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| The Influence of St. Augustin on Posterity, and His Relation to Catholicism and Protestantism PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
CHAPTER V.—The Influence of
St. Augustin upon Posterity, and his Relation to Catholicism and
Protestantism.
In conclusion we must add some observations
respecting the influence of Augustin on the Church and the world
since his time, and his position with reference to the great
antagonism of Catholicism and Protestantism. All the church fathers
are, indeed, the common inheritance of both parties; but no other
of them has produced so permanent effects on both, and no other
stands in so high regard with both, as Augustin. Upon the Greek
Church alone has he exercised little or no influence; for this
Church stopped with the undeveloped synergistic anthropology of the
previous age, and rejects most decidedly, as a Latin heresy, the
doctrine of the double procession of the Holy Spirit (the
Filioque) for which Augustin is chiefly responsible.57
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The church fathers of the first six centuries are certainly far
more Catholic than Protestant, and laid the doctrinal foundation of
the orthodox Greek and Roman churches. But it betrays a contracted,
slavish, and mechanical view of history, when Roman Catholic
divines claim the fathers as their exclusive property; forgetting
that they taught many things which are as inconsistent with the
papal as with the Protestant Creed, and that they knew nothing of
certain dogmas which are essential to Romanism (such as the
infallibility of the pope, the seven sacraments,
transubstantiation, purgatory, indulgences, auricular confession,
the immaculate conception of the Virgin Mary, etc.). “I recollect
well,” says Dr. Newman, the former
intellectual leader of Oxford Tractarianism (in his Letter to Dr.
Pusey on his Eirenicon, 1866, p. 5), “what an outcast I
seemed to myself, when I took down from the shelves of my library
the volumes of St. Athanasius or St. Basil, and set myself to study
them; and how, on the contrary, when at length I was brought into
Catholic communion, I kissed them with delight, with a feeling that
in them I had more than all that I had lost, and, as though I were
directly addressing the glorious saints, who bequeathed them to the
Church, I said to the inanimate pages, ‘You are now mine, and I
am yours, beyond any mistake.’” With the same right the Jews
might lay exclusive claim to the writings of Moses and the
prophets. The fathers were living men, representing the onward
progress and conflicts of Christianity in their time, unfolding and
defending great truths, but not unmixed with many errors and
imperfections which subsequent times have corrected. Those are the
true children of the fathers who, standing on the foundation of
Christ and the apostles, and, kissing the New Testament rather than
any human writings, follow them only as far as they followed
Christ, and who carry forward their work in the onward march of
evangelical catholic Christianity. |
1. Augustin, in the first place, contributed
much to the development of the doctrinal basis which Catholicism
and Protestantism hold in common against such radical
heresies of antiquity as Manichæism, Arianism, and Pelagianism. In
all these great intellectual conflicts he was in general the
champion of the cause of Christian truth against dangerous errors.
Through his influence the canon of Holy Scripture (including,
indeed, the Old Testament Apocrypha) was fixed in its present form
by the councils of Hippo (393) and Carthage (397). He conquered the
Manichæan dualism, hylozoism, and fatalism, and saved the biblical
idea of God and of creation, and the biblical doctrine of the
nature of sin and its origin in the free will of man. He developed
the Nicene dogma of the Trinity, in opposition to tritheism on the
one hand, and Sabellianism on the other, but also with the doubtful
addition of the Filioque, and in opposition to the Greek,
gave it the form in which it has ever since prevailed in the West.
In this form the dogma received classical expression from his
school in the falsely so called Athanasian Creed, which is not
recognized by the Greek Church, and which better deserves the name
of the Augustinian Creed.
In Christology, on the contrary, he added
nothing new, and he died shortly before the great Christological
conflicts opened, which reached their œcumenical settlement at the
council of Chalcedon, twenty years after his death. Yet he
anticipated Leo in giving currency in the West to the important
formula: “Two natures in one person.”58
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He was summoned to the council of Ephesus, which condemned
Nestorianism in 431, but died a year before it met. He prevailed
upon the Gallic monk, Leporius, to retract Nestorianism. His
Christology is in many points defective and obscure. Comp. Dorner’s History of Christology, ii. pp.
88-98 (Germ. ed.). Jerome did still less for this department of
doctrine. |
2. Augustin is also the principal theological
creator of the Latin-Catholic system as distinct from the
Greek Catholicism on the one hand, and from evangelical
protestantism on the other. He ruled the entire theology of the
middle age, and became the father of scholasticism in virtue of his
dialectic mind, and the father of mysticism in virtue of his devout
heart, without being responsible for the excesses of either system.
For scholasticism thought to comprehend the divine with the
understanding, and lost itself at last in empty dialectics; and
mysticism endeavoured to grasp the divine with
feeling, and easily strayed into misty sentimentalism; Augustin
sought to apprehend the divine with the united power of mind and
heart, of bold thought and humble faith.59
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Wigger’s (Pragmat. Darstellung des Augustinismus und
Pelegianismus, i. p. 27) finds the most peculiar and remarkable
point of Augustin’s character in his singular union of intellect
and imagination, scholasticism and mysticism, in which neither can
be said to predominate. So also Huber,
l. c. p. 313. | Anselm, Bernard of Clairvaux, Thomas
Aquinas, and Bonaventura, are his nearest of kin in this respect.
Even now, since the Catholic Church has become a Roman Church, he
enjoys greater consideration in it than Ambrose, Hilary, Jerome, or
Gregory the Great. All this cannot possibly be explained without an
interior affinity.60
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Nourrisson, the able expounder of the
philosophy of Augustin, says (l. c. tom. i. p. iv): “Je
ne crois pas, qu’excepté saint Paul, aucun homme ait contribué
davantage, par sa parole comme par ses écrits, à organiser, à
interpréter, à répandre le christianisme; et, après saint Paul,
nul apparemment, non pas même le glorieux, l’invincible
Athanase, n’a travaillé d’une manière aussi puissante à
fonder l’unité catholique.” |
His very conversion, in which, besides the
Scriptures, the personal intercourse of the hierarchical Ambrose
and the life of the ascetic Anthony had great influence, was a
transition not from heathenism to Christianity (for he was already
a Manichæan Christian), but from heresy to the historical,
orthodox, episcopally organized church, as, for the time, the sole
authorized vehicle of the apostolic Christianity in conflict with
those sects and parties which more or less assailed the foundations
of the Gospel. It was, indeed, a full and unconditional surrender
of his mind and heart to God, but it was at the same time a
submission of his private judgment to the authority of the church
which led him to the faith of the gospel.61
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We recall his famous anti-Manichæan dictum: “Ego evangelio
non crederem, nisi me catholicæ ecclesiæ commoveret
auctoritas.” The Protestant would reverse this maxim, and
ground his faith in the church on his faith in Christ and in the
gospel. So with the well-known maxim of Irenæus: “Ubi
ecclesia, ibi Spiritus Dei, et ubi Spiritus Dei, ibi
ecclesia.” According to the spirit of Protestantism it would
be said conversely: “Where the Spirit of God is, there is the
church, and where the church is, there is the Spirit of God.” | In the same spirit he embraced the
ascetic life, without which, according to the Catholic principle,
no high religion is possible. He did not indeed enter a cloister,
like Luther, whose conversion in Erfurt was likewise essentially
catholic, but he lived in his house in the simplicity of a monk,
and made and kept the vow of voluntary poverty and celibacy.62
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According to genuine Christian principles it would have been far
more noble, if he had married the African woman with whom he had
lived in illicit intercourse for thirteen years, who was always
faithful to him, as he was to her, and had borne him his beloved
and highly gifted Adeodatus; instead of casting her off, and, as he
for a while intended, choosing another for the partner of his life,
whose excellences were more numerous. The superiority of the
evangelical Protestant morality over the Catholic asceticism is
here palpable. But with the prevailing spirit of his age he would
hardly have enjoyed so great regard, nor accomplished so much good
if he had been married. Celibacy was the bridge from the heathen
degradation of marriage to the evangelical Christian exaltation and
sanctification of the family life. |
He adopted Cyprian’s doctrine of the church,
and completed it in the conflict with Donatism by transferring the
predicates of unity, holiness, universality, exclusiveness, and
maternity, directly to the actual church of the time, which, with a
firm episcopal organization, an unbroken succession, and the
Apostles’ Creed, triumphantly withstood the eighty or the hundred
opposing sects in the heretical catalogue of the day, and had its
visible centre in Rome. In this church he had found rescue from the
shipwreck of his life, the home of true Christianity, firm ground
for his thinking, satisfaction for his heart, and a commensurate
field for the wide range of his powers.63
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On Augustin’s doctrine of the church, see Ch. Hist. III.
§71, and especially the thorough account by R.
Rothe: Anfänge der christl. Kirche und ihrer
Verfassung, vol. i. (1837), pp. 679-711. “Augustin,” says
he, “decidely adopted Cyprian’s conception [of the church] in
all essential points. And once adopting it, he penetrated it in its
whole depth with his wonderfully powerful and exuberant soul, and,
by means of his own clear, logical mind, gave it the perfect and
rigorous system which perhaps it still lacked” (p. 679 sqq.).
“Augustin’s conception of the doctrine of the church was about
standard for succeeding times” (p. 685). See also an able article
of Prof. Reuter, of Göttingen, on Augustin’s views concerning
episcopacy, tradition, infallibility, in Brieger’s
“Zeitschrift für Hist. Theol.” for 1885 (Bk. VIII. pp.
126-187). | The predicate of infallibility alone
he does not plainly bring forward; he assumes a progressive
correction of earlier councils by later; and in the Pelagian
controversy he asserts the same independence towards pope Zosimus,
which Cyprian before him had shown towards pope Stephen in the
controversy on heretical baptism, with the advantage of having the
right on his side, so that Zosimus found himself compelled to yield
to the African church. But after the condemnation of the Pelagian errors by
the Roman see (418), he declared that “the case is finished, if
only the error were also finished.”64
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Hence the famous word: “Roma locuta est, causa finita
est,” which is often quoted as an argument for the modern
Vatican dogma of papal infallibility. But it is not found in this
form, though we may admit that it is an epigrammatic condensation
of sentences of Augustin. The nearest approach to it is in his
Sermo CXXXI. cap. 10, §10 (Tom. VII. 645): “Iam enim de
hac causa duo concilia missa sunt ad sedem apostolicam (Rome),
inde etiam rescripta venerunt. Causa finita est, utinam
aliquando error finiatur.” Comp. Reuter, l. c. p.
157. |
He was the first to give a clear and fixed
definition of the sacrament, as a visible sign of invisible grace,
resting on divine appointment; but he knows nothing of the number
seven; this was a much later enactment. In the doctrine of baptism
he is entirely Catholic, though in logical contradiction with his
dogma of predestination; he maintained the necessity of baptism for
salvation on the ground of John ii. 5 and Mark xvi. 16, and derived
from it the horrible dogma of the eternal damnation of all
unbaptized infants, though he reduced their condition to a mere
absence of bliss, without actual suffering.65
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Respecting Augustin’s doctrine of baptism, see the thorough
discussion in W. Wall’s History of
Infant Baptism, vol. i. p. 173 sqq. (Oxford ed. of 1862). His
view of the slight condemnation of all unbaptized children contains
the germ of the scholastic fancy of the limbus infantum and
the pæna damni, as distinct from the lower regions of hell
and the pæna sensus. | In the doctrine of the holy
communion he stands, like his predecessors, Tertullian and Cyprian,
nearer to the Calvinistic than any other theory of a spiritual
presence and fruition of Christ’s body and blood. He certainly
can not be quoted in favor of transubstantiation. He was the chief
authority of Ratramnus and Berengar in their opposition to this
dogma.
He contributed to promote, at least in his
later writings, the Catholic faith of miracles,66
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In his former writings he expressed a truly philosophical view
concerning miracles (De vera relig. c. 25, §47; c. 50,
§98; De utilit. credendi, c. 16, §34; De peccat.
meritis et remiss. l. ii. c. 32, §52, and De civit.
Dei, xxii. c. 8); but in his Retract. l. i. c. 14, §5,
he corrects or modifies a former remark in his book De utilit.
credendi, stating that he did not mean to deny the continuance
of miracles altogether, but only such great miracles as occurred at
the time of Christ (“quia non tanta nec omnia, non quia nulla
fiunt”). See Ch. Hist. III. §§87 and 88, and the
instructive monograph of the younger
Nitzsch: Augustinus’ Lehre vom Wunder, Berlin, 1865
(97 pp.). | and the worship of Mary;67
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See Ch. Hist. III. §§81 and 82. | though he exempts the Virgin only
from actual sin, not from original, and, with all his reverence for
her, never calls her “mother of God.”68
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Comp. Tract. in Evang. Joannis, viii. c. 9, where he says:
“Cur ergo ait matri filius; Quid mihi et tibi est, mulier?
nondum venit hora mea (John ii. 4). Dominus noster Jesus
Christus et Deus erat et homo: secundum quod Deus erat, matrem non
habebat; secundum quod homo erat, habebat. Mater ergo [Maria] erat
carnis, mater humanitatis, mater infirmitatis quam suscepit propter
nos.” This strict separation of the Godhead from the manhood
of Jesus in his birth from the Virgin would have exposed Augustin
in the East to the suspicion of Nestorianism. But he died a year
before the council of Ephesus, at which Nestorius was
condemned. |
At first an advocate of religious liberty and
of purely spiritual methods of opposing error, he afterwards
asserted the fatal principle of forcible coërcion, and lent the
great weight of his authority to the system of civil persecution,
at the bloody fruits of which in the middle age he himself would
have shuddered; for he was always at heart a man of love and
gentleness, and personally acted on the glorious principle:
“Nothing conquers but truth, and the victory of truth is
love.”69
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See Ch. Hist. III. §27, p. 144 sq. He changed his view
partly from his experience that the Donatists, in his own diocese,
were converted to the catholic unity “timore legum
imperialium,” and were afterwards perfectly good Catholics.
He adduces also a misinterpretation of Luke xiv. 23, and Prov. ix.
9: “Da sapienti occasionem et sapientior erit.” Ep.
93, ad Vincentium Rogatistam, §17 (tom. ii. p. 237 sq. ed.
Bened.). But he expressly discouraged the infliction of death on
heretics, and adjured the proconsul Donatus, Ep. 100, by Jesus
Christ, not to repay the Donatists in kind. “Corrigi eos
cupimus, non necari.” |
Thus even truly great and good men have
unintentionally, through mistaken zeal, become the authors of
incalculable mischief.
3. But, on the other hand, Augustin is, of all
the fathers, nearest to evangelical Protestantism, and may
be called, in respect of his doctrine of sin and grace, the first
forerunner of the Reformation. The Lutheran and Reformed churches
have ever conceded to him, without scruple, the cognomen of Saint,
and claimed him as one of the most enlightened witnesses of the
truth and most striking examples of the marvellous power of divine
grace in the transformation of a sinner. It is worthy of mark, that
his Pauline doctrines, which are most nearly akin to Protestantism, are the
later and more mature parts of his system, and that just these
found great acceptance with the laity. The Pelagian controversy, in
which he developed his anthropology, marks the culmination of his
theological and ecclesiastical career, and his latest writings were
directed against the Pelagian Julian and the Semi-Pelagians in
Gaul, who were brought to his notice by two friendly laymen,
Prosper and Hilary. These anti-Pelagian works have wrought
mightily, it is most true, upon the Catholic church, and have held
in check the Pelagianizing tendencies of the hierarchical and
monastic system, but they have never passed into its blood and
marrow. They waited for a favourable future, and nourished in
silence an opposition to the prevailing system.
In the middle age the better sects, which attempted
to simplify, purify, and spiritualize the reigning Christianity by
return to the Holy Scriptures, and the Reformers before the
Reformation, such as Wiclif, Hus, Wessel, resorted most, after the
apostle Paul, to the bishop of Hippo as the representative of the
doctrine of free grace.
The Reformers were led by his writings into a
deeper understanding of Paul, and so prepared for their great
vocation. No church teacher did so much to mould Luther and Calvin;
none furnished them so powerful weapons against the dominant
Pelagianism and formalism; none is so often quoted by them with
esteem and love.70
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Luther pronounced upon the church fathers
(with whom, however, excepting Augustin, he was but slightly
acquainted) very condemnatory judgments, even upon Basil,
Chrysostom, and Jerome (for Jerome he had a downright antipathy, on
account of his advocacy of fasts, virginity, and monkery); he was
at times dissatisfied even with Augustin, because he after all did
not find in him his sola fide, his articulus stantis vel
cadentis ecclesiæ, and says of him: “Augustin often erred;
he cannot be trusted. Though he was good and holy, yet he, as well
as other fathers, was wanting in the true faith.” But this
cursory utterance is overborne by numerous commendations; and all
such judgments of Luther must be taken cum grano salis. He
calls Augustin the most pious, grave, and sincere of the fathers,
and the patron of divines, who taught a pure doctrine and submitted
it in Christian humility to the Holy Scriptures, etc., and he
thinks, if he had lived in the sixteenth century, he would have
been a Protestant (si hoc seculo viveret, nobiscum
sentiret), while Jerome would have gone with Rome. Compare his
singular but striking judgments on the fathers in Lutheri
Colloquia, ed. H. E. Bindseil, 1863, tom. iii. 149, and many
other places. Gangauf, a Roman Catholic (a
pupil of the philosopher Günther), concedes (l. c. p. 28,
note 13) that Luther and Calvin built their doctrinal system mainly
on Augustin, but, as he correctly thinks, with only partial right.
Nourrisson, likewise a Roman Catholic,
derives Protestantism from a corrupted (!) Augustinianism, and very
superficially makes Lutheranism and Calvinism essentially to
consist in the denial of the freedom of the will, which was only
one of the questions of the Reformation. “On ne saurait le
méconnaître, de l’Augustinianisme corrompu, mais enfin de
l’Augustinianisme procède le Protestantisme. Car, sans parler de
Wiclif et de Huss, qui, nourris de saint Augustin, soutiennent,
avec le réalisme platonicien, la doctrine de la prédestination:
Luther et Calvin ne font guère autre chose, dans leurs principaux
ouvrages, que cultiver des semences d’Augustinianisme”
(l. c. ii. p. 176). But the Reformation is far more, of
course, than a repristination of an old controversy; it is a new
creation, and marks the epoch of modern Christianity which is
different both from the mediæval and from ancient or patristic
Christianity. |
All the Reformers in the outset, Melanchthon
and Zwingle among them, adopted his denial of free will and his
doctrine of predestination, and sometimes even went beyond him into
the abyss of supralapsarianism, to cut out the last roots of human
merit and boasting. In this point Augustin holds the same relation
to the Catholic church, as Luther to the Lutheran; that is, he is a
heretic of unimpeachable authority, who is more admired than
censured even in his extravagances; yet his doctrine of
predestination was indirectly condemned by the pope in
Jansenism, as Luther’s view was rejected as Calvinism by the
Formula of Concord.71
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It is well known that Luther, as late as
1526, in his work, De servo arbitrio, against Erasmus, which
he never retracted, proceeded upon the most rigorous notion of the
divine omnipotence, wholly denied the freedom of will, declared it
a mere lie (merum mendacium), pronounced the calls of the
Scriptures to repentance a divine irony, and based eternal
salvation and eternal perdition upon the secret will of God; in all
this he almost exceeded Calvin. See particulars in the books on
doctrine-history; the inaugural dissertation of
Jul. Müller: Lutheri de prædestinatione et libero
arbitrio doctrina, Gött. 1832; and a historical treatise on
predestination by Carl Beck in the
“Studien und Kritiken” for 1847. We add, as a curiosity,
the opinion of Gibbon (ch. xxxiii.), who,
however, had a very limited and superficial knowledge of Augustin:
“The rigid system of Christianity which he framed or restored,
has been entertained, with public applause, and secret reluctance,
by the Latin church. The church of Rome has canonized Augustin, and
reprobated Calvin. Yet as the real difference between them is
invisible even to a theological microscope, the Molinists are
oppressed by the authority of the saint, and the Jansenists are
disgraced by their resemblance to the heretic. In the mean while
the Protestant Arminians stand aloof, and deride the mutual
perplexity of the disputants. Perhaps a reasoner, still more
independent, may smile in his turn when he peruses an Arminian
commentary on the Epistle to the Romans.”
Nourrisson (ii. 179), from his Roman stand-point, likewise
makes Lutheranism to consist “essentiellement dans la question
du libre arbitre.” But the principle of Lutheranism, and of
Protestantism generally, is the supremacy of the Holy Scriptures as
a rule of faith, and salvation by free grace through faith in
Christ. | For Jansenism
was nothing but a revival of Augustinianism in the bosom of the
Roman Catholic church.72
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On the mighty influence of Augustin in the seventeenth century in
France, especially on the noble Jansenists, see the works on
Jansenism, and also Nourrisson, l.
c. tom. ii. pp. 186-276. |
The
excess of Augustin and the Reformers in this direction is due to
the earnestness and energy of their sense of sin and grace. The
Pelagian looseness could never beget a reformer. It was only the
unshaken conviction of man’s own inability, of unconditional
dependence on God, and of the almighty power of his grace to give
us strength for every good work, which could do this. He who would
give others the conviction that he has a divine vocation for the
church and for mankind, must himself be penetrated with the faith
of an eternal, unalterable decree of God, and must cling to it in
the darkest hours.
In great men, and only in great men, great
opposites and apparently antagonistic truths live together. Small
minds cannot hold them. The catholic, churchly, sacramental, and
sacerdotal system stands in conflict with the evangelical
Protestant Christianity of subjective, personal experience. The
doctrine of universal baptismal regeneration, in particular, which
presupposes a universal call (at least within the church), can on
principles of logic hardly be united with the doctrine of an
absolute predestination, which limits the decree of redemption to a
portion of the baptized. Augustin supposes, on the one hand, that
every baptized person, through the inward operation of the Holy
Ghost, which accompanies the outward act of the sacrament, receives
the forgiveness of sins, and is translated from the state of nature
into the state of grace, and thus, qua baptizatus, is also a
child of God and an heir of eternal life; and yet, on the other
hand, he makes all these benefits dependent on the absolute will of
God, who saves only a certain number out of the “mass of
perdition,” and preserves these to the end. Regeneration and
election, with him, do not, as with Calvin, coincide. The former
may exist without the latter, but the latter cannot exist without
the former. Augustin assumes that many are actually born into the
kingdom of grace only to perish again; Calvin holds that in the
case of the non-elect baptism is an unmeaning ceremony; the one
putting the delusion in the inward effect, the other in the outward
form. The sacramental, churchly system throws the main stress upon
the baptismal regeneration, to the injury of the eternal election;
the Calvinistic or Puritan system sacrifices the virtue of the
sacrament to the election; the Lutheran and high Anglican systems
seek a middle ground, without being able to give a satisfactory
theological solution of the problem. The Anglican Church, however
allows the two opposite views, and sanctions the one in the
baptismal service of the Book of Common Prayer, the other in her
Thirty-nine Articles, and other standards, as interpreted by the
low church or evangelical party in a moderately Calvinistic
sense.
It was an evident ordering of God, that
Augustin’s theology, like the Latin Bible of Jerome, appeared
just in the transitional period of history, in which the old
civilization was passing away before the flood of barbarism, and a
new order of things, under the guidance of the Christian religion,
was in preparation. The church, with her strong, imposing
organization and her firm system of doctrine, must save
Christianity amidst the chaotic turmoil of the great migration, and
must become a training-school for the barbarian nations of the
middle age.73
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Guizot, the Protestant historian and
statesman, very correctly says in his Histoire générale de la
civilisation en Europe (Deuxième lecon, p. 45 sq. ed.
Bruxelles, 1850): “S’il n’eût pas été une église, je
ne sais ce qui en serait avenu au milieu de la chute de l’empire
romain.…Si le christianisme n’eût été comme dans les
premiers temps, qu’une croyance, un sentiment, une conviction
individuelle, on peut croire qu’il aurait succombé au milieu de
la dissolution de l’empire et de l’invasion des barbares. Il a
succombé plus tard, en Asie et dans tous le nord de l’Afrique,
sous une invasion de même nature, sous l’invasion des barbares
musulmans; il a succombé alors, quoiqu’il fût à l’êtat
d’institution, d’église constituée. A bien plus forte raison
le même fait aurait pu arriver au moment de la chute de l’empire
romain. Il n’y avait alors aucun des moyens par lesquels
aujourd’hui les influences morales s’établissent ou résistent
indépendamment des institutions, aucun des moyens par lesquels une
pure vérité, une pure idée acquiert un grand empire sur les
esprits, gouverne les actions, dêtermine des événemens. Rien de
semblable n’existait au IVe siècle, pour donner aux
idées, aux sentiments personels, une pareille autorité. Il est
clair qu’il fallait une société fortement organisée, fortement
gouvernée, pour lutter contre un pareil désastre, pour sortir
victorieuse d’un tel ouragan. Je ne crois pas trop dire en
affirmant qu’à la fin du IVe et au commencement du
Ve siècle, c’est l’église chrétienne qui a sauvé
le christianisme; c’est l’église avec ses institutions, ses
magistrats, son pouvoir, qui s’est défendue vigoureusement
contre la dissolution intérieure de l’empire, contre la
barbarie, qui a conquis les barbares, qui est devenue le lien, le
moyen, le principe dé civilisation entre le monde romain et le
monde barbare.” |
In this process of training, next to the Holy
Scriptures, the scholarship of Jerome and
the theology and fertile ideas of Augustin
were the most important intellectual agents.
Augustin
was held in so universal esteem that he could exert influence in
all directions, and even in his excesses gave no offence. He was
sufficiently catholic for the principle of church authority, and
yet at the same time so free and evangelical that he modified its
hierarchical and sacramental character, reacted against its
tendencies to outward, mechanical ritualism, and kept alive a deep
consciousness of sin and grace, and a spirit of fervent and truly
Christian piety, until that spirit grew strong enough to break the
shell of hierarchical tutelage, and enter a new stage of it
development. No other father could have acted more beneficently on
the Catholicism of the middle age, and more successfully provided
for the evangelical Reformation than St. Augustin, the worthy
successor of Paul, and the precursor of Luther and Calvin.
He had lived at the time of the Reformation,
he would in all probability have taken the lead of the evangelical
movement against the prevailing Pelagianism of the Roman church,
though he would not have gone so far as Luther or Calvin. For we
must not forget that, notwithstanding their strong affinity, there
is an important difference between Catholicism and Romanism or
Popery. They sustain a similar relation to each other as the
Judaism of the Old Testament dispensation, which looked to, and
prepared the way for, Christianity, and the Judaism after the
crucifixion and after the destruction of Jerusalem, which is
antagonistic to Christianity. Catholicism covers the entire ancient
and mediæval history of the church, and includes the Pauline,
Augustinian, or evangelical tendencies which increased with the
corruptions of the papacy and the growing sense of the necessity of
a “reformation in capite et membris.” Romanism proper
dates from the council of Trent, which gave it symbolical
expression and anathematized the doctrines of the Reformation.
Catholicism is the strength of Romanism, Romanism is the weakness
of Catholicism. Catholicism produced Jansenism, Popery condemned
it. Popery never forgets and never learns anything, and can allow
no change in doctrine (except by way of addition), without
sacrificing its fundamental principle of infallibility, and thus
committing suicide. But Catholicism may ultimately burst the chains
of Popery which have so long kept it confined, and may assume new
life and vigour.
Such a personage as Augustin, still holding a
mediating place between the two great divisions of Christendom,
revered alike by both, and of equal influence with both, is
furthermore a welcome pledge of the elevating prospect of a future
reconciliation of Catholicism and Protestantism in a high unity,
conserving all the truths, losing all the errors, forgiving all the
sins, forgetting all the enmities of both. After all, the
contradiction between authority and freedom, the objective and the
subjective, the churchly and the personal, the organic and the
individual, the sacramental and the experimental in religion, is
not absolute, but relative and temporary, and arises not so much
from the nature of things, as from the deficiencies of man’s
knowledge and piety in this world. These elements admit of an
ultimate harmony in the perfect state of the church, corresponding
to the union of the divine and human natures, which transcends the
limits of finite thought and logical comprehension, and is yet
completely realized in the person of Christ. They are in fact
united in the theological system of St. Paul, who had the highest
view of the church, as the mystical “body of Christ,” and
“the pillar and ground of the truth,” and who was at the same
time the great champion of evangelical freedom, individual
responsibility, and personal union of the believer with his
Saviour. We believe in and hope for one holy
catholic apostolic church, one communion of saints, one flock, one
Shepherd. The more the different churches become truly
Christian, the nearer they draw to Christ, and the more they labor
for His kingdom which rises above them all, the nearer will they
come to one another. For Christ is the common head and vital centre
of all believers, and the divine harmony of all discordant human
sects and creeds. In Christ, says Pascal,
one of the greatest and noblest disciples of Augustin, In Christ all contradictions are
solved.
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