. That, therefore, there
is the secular jurisdiction and the spiritual jurisdiction. That
these two have distinct characters, distinct objects, and distinct
spheres. and that each, in its own sphere,
is independent, and can claim from the other a recognition
of its independence. Had the constitution of society
been understood, and the principle of co-ordination recognized,
the papacy could not have arisen. But, unhappily, the state drew
the church into conformity first, which ended inevitably in incorporation. And this, again, is the dominancy
of the spiritual over the secular element, as will always be the
case in the long run, the spiritual being the stronger. The crime
met a righteous punishment. for the state, which had begun
by enslaving the church, was itself enslaved in the end by
that very arrogance and ambition which it had taught the church
to cherish. But we pursue our melancholy
story of the decline of Christianity and the rise of the papacy. Rome
had the art to turn all things to her advantage. There was nothing
that fell out that did not minister to her growth and help onward
the accomplishment of her vast designs. The rivalship of sects,
the jealousies of churchmen, the intrigues of courts, the
growth of ignorance and superstition find the triumph of barbarian
arms. It seemed as if the natural operation
of events was suspended in her case, and that what to other
systems wrought naught but evil, to her brought only good. The
great shocks by which powerful empires were broken in pieces,
and the face of the world changed, left the Church unscathed. While
other systems and confederations were falling into ruin, she continued
steadily to advance. From the mighty wreck of the
empire she arose in all the vigor of youth. She had shared in its
grandeur, but she did not share in its fall. She saw the barbaric
flood from the north overwhelm southern Europe, but from her
lofty seat on the seven hills she looked securely down on the
deluge that rolled beneath her. she saw the Crescent, hitherto
triumphant, cease to be victorious the moment it approached the
confines of her special and secret territory. The same arms that
had overthrown other countries only contributed to her grandeur.
The Saracens brought to an end the Patriarchate of Alexandria
and of Antioch, thus leaving the Sea of Rome undisputed mistress of the West. What could be concluded from
so many events, whose issues to the papacy were so opposite
from their bearing on all besides, but that while other states were
left to their fate, Rome was defended by an invisible arm?
Instinct! She must be with a divine life. Otherwise, how could she survive
so many disasters? No wonder that the blinded nations
mistook her for a god and prostrated themselves in adoration. We cannot
write the history of the period, but we may be permitted to point
out the general bearing of the occurrences which we have classified
as above upon the development of the papacy. The disputes which
arose in the churches of the East favored the pretensions
of the Roman Church and helped to pave her way to universal
domination. Desirous to silence an opponent
by citing the opinion of the Western Church, the Eastern clergy
not unfrequently submitted questions at issue among themselves to
the judgment of the Roman Bishop. and every such application was
registered by Rome as proof of superior authority on her part
and of submission on the part of the East. The germinating
superstition of the times, owing principally to the prevalence
of the Platonic philosophy, from the subtle disquisitions and
spacious reasonings of which Christianity suffered far more
than she did from the pre-persecuting edicts of emperors and pro-councils,
likewise aided the advance of the papacy. This superstition,
which was in truth, as we have already explained, Nothing but
the revived paganism of a former age continued to increase from
an early part of the third century onward. The simplicity of the
Christian faith began to be corrupted by novel and heathenish opinions,
and the worship of the Church to be burdened by ridiculous
and idolatrous ceremonies. When the church exchanged the
catacombs for the magnificent edifices which the wealth, the
policy, and sometimes the piety of princes erected, she exchanged
also the simplicity of life and purity of faith of which so many
affecting memorials remain to our day for the accommodating
spirit of the schools and the easy manners of the court. Already
in the 4th century we find images introduced into churches, the
bones of martyrs hawked about as relics, the tombs of saints
become the resort of pilgrims, and monks and hermits swarming
in the various countries We find the pagan festivals, slightly
disguised, adopted into the Christian worship. The homage offered anciently
to the gods transferred to the martyrs. The Lord's Supper dispensed
sometimes at funerals. The not improbable origin of
masses. and the churches filled with
the blaze of lamps and tapers, the smoke of incense, the perfume
of flowers, and the goodly show of gorgeous robes, croziers,
mitres, and gold and silver vases, reminding one of the not-unsimilar
spectacles which might be witnessed in the pagan temples." The religion
of Constantine, close quote, remarks Gibbon, quote, achieved
in less than a century the final conquest of the Roman Empire,
but the victors themselves were insensibly subdued by the arts
of their vanquished rivals, close quote. And as it had fared with
the worship of the church, so had it fared with her government.
First, The people were excluded from all share in the administration
of affairs. Next, the rights and privileges
of the presbyters were invaded, while the bishops, who had usurped
the powers of both people and presbyters, contended with one
another respecting the limits of their respective jurisdictions,
and imitated, in their manner of living, the state and magnificence
of princes. At last, the church elected her
chief bishop in the midst of tumults and fearful slaughter.
Quote, hence it came to pass, close quote, says Mosheum, that
at the conclusion of this century, there remained no more than a
mere shadow of the ancient government of the church, close quote. Notwithstanding
that the church contained every man of the age who was distinguished
for erudition and eloquence, we look in vain for any really
serious attempt to check this career of spiritual infatuation. There was one moment peculiarly
critical. inasmuch as it offered signal
opportunities of retrieving the errors of the past and preventing
the more tremendous errors of the future. Called by the yoke
of ceremonies, the Christian people began to evince a desire
to return to the simplicity of the early times. There needed
only a powerful voice to call that feeling into action. Many
eyes were already turned to one whose commanding eloquence and
venerable piety made him the most conspicuous person of his
times. The destiny of ages hung on the
decision of Augustine. Had he declared for reform, the
history of the papacy might have been cut short. The ambition
of a Hildebrandt and a Clement the bigotry and despotism of
a Philip and a Ferdinand, the fanaticism and cruelties of a
Dominic, and the carnage of a Saint Bartholomew might never have
existed. But the Bishop of Hippo, alas,
hesitated, gave his voice in favor of the growing superstition,
and all was lost. The history of the church becomes
from that hour little better than the history of superstition,
hypocrisy, knavery, and blood. Poisonous plants thrive best
amid corruption, and thus the young papacy drew nutriment from
the follies and superstitions of the age. The time was now
come when the empire should fall. Hosts of barbarians from the
deserts of the north were already assembled on its frontier. The
distracted state, threatened with destruction, lent for aid
upon the arm of the church, whose infancy it had first attempted
to crush, and next condescended to shelter. Thus, the decline
of the imperial accelerated the rise of the spiritual power.
In the year 378 came the Law of Gratian and Valentinian II
empowering the Metropolitans to judge the inferior clergy
and empowering the Bishop of Rome, that was Pope Damascus
or Pope Domicius, either in person or by deputy to judge the Metropolitans. An appeal might be carried from
the tribunal of the Metropolitan to the Roman Bishop. But from
the judgment of the pontiff, there was no appeal. His sentence
was final. This law was addressed to the
Praetorian prefects of Gaul, which is France, and Italy, and
thus it included the whole Western Empire. For the latter prefect
exercised jurisdiction over Western Illyricium and Africa, as well
as over Italy. Thus did the Roman bishop acquire
legal jurisdiction over all the Western clergy. When the bishops
applied to the Pope in doubtful cases, his letters conveying
the desired advice were styled Decretal Epistles, and to these
decretals the Roman canonists came afterwards to attach as
much importance as to the Holy Scriptures. In order to the due
publication and enforcement of these decrees, bishops were appointed
to represent the Pope in various countries, and it became customary
to ordain no bishops without the sanction of these papal vicars. The jurisdiction thus conferred
on the Roman bishop over the West was submitted to with reluctance. It received only a partial submission
from the Churches of Africa and was successfully resisted for
some considerable time by those of Britain and Ireland. The edict
of Gracian and Valentinian II, which was coincident as respects
the date of its promulgation and the powers which it conferred,
with the decree of a synod of Italian bishops, forms a marked
epoch in the growth of the ecclesiastical supremacy. Up till this time,
the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome had been exercised within
the somewhat narrow limits of the civil prefect. His direct
power extended only over the vicarage of Rome or the ten suburban
provinces. However, within this territory,
his authority was of a more absolute kind than that which the exarchs
of the East exercised within their diocese. The latter functionaries
could ordain only their metropolitans, whereas the Roman prelate possessed
the right to ordain every bishop within the limits of his jurisdiction.
Thus, if his authority was less extensive than that of the oriental
patriarch, it was already of a more solid kind. But now it
underwent a sudden and vast enlargement. By the edict of the emperor and
the sanction of the Italian bishops, the Roman prelate took his place
at the head of the Western clergy. A post so distinguished, though
conferring as yet, on the whole, but a nominal authority, must
have offered vast facilities for acquiring real and substantial
power. When was it that the occupants
of Peter's chair lacked either the capacity to comprehend or
the tact to improve the advantages of their position? Ambition and
genius have always alike seemed intuitive to them. Lifted thus
to the supremacy of the West by royal favor and clerical subserviency,
twin elevatory powers at all stages of the rise of this terrible
despotism, the pontiff began to arrogate all the prerogatives
which ecclesiastical law confers upon patriarchs, and to exercise
them in an arbitrary and irresponsible manner. He obtruded his interference
in the ordination of all bishops, even those of humblest rank,
thus passing by and virtually ignoring the rights of Metropolitans. He encouraged appeals to his
See in the well-founded hope of drawing into his own hands
the management of all affairs. He convoked synods, but rather
to display the magnificence and power of Peter's See than to
benefit by the counsel of his brethren in difficult cases.
Usurping the legislative as well as the judicial functions of
the church, he dictated to his secretary whatever he believed
or pretended to believe to be right and fitting in manners
or matters pertaining to the church. And the decretal to which
you all submitted was equally authoritative with the canons
of councils. and finally with the commandments
of Holy Scripture. Thus did the occupant of the
fisherman's chair craftily weave the intricate web of his tyrannical
and blasphemous power over all the churches and clergy of the
West. Another well-marked stage in
the rise of the ecclesiastical supremacy is 445 A.D. In that year came the memorable
edict of Valentinian III and Theodosius II, in which the Roman
pontiff was styled the, quote, director of all Christendom,
close quote. And the bishops and universal
clergy were commanded to obey him as their ruler. It is believed
that the decree was issued on the application of Pope Leo. Amongst other advantages enjoyed
by the pontiff was that of ready access to the court, and thus
he sometimes became the prompter of the imperial policy. the suggestions
noted down by his secretary, submitted to the emperor, and
approved of by him, were ushered into the world with the customary
forms and full authority of an imperial edict. Quote, henceforth,
close quote, that is from the publication of the decree we
have just noted, quote, the power of the Roman bishops, close quote,
says Ranke, quote, advanced beneath the protection of the Emperor
himself, close quote. At about the distance of a century
from the decree of Theodosius came the celebrated letter of
Justinian to the Pope in which the Emperor still farther enlarged
the prerogatives which previous edicts had conferred upon the
Bishop of Rome. These imperial recognitions of
a rank, which the councils of the Church had previously conferred,
tended greatly, as may easily be conceived, to consolidate
and advance the arrogant assumptions of the Roman bishop. They gave
solidity to his power by investing him with a positive and legal
jurisdiction The Code of Justinian, which had been published a few
years before this time, was now the law of Western Europe. Its influence, too, was favorable
to the growth of the ecclesiastical supremacy. Contemporarily with
the publication of Justinian's Code was the rise of the Benedictine
Order. In the course of a century, the
Benedictines had spread themselves over the West, preaching everywhere
the doctrine of implicit submission to the Sea of Rome. Last of all came the Edict of
the Emperor Phocis in 606 AD, constituting Boniface III, Universal
Bishop. This was the last in a series
of edicts which had for their object to make the Bishop of
Rome, quote, Lord over God's heritage, close quote. In so infamous a cause, no one
was so worthy to perform the crowning act as the tyrannical
and brutal Phocas, or Phocas, P-H-O-C-A-S. It was the hand of a murderer
which placed upon the brow of Boniface the Mitra of a universal
Episcopate. The ecclesiastical supremacy
had now a legal existence, but it must become real also. So vast a power, extending over
so many interests and over such a multitude of persons, and covering
so large a portion of the globe, no imperial fiat could create,
it must grow. Planted by councils, buttressed
by edicts, with a congenial element of vitality and increase in the
thickening superstition of the times, it henceforward made rapid
progress. It throve so well, in fact, and
shot up into such a portentous height, that before all was over,
the authority that had evoked it would fain have bidden it
away, but could not. Like the necromancer who forgets
his spell and is unable to lay the spirit he has raised. The
suckling in the cradle to which the state offered its breasts
could never surely grow into the hydra that was to strangle
the empire. Power, when once it has begun
to grow, enlarges its volume like the rolling river and accelerates
its speed like the falling avalanche. On a sudden, all things become
favorable to it. At every turn it finds ready-made
to its hand, helping it to speed it onward. Its faults, be they
ever so great, never lack apologists, and its excellencies, however
small they be, always find willing and eloquent panegysts. Its wealth converts enemies into
friends. The timid grow courageous in
its cause, and the indifferent and lukewarm find a hundred reasons
for being active and zealous in its service. The cause of
Rome was the rising cause, and therefore it enjoyed all these
advantages, and many more besides. With a dexterity and skill which
have never elsewhere been equal, The Vatican could manufacture
out of materials the most heterogeneous and unpromising props and defenses
of its ill-gotten supremacy. The incautious admission of an
opponent The exaggerated and high-flown language of the eulogist
were alike accepted by Rome as formal and measured acknowledgments
of her right. The hyperbical and sycopanthous
terms in which a prelate sued for protection or a heretic implored
forgiveness were registered as documentary proofs of the prerogatives
and powers of the Roman sea. The sectary was encouraged or
put down just as it suited the policy of the Pontiffs. In the
shield of the vanquished heretic, Rome hung up as a trophy of her
prowess. Monarchs were incited to quarrel
with one another. Rome stood by till the conflict
was ended, and then, siding with the stronger party, she divided
the spoils with the victor. The clergy even, who might naturally
have been supposed to be averse to the rise of such a domination,
were conciliated by being taught to find their own dignity in
that of the Roman see, and to share with the pontiff dominion
over the laity. by these and a hundred other
arts which triumphantly vindicate to the Roman Pontiffs an unquestionable
supremacy in knavery and hypocrisy, it came to pass that in process
of time the one Bishop of Rome had absorbed all the bishops
of the West. There was but one huge episcopate. with its head upon the seven
hills, while its hundred limbs, like these of the giant Bryrusses
of classic mythology, were stretched out over Europe, forming a monster
of so anomalous and nondescript a character that nowhere shall
we find a figure adequately to depict it. save among the inspired
hieroglyphics of the Apocalypse, where it is portrayed under the
symbol of a beast. A lamb-like Mian, but dragon
ferocity. At last, the Empire of the West
was dissolved. The seat, which had been occupied
so long by the master of the world, was now empty. This had
been noted beforehand in prophecy as the instant sign of the coming
of Antichrist, that is, of his full revelation. For, as we have
already seen, the mystery of iniquity was operative in the
apostles' days. "'He who now letteth will let',"
said Paul, alluding to the imperial power, which, so long as it existed,
was an effectual obstruction to the papal supremacy. "'He
who now letteth will let, till he be taken out of the way, and
then shall that wicked be revealed.'" the overthrow of the Empire contributed
most materially towards the elevation of the Bishop of Rome. For first,
it took the Caesars out of the way. A secret hand, says de Mastière,
chased the emperors from the Eternal City to give it to the
head of the Eternal Church. Second, It compelled the bishops of Rome,
now deprived of the imperial influence which had hitherto
helped them so mightily in their struggles for preeminence, to
fall back on another element, and that an element which constitutes
the very essence of the papacy, and on which is founded the whole
complex fabric of the spiritual and temporal domination of the
popes. the rank of Rome as the seat
of government and the metropolis of the world had lifted her bishop
to a proud preeminence above his peers. But Rome was the head
of empire no longer. The prestige of her name, which
in all ages has struck the imagination so powerfully and through the
imagination captivated the judgment she still retained, for by no
change could she become bereft of her immortal memories, but
the subject nations no longer called her mother and ruler.
With Rome would have fallen her bishop, had he not, as if by
anticipation of the crises, reserved till this hour the masterstroke
of his policy. He now boldly cast himself upon
an element of much greater strength than that of which the political
convulsions of the times had deprived him—namely, that the
bishop of Rome is the successor of Peter, the prince of the apostles,
and, in virtue of being so, is Christ's vicar on earth. In making this claim, the Roman
Pontiffs vaulted at once over the throne of kings to the seat
of gods. Rome became once more the mistress
of the world and her popes the rulers of the earth. The principle had been tacitly
adopted by many of the clergy. and more especially by the bishops
of Rome before this time. But now it was formally and openly
advanced as the basis of a claim of authority over all churches
and bishops and ultimately of dominion over sovereigns. Of this we adduce the following
testimonies. In the middle of the fifth century
We find the fundamental dogma of the papacy, that the Church
is founded on Peter, and that the Popes are his representatives,
proclaimed by the papal legate in the midst of the Council of
Chalcedon, and virtually sanctioned by the silence of the fathers
who were sitting in judgment on the case of Dioscorus. for these causes," said the legate. Leo, Archbishop of Old Rome,
doth by us and by the synod, with the authority of St. Peter,
who is the rock and foundation of the church and the ground
of faith, depose him, that's Dioscorus, from his episcopal
dignity. We find the fathers of the same
council hailing with acclamation the voice of Leo as the voice
of Peter. A shout followed the reading
of the Pope's letter, quote, Peter speaks in Leo, close quote. As a farther proof that the Popes
had now shifted their dignity from an imperial to a pontifical
foundation, We may instance the case of Hillary, the successor
of Leo, who accepted from the Tarragonese bishop, as a title
to which he had unquestionable right, that is the appellation,
quote, vicar of Peter, to whom, since the resurrection of Christ,
belonged the keys of the kingdom, close quote. In a spirit of equal arrogance,
we find Pope Galatius, Bishop of Rome from A.D. 492 to 496,
asserting that it became kings to learn their duty from bishops,
but especially from the, quote, Vicar of the Blessed Peter, close
quote. We find the same pope asserting
in a Roman council, A.D. 495, that to the sea of Rome
belonged the primacy, in virtue of Christ's own delegation, and
that from the authority of the keys there was accepted none
living. But only, and mark how modest
Rome then was, but only the dead. The council in which these lofty
claims were put forth concluded its session with a shout of acclamation
to Galatius, quote, in thee we behold Christ's vicar, close
quote. In the violent contention which
raged between Symmachus and Laurentius, both of whom had been elected
to the pontificate on the same day, we are furnished with another
proof that at the beginning of the 6th century, not only was
this lofty prerogative claimed by the popes, but that it was
generally acquiesced in by the clergy. we find the counsel convoked
by Theodoric, or Theodorich, demurring to investigate the
charges alleged against Pope Symmachus on the grounds set
forth by this apologist, Ennodius, which were, quote, that the Pope,
as God's vicar, was the judge of all, and could himself be
judged by no one, close quote. quote, in this apology, close
quote, remarks Mosian, quote, the reader will perceive that
the foundations of that enormous power which the Popes of Rome
afterwards acquired were now laid, close quote. Thus did the
Pontiffs, providing timeously against the changes and revolutions
of the future, placed the fabric of the primacy upon foundations
that should be immovable for all time. The primacy had been
promulgated by synodical decrees, ratified by imperial edicts,
but the Pontiffs perceived that what synods and emperors had
given, synods and emperors might take enactments of both therefore
were discarded and the divine right was put in their room as
the only basis of power which neither lapse of years nor change
of circumstances could overthrow. Rome was henceforward indestructible. I'm going to try this Latin here,
not that it matters, but I have no idea what that means.
Thus was accomplished in the destinies of the papacy a change
of so vast a character that the imagination can, with difficulty,
realize it. Quickened with a new life, Rome
returned from her grave to exercise universal dominion a second time. The element of power which was
lost when the Empire fell was at best of an extraneous kind. It was influence reflected from
without upon Rome, foreign in its character and earthly in
its source. But the element on which she
now cast herself was of a nature analogous to the papacy, and
so incorporating with it that element became its life. It made Rome self-existent and
invincible, invincible to every principle save one. that principle
was to remain in abeyance for a full thousand years. The day of Luther was yet afar
off, and it was this element that gave to Rome the superhuman It was this which enabled her
to plant or to pluck up its kingdoms, to bind monarchs to her chariot
wheel, to throw reason and intellect into chains, and to restore once
more the dominion of the pagan knight." That's N-I-G-H-T. In so subtle a device we can
discover a deeper policy and a more consummate craft than
that of man. It was Rome's invisible director
that counseled so bold a step, and this step was as successful
as bold. It opened a new career to the
ambition of Rome and revealed to her, though yet at a great
distance and with many an intervening change and struggle, that seat
of godlike power to which she was ultimately to attain and
towards which she now began with slow and painful steps to climb. most marvelous and astonishing
it truly was, that at a time when Rome was placed in most
imminent jeopardy, and society itself was perishing around her,
she should lay the foundations of her power, and by her, prompt
interposition to save herself and the world from the disillusion
to which both appeared to be tending. Her adherents in all
ages have seen in this nothing less than a proof, a like incontrovertible
and marvelous of her divinity. The Cardinal Baronius speaks
the sentiments of all Roman Catholics when he breaks out in the following
impassioned strain in reference to a supposed grant of the Kingdom
of Hungary by Stephen to the Roman Sea. It fell out by a wonderful
providence of God that at the very time when the Roman Church
might appear ready to fall and perish, even then distant kings
approach the apostolic sea which they acknowledge and venerate
as the only temple of the universe, the sanctuary of piety, the pillar
of truth, the immovable rock. Behold kings, not from the east,
as of old they came to the cradle of Christ, but from the north. Led by faith, they humbly approached
the cottage of the fisher, the church of Rome herself offering
not only gifts out of their treasuries, but bringing even kingdoms to
her and asking kingdoms from her." Thus, we have traced the history
of the papacy, from its rise in primitive times to its formal,
though but partial, development in the 6th century. Aided by
the various influences we have enumerated, the prestige and
rank of Rome, the institution of the Order, the first of Metropolitan
and next of Patriarch, the edict of Emperors, the reference of
disputed questions by other churches to the bishop of Rome, and, most
of all, the pretense that the occupant of the Roman sea was
the successor of Peter and the viceroy of Christ, together with
that crafty, astute, and persevering policy which enabled the Roman
bishops to make the most of apparent concessions to them of preeminence
and authority, the pastors of Rome were now supreme over the
great body of the clergy of the West, and thus the ecclesiastical
supremacy was attained. They were now in a fair way,
too, of becoming the superiors of kings. for there was no usurpation
of prerogative, no exercise of dominion, temporal or spiritual,
which the claim now put forth by the Roman bishop to be Christ's
vicar would not cover. We are now to follow the several
steps by which the papacy gradually rose to the height of power in
which we find it shortly before the breaking out of the Reformation.
The Papacy: Its History, Dogma, Genius, and Prospects Book 1 Chapter 2
Series The History of the Papacy
Book I. Chapter II. Rise and Progress of Ecclesiastical Supremacy.
Narrated by Duane Linn
| Sermon ID | 41020213271772 |
| Duration | 1:04:00 |
| Date | |
| Category | Audiobook |
| Bible Text | Revelation 13:3 |
| Language | English |
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