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A36729 Reflections on the Council of Trent in three discourses / by H.C. de Luzancy. De Luzancy, H. C. (Hippolyte du Chastelet), d. 1713. 1679 (1679) Wing D2419; ESTC R27310 76,793 222

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of Trent gave it two mortal wounds 1. To declare Bishops in many cases the Popes Delegates 2. To leave the question of their residence and jurisdiction undecided 1. The first of these two things brings Episcopacy unto a strange abatement renders the Pope master of all Bishops Jurisdictions breaks all ancient Canons runs down the interests of all Princes encroaches upon the Rights and Liberties of Churches gives the Bishops a quality unworthy the successors of the Apostles and forces them to receive that as a borrowed and begg'd privilege which belongs naturally to them The second causes Episcopacy to be look'd upon as a meer humane emploiment or Civil Magistracy Such a Bishop could never have the confidence to say with the Apostle 2 Cor. 13. 3. Do you seek a proof of Christs speaking in me Nay he would no more value his sacred character then one of the Kings officers do his and regard the duties of his Divine calling rather as rules instituted for decency then as unchangeable obligations so strictly requir'd from him that without them he has no hope of salvation XXVI Jurisdiction is no less essential to Episcopacy then the power of ordaining Ministers a proposition we could easily demonstrate to be unanswerable would it not render this Discourse too big and had it not bin already done by a learned hand against the infamous Doctrine of ●oth English and French Jesuits For Jesuits are every where the same Ordination and Jurisdiction are so twisted together that they cannot be divided without their ●●utual destruction Bishops receive both from the same hand and are no less instituted by Christ in the Church to govern 〈◊〉 then to continue the succession of the Governors XXVII Nay may it not be affirm'd that Jurisdiction is both as essential to Episcopacy 〈◊〉 necessary to the Church as Ordination ●or the Church being as St. Paul saies a 〈◊〉 i. e. a society consisting of Rulers and others submitted to them without Jurisdiction it can no more be such a society then without Ordination those rulers can be continued Therefore as no● Bishop ordains in the Catholic Church a● the Popes or any other Patriarchs delegate but by the fulness of power he receives from Christ so no Bishop exercise● any act of Jurisdiction by any delegation but by that power he is invested with a● Bishop successor of the Apostles and Vicar of Christ A Bishop that acts or believes otherwise betraies that dignity intrusted to hi● by Christ which he ought to maintain 〈◊〉 the last drop of his blood XXVIII Nor pretend we thereby to say th● such a Jurisdiction may be exercis'd in ●●very place and over all persons the patition of Dioceses shews the extraord●●nary wisdom of Councils and Prince● Nor may any one transgress the limi● they have put among Bishops without d●●claring himself an enemy to all disciplin● Now all the following Propositions a● certainly true at least to all admirers 〈◊〉 former times whom I take to be in E●England in a greater number then elsewhere 1. That no man or no part of a Diocess can be substracted from a Bishops Jurisdiction but by the autority of a Prince or Council 2. That no man can be substracted from the Jurisdiction of his Bishop without being put at the same time under another 3. That however a Bishop deals with any man either substracted from his Jurisdiction or added to it 't is alwaies of himself and by the power he receiv'd from Christ 4. That the exemtions of Friars and Monks are a Schism rais'd by the Popes 5. That the name of the Popes Delegates in its most favorable sense given to the Bishops in things which belong to them is plenojure and by all Laws a most shameful injury to the Episcopal order 6. That nemo est qui non perhorrescat to use the words of a Learned Doctor of Sorbon at the speech of the Jesuit Lainez in the Council of Trent That all the power of Jurisdiction hath bin by Christ conferr'd on the Bishop of Rome so that the Jurisdiction of Bishops is not fundamental but deriv'd XXIX Now concerning the divine right of Episcopacy the Fathers of Trent committed two great faults the one to bring it into question and the other to leave it undecided As for the first it had bin receiv'd in the Church for fourteen ages taught by the Fathers embraced by their Disciples and only impugn'd by the Italian Canonists For the second such an indecision is a ground for any man in the Church of Rome to deny doubt of and contradict the institution of Bishops these three things being the nature of all undecided points So a man may maintain there is no government at all in the Church and consequently no Church since it does not appear that Christ hath instituted any other then Episcopacy and certainly to find any other the Scripture must be strain'd in many places the constant universal and never oppos'd practice of fourteen hundred years be impudently contradicted XXX But what is most pleasant in this Indecision is that the Pope has verifi'd the word of the Prophet Psal 35. 8. Let the net that he hath hid catch himself for all these following consequences flow from it 1. That the Holy Father is no Pope by divine right Jure divino for the Popedom being nothing else but an extension of Episcopacy he is no Pope but because he is Bishop No Divine durst yet advance any other opinion But the Episcopacy of the Holy Father is not different from that of other Bishops being in all respects of the same kind Episcopatus unus est And the Italians who are so abundant in novelties when they undertake to raise up the credit of their Master have bin dumb in this matter Therefore if the Popes Episcopacy is not Jure divino his Papacy is not so neither since one is engrafted upon the other and if the Holy Father is not Pope Jure divino what ground can be laid for the ambition and usurpation of the Apostolical See What shall we do with the fine and rare Doctrine of Infallibility 2. The Council has impos'd the belief of its new Decree upon all Christians under pain of eternal damnation but if they are only Ministers from the Church and not from Christ with what eies shall we consider so stupendious a boldness Who hath impowr'd a company of men to make Decrees of divine Faith And how without being authoriz'd by God did they exact an obedience only due to Ministers sent from Heaven 3. 'T is a crime in a Roman Catholic to believe the Council of Trent did not lawfully what it did otherwise such a meeting is a dream and a chimera But who is that Roman Catholic of any sense who can be perswaded of it seeing 't is allow'd in the Church of Rome to deny any of those Bishops had the least autority from God to do what they did XXXI And indeed who will not wonder the Fathers of
the first Councils of the Church Must articles of Faith be handled secretly Is there any thing more dreadful to the truth then to be absco●ded And is there any rational man that suspects not they are willing to disguise and betray it when he sees them so cautious and overprudent to conceal from him their way of examining it Is infallibility to be found in the Sessions or in the Congregations not in the last since they are compos'd of private Doctors nor in the first since nothing is examin'd in them And Gods Spirit a spirit of Wisdom and discretion forbids to determine any thing but after a long and serious trial XXII Hence we draw how weak is an answer of the author of the considerations upon the Council of Trent which seems to him the most solid ground of all his discourse The inconsiderable number of Bishops who voted in that Council is objected to him And we say that it is a great temerity in those few Bishops and Divines to have made in so short a time upon so important matters such a prodigious number of decrees and an other yet greater and more unpardonable then the first to have bin so bold to propose them as the decisions of the Catholic Church To this he answers two things first that those Bishops and Divines were men of an extraordinary merit Secondly that whatever this small number had done was approv'd of received and ratified by the greater number which amounted to above two hundred at the least Session For the first part of his answer concerning their extraordinary merit he must give us leave to tell him Pope Paul the fourth was incomparably better acquainted with it then he is and consequently more to be beleived And he said of them to Cardinal Bellay It had bin a great weakness in his Predecessours their having sent to the Mountains of Trent threescore Bishops of the less learned Sessanta Vescovi de manco habili forty very ordinary Divines quaranta dottori de meno sufficienti For the second we acknowledg with him that at the end of the Council two hundred and 50 Bishops the greatest part Italians ratifi'd the decrees of those other But he ought to acknowledg with us as a matter of fact that after the arrival of those new Bishops there had not bin any new examination of so many decrees but only a simple reading Whence we conclude many things so disadvantageous to him that it would have bin more secure and handsom for him to have let that objection alone as he did twenty others And first that it is against all Canons all right and rules of common sense that Bishops newly come should determine points they never examin'd Secondly the surveying of these points was either necessary or not If t was so they were bound therefore to undertake it But if there was no such necessity why did the first Bishops impose it upon themselves Thirdly the last Bishops avoiding any new examination did therefore acquiesce in the precedent and so it is a ridiculous petition of principle and the greatest dishonour the Council could be blemish'd with to say the Fathers rely upon some Bishops de manco habili and some Divines de meno sufficienti Fourthly that by this means Protestants continue still in the right for complaining they have bin condemned without being heard that they can and ought to maintain their Doctrine till it be lawfully proscrib'd it being probable so many great Kingdoms three parts of Germany and a considerable part of France and Poland were further from being mistaken then a few Bishops de manco habili and a few Divines demeno sufficienti XXIV Ther 's none can forbear laughing at the simplicity of him that collected the subscriptions of that Council who to dazle the eyes of ignorant People writes a patriarch of Jerusalem and six Greek Prelats Greeks born in Italy who had nothing Greek but their names as lately Cardinal de Rets was Arch-Bishop of Corinth tho he had never bin there The same is to be said of the pretended Arch-Bishops of Armagh and Upsal who sate at Trent when the true Prelats of those Sees protested against the Council And for those titular Bishops who appeard there in so stupendious a number the Pope did never reflect that in sending them thither he published to all the World how much an enemy he was to the Spirit Discipline and rules of the Church which hath alwaies consider'd the Election of Bishops without Bishoprics as constant violations of her most holy laws XXV But all these Shepherds as well those that want Sheep as those that are know● by theirs John 11. 14. are tied up to the Pope by a more solemn and dreadful Oath then that which obligeth them to their natural Princes This Oath is not only contrary to all antiquity wherein t is impossible to find any footstep of it not only unworthy the Episcopal rank not only injurious and scandalous to Kings who thereby can never hope for true and faithful allegiances from their Bishops but also horrid and abominable in all its parts A private author would never be beleived that should undertake to evince the consequences of it They would suspect him of being prepossess'd and swayed more by his own passion then the truth But le ts hear how the Pope himself interprets this Oath No Bishop of the Church of Rome can disown the interpretation of his holiness For it is the universal Doctrine of all Divines except some scandalous Jesuits that we must in all our swearings answer the meaning of the law-giver otherwise we attempt to deride God and make his word a witness to our falshood But Pope Pius the Second makes the extent of this Oath so large that writing to the Bishop of Mayence he tells him It is not lawful for a Bishop to speak true against the Pope Non licet verum dicere contra Papam If we give any credit to that Popes words which the Author of the considerations cannot disown for he spake ex Cathedrâ in a thousand occurrences they that take such an Oath must needs be either perjur'd or betrayers of the truth of Christ But what can we hope from Bishops who sit in a Council thus enslav'd to the Popes will since a Heresie maintain'd by him as but too many have bin they cannot oppose without forswearing themselves and if they remain dumb at such enormities they shamefully betray the station Christ has given them in his Church What would the Nicene or Chalcedonian Fathers have said at this acclamation of the Apulian Bishops Nihil aliud sumus praeterquam creaturae mancipia Sanctissimi Patris What would Domnus o● Dioscorus have desir'd more and if Paphnutius could not forbear weeping to see Athanasius's seat fill'd by his accuser and himself thrust into a place due to that vile man is it possible there was not one Bishop at Trent seen to shed tears at so strange
contrary interpretations to satisfy men of different interests and give them the mutual pleasure of believing their assertions upheld by the autority of the Council And thus the Jesuits and Dominicans were equally contented with the Canons concerning Grace and Justification Each Party drew the autority of the Council to its own side and there has not bin any Writer of these two Orders who in their many Books as opposite one to another as light is to darkness has not alledged these very Canons as invincible proofs against his adversary II. But if any should enquire further and search into that vast multitude of Decrees unknown till then he must needs wonder to find them built upon so sandy Foundations The most general Basis of them is laid in the fourth Session where the Council proposes two objects to our Faith to wit Books which are written and Traditions which are not written And they pretend as a necessary consequence that whatever we oppose against the Church of Rome is of that kind This is the Epitome of all the Council Nevertheless least any one should be offended at the word Tradition and perswade himself that they intend by it to equal mens autority to that of God or humane Ceremonies to the sacred Precepts of the Gospell they give of it a most magnificent character calling it The Word of Christ a Doctrine inspired by the Holy Ghost for the ordering our Faith and manners and preserved in the Catholic Church by a continued succession If that Principle be true there is an end of all Controversies and were the Church of Rome as able to prove it as she is ready to advance it we might hope to see in our daies that blessed Word of Christ accomplish't There shall be one Fold and one Shepherd And indeed there is no Protestant in the World who doth not admit of a Tradition endued with these Qualifications First That it be the Word of Christ 2. Inspired by the Holy Ghost 3. In matter of Faith and Manners 4. Preserved in the Catholic Church by an uninterrupted succession But there is no Protestant in the World that doth not maintain such a Tradition cannot be proved and is nothing else but one of those rich and splendid Idea's as admirable and flattering in their speculation as impossible and deceiving in their practice III. For the perfect evidencing whereof we need but consider the following Proposals First That of all places of the Scriptures whereby the Church of Rome asserts her Tradition there is not so much as one alledged by the Fathers in her sense Secondly That none of the Fathers ever understood Tradition otherwise then for the unanimous consent of the Doctors of the Church grounded upon a word which is written Thirdly That no places in Scripture are express for the authorizing such Tradition but many positive and clear to prove the sufficiency of Scripture Fourthly That among the Traditions of the Church of Rome she proposes many to our belief which do not appertain at all either to Faith or manners IV. The Scripture is most holy most infallible most perfect in it self The Gospel has added what was deficient in the Law And the Apostles Writings supplied the defect of the Gospel There we must stay 'T is no less crime in S. Basil's opinion to add that which is not written then to reject that which is written And 't is a stupendious boldness when God has vouchsafed to reveal his will to men by a certain and infallible word to substitute another neither clear nor undoubtedly received V. That new word which is ascribed to God has properly and by its self relation to those things which cannot be proved by Scripture as one of the Divines present at Trent has taken notice of otherwise it would be a written word But if it be so nothing is more unworthy of Christ and less agreeable to his divine Oracles It is to render his truth suspected or uncertain to expose Christians to infinite errors to give them as many masters as there are persons who will profess themselves the Guardians of that word and to make it the object of all mens scorn since according to the excellent saying of S. Jerome Quod de Scripturis autoritatem non habet e●dem facilitate contemnitur qua probatur VI. We find not that Christ in his holy Gospel sends us to Tradition whereby we may come to the knowledg of him Search the Scriptures they are they that testify of me The Apostles speak as their Master We have also a more sure word of Prophecy whereunto you do well that ye take heed as unto a light that shines in a dark place until the day dawn and the day-star arise in your hearts Many saies S. Chrysostom pretend to speak from the Holy Ghost but they do it falsly as long as they speak from themselves as Christ testifies he spoke not from himself but from the Law and the Prophets so if they proffer us any other thing then the Gospel under pretence of its being inspired by the Holy Ghost let us be far from believing it Is there any thing worse saies Pope S. Leo then to have impious sentiments and yet not to be willing to assent to the more learned and wise Those are guilty of this folly who when they are hindred from knowing the truth by any obscurity do not recur to the Prophetical Books the Apostolical Writings and Evangelical autority but to themselves and so become Masters and Teachers of error because they refused to be Disciples of Truth It would have bin very easy for S. Austin in that long and tedious Disputation with the Donatists concerning the Catholic Church to have made an end of it by sending them to Tradition But instead of doing so Let us not hear saies he Haec dico haec dicis but let us hear haec dicit Dominus We have the Lords Books Both of us acknowledg their autority both of us believe them ibi quaeramus Ecclesiam ibi discutiamus causam nostram nolo humanis documentis se● divinis Oraculis sanctam Ecclesiam demonstrari We seek as he there adds where the Church is what shall we do in verbis nostris eam quaesituri sumus an in verbis Domini I think it is to be sought in his words who is the TRUTH and knows perfectly her who is his Body Habeo manifestissimam vocem Pastoris mei commendantis mihi sine ullis ambagibus exprimentis Ecclesiam If I suffer my self to be reduced and separated from his flock which is the Church by the words of men I will impute it to my self whereas he advertiz'd me saying My Sheep know my voice 'T is the constant Doctrine of that admirable man in all his Works In his Letter to S. Jerome I confess your Charity saies he I give those Books alone which are termed Canonical that honor as to believe none of their Authors did
man most deeply engag'd in the love of the World most buried in all its pleasures the most taken with its glory one that is a public sinner guilty of all the excesses which libertinism or atheism are able to inspire such an one as this must be excus'd from too much troubling himself The bearing of a Medal bowing to a Saint walking to such a Church or the like will wash him whither then snow and presently render him as innocent in the eyes of God as the best of them who think it worth their while to work out their salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 12. who are at the trouble of mortifying in themselves the body of sin by an incredible perseverance by continual Fasting Praiers and Alms that they may present their bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto God Rom. 10. 1. XXII Thus the power of Dispensing opens the door to infinite scandals But the Pope was impowr'd to do what he would the Council granting him that which he could never hope for viz. the affertion of his infallibility and pre-eminence above general Councils two Opinions that had never bin heard of for 14 Ages and were scarce brought forth into the World but all learned and pious Men opposed them the 400 Bishops at Basil and the famous Sorbon stiling them pernicious Heresies but the Fathers of Trent being afraid to contradict openly so considerable an autority and yet desirous to have their intent dealt after a most pleasant manner they take away these two words Infallibility and Superiority but preserve carefully the thing 1. The Council declares the Church of Rome is Mother and Mistress of all Churches 2. The Council affects to stick at many matters and remits their decision to the Popes judgment Now what man of sense is there who would not draw these two Consequences 1. The Church of Rome being Mother of all Churches in the World and a general Council being compos'd but of particular Churches the Pope being Bishop of Rome is therefore Father and Master of all Bishops Councils 2. There is Infallibility in the Church this must either be in the Pope or in the Council not in the last since the Council cannot and dares not give their Opinion in many and weighty matters therefore in the first whose Church is Mistress and Mother of all Christian Churches in the World and whose sentence an oecumenical Council submits unto as to an Oracle which must fix its uncertainty But the same man should with their good leave to these consequences add a third which is 3. That the faculty of Sorbon is Heretical The Learned Gerson Chancellor of Paris is an Heretic The 400 Bishops at Basil are Heretics Pope Pius the Second an Heretic Martin the Fifth an Heretic And generally all the Learned Men of the Church for these 200 years are Heretics for they all call that Doctrine of Infallibility and Superiority a pernicious Heresie XXIII These two Points Infallibility and Superiority being once stated what reformation could be expected in the Church If the Pope be infallible What an insolent boldness is it to subject him to other rules then his own And if the Church of Rome be Mistress and Mother of all Churches What right have these Churches to give Laws instead of receiving them from her And therefore I cannot sufficiently admire how the author of the Considerations upon the Council of Trent durst assert That the Pope had bin ill us'd at Trent and nothing was said of his Supremacy We leave it to all persons to judg of the truth of this Assertion we can only say That the Authors who had written till then with the greatest ardor to promote the Apostolical Grandeur had never given her the ambitious qualifications of Mother and Mistress nay they were so far from raising the Pope above Councils that they call such a Doctrine a Schism and an Heresie XXIV But as if Infallibility and Superiority were not enough the Council adds a third a Vow of true obedience The word true obedience is no less pleasant then the trae pardon of sins The Court of Rome is so us'd to equivocations and ambiguities that her fears appear in her own Decrees All Christians therefore whether Clergy or Laity are tied up or rather sacrificed to the Pope by a solemn Oath so as let him be as much Arian as Liberius as much a Monothelite as Honorius as unlearned as Celestine the Fourth as Simoniacal as John the Twenty second as unclean as Alexander the Sixth let him be as insolent towards Kings as Hildebrand to Frederic Boniface to Philip August Innocent to John King of England Leo the Tenth to Henry the Eighth Julius the Third to the Queen of Navar yet he cannot be resisted 't is not lawful to disobey the Father and Master of all Churches to believe him in the wrong whose judgment is above all Councils and to oppose him to whom you are sworn upon the four Gospels XXV These reasons occasion'd the doleful complaint of Monsieur d' Espences then present at the Council who saies openly That the Church is in a more desperate condition then before and that by reason of the Italian Bishops whom he calls the Helena which triumph'd at Trent there is no hope to cure her wounds Gentianus Hervaeus Doctor in Sorbon also and present at the Council speaks after the same rate and differs only from the others in that he ascribes all the miscarriages of the Council to Lainez and Salmero both Jesuits Julius Sanelius being return'd from Trent whether he had bin brought by the Cardinal of Lorrain gave an account of that Assembly in these terms That in the Council of the Apostles it had bin said Visum est spiritui sancto nobis it seem'd good to the Holy Ghost and to us but in that of Trent Plus nobis quam Spiritui Sancto more to us then to the Holy Ghost It appears therefore that the pretended Reformation of the Pope and Court of Rome is a meer Chimera nor is it an harder matter to evidence that the Reformation of the Church is a meer disorder It may be said and very truly that the sins which Lay-men lie under have no other source then the bad examples of the Clergy and we may learn both from profane Writings and Divine from Historians as well as Prophets that the good or bad life of Priests hath ever had an unspeakable influence on mankind But 't is another truth no less certain that if the sins of the people come from the Priests those of the Priests spring from the Bishops this being a daily experiment that as the Clergy is holy when it is govern'd by Saints so it becomes abominable to God when the life of its head does not answer the duties and excellency of his dignity The shortest way therefore to reform the Church was seriously to reform the Bishops But instead of reforming the Episcopal Order the Fathers
Had not Pope Paul the Third and his Successors aim'd at some other end then the love of Catholic truth why did he oppose the only thing that could render it victorious Is there any president of such a conduct in former Ages Is it not cleer that there is in it some mystery And if so was it to be wondred that Protestants should apply themselves to search into it and prevent its consequences XVIII The choice of a free place where truth should command had bin alwaies a terrour to the Popes As long as the Apostolic See is not rul'd by Adrians and Marcellus's it will never without horrour call to mind the Councils of Constance and Basil Every Country wherein Bishops may say It seems good to the Holy Ghost and to us Act. 15. 28. shall be accounted by the Bishop of Rome a Land of bondage The Pisan Council shall be term'd a Latrociny by the Lateran and most holy decrees shall be lookt upon as so many bold and rash attempts Paul the Third chuses therefore Trent to assemble his Council at This Town indeed was out of the Ecclesiastical state and the Cardinal of Trent commanded therein but as an Author of the Roman communion pleasantly observes the Town was subject to the Cardinal and the Cardinal to the Pope Paul the Third had bin informed by his predecessors example that nothing made so much to the mastering of a Council as the choice of the place He succeeded in it admirably well Trent was not so far from Rome but the Holy Ghost might come thither in a few daies and many legions of Italian Bishops resort thither as it was done at the question of Residence and divine right of Episcopacy when 40 Apulian Bishops set aside for the most pressing occasions came in as fresh supply But he had forgot how Nicholas the First Innocent the Third Clement the Fifth Innocent the Fourth do teach that no man is bound to appear in a place where he has just reasons to fear the multitude XIX The event has shown us that the fears of those Princes were not groundless Their intention was only to obtain a free Council where none should be condemned unheard truth examin'd without prejudice and matters weighed with the greatest care For we must not imagine so many great Kingdoms holy Bishops and learned men sought their own ruine They desired no more then the examination of their doctrine to persevere in it if it should be judged orthodox or to renounce it if it were not so for this reason the favour should be granted them which was never denied to any to wit of being heard An Heathen does so much justice to Pope Liberius as to confess that he chose rather to banish then to condemn Athanasius without hearing his defence But if they were afraid to place us in Athanasius's rank it is certain that Arius Macedonius Paul of Samasate Nestorius Pelagius and the most abominable Heresiarchs have bin heard And the Church alwaies judg'd she could not deny them a thing of natural right XX. Nevertheless the Pope rids himself of all these Inconveniences of the Primitive Church and for fear other Bishops that are present at the Council should speak for them he deprives them of all freedom of proposing any thing Tho they are his venerable Brothers and born Judges of Councils as well as he they have never the more liberty for it All things are done proponentibus legatis and these Legats do propose but what they please When any one touched with a sense of his duty intends to speak he is silenced If he be a French-man or a Spaniard they tell him t is unbecoming the Majesty of a Council to contest But if he be an Italian that is a shadow and a Sceleton of a Bishop he has his ingratitude reproach'd and his Soul terrified by violent threats Ibi est herus tergo metuas There is at Trent but the image of a Council The true one is at Rome Quid à patribus judicandum proponitur aut ab ●is judicatum publicatur quod non prius Romam missum Pio Quarto placuerit The main design is to cheat the People not to establish any real good for the Church The holy Ghost does not shine on the Fathers at Trent but by reflexion and tho he has not promis'd to be in the conclave but in the Council yet he does not come to the one but as sent by the other What can the result be of dealings so contrary to the Spirit of God but to incline men to renounce an assembly where as speaks Mr. Ferriers's Pope Pius the Fourth left no place for the laws no footsteps of the antient Councils no vestige of freedom Vbi nullum legibus locum nullum antiquorum conciliorum nullum liberatatis vestigium Pius Quartus relinquat Nor are the Authors of these last words either Protestants or Heretics Neither is it that famour Venetian whom they call Atheist because he brought out of darkness those artifices the Popes made use of to betray the cause of God but the Legats of the most Christian King Men of admirable integrity and erudition wonderfully addicted to the Church of Rome and public Enemies to those that had separated themselves from it XXI But to be fully perswaded of the violence offer'd the truth and that its vindication was not the scope of their endeavours we need but consider the secret power given to the Popes Legat to transport or to dissolve the Council according to the occurrences Is it not a manifest and evincing argument that the Fathers gather'd at Trent were treated like Children made use of but only for a shew and pretence when an occult and an overuling spirit agitated the whole mass Had the Pope dealt sincerely and without mistrust what need such an anticipated power But if he could not suppress his fears in a place he had bin so much cautious of to be made secure are not the very same fears much more reasonable in such as could there hope for no security The dissolving of Councils is the last shift the Popes betake themselves to Eugenius the Fourth attempted to secure his tottering power at Basil and indeed that Council had vanish'd into smoak but that the Emperour Princes and Bishops forced him to repair thither by threatning to condemn him for a stubborn and obstinate man if he should refuse it Proud Le● the Tenth succeeded more happily and tho Alexander the Fifth testified at his death all things had bin done at the Pisan Council with all imaginable sincerity and integrity yet he declar'd it a meer conventicle XXII Had they intended to render truth manifest and palpable to all Christians why did they take a course for discussing it o● suspicious and unheard of till then What means that so extraordinary distinction of Congregations and Sessions the first to deliberate the other to decide and decree● Had they learnt this from
irrecoverably ruined But when a sinner groans under a voluntary pressure fasts praies and impoverisheth himself to enrich the poor instead of puffing him up with self-conceit and flattering him with a perswasion that he satisfies God we depress him more and more still repeating to him this Lesson That according to the Oracles of the Word of God and the practise of his Saints the most laudable life examined in his Justice is an abomination in his sight and that the greatest penitent in the most burning fervor of his Penance for his sins past stands in need at every moment of new mercy to obliterate and forgive the present XV. Nor do we less wonder at the Anathema pronounc'd by the Fathers at Trent against those that think Attrition with Confession insufficient for the pardon of sins That is those who believe the very same that till then was constantly a part of the Churches belief and are perswaded that a man desisting from sin against God out of fear of punishment is not accounted guiltless by him This their Assertion is so true that the learned men of the Church of Rome are at a loss to give a favorable interpretation to the words of the Council And we have seen a Bishop in Flanders so admirable and profound every where else scarce understood when he endeavors to make the Council speak what he is perswaded it should To perceive at first sight all the consequences of this Principle we need but consider the abominable interpretations Jesuits have given of it Both the doctrine practise of these Friars is so enormous upon that point that we want words to express it This is the foundation whereon Bauny Escobar Tambourin Sanchez Vasquez and other such Monsters build their infamous Morals Wherein they are not contented to teach all manner of crimes but afford means how to commit them with impunity and as much as in them lies cheat both God and their consciences But leaving these favorers of sin to Gods judgements let it suffice us to say that we are so far from blaming Fear in general that we acknowledge there is a chast fear which endureth for ever more We learn from the sacred Writings that fear of eternal pains is the beginning of Wisdom None saies S. Austin can come to love but by fear he must begin with the chain of Iron before he be adorned with the Golden Neck-lace So when God strikes a sinner with the fear of his Judgements 't is the first step to his Conversion but if he never goes further he shall never be justified in his sight Love is at least an essential condition for the forgiving our sins We are justified by Faith but it is by Faith that worketh by Love not by a dead Faith which brings forth nothing nor by a sterile one which goes not so far as to produce fear nor by a slavish one which only refrains us thro the apprehensions of punishment and would never leave off sinning did it not still behold the thunder of Divine vengeance alwaies hanging over it but by a Faith full of Love and pious zeal which in the strictest bonds unites our hearts to our crucified Savior gives us a lively representation of his sufferings revives in us an ardent desire of shaking off the vices of the old Man to be invested with the life and vertues of the New To renounce all things for our Redeemer and at least to love our God as S. Austin excellently prescribes with as much fidelity and ardency as we have loved the Creatures In the Epistles of the Apostle we find that the great advantage of the Sons of God above those of the Devil and their true and intrinsecal distinction is to have bin divested of the spirit of bondage to fear which belongs properly to the Jews and to have received the spirit of Adoption which is the lot of Christians The one brings them to God as to their Father the other frights them as with the presence of their Judge But till Faith which worketh by Love hath enlarged our hearts and begotten in us the disposition of Sons there is no hopes of pardon For let us dispute to the end of the World tire our Readers with the multitude and subtlety of our distinctions and make our fancies the Rules of Gods Decrees those only shall receive pardon whom Grace hath converted and made his Sons Fear is good and usefull bonus est iste timor utilis est those that are struck with it saluberrimo timore quatiuntur But 't is insufficient and something more is required 'T is the Jews gift the Character of the Slaves the spirit of the old Testament ibi plebs longè stabat timor erat amor non erat 'T is an effect of that universal infirm Grace God has granted to all men but not of that particular and victorious one which Christ hath got for us by his death and poured into our hearts by the Holy Ghost Cum enim adest vivificans spiritus hoc ipsum intus conscriptum facit diligi quod foris scriptum lex faciebat timeri The Fathers of the Primitve times apprehended the nature of that fear quite in another manner then the Fathers of Trent did First They did consider that its Source was nothing else but a prodigious self-love They that are in those dispositions of fear the Council is satisfied with do not seek so much to return to their God and give themselves to him as to preserve their quiet and their bodies in the future life Propterea enim timentur apud inferos poenae dolores ac tormenta Gehennarum Secondly They knew that a man whom fear only refrains from sinning loses not the love and desire of sin but sins still in his heart Sic profecto in ipsa intus voluntate peccat qui non voluntate sed timore non peccat S. Austin compares these persons to a wife who is not true to her husband but because she is afraid of being punished if she be found not so 'T is certain she commits adultery in her heart since she would not persevere innocent if she could contract guilt without punishment 'T is like a Wolf saies that holy Doctor who being surprized by the watchfull Shepherd and the cry of the Dogs is obliged to fly without doing any harm he is not cruel and bloody he tears no Sheep in pieces Venit fremens redit tremens he came on raging returns trembling but in these two circumstances he is still a Wolf He doth not execute his bad design nor yet doth he leave it Lupus est tamen fremens tremens Thirdly They were perswaded that the righteousness which fear produces in a sinner is from the Law and men which the Apostle counts but dung who sees not saies one of the Fathers that righteousness which is from the Law comes from men but that which is by Christ comes
Trent so peremtorily give their verdict of things they confess not grounded upon Scripture and which were converted for many Ages as Images Praiers to the Saints Indulgencies c. and leave undecided a point so evident in Scripture and so constant in Tradition XXXII It highly therefore concerns the truth to find out the mystery why they were so obstinate at Rome in an undecision so extremely pernicious to the whole Catholic Church to that of Rome in particular and to the Pope himself The truest cause is the pride of the Eminentissimi Cardinali They were used long since to trample on the necks of Bishops and to keep them in quality of their Secretaries or Stewards An enormity proceeding from the poverty weakness and sad condition of the Italian Prelates A Bishop to gain respect needed to be privy to the pleasures or designs of the Cardinal At Pope Pius the Fourths Counsel Bishops stood bare-headed whilst gli Eminentissimi sat and were covered And by a disorder no where to be found but at Rome a gray hair'd Bishop or Arch-bishop exhausted with austerities and considerable for services done the Chur●h was seen at the feet of a young powdered perfumed Cardinal puft up with pride softned by wantonness and in a word whose Eminency had usually nothing more eminent then most eminent vices XXXIII 'T was then impossible to speak in the Council of the Bishops Institution without putting Cardinals in mind of theirs one is so ancient and divine the other so new and humane that the very thoughts of them could not chuse but make Cardinals asham'd For if they consider their dignity as Spiritual they are only Priests or Deacons submitted for that very reason to their Bishops and without power of voting in Councils Or if they consider it as a temporal honor they have nothing to do with the affairs of the Church They are in the order of the sheep not of the Shepherd and instead of being so proud as to ambition speaking and ruling in Councils must beg with a profound humility to hear and be ruled Or at last if they are in a middle state as a Jesuit a man of a middle state also as fit as the rest of his company to unite great extremes describes them they ought to fear the condemnation Christ has interminated to those who serve two masters And thus it was of a very high concernment for Cardinals to leave a question undecided which would have restored them to their ancient condition and done justice to the sacred character of Bishops How dangerous soever seemed the consequences of such undecision they followed the Italian maxim To keep the present usurpations at the price of the most equitable Laws XXXIV Nor were they less interess'd at the question of Residency For if the decision of the divine institution of Bishops destroied their honors that of residency finished their pleasures sent them to their Diocess and cut off the sweet and luxurious life of Rome Nevertheless it was required by the Spanish and French Bishops that Residency should be declared Jure divino Of all Christian Truths none is so powerfully expressed in the Scripture so conformable to good sense so inculcated to us by the Writings and Examples of the Fathers Nay without gathering a thousand testimonies from all parts of the Scripture let us only say to the Bishops what Saint Jerome saies to Nepotian Interrogent nomen suum and no doubt 't is enough to perswade them There is none of these Bishops absent from their Dioceses who dares read without fear that parable of the Gospel wherein Christ calls himself the good Shepherd expresses in a stile full of love that 〈◊〉 takes all imaginable care for hindering them from going astray that he has a voice whereby his sheep know him and discern him from foreigners or mercen●●ries and what is more that he has 〈◊〉 life to spend for saving them from death XXXV Now Bishops are in the Church to re●present Christ to the life either because he has committed to their care the go●vernment of his people or because they succeed the Apostles who are his wit●nesses A Bishop that wants a watchfu● care to look after his sheep a voice to ca● them and above all a life to lose for their sakes is a thief that comes not but to steal to kill and to destroy This great duty gave occasion to the Fathers to call Bishops Sponsos Ecclesiarum suarum the Bride-grooms of their Churches Thence they drew these important conclusions 1. That the polygamy of Dioceses is no more lawful to a Bishop then polygamy of Wives to a Christian 2. That as in a Christian Marriage a husband must be entirely to his wife concenter in her all his desires and love her after God above all the world so a Bishop that is tyed to the Church must banish all other thoughts then to live and die in her bosom 3. That as we learn from the sublime Divinity of the Apostle that Christ loved entirely his Church never abandoned her died for her and remains with her till the end of the world so a Bishop must be jealous of the Church Christ has entrusted him with watch continually for her and because she lies in the midst of a thousand enemies persevere in her defence till his last breath XXXVI We need but read St. Pauls Epistles to Timothy and Titus to see the Disciple Preaching as he had bin taught by his Master All those great qualities he requires in a Bishop that irreprehensible life that exact watchfulness that sound doctrine that incredible patience in exhorting that prudent behavior amongst so many different sorts of people old men youths widows and virgins have no other foundation but residency And the Fathers were so throughly convinc'd of this duty that when they speak of Episcopacy they stile it a burden dreadful to the shoulders of angels themselves along and tedious death a source of infinite cares and solicitudes all which expressions are meer mockeries if they did not suppose residency Jure divino Their examples are more pressing then their precepts And St. Athanasius St. Austin and Pope St. Gregory did actions answering to and surpassing their words Nay God has not permitted the Church of Rome it self in the darkness of its incredulity to be destituted of such precedents St. Charles nephew to Pope Pius the Fourth retir'd to his See maugre all the intreaties of his uncle Cardinal Bellarmin the Popes great adorer would never accept of a dispensation profer'd to him for non residing and he has left us an excellent Letter to a nephew of his wherein we may see that tho Jesuit and Cardinal he could never be induced by the Pope himself to betray his conscience XXXVII But the Cardinals presiding at Trent and the Italian Bishops did not care very much to shake the very principles of Religion and so recur to the softest interpretations of Casuists The first foresaw that if residency be declared of Divine Right