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We were entirely mistaken. It was only yesterday that I was
undeceived. Until that time I had laboured under the impression that
the disputes in the Sorbonne were vastly important, and deeply
affected the interests of religion. The frequent convocations of an
assembly so illustrious as that of the Theological Faculty of Paris,
attended by so many extraordinary and unprecedented circumstances, led
one to form such high expectations that it was impossible to help
coming to the conclusion that the subject was most extraordinary. You
will be greatly surprised, however, when you learn from the following
account the issue of this grand demonstration, which, having made
myself perfectly master of the subject, I shall be able to tell you in
very few words.
Two questions, then, were brought under examination; the one a
question of fact, the other a question of right.
The question of fact consisted in ascertaining whether M. Arnauld
was guilty of presumption, for having asserted in his second letter
that he had carefully perused the book of Jansenius, and that he had
not discovered the propositions condemned by the late pope; but that,
nevertheless, as he condemned these propositions wherever they might
occur, he condemned them in Jansenius, if they were really contained
in that work.
The question here was, if he could, without presumption, entertain
a doubt that these propositions were in Jansenius, after the bishops
had declared that they were.
The matter having been brought before the Sorbonne, seventy-one
doctors undertook his defence, maintaining that the only reply he
could possibly give to the demands made upon him in so many
publications, calling on him to say if he held that these propositions
were in that book, was that he had not been able to find them, but
that if they were in the book, he condemned them in the book.
Some even went a step farther and protested that, after all the
search they had made into the book, they had never stumbled upon these
propositions, and that they had, on the contrary, found sentiments
entirely at variance with them. They then earnestly begged that, if
any doctor present had discovered them, he would have the goodness to
point them out; adding that what was so easy could not reasonably be
refused, as this would be the surest way to silence the whole of them,
M. Arnauld included; but this proposal has been uniformly declined. So
much for the one side.
On the other side are eighty secular doctors and some forty
mendicant friars, who have condemned M. Arnauld's proposition, without
choosing to examine whether he has spoken truly or falsely- who, in
fact, have declared that they have nothing to do with the veracity of
his proposition, but simply with its temerity.
Besides these, there were fifteen who were not in favor of the
censure, and who are called Neutrals.
Such was the issue of the question of fact, regarding which, I
must say, I give myself very little concern. It does not affect my
conscience in the least whether M. Arnauld is presumptuous or the
reverse; and should I be tempted, from curiosity, to ascertain whether
these propositions are contained in Jansenius, his book is neither so
very rare nor so very large as to hinder me from reading it over from
beginning to end, for my own satisfaction, without consulting the
Sorbonne on the matter.
Were it not, however, for the dread of being presumptuous myself,
I really think that I would be disposed to adopt the opinion which has
been formed by the most of my acquaintances, who, though they have
believed hitherto on common report that the propositions were in
Jansenius, begin now to suspect the contrary, owing to this strange
refusal to point them out- a refusal the more extraordinary to me as I
have not yet met with a single individual who can say that he has
discovered them in that work. I am afraid, therefore, that this
censure will do more harm than good, and that the impression which it
will leave on the minds of all who know its history will be just the
reverse of the conclusion that has been come to. The truth is the
world has become sceptical of late and will not believe things till it
sees them. But, as I said before, this point is of very little moment,
as it has no concern with religion.
The question of right, from its affecting the faith, appears much
more important, and, accordingly, I took particular pains in examining
it. You will be relieved, however, to find that it is of as little
consequence as the former.
The point of dispute here was an assertion of M. Arnauld's in the
same letter, to the effect "that the grace, without which we can do
nothing, was wanting to St. Peter at his fall." You and I supposed
that the controversy here would turn upon the great principles of
grace; such as whether grace is given to all men? Or if it is
efficacious of itself? But we were quite mistaken. You must know I
have become a great theologian within this short time; and now for the
proofs of it!
To ascertain the matter with certainty, I repaired to my neighbor,
M. N-, doctor of Navarre, who, as you are aware, is one of the keenest
opponents of the Jansenists, and, my curiosity having made me almost
as keen as himself, I asked him if they would not formally decide at
once that "grace is given to all men," and thus set the question at
rest. But he gave me a sore rebuff and told me that that was not the
point; that there were some of his party who held that grace was not
given to all; that the examiners themselves had declared, in a full
assembly of the Sorbonne, that that opinion was problematical; and
that he himself held the same sentiment, which he confirmed by quoting
to me what he called that celebrated passage of St. Augustine: "We
know that grace is not given to all men."
I apologized for having misapprehended his sentiment and requested
him to say if they would not at least condemn that other opinion of
the Jansenists which is making so much noise: "That grace is
efficacious of itself, and invincibly determines our will to what is
good." But in this second query I was equally unfortunate. "You know
nothing about the matter," he said; "that is not a heresy- it is an
orthodox opinion; all the Thomists maintain it; and I myself have
defended it in my Sorbonic thesis."
I did not venture again to propose my doubts, and yet I was as far
as ever from understanding where the difficulty lay; so, at last, in
order to get at it, I begged him to tell me where, then, lay the
heresy of M. Arnauld's proposition. "It lies here," said he, "that he
does not acknowledge that the righteous have the power of obeying the
commandments of God, in the manner in which we understand it."
On receiving this piece of information, I took my leave of him;
and, quite proud at having discovered the knot of the question, I
sought M. N-, who is gradually getting better and was sufficiently
recovered to conduct me to the house of his brother-in-law, who is a
Jansenist, if ever there was one, but a very good man notwithstanding.
Thinking to insure myself a better reception, I pretended to be very
high on what I took to be his side, and said: "Is it possible that the
Sorbonne has introduced into the Church such an error as this, 'that
all the righteous have always the power of obeying the commandments of
God?'"
"What say you?" replied the doctor. "Call you that an error- a
sentiment so Catholic that none but Lutherans and Calvinists impugn
it?"
"Indeed!" said I, surprised in my turn; "so you are not of their
opinion?"
"No," he replied; "we anathematize it as heretical and impious."
Confounded by this reply, I soon discovered that I had overacted
the Jansenist, as I had formerly overdone the Molinist. But, not being
sure if I had rightly understood him, I requested him to tell me
frankly if he held "that the righteous have always a real power to
observe the divine precepts?" Upon this, the good man got warm (but it
was with a holy zeal) and protested that he would not disguise his
sentiments on any consideration- that such was, indeed, his belief,
and that he and all his party would defend it to the death, as the
pure doctrine of St. Thomas, and of St. Augustine their master.
This was spoken so seriously as to leave me no room for doubt; and
under this impression I returned to my first doctor and said to him,
with an air of great satisfaction, that I was sure there would be
peace in the Sorbonne very soon; that the Jansenists were quite at one
with them in reference to the power of the righteous to obey the
commandments of God; that I could pledge my word for them and could
make them seal it with their blood.
"Hold there!" said he. "One must be a theologian to see the point
of this question. The difference between us is so subtle that it is
with some difficulty we can discern it ourselves- you will find it
rather too much for your powers of comprehension. Content yourself,
then, with knowing that it is very true the Jansenists will tell you
that all the righteous have always the power of obeying the
commandments; that is not the point in dispute between us; but mark
you, they will not tell you that that power is proximate. That is the
point."
This was a new and unknown word to me. Up to this moment I had
managed to understand matters, but that term involved me in obscurity;
and I verily believe that it has been invented for no other purpose
than to mystify. I requested him to give me an explanation of it, but
he made a mystery of it, and sent me back, without any further
satisfaction, to demand of the Jansenists if they would admit this
proximate power. Having charged my memory with the phrase (as to my
understanding, that was out of the question), I hastened with all
possible expedition, fearing that I might forget it, to my Jansenist
friend and accosted him, immediately after our first salutations,
with: "Tell me, pray, if you admit the proximate power?" He smiled,
and replied, coldly: "Tell me yourself in what sense you understand
it, and I may then inform you what I think of it." As my knowledge did
not extend quite so far, I was at a loss what reply to make; and yet,
rather than lose the object of my visit, I said at random: "Why, I
understand it in the sense of the Molinists." "To which of the
Molinists do you refer me?" replied he, with the utmost coolness. I
referred him to the whole of them together, as forming one body, and
animated by one spirit.
"You know very little about the matter," returned he. "So far are
they from being united in sentiment that some of them are
diametrically opposed to each other. But, being all united in the
design to ruin M. Arnauld, they have resolved to agree on this term
proximate, which both parties might use indiscriminately, though they
understand it diversely, that thus, by a similarity of language and an
apparent conformity, they may form a large body and get up a majority
to crush him with the greater certainty."
This reply filled me with amazement; but, without imbibing these
impressions of the malicious designs of the Molinists, which I am
unwilling to believe on his word, and with which I have no concern, I
set myself simply to ascertain the various senses which they give to
that mysterious word proximate. "I would enlighten you on the subject
with all my heart," he said; "but you would discover in it such a mass
of contrariety and contradiction that you would hardly believe me. You
would suspect me. To make sure of the matter, you had better learn it
from some of themselves; and I shall give you some of their addresses.
You have only to make a separate visit to one called M. le Moine and
to Father Nicolai."
"I have no acquaintance with any of these persons," said I.
"Let me see, then," he replied, "if you know any of those whom I
shall name to you; they all agree in sentiment with M. le Moine."
I happened, in fact, to know some of them.
"Well, let us see if you are acquainted with any of the Dominicans
whom they call the 'New Thomists,' for they are all the same with
Father Nicolai."
I knew some of them also whom he named; and, resolved to profit by
this council and to investigate the matter, I took my leave of him and
went immediately to one of the disciples of M. le Moine. I begged him
to inform me what it was to have the proximate power of doing a thing.
"It is easy to tell you that, " he replied; "it is merely to have
all that is necessary for doing it in such a manner that nothing is
wanting to performance."
"And so," said I, "to have the proximate power of crossing a
river, for example, is to have a boat, boatmen, oars, and all the
rest, so that nothing is wanting?"
"Exactly so," said the monk.
"And to have the proximate power of seeing," continued I, "must be
to have good eyes and the light of day; for a person with good sight
in the dark would not have the proximate power of seeing, according to
you, as he would want the light, without which one cannot see?"
"Precisely," said he.
"And consequently," returned I, "when you say that all the
righteous have the proximate power of observing the commandments of
God, you mean that they have always all the grace necessary for
observing them, so that nothing is wanting to them on the part of
God."
"Stay there," he replied; "they have always all that is necessary
for observing the commandments, or at least for asking it of God."
"I understand you," said I; "they have all that is necessary for
praying to God to assist them, without requiring any new grace from
God to enable them to pray."
"You have it now," he rejoined.
"But is it not necessary that they have an efficacious grace, in
order to pray to God?"
"No," said he; "not according to M. le Moine."
To lose no time, I went to the Jacobins, and requested an
interview with some whom I knew to be New Thomists, and I begged them
to tell me what proximate power was. "Is it not," said I, "that power
to which nothing is wanting in order to act?"
"No," said they.
"Indeed! fathers," said I; "if anything is wanting to that power,
do you call it proximate? Would you say, for instance, that a man in
the night-time, and without any light, had the proximate power of
seeing?"
"Yes, indeed, he would have it, in our opinion, if he is not
blind."
"I grant that," said I; "but M. le Moine understands it in a
different manner."
"Very true," they replied; "but so it is that we understand it."
"I have no objections to that," I said; "for I never quarrel about
a name, provided I am apprised of the sense in which it is understood.
But I perceive from this that, when you speak of the righteous having
always the proximate power of praying to God, you understand that they
require another supply for praying, without which they will never
pray."
"Most excellent!" exclaimed the good fathers, embracing me;
"exactly the thing; for they must have, besides, an efficacious grace
bestowed upon all, and which determines their wills to pray; and it is
heresy to deny the necessity of that efficacious grace in order to
pray."
"Most excellent!" cried I, in return; "but, according to you, the
Jansenists are Catholics, and M. le Moine a heretic; for the
Jansenists maintain that, while the righteous have power to pray, they
require nevertheless an efficacious grace; and this is what you
approve. M. le Moine, again, maintains that the righteous may pray
without efficacious grace; and this is what you condemn."
"Ay," said they; "but M. le Moine calls that power 'proximate
power.'"
"How now! fathers," I exclaimed; "this is merely playing with
words, to say that you are agreed as to the common terms which you
employ, while you differ with them as to the sense of these terms."
The fathers made no reply; and at this juncture, who should come
in but my old friend, the disciple of M. le Moine! I regarded this at
the time as an extraordinary piece of good fortune; but I have
discovered since then that such meetings are not rare- that, in fact,
they are constantly mixing in each other's society.
"I know a man," said I, addressing myself to M. le Moine's
disciple, "who holds that all the righteous have always the power of
praying to God, but that, notwithstanding this, they will never pray
without an efficacious grace which determines them, and which God does
not always give to all the righteous. Is he a heretic?"
"Stay," said the doctor; "you might take me by surprise. Let us go
cautiously to work. Distinguo. If he call that power proximate power,
he will be a Thomist, and therefore a Catholic; if not, he will be a
Jansenist and, therefore, a heretic."
"He calls it neither proximate nor non-proximate," said I.
"Then he is a heretic," quoth he; "I refer you to these good
fathers if he is not."
I did not appeal to them as judges, for they had already nodded
assent; but I said to them: "He refuses to admit that word proximate,
because he can meet with nobody who will explain it to him."
Upon this one of the fathers was on the point of offering his
definition of the term, when he was interrupted by M. le Moine's
disciple, who said to him: "Do you mean, then, to renew our broils?
Have we not agreed not to explain that word proximate, but to use it
on both sides without saying what it signifies?" To this the Jacobin
gave his assent.
I was thus let into the whole secret of their plot; and, rising to
take my leave of them, I remarked: "Indeed, fathers, I am much afraid
this is nothing better than pure chicanery; and, whatever may be the
result of your convocations, I venture to predict that, though the
censure should pass, peace will not be established. For though it
should be decided that the syllables of that word proximate should be
pronounced, who does not see that, the meaning not being explained,
each of you will be disposed to claim the victory? The Jacobins will
contend that the word is to be understood in their sense; M. le Moine
will insist that it must be taken in his; and thus there will be more
wrangling about the explanation of the word than about its
introduction. For, after all, there would be no great danger in
adopting it without any sense, seeing it is through the sense only
that it can do any harm. But it would be unworthy of the Sorbonne and
of theology to employ equivocal and captious terms without giving any
explanation of them. In short, fathers, tell me, I entreat you, for
the last time, what is necessary to be believed in order to be a good
Catholic?"
"You must say," they all vociferated simultaneously, "that all the
righteous have the proximate power, abstracting from it all sense-
from the sense of the Thomists and the sense of other divines."
"That is to say," I replied, in taking leave of them, "that I must
pronounce that word to avoid being the heretic of a name. For, pray,
is this a Scripture word?" "No," said they. "Is it a word of the
Fathers, the Councils, or the Popes?" "No." "Is the word, then, used
by St. Thomas?" "No." "What necessity, therefore, is there for using
it since it has neither the authority of others nor any sense of
itself.?" "You are an opinionative fellow," said they; "but you shall
say it, or you shall be a heretic, and M. Arnauld into the bargain;
for we are the majority, and, should it be necessary, we can bring a
sufficient number of Cordeliers into the field to carry the day."
On hearing this solid argument, I took my leave of them, to write
you the foregoing account of my interview, from which you will
perceive that the following points remain undisputed and uncondemned
by either party. First, That grace is not given to all men. Second,
That all the righteous have always the power of obeying the divine
commandments. Third, That they require, nevertheless, in order to obey
them, and even to pray, an efficacious grace, which invincibly
determines their will. Fourth, That this efficacious grace is not
always granted to all the righteous, and that it depends on the pure
mercy of God. So that, after all, the truth is safe, and nothing runs
any risk but that word without the sense, proximate.
Happy the people who are ignorant of its existence! happy those
who lived before it was born! for I see no help for it, unless the
gentlemen of the Acadamy, by an act of absolute authority, banish that
barbarous term, which causes so many divisions, from beyond the
precincts of the Sorbonne. Unless this be done, the censure appears
certain; but I can easily see that it will do no other harm than
diminish the credit of the Sorbonne, and deprive it of that authority
which is so necessary to it on other occasions.
Meanwhile, I leave you at perfect liberty to hold by the word
proximate or not, just as you please; for I love you too much to
persecute you under that pretext. If this account is not displeasing
to you, I shall continue to apprise you of all that happens. I am,
Just as I had sealed up my last letter, I received a visit from
our old friend M. N-. Nothing could have happened more luckily for my
curiosity; for he is thoroughly informed in the questions of the day
and is completely in the secret of the Jesuits, at whose houses,
including those of their leading men, he is a constant visitor. After
having talked over the business which brought him to my house, I asked
him to state, in a few words, what were the points in dispute between
the two parties.
He immediately complied, and informed me that the principal points
were two- the first about the proximate power, and the second about
sufficient grace. I have enlightened you on the first of these points
in my former letter and shall now speak of the second.
In one word, then, I found that their difference about sufficient
grace may be defined thus: The Jesuits maintain that there is a grace
given generally to all men, subject in such a way to free-will that
the will renders it efficacious or inefficacious at its pleasure,
without any additional aid from God and without wanting anything on
his part in order to act effectively; and hence they term this grace
sufficient, because it suffices of itself for action. The Jansenists,
on the other hand, will not allow that any grace is actually
sufficient which is not also efficacious; that is, that all those
kinds of grace which do not determine the will to act effectively are
insufficient for action; for they hold that a man can never act
without efficacious grace.
Such are the points in debate between the Jesuits and the
Jansenists; and my next object was to ascertain the doctrine of the
New Thomists. "It is rather an odd one," he said; "they agree with the
Jesuits in admitting a sufficient grace given to all men; but they
maintain, at the same time, that no man can act with this grace alone,
but that, in order to do this, he must receive from God an efficacious
grace which really determines his will to the action, and which God
does not grant to all men." "So that, according to this doctrine,"
said I, "this grace is sufficient without being sufficient." "Exactly
so," he replied; "for if it suffices, there is no need of anything
more for acting; and if it does not suffice, why- it is not
sufficient."
"But," asked I, "where, then, is the difference between them and
the Jansenists?" "They differ in this," he replied, "that the
Dominicans have this good qualification, that they do not refuse to
say that all men have the sufficient grace." "I understand you,"
returned I; "but they say it without thinking it; for they add that,
in order to act, we must have an efficacious grace which is not given
to all, consequently, if they agree with the Jesuits in the use of a
term which has no sense, they differ from them and coincide with the
Jansenists in the substance of the thing. That is very true, said he.
"How, then," said I, "are the Jesuits united with them? and why do
they not combat them as well as the Jansenists, since they will always
find powerful antagonists in these men, who, by maintaining the
necessity of the efficacious grace which determines the will, will
prevent them from establishing that grace which they hold to be of
itself sufficient?"
"The Dominicans are too powerful," he replied, "and the Jesuits
are too politic, to come to an open rupture with them. The Society is
content with having prevailed on them so far as to admit the name of
sufficient grace, though they understand it in another sense; by which
manoeuvre they gain this advantage, that they will make their opinion
appear untenable, as soon as they judge it proper to do so. And this
will be no difficult matter; for, let it be once granted that all men
have the sufficient graces, nothing can be more natural than to
conclude that the efficacious grace is not necessary to action- the
sufficiency of the general grace precluding the necessity of all
others. By saying sufficient we express all that is necessary for
action; and it will serve little purpose for the Dominicans to exclaim
that they attach another sense to the expression; the people,
accustomed to the common acceptation of that term, would not even
listen to their explanation. Thus the Society gains a sufficient
advantage from the expression which has been adopted by the
Dominicans, without pressing them any further; and were you but
acquainted with what passed under Popes Clement VIII and Paul V, and
knew how the Society was thwarted by the Dominicans in the
establishment of the sufficient grace, you would not be surprised to
find that it avoids embroiling itself in quarrels with them and allows
them to hold their own opinion, provided that of the Society is left
untouched; and more especially, when the Dominicans countenance its
doctrine, by agreeing to employ, on all public occasions, the term
sufficient grace.
"The Society," he continued, "is quite satisfied with their
complaisance. It does not insist on their denying the necessity of
efficacious grace, this would be urging them too far. People should
not tyrannize over their friends; and the Jesuits have gained quite
enough. The world is content with words; few think of searching into
the nature of things; and thus the name of sufficient grace being
adopted on both sides, though in different senses, there is nobody,
except the most subtle theologians, who ever dreams of doubting that
the thing signified by that word is held by the Jacobins as well as by
the Jesuits; and the result will show that these last are not the
greatest dupes."
I acknowledged that they were a shrewd class of people, these
Jesuits; and, availing myself of his advice, I went straight to the
Jacobins, at whose gate I found one of my good friends, a staunch
Jansenist (for you must know I have got friends among all parties),
who was calling for another monk, different from him whom I was in
search of. I prevailed on him, however, after much entreaty, to
accompany me, and asked for one of my New Thomists. He was delighted
to see me again. "How now! my dear father," I began, "it seems it is
not enough that all men have a proximate power, with which they can
never act with effect; they must have besides this a sufficient grace,
with which they can act as little. Is not that the doctrine of your
school?" "It is," said the worthy monk; "and I was upholding it this
very morning in the Sorbonne. I spoke on the point during my whole
half-hour; and, but for the sand-glass, I bade fair to have reversed
that wicked proverb, now so current in Paris: 'He votes without
speaking, like a monk in the Sorbonne.'" "What do you mean by your
half-hour and your sand-glass?" I asked; "do they cut your speeches by
a certain measure?" "Yes," said he, "they have done so for some days
past." "And do they oblige you to speak for half an hour?" "No; we may
speak as little as we please." "But not as much as you please, said I.
"O what a capital regulation for the boobies! what a blessed excuse
for those who have nothing worth the saying! But, to return to the
point, father; this grace given to all men is sufficient, is it not?"
"Yes," said he. "And yet it has no effect without efficacious grace?"
"None whatever," he replied. "And all men have the sufficient,"
continued I, "and all have not the efficacious?" "Exactly," said he.
"That is," returned I, "all have enough of grace, and all have not
enough of it that is, this grace suffices, though it does not suffice-
that is, it is sufficient in name and insufficient in effect! In good
sooth, father, this is particularly subtle doctrine! Have you
forgotten, since you retired to the cloister, the meaning attached, in
the world you have quitted, to the word sufficient? don't you remember
that it includes all that is necessary for acting? But no, you cannot
have lost all recollection of it; for, to avail myself of an
illustration which will come home more vividly to your feelings, let
us suppose that you were supplied with no more than two ounces of
bread and a glass of water daily, would you be quite pleased with your
prior were he to tell you that this would be sufficient to support
you, under the pretext that, along with something else, which however,
he would not give you, you would have all that would be necessary to
support you? How, then can you allow yourselves to say that all men
have sufficient grace for acting, while you admit that there is
another grace absolutely necessary to acting which all men have not?
Is it because this is an unimportant article of belief, and you leave
all men at liberty to believe that efficacious grace is necessary or
not, as they choose? Is it a matter of indifference to say, that with
sufficient grace a man may really act?" "How!" cried the good man;
"indifference! it is heresy- formal heresy. The necessity of
efficacious grace for acting effectively, is a point of faith- it is
heresy to deny it."
"Where are we now?" I exclaimed; "and which side am I to take
here? If I deny the sufficient grace, I am a Jansenist. If I admit it,
as the Jesuits do, in the way of denying that efficacious grace is
necessary, I shall be a heretic, say you. And if I admit it, as you
do, in the way of maintaining the necessity of efficacious grace, I
sin against common sense, and am a blockhead, say the Jesuits. What
must I do, thus reduced to the inevitable necessity of being a
blockhead, a heretic, or a Jansenist? And what a sad pass are matters
come to, if there are none but the Jansenists who avoid coming into
collision either with the faith or with reason, and who save
themselves at once from absurdity and from error!"
My Jansenist friend took this speech as a good omen and already
looked upon me as a convert. He said nothing to me, however; but,
addressing the monk: "Pray, father," inquired he, "what is the point
on which you agree with the Jesuits?" "We agree in this," he replied,
"that the Jesuits and we acknowledge the sufficient grace given to
all." "But," said the Jansenist, "there are two things in this
expression sufficient grace- there is the sound, which is only so much
breath; and there is the thing which it signifies, which is real and
effectual. And, therefore, as you are agreed with the Jesuits in
regard to the word sufficient and opposed to them as to the sense, it
is apparent that you are opposed to them in regard to the substance of
that term, and that you only agree with them as to the sound. Is this
what you call acting sincerely and cordially?"
"But," said the good man, "what cause have you to complain, since
we deceive nobody by this mode of speaking? In our schools we openly
teach that we understand it in a manner different from the Jesuits."
"What I complain of," returned my friend" "is, that you do not
proclaim it everywhere, that by sufficient grace you understand the
grace which is not sufficient. You are bound in conscience, by thus
altering the sense of the ordinary terms of theology, to tell that,
when you admit a sufficient grace in all men, you understand that they
have not sufficient grace in effect. All classes of persons in the
world understand the word sufficient in one and the same sense; the
New Thomists alone understand it in another sense. All the women, who
form one-half of the world, all courtiers, all military men, all
magistrates, all lawyers, merchants, artisans, the whole populace- in
short, all sorts of men, except the Dominicans, understand the word
sufficient to express all that is necessary. Scarcely any one is aware
of this singular exception. It is reported over the whole earth,
simply that the Dominicans hold that all men have the sufficient
graces. What other conclusion can be drawn from this, than that they
hold that all men have all the graces necessary for action; especially
when they are seen joined in interest and intrigue with the Jesuits,
who understand the thing in that sense? Is not the uniformity of your
expressions, viewed in connection with this union of party, a manifest
indication and confirmation of the uniformity of your sentiments?
"The multitude of the faithful inquire of theologians: What is the
real condition of human nature since its corruption? St. Augustine and
his disciples reply that it has no sufficient grace until God is
pleased to bestow it. Next come the Jesuits, and they say that all
have the effectually sufficient graces. The Dominicans are consulted
on this contrariety of opinion; and what course do they pursue? They
unite with the Jesuits; by this coalition they make up a majority;
they secede from those who deny these sufficient graces; they declare
that all men possess them. Who, on hearing this, would imagine
anything else than that they gave their sanction to the opinion of the
Jesuits? And then they add that, nevertheless, these said sufficient
graces are perfectly useless without the efficacious, which are not
given to all!
"Shall I present you with a picture of the Church amidst these
conflicting sentiments? I consider her very like a man who, leaving
his native country on a journey, is encountered by robbers, who
inflict many wounds on him and leave him half dead. He sends for three
physicians resident in the neighboring towns. The first, on probing
his wounds, pronounces them mortal and assures him that none but God
can restore to him his lost powers. The second, coming after the
other, chooses to flatter the man- tells him that he has still
sufficient strength to reach his home; and, abusing the first
physician who opposed his advice, determines upon his ruin. In this
dilemma, the poor patient, observing the third medical gentleman at a
distance, stretches out his hands to him as the person who should
determine the controversy. This practitioner, on examining his wounds,
and ascertaining the opinions of the first two doctors, embraces that
of the second, and uniting with him, the two combine against the
first, and being the stronger party in number drive him from the field
in disgrace. From this proceeding, the patient naturally concludes
that the last comer is of the same opinion with the second; and, on
putting the question to him, he assures him most positively that his
strength is sufficient for prosecuting his journey. The wounded man,
however, sensible of his own weakness, begs him to explain to him how
he considered him sufficient for the journey. 'Because,' replies his
adviser, 'you are still in possession of your legs, and legs are the
organs which naturally suffice for walking.' 'But,' says the patient,
'have I all the strength necessary to make use of my legs? for, in my
present weak condition, it humbly appears to me that they are wholly
useless.' 'Certainly you have not,' replies the doctor; 'you will
never walk effectively, unless God vouchsafes some extraordinary
assistance to sustain and conduct you.' 'What!' exclaims the poor man,
'do you not mean to say that I have sufficient strength in me, so as
to want for nothing to walk effectively?' 'Very far from it,' returns
the physician. 'You must, then,' says the patient, 'be of a different
opinion from your companion there about my real condition.' 'I must
admit that I am,' replies the other.
"What do you suppose the patient said to this? Why, he complained
of the strange conduct and ambiguous terms of this third physician. He
censured him for taking part with the second, to whom he was opposed
in sentiment, and with whom he had only the semblance of agreement,
and for having driven away the first doctor, with whom he in reality
agreed; and, after making a trial of strength, and finding by
experience his actual weakness, he sent them both about their
business, recalled his first adviser, put himself under his care, and
having, by his advice, implored from God the strength of which he
confessed his need, obtained the mercy he sought, and, through divine
help, reached his house in peace.
The worthy monk was so confounded with this parable that he could
not find words to reply. To cheer him up a little, I said to him, in a
mild tone: "But after all, my dear father, what made you think of
giving the name of sufficient to a grace which you say it is a point
of faith to believe is, in fact, insufficient?" "It is very easy for
you to talk about it," said he. "You are an independent and private
man; I am a monk and in a community- cannot you estimate the
difference between the two cases? We depend on superiors; they depend
on others. They have promised our votes- what would you have to become
of me?" We understood the hint; and this brought to our recollection
the case of his brother monk, who, for a similar piece of
indiscretion, has been exiled to Abbeville.
"But," I resumed, "how comes it about that your community is bound
to admit this grace?" "That is another question," he replied. "All
that I can tell you is, in one word, that our order has defended, to
the utmost of its ability, the doctrine of St. Thomas on efficacious
grace. With what ardor did it oppose, from the very commencement, the
doctrine of Molina? How did it labor to establish the necessity of the
efficacious grace of Jesus Christ? Don't you know what happened under
Clement VIII and Paul V, and how, the former having been prevented by
death, and the latter hindered by some Italian affairs from publishing
his bull, our arms still sleep in the Vatican? But the Jesuits,
availing themselves, since the introduction of the heresy of Luther
and Calvin, of the scanty light which the people possess for
discriminating between the error of these men and the truth of the
doctrine of St. Thomas, disseminated their principles with such
rapidity and success that they became, ere long, masters of the
popular belief; while we, on our part, found ourselves in the
predicament of being denounced as Calvinists and treated as the
Jansenists are at present, unless we qualified the efficacious grace
with, at least, the apparent avowal of a sufficient. In this
extremity, what better course could we have taken for saving the
truth, without losing our own credit, than by admitting the name of
sufficient grace, while we denied that it was such in effect? Such is
the real history of the case."
This was spoken in such a melancholy tone that I really began to
pity the man; not so, however, my companion. "Flatter not yourselves,"
said he to the monk, "with having saved the truth; had she not found
other defenders, in your feeble hands she must have perished. By
admitting into the Church the name of her enemy, you have admitted the
enemy himself. Names are inseparable from things. If the term
sufficient grace be once established, it will be vain for you to
protest that you understand by it a grace which is not sufficient.
Your protest will be held inadmissible. Your explanation would be
scouted as odious in the world, where men speak more ingenuously about
matters of infinitely less moment. The Jesuits will gain a triumph- it
will be their grace, which is sufficient in fact, and not yours, which
is only so in name, that will pass as established; and the converse of
your creed will become an article of faith."
"We will all suffer martyrdom first," cried the father, "rather
than consent to the establishment of sufficient grace in the sense of
the Jesuits. St. Thomas, whom we have sworn to follow even to the
death, is diametrically opposed to such doctrine."
To this my friend, who took up the matter more seriously than I
did, replied: "Come now, father, your fraternity has received an honor
which it sadly abuses. It abandons that grace which was confided to
its care, and which has never been abandoned since the creation of the
world. That victorious grace, which was waited for by the patriarchs,
predicted by the prophets, introduced by Jesus Christ, preached by St.
Paul, explained by St. Augustine, the greatest of the fathers,
embraced by his followers, confirmed by St. Bernard, the last of the
fathers, supported by St. Thomas, the angel of the schools,
transmitted by him to your order, maintained by so many of your
fathers, and so nobly defended by your monks under Popes Clement and
Paul- that efficacious grace, which had been committed as a sacred
deposit into your hands, that it might find, in a sacred and
everlasting order, a succession of preachers, who might proclaim it to
the end of time- is discarded and deserted for interests the most
contemptible. It is high time for other hands to arm in its quarrel.
It is time for God to raise up intrepid disciples of the Doctor of
grace, who, strangers to the entanglements of the world, will serve
God for God's sake. Grace may not, indeed, number the Dominicans among
her champions, but champions she shall never want; for, by her own
almighty energy, she creates them for herself. She demands hearts pure
and disengaged; nay, she herself purifies and disengages them from
worldly interests, incompatible with the truths of the Gospel. Reflect
seriously, on this, father; and take care that God does not remove
this candlestick from its place, leaving you in darkness and without
the crown, as a punishment for the coldness which you manifest to a
cause so important to his Church."
He might have gone on in this strain much longer, for he was
kindling as he advanced, but I interrupted him by rising to take my
leave and said: "Indeed, my dear father, had I any influence in
France, I should have it proclaimed, by sound of trumpet: 'BE IT KNOWN
TO ALL MEN, that when the Jacobins SAY that sufficient grace is given
to all, they MEAN that all have not the grace which actually
suffices!' After which, you might say it often as you please, but not
otherwise." And thus ended our visit.
You will perceive, therefore, that we have here a politic
sufficiency somewhat similar to proximate power. Meanwhile I may tell
you that it appears to me that both the proximate power and this same
sufficient grace may be safely doubted by anybody, provided he is not
a Jacobin.
I have just come to learn, when closing my letter, that the
censure has passed. But as I do not yet know in what terms it is
worded, and as it will not be published till the 15th of February, I
shall delay writing you about it till the next post. I am,
Your two letters have not been confined to me. Everybody has seen
them, everybody understands them, and everybody believes them. They
are not only in high repute among theologians- they have proved
agreeable to men of the world, and intelligible even to the ladies.
In a communication which I lately received from one of the
gentlemen of the Academy- one of the most illustrious names in a
society of men who are all illustrious- who had seen only your first
letter, he writes me as follows: "I only wish that the Sorbonne, which
owes so much to the memory of the late cardinal, would acknowledge the
jurisdiction of his French Academy. The author of the letter would be
satisfied; for, in the capacity of an academician, I would
authoritatively condemn, I would banish, I would proscribe- I had
almost said exterminate- to the extent of my power, this proximate
power, which makes so much noise about nothing and without knowing
what it would have. The misfortune is that our academic power is a
very limited and remote power. I am sorry for it; and still more sorry
that my small power cannot discharge me from my obligations to you,"
My next extract is from the pen of a lady, whom I shall not
indicate in any way whatever. She writes thus to a female friend who
had transmitted to her the first of your letters: "You can have no
idea how much I am obliged to you for the letter you sent me- it is so
very ingenious, and so nicely written. It narrates, and yet it is not
a narrative; it clears up the most intricate and involved of all
possible matters; its raillery is exquisite; it enlightens those who
know little about the subject and imparts double delight to those who
understand it. It is an admirable apology; and, if they would so take
it, a delicate and innocent censure. In short, that letter displays so
much art, so much spirit, and so much judgment, that I burn with
curiosity to know who wrote it,"
You too, perhaps, would like to know who the lady is that writes
in this style; but you must be content to esteem without knowing her;
when you come to know her, your esteem will be greatly enhanced.
Take my word for it, then, and continue your letters; and let the
censure come when it may, we are quite prepared for receiving it.
These words proximate power and sufficient grace, with which we are
threatened, will frighten us no longer. We have learned from the
Jesuits, the Jacobins, and M. le Moine, in how many different ways
they may be turned, and how little solidity there is in these
new-fangled terms, to give ourselves any trouble about them.
Meanwhile, I remain,
I have just received your letter; and, at the same time, there was
brought me a copy of the censure in manuscript. I find that I am as
well treated in the former as M. Arnauld is ill treated in the latter.
I am afraid there is some extravagance in both cases and that neither
of us is sufficiently well known by our judges. Sure I am that, were
we better known, M. Arnauld would merit the approval of the Sorbonne,
and I the censure of the Academy. Thus our interests are quite at
variance with each other. It is his interest to make himself known, to
vindicate his innocence; whereas it is mine to remain in the dark, for
fear of forfeiting my reputation. Prevented, therefore, from showing
my face, I must devolve on you the task of making my acknowledgments
to my illustrious admirers, while I undertake that of furnishing you
with the news of the censure.
I assure you, sir, it has filled me with astonishment. I expected
to find it condemning the most shocking heresy in the world, but your
wonder will equal mine, when informed that these alarming
preparations, when on the point of producing the grand effect
anticipated, have all ended in smoke.
To understand the whole affair in a pleasant way, only recollect,
I beseech you, the strange impressions which, for a long time past, we
have been taught to form of the Jansenists. Recall to mind the cabals,
the factions, the errors, the schisms, the outrages, with which they
have been so long charged; the manner in which they have been
denounced and vilified from the pulpit and the press; and the degree
to which this torrent of abuse, so remarkable for its violence and
duration, has swollen of late years, when they have been openly and
publicly accused of being not only heretics and schismatics, but
apostates and infidels- with "denying the mystery of
transubstantiation, and renouncing Jesus Christ and the Gospel."
After having published these startling accusations, it was
resolved to examine their writings, in order to pronounce judgement on
them. For this purpose the second letter of M. Arnauld, which was
reported to be full of the greatest errors, is selected. The examiners
appointed are his most open and avowed enemies. They employ all their
learning to discover something that they might lay hold upon, and at
length they produce one proposition of a doctrinal character, which
they exhibit for censure.
What else could any one infer from such proceedings than that this
proposition, selected under such remarkable circumstances, would
contain the essence of the blackest heresies imaginable. And yet the
proposition so entirely agrees with what is clearly and formally
expressed in the passages from the fathers quoted by M. Arnauld that I
have not met with a single individual who could comprehend the
difference between them. Still, however, it might be imagined that
there was a very great difference; for the passages from the fathers
being unquestionably Catholic, the proposition of M. Arnauld, if
heretical, must be widely opposed to them.
Such was the difficulty which the Sorbonne was expected to clear
up. All Christendom waited, with wide-opened eyes, to discover, in the
censure of these learned doctors, the point of difference which had
proved imperceptible to ordinary mortals. Meanwhile M. Arnauld gave in
his defences, placing his own proposition and the passages of the
fathers from which he had drawn it in parallel columns, so as to make
the agreement between them apparent to the most obtuse understandings.
He shows, for example, that St. Augustine says in one passage that
"Jesus Christ points out to us, in the person of St. Peter, a
righteous man warning us by his fall to avoid presumption." He cites
another passage from the same father, in which he says "that God, in
order to show us that without grace we can do nothing, left St. Peter
without grace." He produces a third, from St. Chrysostom, who says,
"that the fall of St. Peter happened, not through any coldness towards
Jesus Christ, but because grace failed him; and that he fell, not so
much through his own negligence as through the withdrawment of God, as
a lesson to the whole Church, that without God we can do nothing." He
then gives his own accused proposition, which is as follows: "The
fathers point out to us, in the person of St. Peter, a righteous man
to whom that grace without which we can do nothing was wanting."
In vain did people attempt to discover how it could possibly be
that M. Arnauld's expression differed from those of the fathers as
much as the truth from error and faith from heresy. For where was the
difference to be found? Could it be in these words: "that the fathers
point out to us, in the person of St. Peter, a righteous man"? St.
Augustine has said the same thing in so many words. Is it because he
says "that grace had failed him"? The same St. Augustine who had said
that "St. Peter was a righteous man," says "that he had not had grace
on that occasion." Is it, then, for his having said "that without
grace we can do nothing"? Why, is not this just what St. Augustine
says in the same place, and what St. Chrysostom had said before him,
with this difference only, that he expresses it in much stronger
language, as when he says "that his fall did not happen through his
own coldness or negligence, but through the failure of grace, and the
withdrawment of God"?
Such considerations as these kept everybody in a state of
breathless suspense to learn in what this diversity could consist,
when at length, after a great many meetings, this famous and
long-looked-for censure made its appearance. But, alas! it has sadly
baulked our expectation. Whether it be that the Molinist doctors would
not condescend so far as to enlighten us on the point, or for some
other mysterious reason, the fact is they have done nothing more than
pronounce these words: "This proposition is rash, impious,
blasphemous, accursed, and heretical!"
Would you believe it, sir, that most people, finding themselves
deceived in their expectations, have got into bad humor, and begin to
fall foul upon the censors themselves? They are drawing strange
inferences from their conduct in favour of M. Arnauld's innocence.
"What!" they are saying, "is this all that could be achieved, during
all this time, by so many doctors joining in a furious attack on one
individual? Can they find nothing in all his works worthy of
reprehension, but three lines, and these extracted, word for word,
from the greatest doctors of the Greek and Latin Churches? Is there
any author whatever whose writings, were it intended to ruin him,
would not furnish a more specious pretext for the purpose? And what
higher proof could be furnished of the orthodoxy of this illustrious
accused?
"How comes it to pass," they add, "that so many denunciations are
launched in this censure, into which they have crowded such terms as
'poison, pestilence, horror, rashness, impiety, blasphemy,
abomination, execration, anathema, heresy'- the most dreadful epithets
that could be used against Arius, or Antichrist himself; and all to
combat an imperceptible heresy, and that, moreover, without telling as
what it is? If it be against the words of the fathers that they
inveigh in this style, where is the faith and tradition? If against M.
Arnauld's proposition, let them point out the difference between the
two; for we can see nothing but the most perfect harmony between them.
As soon as we have discovered the evil of the proposition, we shall
hold it in abhorrence; but so long as we do not see it, or rather see
nothing in the statement but the sentiments of the holy fathers,
conceived and expressed in their own terms, how can we possibly regard
it with any other feelings than those of holy veneration?"
Such is the specimen of the way in which they are giving vent to
their feelings. But these are by far too deep-thinking people. You and
I, who make no pretensions to such extraordinary penetration, may keep
ourselves quite easy about the whole affair. What! would we be wiser
than our masters? No: let us take example from them, and not undertake
what they have not ventured upon. We would be sure to get boggled in
such an attempt. Why it would be the easiest thing imaginable, to
render this censure itself heretical. Truth, we know, is so delicate
that, if we make the slightest deviation from it, we fall into error;
but this alleged error is so extremely finespun that, if we diverge
from it in the slightest degree, we fall back upon the truth. There is
positively nothing between this obnoxious proposition and the truth
but an imperceptible point. The distance between them is so impalpable
that I was in terror lest, from pure inability to perceive it, I
might, in my over-anxiety to agree with the doctors of the Sorbonne,
place myself in opposition to the doctors of the Church. Under this
apprehension, I judged it expedient to consult one of those who,
through policy, was neutral on the first question, that from him I
might learn the real state of the matter. I have accordingly had an
interview with one of the most intelligent of that party, whom I
requested to point out to me the difference between the two things, at
the same time frankly owning to him that I could see none.
He appeared to be amused at my simplicity and replied, with a
smile: "How simple it is in you to believe that there is any
difference! Why, where could it be? Do you imagine that, if they could
have found out any discrepancy between M. Arnauld and the fathers,
they would not have boldly pointed it out and been delighted with the
opportunity of exposing it before the public, in whose eyes they are
so anxious to depreciate that gentleman?"
I could easily perceive, from these few words, that those who had
been neutral on the first question would not all prove so on the
second; but, anxious to hear his reasons, I asked: "Why, then, have
they attacked this unfortunate proposition?"
"Is it possible," he replied, "you can be ignorant of these two
things, which I thought had been known to the veriest tyro in these
matters? that, on the one hand, M. Arnauld has uniformly avoided
advancing a single tenet which is not powerfully supported by the
tradition of the Church; and that, on the other hand, his enemies have
determined, cost what it may, to cut that ground from under him; and,
accordingly, that as the writings of the former afforded no handle to
the designs of the latter, they have been obliged, in order to satiate
their revenge, to seize on some proposition, it mattered not what, and
to condemn it without telling why or wherefore. Do not you know how
the keep them in check, and annoy them so desperately that they cannot
drop the slightest word against the principles of the fathers without
being incontinently overwhelmed with whole volumes, under the pressure
of which they are forced to succumb? So that, after a great many
proofs of their weakness, they have judged it more to the purpose, and
much less troublesome, to censure than to reply- it being a much
easier matter with them to find monks than reasons."
"Why then," said I, "if this be the case, their censure is not
worth a straw; for who will pay any regard to it, when they see it to
be without foundation, and refuted, as it no doubt will be, by the
answers given to it?"
"If you knew the temper of people," replied my friend the doctor,
"you would talk in another sort of way. Their censure, censurable as
it is, will produce nearly all its designed effect for a time; and
although, by the force of demonstration, it is certain that, in course
of time, its invalidity will be made apparent, it is equally true
that, at first, it will tell as effectually on the minds of most
people as if it had been the most righteous sentence in the world. Let
it only be cried about the streets: 'Here you have the censure of M.
Arnauld!- here you have the condemnation of the Jansenists!' and the
Jesuits will find their account in it. How few will ever read it! How
few, of them who do read, will understand it! How few will observe
that it answers no objections! How few will take the matter to heart,
or attempt to sift it to the bottom! Mark, then, how much advantage
this gives to the enemies of the Jansenists. They are sure to make a
triumph of it, though a vain one, as usual, for some months at least-
and that is a great matter for them, they will look out afterwards for
some new means of subsistence. They live from hand to mouth, sir. It
is in this way they have contrived to maintain themselves down to the
present day. Sometimes it is by a catechism in which a child is made
to condemn their opponents; then it is by a procession, in which
sufficient grace leads the efficacious in triumph; again it is by a
comedy, in which Jansenius is represented as carried off by devils; at
another time it is by an almanac; and now it is by this censure."
"In good sooth," said I "I was on the point of finding fault with
the conduct of the Molinists; but after what you have told me, I must
say I admire their prudence and their policy. I see perfectly well
that they could not have followed a safer or more Judicious course."
"You are right," returned he; "their safest policy has always been
to keep silent; and this led a certain learned divine to remark, 'that
the cleverest among them are those who intrigue much, speak little,
and write nothing.'
"It is on this principle that, from the commencement of the
meetings, they prudently ordained that, if M. Arnauld came into the
Sorbonne, it must be simply to explain what he believed, and not to
enter the lists of controversy with any one. The examiners, having
ventured to depart a little from this prudent arrangement, suffered
for their temerity. They found themselves rather too vigourously
refuted by his second apology.
"On the same principle, they had recourse to that rare and very
novel device of the half-hour and the sand-glass. By this means they
rid themselves of the importunity of those troublesome doctors, who
might undertake to refute all their arguments, to produce books which
might convict them of forgery, to insist on a reply, and reduce them
to the predicament of having none to give.
"It is not that they were so blind as not to see that this
encroachment on liberty, which has induced so many doctors to withdraw
from the meetings, would do no good to their censure; and that the
protest of nullity, taken on this ground by M. Arnauld before it was
concluded, would be a bad preamble for securing it a favourable
reception. They know very well that unprejudiced persons place fully
as much weight on the judgement of seventy doctors, who had nothing to
gain by defending M. Arnauld, as on that of a hundred others who had
nothing to lose by condemning him. But, upon the whole, they
considered that it would be of vast importance to have a censure,
although it should be the act of a party only in the Sorbonne, and not
of the whole body; although it should be carried with little or no
freedom of debate and obtained by a great many small manoeuvres not
exactly according to order; although it should give no explanation of
the matter in dispute; although it should not point out in what this
heresy consists, and should say as little as possible about it, for
fear of committing a mistake. This very silence is a mystery in the
eyes of the simple; and the censure will reap this singular advantage
from it, that they may defy the most critical and subtle theologians
to find in it a single weak argument.
"Keep yourself easy, then, and do not be afraid of being set down
as a heretic, though you should make use of the condemned proposition.
It is bad, I assure you, only as occurring in the second letter of M.
Arnauld. If you will not believe this statement on my word, I refer
you to M. le Moine, the most zealous of the examiners, who, in the
course of conversation with a doctor of my acquaintance this very
morning, on being asked by him where lay the point of difference in
dispute, and if one would no longer be allowed to say what the fathers
had said before him, made the following exquisite reply: 'This
proposition would be orthodox in the mouth of any other- it is only as
coming from M. Arnauld that the Sorbonne has condemned it!' You must
now be prepared to admire the machinery of Molinism, which can produce
such prodigious overturnings in the Church- that what is Catholic in
the fathers becomes heretical in M. Arnauld- that what is heretical in
the Semi-Pelagians becomes orthodox in the writings of the Jesuits;
the ancient doctrine of St. Augustine becomes an intolerable
innovation, and new inventions, daily fabricated before our eyes, pass
for the ancient faith of the Church." So saying, he took his leave of
me.
This information has satisfied my purpose. I gather from it that
this same heresy is one of an entirely new species. It is not the
sentiments of M. Arnauld that are heretical; it is only his person.
This is a personal heresy. He is not a heretic for anything he has
said or written, but simply because he is M. Arnauld. This is all they
have to say against him. Do what he may, unless he cease to be, he
will never be a good Catholic. The grace of St. Augustine will never
be the true grace, so long as he continues to defend it. It would
become so at once, were he to take it into his head to impugn it. That
would be a sure stroke, and almost the only plan for establishing the
truth and demolishing Molinism; such is the fatality attending all the
opinions which he embraces.
Let us leave them, then, to settle their own differences. These
are the disputes of theologians, not of theology. We, who are no
doctors, have nothing to do with their quarrels. Tell our friends the
news of the censure, and love me while I am,
Nothing can come up to the Jesuits. I have seen Jacobins, doctors,
and all sorts of people in my day, but such an interview as I have
just had was wanting to complete my knowledge of mankind. Other men
are merely copies of them. As things are always found best at the
fountainhead, I paid a visit to one of the ablest among them, in
company with my trusty Jansenist- the same who accompanied me to the
Dominicans. Being particularly anxious to learn something of a dispute
which they have with the Jansenists about what they call actual grace,
I said to the worthy father that I would be much obliged to him if he
would instruct me on this point- that I did not even know what the
term meant and would thank him to explain it. "With all my heart," the
Jesuit replied; "for I dearly love inquisitive people. Actual grace,
according to our definition, 'is an inspiration of God, whereby He
makes us to know His will and excites within us a desire to perform
it.'"
"And where," said I, "lies your difference with the Jansenists on
this subject?"
"The difference lies here," he replied; "we hold that God bestows
actual grace on all men in every case of temptation; for we maintain
that unless a person have, whenever tempted, actual grace to keep him
from sinning, his sin, whatever it may be, can never be imputed to
him. The Jansenists, on the other hand, affirm that sins, though
committed without actual grace, are, nevertheless, imputed; but they
are a pack of fools." I got a glimpse of his meaning; but, to obtain
from him a fuller explanation, I observed: "My dear father, it is that
phrase actual grace that puzzles me; I am quite a stranger to it, and
if you would have the goodness to tell me the same thing over again,
without employing that term, you would infinitely oblige me."
"Very good," returned the father; "that is to say, you want me to
substitute the definition in place of the thing defined; that makes no
alteration of the sense; I have no objections. We maintain it, then,
as an undeniable principle, that an action cannot be imputed as a sin,
unless God bestow on us, before committing it, the knowledge of the
evil that is in the action, and an inspiration inciting us to avoid
it. Do you understand me now?"
Astonished at such a declaration, according to which, no sins of
surprise, nor any of those committed in entire forgetfulness of God,
could be imputed, I turned round to my friend the Jansenist and easily
discovered from his looks that he was of a different way of thinking.
But as he did not utter a word, I said to the monk, "I would fain
wish, my dear father, to think that what you have now said is true,
and that you have good proofs for it."
"Proofs, say you!" he instantly exclaimed: "I shall furnish you
with these very soon, and the very best sort too; let me alone for
that."
So saying, he went in search of his books, and I took this
opportunity of asking my friend if there was any other person who
talked in this manner? "Is this so strange to you?" he replied. "You
may depend upon it that neither the fathers, nor the popes, nor
councils, nor Scripture, nor any book of devotion employ such
language; but, if you wish casuists and modern schoolmen, he will
bring you a goodly number of them on his side." "O! but I care not a
fig about these authors, if they are contrary to tradition," I said.
"You are right," he replied.
As he spoke, the good father entered the room, laden with books;
and presenting to me the first that came to hand. "Read that," he
said; "this is The Summary of Sins, by Father Bauny- the fifth edition
too, you see, which shows that it is a good book."
"It is a pity, however," whispered the Jansenist in my ear, "that
this same book has been condemned at Rome, and by the bishops of
France."
"Look at page 906," said the father. I did so and read as follows:
"In order to sin and become culpable in the sight of God, it is
necessary to know that the thing we wish to do is not good, or at
least to doubt that it is- to fear or to judge that God takes no
pleasure in the action which we contemplate, but forbids it; and in
spite of this, to commit the deed, leap the fence, and transgress."
"This is a good commencement," I remarked. "And yet," said he,
"mark how far envy will carry some people. It was on that very passage
that M. Hallier, before he became one of our friends, bantered Father
Bauny, by applying to him these words: Ecce qui tollit peccata mundi-
'Behold the man that taketh away the sins of the world!'"
"Certainly," said I, "according to Father Bauny, we may be said to
behold a redemption of an entirely new description."
"Would you have a more authentic witness on the point?" added he.
"Here is the book of Father Annat. It is the last that he wrote
against M. Arnauld. Turn up to page 34, where there is a dog's ear,
and read the lines which I have marked with pencil- they ought to be
written in letters of gold." I then read these words: "He that has no
thought of God, nor of his sins, nor any apprehension (that is, as he
explained it, any knowledge) of his obligation to exercise the acts of
love to God or contrition, has no actual grace for exercising those
acts; but it is equally true that he is guilty of no sin in omitting
them, and that, if he is damned, it will not be as a punishment for
that omission." And a few lines below, he adds: "The same thing may be
said of a culpable commission."
"You see," said the monk, "how he speaks of sins of omission and
of commission. Nothing escapes him. What say you to that?"
"Say!" I exclaimed. "I am delighted! What a charming train of
consequences do I discover flowing from this doctrine! I can see the
whole results already; and such mysteries present themselves before
me! Why, I see more people, beyond all comparison, justified by this
ignorance and forgetfulness of God, than by grace and the sacraments!
But, my dear father, are you not inspiring me with a delusive joy? Are
you sure there is nothing here like that sufficiency which suffices
not? I am terribly afraid of the Distinguo; I was taken in with that
once already! Are you quite in earnest?"
"How now!" cried the monk, beginning to get angry, "here is no
matter for jesting. I assure you there is no such thing as
equivocation here."
"I am not making a jest of it, said I; "but that is what I really
dread, from pure anxiety to find it true."
"Well then," he said, "to assure yourself still more of it, here
are the writings of M. le Moine, who taught the doctrine in a full
meeting of the Sorbonne. He learned it from us, to be sure; but he has
the merit of having cleared it up most admirably. O how
circumstantially he goes to work! He shows that, in order to make out
action to be a sin, all these things must have passed through the
mind. Read, and weigh every word." I then read what I now give you in
a translation from the original Latin: "1. On the one hand, God sheds
abroad on the soul some measure of love, which gives it a bias toward
the thing commanded; and on the other, a rebellious concupiscence
solicits it in the opposite direction. 2. God inspires the soul with a
knowledge of its own weakness. 3. God reveals the knowledge of the
physician who can heal it. 4. God inspires it with a desire to be
healed. 5. God inspires a desire to pray and solicit his assistance."
"And unless all these things occur and pass through the soul,"
added the monk, "the action is not properly a sin, and cannot be
imputed, as M. le Moine shows in the same place and in what follows.
Would you wish to have other authorities for this? Here they are."
"All modern ones, however," whispered my Jansenist friend.
"So I perceive," said I to him aside; and then, turning to the
monk: "O my dear sir," cried I, "what a blessing this will be to some
persons of my acquaintance! I must positively introduce them to you.
You have never, perhaps, met with people who had fewer sins to account
for all your life. For, in the first place, they never think of God at
all; their vices have got the better of their reason; they have never
known either their weakness or the physician who can cure it; they
have never thought of 'desiring the health of their soul,' and still
less of 'praying to God to bestow it'; so that, according to M. le
Moine, they are still in the state of baptismal innocence. They have
'never had a thought of loving God or of being contrite for their
sins'; so that, according to Father Annat, they have never committed
sin through the want of charity and penitence. Their life is spent in
a perpetual round of all sorts of pleasures, in the course of which
they have not been interrupted by the slightest remorse. These
excesses had led me to imagine that their perdition was inevitable;
but you, father, inform me that these same excesses secure their
salvation. Blessings on you, my good father, for this way of
justifying people! Others prescribe painful austerities for healing
the soul; but you show that souls which may be thought desperately
distempered are in quite good health. What an excellent device for
being happy both in this world and in the next! I had always supposed
that the less a man thought of God, the more he sinned; but, from what
I see now, if one could only succeed in bringing himself not to think
upon God at all, everything would be pure with him in all time coming.
Away with your half-and-half sinners, who retain some sneaking
affection for virtue! They will be damned every one of them, these
semi-sinners. But commend me to your arrant sinners- hardened,
unalloyed, out-and-out, thorough-bred sinners. Hell is no place for
them; they have cheated the devil, purely by virtue of their devotion
to his service!"
The good father, who saw very well the connection between these
consequences and his principle, dexterously evaded them; and,
maintaining his temper, either from good nature or policy, he merely
replied: "To let you understand how we avoid these inconveniences, you
must know that, while we affirm that these reprobates to whom you
refer would be without sin if they had no thoughts of conversion and
no desires to devote themselves to God, we maintain that they all
actually have such thoughts and desires, and that God never permitted
a man to sin without giving him previously a view of the evil which he
contemplated, and a desire, either to avoid the offence, or at all
events to implore his aid to enable him to avoid it; and none but
Jansenists will assert the contrary."
"Strange! father," returned I; "is this, then, the heresy of the
Jansenists, to deny that every time a man commits a sin he is troubled
with a remorse of conscience, in spite of which, he 'leaps the fence
and transgresses,' as Father Bauny has it? It is rather too good a
joke to be made a heretic for that. I can easily believe that a man
may be damned for not having good thoughts; but it never would have
entered my head to imagine that any man could be subjected to that
doom for not believing that all mankind must have good thoughts! But,
father, I hold myself bound in conscience to disabuse you and to
inform you that there are thousands of people who have no such
desires- who sin without regret- who sin with delight- who make a
boast of sinning. And who ought to know better about these things than
yourself.? You cannot have failed to have confessed some of those to
whom I allude; for it is among persons of high rank that they are most
generally to be met with. But mark, father, the dangerous consequences
of your maxim. Do you not perceive what effect it may have on those
libertines who like nothing better than to find out matter of doubt in
religion? What a handle do you give them, when you assure them, as an
article of faith, that, on every occasion when they commit a sin, they
feel an inward presentiment of the evil and a desire to avoid it? Is
it not obvious that, feeling convinced by their own experience of the
falsity of your doctrine on this point, which you say is a matter of
faith, they will extend the inference drawn from this to all the other
points? They will argue that, since you are not trustworthy in one
article, you are to be suspected in them all; and thus you shut them
up to conclude either that religion is false or that you must know
very little about it."
Here my friend the Jansenist, following up my remarks, said to
him: "You would do well, father, if you wish to preserve your
doctrine, not to explain so precisely as you have done to us what you
mean by actual grace. For, how could you, without forfeiting all
credit in the estimation of men, openly declare that nobody sins
without having previously the knowledge of his weakness, and of a
physician, or the desire of a cure, and of asking it of God? Will it
be believed, on your word, that those who are immersed in avarice,
impurity, blasphemy, duelling, revenge, robbery and sacrilege, have
really a desire to embrace chastity, humility, and the other Christian
virtues? Can it be conceived that those philosophers who boasted so
loudly of the powers of nature, knew its infirmity and its physician?
Will you maintain that those who held it as a settled maxim that is
not God that bestows virtue, and that no one ever asked it from him,'
would think of asking it for themselves? Who can believe that the
Epicureans, who denied a divine providence, ever felt any inclination
to pray to God? men who said that 'it would be an insult to invoke the
Deity in our necessities, as if he were capable of wasting a thought
on beings like us?' In a word, how can it be imagined that idolaters
and atheists, every time they are tempted to the commission of sin, in
other words, infinitely often during their lives, have a desire to
pray to the true God, of whom they are ignorant, that he would bestow
on them virtues of which they have no conception?"
"Yes," said the worthy monk, in a resolute tone, "we will affirm
it: and sooner than allow that any one sins without having the
consciousness that he is doing evil, and the desire of the opposite
virtue, we will maintain that the whole world, reprobates and infidels
included, have these inspirations and desires in every case of
temptation. You cannot show me, from the Scripture at least, that this
is not the truth."
On this remark I struck in, by exclaiming: "What! father, must we
have recourse to the Scripture to demonstrate a thing so clear as
this? This is not a point of faith, nor even of reason. It is a matter
of fact: we see it- we know it- we feel it."
But the Jansenist, keeping the monk to his own terms, addressed
him as follows: "If you are willing, father, to stand or fall by
Scripture, I am ready to meet you there; only you must promise to
yield to its authority; and, since it is written that 'God has not
revealed his judgements to the Heathen, but left them to wander in
their own ways,' you must not say that God has enlightened those whom
the Sacred Writings assure us 'he has left in darkness and in the
shadow of death.' Is it not enough to show the erroneousness of your
principle, to find that St. Paul calls himself 'the chief of sinners,'
for a sin which he committed 'ignorantly, and with zeal'? Is it not
enough, to and from the Gospel, that those who crucified Jesus Christ
had need of the pardon which he asked for them, although they knew not
the malice of their action, and would never have committed it,
according to St. Paul, if they had known it? Is it not enough that
Jesus Christ apprises us that there will be persecutors of the Church,
who, while making every effort to ruin her, will 'think that they are
doing God service'; teaching us that this sin, which in the judgement
of the apostle, is the greatest of all sins, may be committed by
persons who, so far from knowing that they were sinning, would think
that they sinned by not committing it? In fine, it is not enough that
Jesus Christ himself has taught us that there are two kinds of
sinners, the one of whom sin with 'knowledge of their Master's will,'
and the other without knowledge; and that both of them will be
'chastised,' although, indeed, in a different manner?"
Sorely pressed by so many testimonies from Scripture, to which he
had appealed, the worthy monk began to give way; and, leaving the
wicked to sin without inspiration, he said: "You will not deny that
good men, at least, never sin unless God give them"- "You are
flinching," said I, interrupting him; "you are flinching now, my good
father; you abandon the general principle, and, finding that it will
not hold good in regard to the wicked, you would compound the matter,
by making it apply at least to the righteous. But in this point of
view the application of it is, I conceive, so circumscribed that it
will hardly apply to anybody, and it is scarcely worth while to
dispute the point."
My friend, however, who was so ready on the whole question, that I
am inclined to think he had studied it all that very morning, replied:
"This, father, is the last entrenchment to which those of your party
who are willing to reason at all are sure to retreat; but you are far
from being safe even here. The example of the saints is not a whit
more in your favour. Who doubts that they often fall into sins of
surprise, without being conscious of them? Do we not learn from the
saints themselves how often concupiscence lays hidden snares for them;
and how generally it happens, as St. Augustine complains of himself in
his Confessions, that, with all their discretion, they 'give to
pleasure what they mean only to give to necessity'?
"How usual is it to see the more zealous friends of truth betrayed
by the heat of controversy into sallies of bitter passion for their
personal interests, while their consciences, at the time, bear them no
other testimony than that they are acting in this manner purely for
the interests of truth, and they do not discover their mistake till
long afterwards!
"What, again, shall we say of those who, as we learn from examples
in ecclesiastical history, eagerly involve themselves in affairs which
are really bad, because they believe them to be really good; and yet
this does not hinder the fathers from condemning such persons as
having sinned on these occasions?
"And were this not the case, how could the saints have their
secret faults? How could it be true that God alone knows the magnitude
and the number of our offences; that no one knows whether he is worthy
of hatred or love; and that the best of saints, though unconscious of
any culpability, ought always, as St. Paul says of himself, to remain
in 'fear and trembling'?
"You perceive, then, father, that this knowledge of the evil and
love of the opposite virtue, which you imagine to be essential to
constitute sin, are equally disproved by the examples of the righteous
and of the wicked. In the case of the wicked, their passion for vice
sufficiently testifies that they have no desire for virtue; and in
regard to the righteous, the love which they bear to virtue plainly
shows that they are not always conscious of those sins which, as the
Scripture teaches, they are daily committing.
"So true is it, indeed, that the righteous often sin through
ignorance, that the greatest saints rarely sin otherwise. For how can
it be supposed that souls so pure, who avoid with so much care and
zeal the least things that can be displeasing to God as soon as they
discover them, and who yet sin many times every day, could possibly
have every time before they fell into sin, 'the knowledge of their
infirmity on that occasion, and of their physician, and the desire of
their souls' health, and of praying to God for assistance,' and that,
in spite of these inspirations, these devoted souls 'nevertheless
transgress,' and commit the sin?
"You must conclude then, father, that neither sinners nor yet
saints have always that knowledge, or those desires and inspirations,
every time they offend; that is, to use your own terms, they have not
always actual grace. Say no longer, with your modern authors, that it
is impossible for those to sin who do not know righteousness; but
rather join with St. Augustine and the ancient fathers in saying that
it is impossible not to sin, when we do not know righteousness:
Necesse est ut peccet, a quo ignoratur justilia."
The good father, though thus driven from both of his positions,
did not lose courage, but after ruminating a little, "Ha!" he
exclaimed, "I shall convince you immediately." And again taking up
Father Bauny, he pointed to the same place he had before quoted,
exclaiming, "Look now- see the ground on which he establishes his
opinion! I was sure he would not be deficient in good proofs. Read
what he quotes from Aristotle, and you will see that, after so express
an authority, you must either burn the books of this prince of
philosophers or adopt our opinion. Hear, then, the principles which
support Father Bauny: Aristotle states first, 'that an action cannot
be imputed as blameworthy, if it be involuntary.'"
"I grant that," said my friend.
"This is the first time you have agreed together," said I. "Take
my advice, father, and proceed no further."
"That would be doing nothing," he replied; "we must know what are
the conditions necessary to constitute an action voluntary."
"I am much afraid," returned I, "that you will get at loggerheads
on that point."
"No fear of that," said he; "this is sure ground- Aristotle is on
my side. Hear now, what Father Bauny says: 'In order that an action be
voluntary, it must proceed from a man who perceives, knows, and
comprehends what is good and what is evil in it. Voluntarium est- that
is a voluntary action, as we commonly say with the philosopher' (that
is Aristotle, you know, said the monk, squeezing my hand); 'quod fit a
principio cognoscente singula in quibus est actio- which is done by a
person knowing the particulars of the action; so that when the will is
led inconsiderately, and without mature reflection, to embrace or
reject, to do or omit to do anything, before the understanding has
been able to see whether it would be right or wrong, such an action is
neither good nor evil; because previous to this mental inquisition,
view, and reflection on the good or bad qualities of the matter in
question, the act by which it is done is not voluntary.' Are you
satisfied now?" said the father.
"It appears," returned I, "that Aristotle agrees with Father
Bauny; but that does not prevent me from feeling surprised at this
statement. What, sir! is it not enough to make an action voluntary
that the man knows what he is doing, and does it just because he
chooses to do it? Must we suppose, besides this, that he 'perceives,
knows, and comprehends what is good and evil in the action'? Why, on
this supposition there would be hardly such a thing in nature as
voluntary actions, for no one scarcely thinks about all this. How many
oaths in gambling, how many excesses in debauchery, how many riotous
extravagances in the carnival, must, on this principle, be excluded
from the list of voluntary actions, and consequently neither good nor
bad, because not accompanied by those 'mental reflections on the good
and evil qualities' of the action? But is it possible, father, that
Aristotle held such a sentiment? I have always understood that he was
a sensible man."
"I shall soon convince you of that, said the Jansenist, and
requesting a sight of Aristotle's Ethics, he opened it at the
beginning of the third book, from which Father Bauny had taken the
passage quoted, and said to the monk: "I excuse you, my dear sir, for
having believed, on the word of Father Bauny, that Aristotle held such
a sentiment; but you would have changed your mind had you read him for
yourself. It is true that he teaches, that 'in order to make an action
voluntary, we must know the particulars of that action'- singula in
quibus est actio. But what else does he means by that, than the
circumstances of the action? The examples which he adduces clearly
show this to be his meaning, for they are exclusively confined to
cases in which the persons were ignorant of some of the circumstances;
such as that of 'a person who, wishing to exhibit a machine,
discharges a dart which wounds a bystander; and that of Merope, who
killed her own son instead of her enemy,' and such like.
"Thus you see what is the kind of ignorance that renders actions
involuntary; namely, that of the particular circumstances, which is
termed by divines, as you must know, ignorance of the fact. But with
respect to ignorance of the right- ignorance of the good or evil in an
action- which is the only point in question, let us see if Aristotle
agrees with Father Bauny. Here are the words of the philosopher: 'All
wicked men are ignorant of what they ought to do, and what they ought
to avoid; and it is this very ignorance which makes them wicked and
vicious. Accordingly, a man cannot be said to act involuntarily merely
because he is ignorant of what it is proper for him to do in order to
fulfil his duty. This ignorance in the choice of good and evil does
not make the action involuntary; it only makes it vicious. The same
thing may be affirmed of the man who is ignorant generally of the
rules of his duty; such ignorance is worthy of blame, not of excuse.
And consequently, the ignorance which renders actions involuntary and
excusable is simply that which relates to the fact and its particular
circumstances. In this case the person is excused and forgiven, being
considered as having acted contrary to his inclination.'
"After this, father, will you maintain that Aristotle is of your
opinion? And who can help being astonished to find that a Pagan
philosopher had more enlightened views than your doctors, in a matter
so deeply affecting morals, and the direction of conscience, too, as
the knowledge of those conditions which render actions voluntary or
involuntary, and which, accordingly, charge or discharge them as
sinful? Look for no more support, then, father, from the prince of
philosophers, and no longer oppose yourselves to the prince of
theologians, who has thus decided the point in the first book of his
Retractations, chapter xv: 'Those who sin through ignorance, though
they sin without meaning to sin, commit the deed only because they
will commit it. And, therefore, even this sin of ignorance cannot be
committed except by the will of him who commits it, though by a will
which incites him to the action merely, and not to the sin; and yet
the action itself is nevertheless sinful, for it is enough to
constitute it such that he has done what he was bound not to do.'"
The Jesuit seemed to be confounded more with the passage from
Aristotle, I thought, than that from St. Augustine; but while he was
thinking on what he could reply, a messenger came to inform him that
Madame la Marechale of- , and Madame the Marchioness of- , requested
his attendance. So, taking a hasty leave of us, he said: "I shall
speak about it to our fathers. They will find an answer to it, I
warrant you; we have got some long heads among us."
We understood him perfectly well; and, on our being left alone, I
expressed to my friend my astonishment at the subversion which this
doctrine threatened to the whole system of morals. To this he replied
that he was quite astonished at my astonishment. "Are you not yet
aware," he said, "that they have gone to far greater excess in morals
than in any other matter?" He gave me some strange illustrations of
this, promising me more at some future time. The information which I
may receive on this point will, I hope, furnish the topic of my next
communication. I am,
According to my promise, I now send you the first outlines of the
morals taught by those good fathers the Jesuits, "those men
distinguished for learning and sagacity, who are all under the
guidance of divine wisdom- a surer guide than all philosophy." You
imagine, perhaps, that I am in jest, but I am perfectly serious; or
rather, they are so when they speak thus of themselves in their book
entitied The Image of the First Century. I am only copying their own
words, and may now give you the rest of the eulogy: "They are a
society of men, or rather let us call them angels, predicted by Isaiah
in these words, 'Go, ye swift and ready angels.'" The prediction is as
clear as day, is it not? "They have the spirit of eagles they are a
flock of phoenixes (a late author having demonstrated that there are a
great many of these birds); they have changed the face of
Christendom!" Of course, we must believe all this, since they have
said it; and in one sense you will find the account amply verified by
the sequel of this communication, in which I propose to treat of their
maxims.
Determined to obtain the best possible information, I did not
trust to the representations of our friend the Jansenist, but sought
an interview with some of themselves. I found however, that he told me
nothing but the bare truth, and I am persuaded he is an honest man. Of
this you may judge from the following account of these conferences.
In the conversation I had with the Jansenist, he told me so many
strange things about these fathers that I could with difficulty
believe them, till he pointed them out to me in their writings; after
which he left me nothing more to say in their defence than that these
might be the sentiments of some individuals only, which it was not
fair to impute to the whole fraternity. And, indeed, I assured him
that I knew some of them who were as severe as those whom he quoted to
me were lax. This led him to explain to me the spirit of the Society,
which is not known to every one; and you will perhaps have no
objections to learning something about it.
"You imagine," he began, "that it would tell considerably in their
favour to show that some of their fathers are as friendly to
Evangelical maxims as others are opposed to them; and you would
conclude from that circumstance, that these loose opinions do not
belong to the whole Society. That I grant you; for had such been the
case, they would not have suffered persons among them holding
sentiments so diametrically opposed to licentiousness. But, as it is
equally true that there are among them those who hold these licentious
doctrines, you are bound also to conclude that the holy Spirit of the
Society is not that of Christian severity, for had such been the case,
they would not have suffered persons among them holding sentiments so
diametrically opposed to that severity."
"And what, then," I asked, "can be the design of the whole as a
body? Perhaps they have no fixed principle, and every one is left to
speak out at random whatever he thinks."
"That cannot be," returned my friend; "such an immense body could
not subsist in such a haphazard sort of way, or without a soul to
govern and regulate its movements; besides, it is one of their express
regulations that none shall print a page without the approval of their
superiors."
"But," said I, "how can these same superiors give their consent to
maxims so contradictory?"
"That is what you have yet to learn," he replied. "Know then that
their object is not the corruption of manners- that is not their
design. But as little is it their sole aim to reform them- that would
be bad policy. Their idea is briefly this: They have such a good
opinion of themselves as to believe that it is useful, and in some
sort essentially necessary to the good of religion, that their
influence should extend everywhere, and that they should govern all
consciences. And the Evangelical or severe maxims being best fitted
for managing some sorts of people, they avail themselves of these when
they find them favourable to their purpose. But as these maxims do not
suit the views of the great bulk of the people, they waive them in the
case of such persons, in order to keep on good terms with all the
world. Accordingly, having to deal with persons of all classes and of
all different nations, they find it necessary to have casuists
assorted to match this diversity.
"On this principle, you will easily see that, if they had none but
the looser sort of casuists, they would defeat their main design,
which is to embrace all; for those that are truly pious are fond of a
stricter discipline. But as there are not many of that stamp, they do
not require many severe directors to guide them. They have a few for
the select few; while whole multitudes of lax casuists are provided
for the multitudes that prefer laxity.
"It is in virtue of this 'obliging and accommodating, conduct,' as
Father Petau calls it, that they may be said to stretch out a helping
hand to all mankind. Should any person present himself before them,
for example, fully resolved to make restitution of some ill-gotten
gains, do not suppose that they would dissuade him from it. By no
means; on the contrary, they would applaud and confirm him in such a
holy resolution. But suppose another should come who wishes to be
absolved without restitution, and it will be a particularly hard case
indeed, if they cannot furnish him with means of evading the duty, of
one kind or another, the lawfulness of which they will be ready to
guarantee.
"By this policy they keep all their friends, and defend themselves
against all their foes; for when charged with extreme laxity, they
have nothing more to do than produce their austere directors, with
some books which they have written on the severity of the Christian
code of morals; and simple people, or those who never look below the
surface of things, are quite satisfied with these proofs of the
falsity of the accusation.
"Thus, are they prepared for all sorts of persons, and so ready
are they to suit the supply to the demand that, when they happen to be
in any part of the world where the doctrine of a crucified God is
accounted foolishness, they suppress the offence of the cross and
preach only a glorious and not a suffering Jesus Christ. This plan
they followed in the Indies and in China, where they permitted
Christians to practise idolatry itself, with the aid of the following
ingenious contrivance: they made their converts conceal under their
clothes an image of Jesus Christ, to which they taught them to
transfer mentally those adorations which they rendered ostensibly to
the idol of Cachinchoam and Keum-fucum. This charge is brought against
them by Gravina, a Dominican, and is fully established by the Spanish
memorial presented to Philip IV, king of Spain, by the Cordeliers of
the Philippine Islands, quoted by Thomas Hurtado, in his Martyrdom of
the Faith, page 427. To such a length did this practice go that the
Congregation De Propaganda were obliged expressly to forbid the
Jesuits, on pain of excommunication, to permit the worship of idols on
any pretext whatever, or to conceal the mystery of the cross from
their catechumens; strictly enjoining them to admit none to baptism
who were not thus instructed, and ordering them to expose the image of
the crucifix in their churches: all of which is amply detailed in the
decree of that Congregation, dated the 9th of July, 1646, and signed
by Cardinal Capponi.
"Such is the manner in which they have spread themselves over the
whole earth, aided by the doctrine of probable opinions, which is at
once the source and the basis of all this licentiousness. You must get
some of themselves to explain this doctrine to you. They make no
secret of it, any more than of what you have already learned; with
this difference only, that they conceal their carnal and worldly
policy under the garb of divine and Christian prudence; as if the
faith, and tradition, its ally, were not always one and the same at
all times and in all places; as if it were the part of the rule to
bend in conformity to the subject which it was meant to regulate; and
as if souls, to be purified from their pollutions, had only to corrupt
the law of the Lord, in place of the law of the Lord, which is clean
and pure, converting the soul which lieth in sin, and bringing it into
conformity with its salutary lessons!
"Go and see some of these worthy fathers, I beseech you, and I am
confident that you will soon discover, in the laxity of their moral
system, the explanation of their doctrine about grace. You will then
see the Christian virtues exhibited in such a strange aspect, so
completely stripped of the charity which is the life and soul of them,
you will see so many crimes palliated and irregularities tolerated
that you will no longer be surprised at their maintaining that 'all
men have always enough of grace' to lead a pious life, in the sense of
which they understand piety. Their morality being entirely Pagan,
nature is quite competent to its observance. When we maintain the
necessity of efficacious grace, we assign it another sort of virtue
for its object. Its office is not to cure one vice by means of
another; it is not merely to induce men to practise the external
duties of religion: it aims at a virtue higher than that propounded by
Pharisees, or the greatest sages of Heathenism. The law and reason are
'sufficient graces' for these purposes. But to disenthral the soul
from the love of the world- to tear it from what it holds most dear-
to make it die to itself- to lift it up and bind it wholly, only, and
forever, to God can be the work of none but an all-powerful hand. And
it would be as absurd to affirm that we have the full power of
achieving such objects, as it would be to allege that those virtues,
devoid of the love of God, which these fathers confound with the
virtues of Christianity, are beyond our power."
Such was the strain of my friend's discourse, which was delivered
with much feeling; for he takes these sad disorders very much to
heart. For my own part, I began to entertain a high admiration for
these fathers, simply on account of the ingenuity of their policy;
and, following his advice, I waited on a good casuist of the Society,
one of my old acquaintances, with whom I now resolved purposely to
renew my former intimacy. Having my instructions how to manage them, I
had no great difficulty in getting him afloat. Retaining his old
attachment, he received me immediately with a profusion of kindness;
and, after talking over some indifferent matters, I took occasion from
the present season to learn something from him about fasting and,
thus, slip insensibly into the main subject. I told him, therefore,
that I had difficulty in supporting the fast. He exhorted me to do
violence to my inclinations; but, as I continued to murmur, he took
pity on me and began to search out some ground for a dispensation. In
fact he suggested a number of excuses for me, none of which happened
to suit my case, till at length he bethought himself of asking me
whether I did not find it difficult to sleep without taking supper.
"Yes, my good father," said I; "and for that reason I am obliged often
to take a refreshment at mid-day and supper at night."
"I am extremely happy," he replied, "to have found out a way of
relieving you without sin: go in peace- you are under no obligation to
fast. However, I would not have you depend on my word: step this way
to the library."
On going thither with me he took up a book, exclaiming with great
rapture, "Here is the authority for you: and, by my conscience, such
an authority! It is Escobar!"
"Who is Escobar?" I inquired.
"What! not know Escobar! " cried the monk; "the member of our
Society who compiled this Moral Theology from twenty-four of our
fathers, and on this founds an analogy, in his preface, between his
book and 'that in the Apocalypse which was sealed with seven seals,'
and states that 'Jesus presents it thus sealed to the four living
creatures, Suarez, Vasquez, Molina, and Valencia, in presence of the
four-and-twenty Jesuits who represent the four-and-twenty elders.'"
He read me, in fact, the whole of that allegory, which he
pronounced to be admirably appropriate, and which conveyed to my mind
a sublime idea of the exellence of the work. At length, having sought
out the passage of fasting, "Oh, here it is!" he said; "treatise I,
example 13, no. 67: 'If a man cannot sleep without taking supper, is
he bound to fast? Answer: By no means!' Will that not satisfy you?"
"Not exactly," replied I; "for I might sustain the fast by taking
my refreshment in the morning, and supping at night."
"Listen, then, to what follows; they have provided for all that:
'And what is to be said, if the person might make a shift with a
refreshment in the morning and supping at night?'"
"That's my case exactly."
"'Answer: Still he is not obliged to fast; because no person is
obliged to change the order of his meals.'"
"A most excellent reason!" I exclaimed.
"But tell me, pray," continued the monk, "do you take much wine?"
"No, my dear father," I answered; "I cannot endure it."
"I merely put the question," returned he, "to apprise you that you
might, without breaking the fast, take a glass or so in the morning,
or whenever you felt inclined for a drop; and that is always something
in the way of supporting nature. Here is the decision at the same
place, no. 57: 'May one, without breaking the fast, drink wine at any
hour he pleases, and even in a large quantity? Yes, he may: and a dram
of hippocrass too.' I had no recollection of the hippocrass," said the
monk; "I must take a note of that in my memorandum-book."
"He must be a nice man, this Escobar," observed I.
"Oh! everybody likes him," rejoined the father; "he has such
delightful questions! Only observe this one in the same place, no. 38:
'If a man doubt whether he is twenty-one years old, is he obliged to
fast? No. But suppose I were to be twenty-one to-night an hour after
midnight, and to-morrow were the fast, would I be obliged to fast
to-morrow? No; for you were at liberty to eat as much as you pleased
for an hour after midnight, not being till then fully twenty-one; and
therefore having a right to break the fast day, you are not obliged to
keep it.'"
"Well, that is vastly entertaining!" cried I.
"Oh," rejoined the father, "it is impossible to tear one's self
away from the book: I spend whole days and nights in reading it; in
fact, I do nothing else."
The worthy monk, perceiving that I was interested, was quite
delighted, and went on with his quotations. "Now," said he, "for a
taste of Filiutius, one of the four-and-twenty Jesuits: 'Is a man who
has exhausted himself any way- by profligacy, for example- obliged to
fast? By no means. But if he has exhausted himself expressly to
procure a dispensation from fasting, will he be held obliged? He will
not, even though he should have had that design.' There now! would you
have believed that?"
"Indeed, good father, I do not believe it yet," said I. "What! is
it no sin for a man not to fast when he has it in his power? And is it
allowable to court occasions of committing sin, or rather, are we not
bound to shun them? That would be easy enough, surely."
"Not always so," he replied; "that is just as it may happen."
"Happen, how?" cried I.
"Oh!" rejoined the monk, "so you think that if a person experience
some inconvenience in avoiding the occasions of sin, he is still bound
to do so? Not so thinks Father Bauny. 'Absolution,' says he, 'is not
to be refused to such as continue in the proximate occasions of sin,
if they are so situated that they cannot give them up without becoming
the common talk of the world, or subjecting themselves to personal
inconvenience.'"
"I am glad to hear it, father," I remarked; "and now that we are
not obliged to avoid the occasions of sin, nothing more remains but to
say that we may deliberately court them."
"Even that is occasionally permitted," added he; "the celebrated
casuist, Basil Ponce, has said so, and Father Bauny quotes his
sentiment with approbation in his Treatise on Penance, as follows: 'We
may seek an occasion of sin directly and designedly- primo et per se-
when our own or our neighbour's spiritual or temporal advantage
induces us to do so.'"
"Truly," said I, "it appears to be all a dream to me, when I hear
grave divines talking in this manner! Come now, my dear father, tell
me conscientiously, do you hold such a sentiment as that?"
"No, indeed," said he, "I do not."
"You are speaking, then, against your conscience," continued I.
"Not at all," he replied; "I was speaking on that point not
according to my own conscience, but according to that of Ponce and
Father Bauny, and them you may follow with the utmost safety, for I
assure you that they are able men."
"What, father! because they have put down these three lines in
their books, will it therefore become allowable to court the occasions
of sin? I always thought that we were bound to take the Scripture and
the tradition of the Church as our only rule, and not your cauists."
"Goodness!" cried the monk, "I declare you put me in mind of these
Jansenists. Think you that Father Bauny and Basil Ponce are not able
to render their opinion probable?"
"Probable won't do for me," said I; "I must have certainty."
"I can easily see," replied the good father, "that you know
nothing about our doctrine of probable opinions. If you did, you would
speak in another strain. Ah! my dear sir, I must really give you some
instructions on this point; without knowing this, positively you can
understand nothing at all. It is the foundation- the very A, B, C, of
our whole moral philosophy."
Glad to see him come to the point to which I had been drawing him
on, I expressed my satisfaction and requested him to explain what was
meant by a probable opinion?
"That," he replied, "our authors will answer better than I can do.
The generality of them, and, among others, our four-and-twenty elders,
describe it thus: 'An opinion is called probable when it is founded
upon reasons of some consideration. Hence it may sometimes happen that
a single very grave doctor may render an opinion probable.' The reason
is added: 'For a man particularly given to study would not adhere to
an opinion unless he was drawn to it by a good and sufficient
reason.'"
"So it would appear," I observed, with a smile, "that a single
doctor may turn consciences round about and upside down as he pleases,
and yet always land them in a safe position."
"You must not laugh at it, sir," returned the monk; "nor need you
attempt to combat the doctrine. The Jansenists tried this; but they
might have saved themselves the trouble- it is too firmly established.
Hear Sanchez, one of the most famous of our fathers: 'You may doubt,
perhaps, whether the authority of a single good and learned doctor
renders an opinion probable. I answer that it does; and this is
confirmed by Angelus, Sylvester, Navarre, Emanuel Sa, It is proved
thus: A probable opinion is one that has a considerable foundation.
Now the authority of a learned and pious man is entitled to very great
consideration; because (mark the reason), if the testimony of such a
man has great influence in convincing us that such and such an event
occurred, say at Rome, for example, why should it not have the same
weight in the case of a question in morals?'"
"An odd comparison this," interrupted I, "between the concerns of
the world and those of conscience!"
"Have a little patience," rejoined the monk; "Sanchez answers that
in the very next sentence: 'Nor can I assent to the qualification made
here by some writers, namely, that the authority of such a doctor,
though sufficient in matters of human right, is not so in those of
divine right. It is of vast weight in both cases.'"
"Well, father," said I, frankly, "I really cannot admire that
rule. Who can assure me, considering the freedom your doctors claim to
examine everything by reason, that what appears safe to one may seem
so to all the rest? The diversity of judgements is so great"-
"You don't understand it," said he, interrupting me; "no doubt
they are often of different sentiments, but what signifies that? Each
renders his own opinion probable and safe. We all know well enough
that they are far from being of the same mind; what is more, there is
hardly an instance in which they ever agree. There are very few
questions, indeed, in which you do not find the one saying yes and the
other saying no. Still, in all these cases, each of the contrary
opinions is probable. And hence Diana says on a certain subject:
'Ponce and Sanchez hold opposite views of it; but, as they are both
learned men, each renders his own opinion probable.'"
"But, father," I remarked, "a person must be sadly embarrassed in
choosing between them!" "Not at all," he rejoined; "he has only to
follow the opinion which suits him best." "What! if the other is more
probable?" "It does not signify," "And if the other is the safer?" "It
does not signify," repeated the monk; "this is made quite plain by
Emanuel Sa, of our Society, in his Aphorisms: 'A person may do what he
considers allowable according to a probable opinion, though the
contrary may be the safer one. The opinion of a single grave doctor is
all that is requisite.'"
"And if an opinion be at once the less probable and the less safe,
it is allowable to follow it," I asked, "even in the way of rejecting
one which we believe to be more probable and safe?"
"Once more, I say yes," replied the monk. "Hear what Filiutius,
that great Jesuit of Rome, says: 'It is allowable to follow the less
probable opinion, even though it be the less safe one. That is the
common judgement of modern authors.' Is not that quite clear?"
"Well, reverend father," said I, "you have given us elbowroom, at
all events! Thanks to your probable opinions, we have got liberty of
conscience with a witness! And are you casuists allowed the same
latitude in giving your responses?"
"Oh, yes," said he, "we answer just as we please; or rather, I
should say, just as it may please those who ask our advice. Here are
our rules, taken from Fathers Layman, Vasquez, Sanchez, and the
four-and-twenty worthies, in the words of Layman: 'A doctor, on being
consulted, may give an advice, not only probable according to his own
opinion, but contrary to his own opinion, provided this judgement
happens to be more favourable or more agreeable to the person that
consults him- si forte haec favorabilior seu exoptatior sit. Nay, I go
further and say that there would be nothing unreasonable in his giving
those who consult him a judgement held to be probable by some learned
person, even though he should be satisfied in his own mind that it is
absolutely false.'"
"Well, seriously, father," I said, "your doctrine is a most
uncommonly comfortable one! Only think of being allowed to answer yes
or no, just as you please! It is impossible to prize such a privilege
too highly. I see now the advantage of the contrary opinions of your
doctors. One of them always serves your turn, and the other never
gives you any annoyance. If you do not find your account on the one
side, you fall back on the other and always land in perfect safety."
"That is quite true," he replied; "and, accordingly, we may always
say with Diana, on his finding that Father Bauny was on his side,
while Father Lugo was against him: Saepe premente deo, fert deus alter
opem."*
* Ovid, Appendice, xiii. "If pressed by any god, we will be
delivered by another."
"I understand you," resumed I; "but a practical difficulty has
just occurred to me, which is this, that supposing a person to have
consulted one of your doctors and obtained from him a pretty liberal
opinion, there is some danger of his getting into a scrape by meeting
a confessor who takes a different view of the matter and refuses him
absolution unless he recant the sentiment of the casuist. Have you not
provided for such a case as that, father?"
"Can you doubt it?" he replied, "We have bound them, sir, to
absolve their penitents who act according to probable opinions, under
the pain of mortal sin, to secure their compliance. 'When the
penitent,' says Father Bauny, 'follows a probable opinion, the
confessor is bound to absolve him, though his opinion should differ
from that of his penitent.'"
"But he does not say it would be a mortal sin not to absolve him"
said I.
"How hasty you are!" rejoined the monk; "listen to what follows;
he has expressly decided that, 'to refuse absolution to a penitent who
acts according to a probable opinion is a sin which is in its nature
mortal.' And, to settle that point, he cites the most illustrious of
our fathers- Suarez, Vasquez, and Sanchez."
"My dear sir," said I, "that is a most prudent regulation. I see
nothing to fear now. No confessor can dare to be refractory after
this. Indeed, I was not aware that you had the power of issuing your
orders on pain of damnation. I thought that your skill had been
confined to the taking away of sins; I had no idea that it extended to
the introduction of new ones. But, from what I now see, you are
omnipotent."
"That is not a correct way of speaking," rejoined the father. "We
do not introduce sins; we only pay attention to them. I have had
occasion to remark, two or three times during our conversation, that
you are no great scholastic."
"Be that as it may, father, you have at least answered my
difficulty. But I have another to suggest. How do you manage when the
Fathers of the Church happen to differ from any of your casuists?"
"You really know very little of the subject," he replied. "The
Fathers were good enough for the morality of their own times; but they
lived too far back for that of the present age, which is no longer
regulated by them, but by the modern casuists. On this Father Cellot,
following the famous Reginald, remarks: 'In questions of morals, the
modern casuists are to be preferred to the ancient fathers, though
those lived nearer to the times of the apostles.' And following out
this maxim, Diana thus decides: 'Are beneficiaries bound to restore
their revenue when guilty of mal-appropriation of it? The ancients
would say yes, but the moderns say no; let us, therefore, adhere to
the latter opinion, which relieves from the obligation of
restitution.'"
"Delightful words these, and most comfortable they must be to a
great many people!" I observed.
"We leave the fathers," resumed the monk, "to those who deal with
positive divinity. As for us, who are the directors of conscience, we
read very little of them and quote only the modern casuists. There is
Diana, for instance, a most voluminous writer; he has prefixed to his
works a list of his authorities, which amount to two hundred and
ninety-six, and the most ancient of them is only about eighty years
old."
"It would appear, then," I remarked, "that all these have come
into the world since the date of your Society?"
"Thereabouts," he replied.
"That is to say, dear father, on your advent, St. Augustine, St.
Chrysostom, St. Ambrose, St. Jerome, and all the rest, in so far as
morals are concerned, disappeared from the stage. Would you be so kind
as let me know the names, at least, of those modern authors who have
succeeded them?"
"A most able and renowned class of men they are," replied the
monk. "Their names are: Villalobos, Conink, Llamas, Achokier,
Dealkozer, Dellacruz, Veracruz, Ugolin, Tambourin, Fernandez,
Martinez, Suarez, Henriquez, Vasquez, Lopez, Gomez, Sanchez, De
Vechis, De Grassis, De Grassalis, De Pitigianis, De Graphaeis,
Squilanti, Bizozeri, Barcola, De Bobadilla, Simanacha, Perez de Lara,
Aldretta, Lorca, De Scarcia, Quaranta, Scophra, Pedrezza, Cabrezza,
Bisbe, Dias, De Clavasio, Villagut, Adam a Manden, Iribarne, Binsfeld,
Volfangi A Vorberg, Vosthery, Strevesdorf."
"O my dear father!" cried I, quite alarmed, "were all these people
Christians?"
"How! Christians!" returned the casuist; "did I not tell you that
these are the only writers by whom we now govern Christendom?"
Deeply affected as I was by this announcement, I concealed my
emotion from the monk and only asked him if all these authors were
Jesuits?
"No," said he; "but that is of little consequence; they have said
a number of good things for all that. It is true the greater part of
these same good things are extracted or copied from our authors, but
we do not stand on ceremony with them on that score, more especially
as they are in the constant habit of quoting our authors with
applause. When Diana, for example, who does not belong to our Society,
speaks of Vasquez, he calls him 'that phoenix of genius'; and he
declares more than once 'that Vasquez alone is to him worth all the
rest of men put together'- instar omnium. Accordingly, our fathers
often make use of this good Diana; and, if you understand our doctrine
of probability, you will see that this is no small help in its way. In
fact, we are anxious that others besides the Jesuits would render
their opinions probable, to prevent people from ascribing them all to
us; for you will observe that, when any author, whoever he may be,
advances a probable opinion, we are entitled, by the doctrine of
probability, to adopt it if we please; and yet, if the author does not
belong to our fraternity, we are not responsible for its soundness."
"I understand all that," said I. "It is easy to see that all are
welcome that come your way, except the ancient fathers; you are
masters of the field, and have only to walk the course. But I foresee
three or four serious difficulties and powerful barriers which will
oppose your career."
"And what are these?" cried the monk, looking quite alarmed.
"They are the Holy Scriptures," I replied, "the popes, and the
councils, whom you cannot gainsay, and who are all in the way of the
Gospel."
"Is that all?" he exclaimed; "I declare you put me in a fright. Do
you imagine that we would overlook such an obvious scruple as that, or
that we have not provided against it? A good idea, forsooth, to
suppose that we would contradict Scripture, popes, and councils! I
must convince you of your mistake; for I should be sorry you should go
away with an impression that we are deficient in our respect to these
authorities. You have doubtless taken up this notion from some of the
opinions of our fathers, which are apparently at variance with their
decisions, though in reality they are not. But to illustrate the
harmony between them would require more leisure than we have at
present; and, as I would not like you to retain a bad impression of
us, if you agree to meet with me to-morrow, I shall clear it all up
then."
Thus ended our interview, and thus shall end my present
communication, which has been long enough, besides, for one letter. I
am sure you will be satisfied with it, in the prospect of what is
forthcoming. I am,
I mentioned, at the close of my last letter, that my good friend,
the Jesuit, had promised to show me how the casuists reconcile the
contrarieties between their opinions and the decisions of the popes,
the councils, and the Scripture. This promise he fulfilled at our last
interview, of which I shall now give you an account.
"One of the methods," resumed the monk, "in which we reconcile
these apparent contradictions, is by the interpretation of some
phrase. Thus, Pope Gregory XIV decided that assassins are not worthy
to enjoy the benefit of sanctuary in churches and ought to be dragged
out of them; and yet our four-and-twenty elders affirm that 'the
penalty of this bull is not incurred by all those that kill in
treachery.' This may appear to you a contradiction; but we get over
this by interpreting the word assassin as follows: 'Are assassins
unworthy of sanctuary in churches? Yes, by the bull of Gregory XIV
they are. But by the word assassins we understand those that have
received money to murder one; and, accordingly, such as kill without
taking any reward for the deed, but merely to oblige their friends, do
not come under the category of assassins.'"
"Take another instance: It is said in the Gospel, 'Give alms of
your superfluity.' Several casuists, however, have contrived to
discharge the wealthiest from the obligation of alms-giving. This may
appear another paradox, but the matter is easily put to rights by
giving such an interpretation to the word superfluity that it will
seldom or never happen that any one is troubled with such an article.
This feat has been accomplished by the learned Vasquez, in his
Treatise on Alms, c. 4: 'What men of the world lay up to improve their
circumstances, or those of their relatives, cannot be termed
superfluity, and accordingly, such a thing as superfluity is seldom to
be found among men of the world, not even excepting kings.' Diana,
too, who generally founds on our fathers, having quoted these words of
Vasquez, justly concludes, 'that as to the question whether the rich
are bound to give alms of their superfluity, even though the
affirmative were true, it will seldom or never happen to be obligatory
in practice.'"
"I see very well how that follows from the doctrine of Vasquez,"
said I. "But how would you answer this objection, that, in working out
one's salvation, it would be as safe, according to Vasquez, to give no
alms, provided one can muster as much ambition as to have no
superfluity; as it is safe, according to the Gospel, to have no
ambition at all, in order to have some superfluity for the purpose of
alms-giving?"
"Why," returned he, "the answer would be that both of these ways
are safe according to the Gospel; the one according to the Gospel in
its more literal and obvious sense, and the other according to the
same Gospel as interpreted by Vasquez. There you see the utility of
interpretations. When the terms are so clear, however," he continued,
"as not to admit of an interpretation, we have recourse to the
observation of favourable circumstances. A single example will
illustrate this. The popes have denounced excommunication on monks who
lay aside their canonicals; our casuists, notwithstanding, put it as a
question, 'On what occasions may a monk lay aside his religious habits
without incurring excommunication?' They mention a number of cases in
which they may, and among others the following: 'If he has laid it
aside for an infamous purpose, such as to pick pockets or to go
incognito into haunts of profligacy, meaning shortly after to resume
it.' It is evident the bulls have no reference to cases of that
description."
I could hardly believe that and begged the father to show me the
passage in the original. He did so, and under the chapter headed
"Practice according to the School of the Society of Jesus"- Praxis ex
Societatis Jesu Schola- I read these very words: Si habitum dimittat
ut furetur occulte, vel fornicetur. He showed me the same thing in
Diana, in these terms: Ut eat incognitus ad lupanar. "And why,
father," I asked, "are they discharged from excommunication on such
occasions?"
"Don't you understand it?" he replied. "Only think what a scandal
it would be, were a monk surprised in such a predicament with his
canonicals on! And have you never heard," he continued, "how they
answer the first bull contra sollicitantes and how our
four-and-twenty, in another chapter of the Practice according to the
School of our Society, explain the bull of Pius V contra clericos,
"I know nothing about all that," said I.
"Then it is a sign you have not read much of Escobar," returned
the monk.
"I got him only yesterday, father, said I; "and I had no small
difficulty, too, in procuring a copy. I don't know how it is, but
everybody of late has been in search of him."
"The passage to which I referred," returned the monk, "may be
found in treatise I, example 8, no. 102. Consult it at your leisure
when you go home."
I did so that very night; but it is so shockingly bad that I dare
not transcribe it.
The good father then went on to say: "You now understand what use
we make of favourable circumstances. Sometimes, however, obstinate
cases will occur, which will not admit of this mode of adjustment; so
much so, indeed, that you would almost suppose they involved flat
contradictions. For example, three popes have decided that monks who
are bound by a particular vow to a Lenten life cannot be absolved from
it even though they should become bishops. And yet Diana avers that
notwithstanding this decision they are absolved.
"And how does he reconcile that?" said I.
"By the most subtle of all the modern methods, and by the nicest
possible application of probability," replied the monk. "You may
recollect you were told the other day that the affirmative and
negative of most opinions have each, according to our doctors, some
probability enough, at least, to be followed with a safe conscience.
Not that the pro and con are both true in the same sense- that is
impossible- but only they are both probable and, therefore, safe, as a
matter of course. On this principle our worthy friend Diana remarks:
'To the decision of these three popes, which is contrary to my
opinion, I answer that they spoke in this way by adhering to the
affirmative side- which, in fact, even in my judgement, is probable;
but it does not follow from this that the negative may not have its
probability too.' And in the same treatise, speaking of another
subject on which he again differs from a pope, he says: 'The pope, I
grant, has said it as the head of the Church; but his decision does
not extend beyond the sphere of the probability of his own opinion.'
Now you perceive this is not doing any harm to the opinions of the
popes; such a thing would never be tolerated at Rome, where Diana is
in high repute. For he does not say that what the popes have decided
is not probable; but leaving their opinion within the sphere of
probability, he merely says that the contrary is also probable."
"That is very respectful," said I.
"Yes," added the monk, "and rather more ingenious than the reply
made by Father Bauny, when his books were censured at Rome; for, when
pushed very hard on this point by M. Hallier, he made bold to write:
'What has the censure of Rome to do with that of France?' You now see
how, either by the interpretation of terms, by the observation of
favourable circumstances, or by the aid of the double probability of
pro and con, we always contrive to reconcile those seeming
contradictions which occasioned you so much surprise, without ever
touching on the decisions of Scripture, councils, or popes."
"Reverend father," said I, "how happy the world is in having such
men as you for its masters! And what blessings are these
probabilities! I never knew the reason why you took such pains to
establish that a single doctor, if a grave one, might render an
opinion probable, and that the contrary might be so too, and that one
may choose any side one pleases, even though he does not believe it to
be the right side, and all with such a safe conscience, that the
confessor who should refuse him absolution on the faith of the
casuists would be in a state of damnation. But I see now that a single
casuist may make new rules of morality at his discretion and dispose,
according to his fancy, of everything pertaining to the regulation of
manners."
"What you have now said," rejoined the father, "would require to
be modified a little. Pay attention now, while I explain our method,
and you will observe the progress of a new opinion, from its birth to
its maturity. First, the grave doctor who invented it exhibits it to
the world, casting it abroad like seed, that it may take root. In this
state it is very feeble; it requires time gradually to ripen. This
accounts for Diana, who has introduced a great many of these opinions,
saying: 'I advance this opinion; but as it is new, I give it time to
come to maturity- relinquo tempori maturandum.' Thus in a few years it
becomes insensibly consolidated; and, after a considerable time, it is
sanctioned by the tacit approbation of the Church, according to the
grand maxim of Father Bauny, 'that if an opinion has been advanced by
some casuist, and has not been impugned by the Church, it is a sign
that she approves of it.' And, in fact, on this principle he
authenticates one of his own principles in his sixth treatise, p.
312."
"Indeed, father! " cried I, "why, on this principle the Church
would approve of all the abuses which she tolerates, and all the
errors in all the books which she does not censure!"
"Dispute the point with Father Bauny," he replied. "I am merely
quoting his words, and you begin to quarrel with me. There is no
disputing with facts, sir. Well, as I was saying, when time has thus
matured an opinion, it thenceforth becomes completely probable and
safe. Hence the learned Caramuel, in dedicating his Fundamental
Theology to Diana, declares that this great Diana has rendered many
opinions probable which were not so before- quae antea non erant, and
that, therefore, in following them, persons do not sin now, though
they would have sinned formerly- jam non peccant, licet ante
peccaverint."
"Truly, father," I observed, "it must be worth one's while living
in the neighbourhood of your doctors. Why, of two individuals who do
the same actions, he that knows nothing about their doctrine sins,
while he that knows it does no sin. It seems, then, that their
doctrine possesses at once an edifying and a justifying virtue! The
law of God, according to St. Paul, made transgressors; but this law of
yours makes nearly all of us innocent. I beseech you, my dear sir, let
me know all about it. I will not leave you till you have told me all
the maxims which your casuists have established."
"Alas!" the monk exclaimed, "our main object, no doubt, should
have been to establish no other maxims than those of the Gospel in all
their strictness: and it is easy to see, from the Rules for the
regulation of our manners, that, if we tolerate some degree of
relaxation in others, it is rather out of complaisance than through
design. The truth is, sir, we are forced to it. Men have arrived at
such a pitch of corruption nowadays that, unable to make them come to
us, we must e'en go to them, otherwise they would cast us off
altogether; and, what is worse, they would become perfect castaways.
It is to retain such characters as these that our casuists have taken
under consideration the vices to which people of various conditions
are most addicted, with the view of laying down maxims which, while
they cannot be said to violate the truth, are so gentle that he must
be a very impracticable subject indeed who is not pleased with them.
The grand project of our Society, for the good of religion, is never
to repulse any one, let him be what he may, and so avoid driving
people to despair.
"They have got maxims, therefore, for all sorts of persons; for
beneficiaries, for priests, for monks; for gentlemen, for servants;
for rich men, for commercial men; for people in embarrassed or
indigent circumstances; for devout women, and women that are not
devout; for married people, and irregular people. In short, nothing
has escaped their foresight."
"In other words," said I, "they have got maxims for the clergy,
the nobility, and the commons. Well, I am quite impatient to hear
them."
"Let us commence," resumed the father, 'with the beneficiaries.
You are aware of the traffic with benefices that is now carried on,
and that, were the matter referred to St. Thomas and the ancients who
had written on it, there might chance to be some simoniacs in the
Church. This rendered it highly necessary for our fathers to exercise
their prudence in finding out a palliative. With what success they
have done so will appear from the following words of Valencia, who is
one of Escobar's 'four living creatures.' At the end of a long
discourse, in which he suggests various expedients, he propounds the
following at page 2039, vol. iii, which, to my mind, is the best: 'If
a person gives a temporal in exchange for a spiritual good'- that is,
if he gives money for a benefice- 'and gives the money as the price of
the benefice, it is manifest simony. But if he gives it merely as the
motive which inclines the will of the patron to confer on him the
living, it is not simony, even though the person who confers it
considers and expects the money as the principal object.' Tanner, who
is also a member of our Society, affirms the same thing, vol. iii,
p.1519, although he 'grants that St. Thomas is opposed to it; for he
expressly teaches that it is always simony to give a spiritual for a
temporal good, if the temporal is the end in view.' By this means we
prevent an immense number of simoniacal transactions; for who would be
so desperately wicked as to refuse, when giving money for a benefice,
to take the simple precaution of so directing his intentions as to
give it as a motive to induce the beneficiary to part with it, instead
of giving it as the price of the benefice? No man, surely, can be so
far left to himself as that would come to."
"I agree with you there," I replied; "all men, I should think,
have sufficient grace to make a bargain of that sort."
"There can be no doubt of it," returned the monk. "Such, then, is
the way in which we soften matters in regard to the beneficiaries. And
now for the priests- we have maxims pretty favourable to them also.
Take the following, for example, from our four-and-twenty elders: "Can
a priest, who has received money to say a mass, take an additional sum
upon the same mass? Yes, says Filiutius, he may, by applying that part
of the sacrifice which belongs to himself as a priest to the person
who paid him last; provided he does not take a sum equivalent to a
whole mass, but only a part, such as the third of a mass.'"
"Surely, father," said I, "this must be one of those cases in
which the pro and the con have both their share of probability. What
you have now stated cannot fail, of course, to be probable, having the
authority of such men as Filiutius and Escobar; and yet, leaving that
within the sphere of probability, it strikes me that the contrary
opinion might be made out to be probable too, and might be supported
by such reasons as the following: That, while the Church allows
priests who are in poor circumstances to take money for their masses,
seeing it is but right that those who serve at the altar should live
by the altar, she never intended that they should barter the sacrifice
for money, and, still less, that they should deprive themselves of
those benefits which they ought themselves, in the first place, to
draw from it; to which I might add that, according to St. Paul, the
priests are to offer sacrifice first for themselves and then for the
people; and that, accordingly, while permitted to participate with
others in the benefit of the sacrifice, they are not at liberty to
forego their share by transferring it to another for a third of a
mass, or, in other words, for the matter of fourpence or fivepence.
Verily, father, little as I pretend to be a grave man, I might
contrive to make this opinion probable."
"It would cost you no great pains to do that, replied the monk;
"it is visibly probable already. The difficulty lies in discovering
probability in the converse of opinions manifestly good; and this is a
feat which none but great men can achieve. Father Bauny shines in this
department. It is really delightful to see that learned casuist
examining with characteristic ingenuity and subtlety the negative and
affirmative of the same question, and proving both of them to be
right! Thus in the matter of priests, he says in one place: 'No law
can be made to oblige the curates to say mass every day; for such a
law would unquestionably (haud dubie) expose them to the danger of
saying it sometimes in mortal sin.' And yet, in another part of the
same treatise, he says, 'that priests who have received money for
saying mass every day ought to say it every day, and that they cannot
excuse themselves on the ground that they are not always in a fit
state for the service; because it is in their power at all times to do
penance, and if they neglect this they have themselves to blame for it
and not the person who made them say mass.' And to relieve their minds
from all scruples on the subject, he thus resolves the question: 'May
a priest say mass on the same day in which he has committed a mortal
sin of the worst kind, in the way of confessing himself beforehand?'
Villalobos says no, because of his impurity; but Sancius says: 'He may
without any sin; and I hold his opinion to be safe, and one which may
be followed in practice- et tuta et sequenda in praxi.'"
"Follow this opinion in practice!" cried I. "Will any priest who
has fallen into such irregularities have the assurance on the same day
to approach the altar, on the mere word of Father Bauny? Is he not
bound to submit to the ancient laws of the Church, which debarred from
the sacrifice forever, or at least for a long time, priests who had
committed sins of that description- instead of following the modern
opinions of casuists, who would admit him to it on the very day that
witnessed his fall?"
"You have a very short memory, returned the monk. "Did I not
inform you a little ago that, according to our fathers Cellot and
Reginald, 'in matters of morality we are to follow, not the ancient
fathers, but the modern casuists?'"
"I remember it perfectly," said I; "but we have something more
here: we have the laws of the Church."
"True," he replied; "but this shows you do not know another
capital maxim of our fathers, 'that the laws of the Church lose their
authority when they have gone into desuetude- cum jam desuetudine
abierunt- as Filiutius says. We know the present exigencies of the
Church much better than the ancients could do. Were we to be so strict
in excluding priests from the altar, you can understand there would
not be such a great number of masses. Now a multitude of masses brings
such a revenue of glory to God and of good to souls that I may venture
to say, with Father Cellot, that there would not be too many priests,
'though not only all men and women, were that possible, but even
inanimate bodies, and even brute beasts- bruta animalia- were
transformed into priests to celebrate mass.'"
I was so astounded at the extravagance of this imagination that I
could not utter a word and allowed him to go on with his discourse.
"Enough, however, about priests; I am afraid of getting tedious: let
us come to the monks. The grand difficulty with them is the obedience
they owe to their superiors; now observe the palliative which our
fathers apply in this case. Castro Palao of our Society has said:
'Beyond all dispute, a monk who has a probable opinion of his own, is
not bound to obey his superior, though the opinion of the latter is
the more probable. For the monk is at liberty to adopt the opinion
which is more agreeable to himself- quae sibi gratior fuerit- as
Sanchez says. And though the order of his superior be just, that does
not oblige you to obey him, for it is not just at all points or in
every respect- non undequaque juste praecepit- but only probably so;
and, consequently, you are only probably bound to obey him, and
probably not bound- probabiliter obligatus, et probabiliter
deobligatus.'"
"Certainly, father," said I, "it is impossible too highly to
estimate this precious fruit of the double probability."
"It is of great use indeed," he replied; "but we must be brief.
Let me only give you the following specimen of our famous Molina in
favour of monks who are expelled from their convents for
irregularities. Escobar quotes him thus: 'Molina asserts that a monk
expelled from his monastery is not obliged to reform in order to get
back again, and that he is no longer bound by his vow of obedience.'"
"Well, father," cried I, "this is all very comfortable for the
clergy. Your casuists, I perceive, have been very indulgent to them,
and no wonder- they were legislating, so to speak, for themselves. I
am afraid people of other conditions are not so liberally treated.
Every one for himself in this world."
"There you do us wrong," returned the monk; "they could not have
been kinder to themselves than we have been to them. We treat all,
from the highest to the lowest, with an even-handed charity, sir. And
to prove this, you tempt me to tell you our maxims for servants. In
reference to this class, we have taken into consideration the
difficulty they must experience, when they are men of conscience, in
serving profligate masters. For, if they refuse to perform all the
errands in which they are employed, they lose their places; and if
they yield obedience, they have their scruples. To relieve them from
these, our four-and-twenty fathers have specified the services which
they may render with a safe conscience; such as 'carrying letters and
presents, opening doors and windows, helping their master to reach the
window, holding the ladder which he is mounting. All this,' say they,
'is allowable and indifferent; it is true that, as to holding the
ladder, they must be threatened, more than usually, with being
punished for refusing; for it is doing an injury to the master of a
house to enter it by the window.' You perceive the judiciousness of
that observation, of course?"
"I expected nothing less," said I, "from a book edited by
four-and-twenty Jesuits."
"But," added the monk, "Father Bauny has gone beyond this; he has
taught valets how to perform these sorts of offices for their masters
quite innocently, by making them direct their intention, not to the
sins to which they are accessary, but to the gain which is to accrue
from them. In his Summary of Sins, p.710, first edition, he thus
states the matter: 'Let confessors observe,' says he, 'that they
cannot absolve valets who perform base errands, if they consent to the
sins of their masters; but the reverse holds true, if they have done
the thing merely from a regard to their temporal emolument.' And that,
I should conceive, is no difficult matter to do; for why should they
insist on consenting to sins of which they taste nothing but the
trouble? The same Father Bauny has established a prime maxim in favour
of those who are not content with their wages: 'May servants who are
dissatisfied with their wages use means to raise them by laying their
hands on as much of the property of their masters as they may consider
necessary to make the said wages equivalent to their trouble? They
may, in certain circumstances; as when they are so poor that, in
looking for a situation, they have been obliged to accept the offer
made to them, and when other servants of the same class are gaining
more than they, elsewhere.'"
"Ha, father!" cried I, "that is John d'Alba's passage, I declare."
"What John d'Alba?" inquired the father: "what do you mean?"
"Strange, father!" returned I: "do you not remember what happened
in this city in the year 1647? Where in the world were you living at
that time?"
"I was teaching cases of conscience in one of our colleges far
from Paris," he replied.
"I see you don't know the story, father: I must tell it to you. I
heard it related the other day by a man of honour, whom I met in
company. He told us that this John d'Alba, who was in the service of
your fathers in the College of Clermont, in the Rue St. Jacques, being
dissatisfied with his wages, had purloined something to make himself
amends; and that your fathers, on discovering the theft, had thrown
him into prison on the charge of larceny. The case was reported to the
court, if I recollect right, on the 16th of April, 1647; for he was
very minute in his statements, and indeed they would hardly have been
credible otherwise. The poor fellow, on being questioned, confessed to
having taken some pewter plates, but maintained that for all that he
had not stolen them; pleading in his defence this very doctrine of
Father Bauny, which he produced before the judges, along with a
pamphlet by one of your fathers, under whom he had studied cases of
conscience, and who had taught him the same thing. Whereupon M. de
Montrouge, one of the most respected members of the court, said, in
giving his opinion, 'that he did not see how, on the ground of the
writings of these fathers- writings containing a doctrine so illegal,
pernicious, and contrary to all laws, natural, divine, and human, and
calculated to ruin all families, and sanction all sorts of household
robbery- they could discharge the accused. But his opinion was that
this too faithful disciple should be whipped before the college gate,
by the hand of the common hangman; and that, at the same time, this
functionary should burn the writings of these fathers which treated of
larceny, with certification that they were prohibited from teaching
such doctrine in future, upon pain of death.'
"The result of this judgement, which was heartily approved of, was
waited for with much curiosity, when some incident occurred which made
them delay procedure. But in the meantime the prisoner disappeared,
nobody knew how, and nothing more was heard about the affair; so that
John d'Alba got off, pewter plates and all. Such was the account he
gave us, to which he added, that the judgement of M. de Montrouge was
entered on the records of the court, where any one may consult it. We
were highly amused at the story."
"What are you trifling about now?" cried the monk. "What does all
that signify? I was explaining the maxims of our casuists, and was
just going to speak of those relating to gentlemen, when you interrupt
me with impertinent stories."
"It was only something put in by the way, father," I observed;
"and besides, I was anxious to apprise you of an important
circumstance, which I find you have overlooked in establishing your
doctrine of probability."
"Ay, indeed!" exclaimed the monk, "what defect can this be that
has escaped the notice of so many ingenious men?"
"You have certainly," continued I, "contrived to place your
disciples in perfect safety so far as God and the conscience are
concerned; for they are quite safe in that quarter, according to you,
by following in the wake of a grave doctor. You have also secured them
on the part of the confessors, by obliging priests, on the pain of
mortal sin, to absolve all who follow a probable opinion. But you have
neglected to secure them on the part of the judges; so that, in
following your probabilities, they are in danger of coming into
contact with the whip and the gallows. This is a sad oversight."
"You are right," said the monk; "I am glad you mentioned it. But
the reason is we have no such power over magistrates as over the
confessors, who are obliged to refer to us in cases of conscience, in
which we are the sovereign judges."
"So I understand," returned I; "but if, on the one hand, you are
the judges of the confessors, are you not, on the other hand, the
confessors of the judges? Your power is very extensive. Oblige them,
on pain of being debarred from the sacraments, to acquit all criminals
who act on a probable opinion; otherwise it may happen, to the great
contempt and scandal of probability, that those whom you render
innocent in theory may be whipped or hanged in practice. Without
something of this kind, how can you expect to get disciples?"
"The matter deserves consideration," said he; "it will never do to
neglect it. I shall suggest it to our father Provincial. You might,
however, have reserved this advice to some other time, without
interrupting the account I was about to give you of the maxims which
we have established in favour of gentlemen; and I shall not give you
any more information, except on condition that you do not tell me any
more stories."
This is all you shall have from me at present; for it would
require more than the limits of one letter to acquaint you with all
that I learned in a single conversation. Meanwhile I am,
Having succeeded in pacifying the good father, who had been rather
disconcerted by the story of John d'Alba, he resumed the conversation,
on my assuring him that I would avoid all such interruptions in
future, and spoke of the maxims of his casuists with regard to
gentlemen, nearly in the following terms:
"You know," he said, "that the ruling passion of persons in that
rank of life is 'the point of honor,' which is perpetually driving
them into acts of violence apparently quite at variance with Christian
piety; so that, in fact, they would be almost all of them excluded
from our confessionals, had not our fathers relaxed a little from the
strictness of religion, to accommodate themselves to the weakness of
humanity. Anxious to keep on good terms both with the Gospel, by doing
their duty to God, and with the men of the world, by showing charity
to their neighbour, they needed all the wisdom they possessed to
devise expedients for so nicely adjusting matters as to permit these
gentlemen to adopt the methods usually resorted to for vindicating
their honour, without wounding their consciences, and thus reconcile
two things apparently so opposite to each other as piety and the point
of honour. But, sir, in proportion to the utility of the design, was
the difficulty of the execution. You cannot fail, I should think, to
realize the magnitude and arduousness of such an enterprise?"
"It astonishes me, certainly," said I, rather coldly.
"It astonishes you, forsooth!" cried the monk. "I can well believe
that; many besides you might be astonished at it. Why, don't you know
that, on the one hand, the Gospel commands us 'not to render evil for
evil, but to leave vengeance to God'; and that, on the other hand, the
laws of the world forbid our enduring an affront without demanding
satisfaction from the offender, and that often at the expense of his
life? You have never, I am sure, met with anything to all appearance
more diametrically opposed than these two codes of morals; and yet,
when told that our fathers have reconciled them, you have nothing more
to say than simply that this astonishes you!"
"I did not sufficiently explain myself, father. I should certainly
have considered the thing perfectly impracticable, if I had not known,
from what I have seen of your fathers, that they are capable of doing
with ease what is impossible to other men. This led me to anticipate
that they must have discovered some method for meeting the difficulty-
a method which I admire even before knowing it, and which I pray you
to explain to me."
"Since that is your view of the matter," replied the monk, "I
cannot refuse you. Know then, that this marvellous principle is our
grand method of directing the intention- the importance of which, in
our moral system, is such that I might almost venture to compare it
with the doctrine of probability. You have had some glimpses of it in
passing, from certain maxims which I mentioned to you. For example,
when I was showing you how servants might execute certain troublesome
jobs with a safe conscience, did you not remark that it was simply by
diverting their intention from the evil to which they were accessary
to the profit which they might reap from the transaction? Now that is
what we call directing the intention. You saw, too, that, were it not
for a similar divergence of the mind, those who give money for
benefices might be downright simoniacs. But I will now show you this
grand method in all its glory, as it applies to the subject of
homicide- a crime which it justifies in a thousand instances; in order
that, from this startling result, you may form an idea of all that it
is calculated to effect."
"I foresee already," said I, "that, according to this mode,
everything will be permitted; it win stick at nothing."
"You always fly from the one extreme to the other," replied the
monk: "prithee avoid that habit. For, just to show you that we are far
from permitting everything, let me tell you that we never suffer such
a thing as a formal intention to sin, with the sole design of sinning;
and if any person whatever should persist in having no other end but
evil in the evil that he does, we break with him at once: such conduct
is diabolical. This holds true, without exception of age, sex, or
rank. But when the person is not of such a wretched disposition as
this, we try to put in practice our method of directing the intention,
which simply consists in his proposing to himself, as the end of his
actions, some allowable object. Not that we do not endeavour, as far
as we can, to dissuade men from doing things forbidden; but when we
cannot prevent the action, we at least purify the motive, and thus
correct the viciousness of the means by the goodness of the end. Such
is the way in which our fathers have contrived to permit those acts of
violence to which men usually resort in vindication of their honour.
They have no more to do than to turn off their intention from the
desire of vengeance, which is criminal, and direct it to a desire to
defend their honour, which, according to us, is quite warrantable. And
in this way our doctors discharge all their duty towards God and
towards man. By permitting the action, they gratify the world; and by
purifying the intention, they give satisfaction to the Gospel. This is
a secret, sir, which was entirely unknown to the ancients; the world
is indebted for the discovery entirely to our doctors. You understand
it now, I hope?"
"Perfectly well," was my reply. "To men you grant the outward
material effect of the action; and to God you give the inward and
spiritual movement of the intention; and by this equitable partition,
you form an alliance between the laws of God and the laws of men. But,
my dear sir, to be frank with you, I can hardly trust your premisses,
and I suspect that your authors will tell another tale."
"You do me injustice, rejoined the monk; "I advance nothing but
what I am ready to prove, and that by such a rich array of passages
that altogether their number, their authority, and their reasonings,
will fill you with admiration. To show you, for example, the alliance
which our fathers have formed between the maxims of the Gospel and
those of the world, by thus regulating the intention, let me refer you
to Reginald: 'Private persons are forbidden to avenge themselves; for
St. Paul says to the Romans (12), "Recompense to no man evil for
evil"; and Ecclesiasticus says (28), "He that taketh vengeance shall
draw on himself the vengeance of God, and his sins will not be
forgotten." Besides all that is said in the Gospel about forgiving
offences, as in chapters 6 and 18 of St. Matthew.'"
"Well, father, if after that he says anything contrary to the
Scripture, it will not be from lack of scriptural knowledge, at any
rate. Pray, how does he conclude?"
"You shall hear," he said. "From all this it appears that a
military man may demand satisfaction on the spot from the person who
has injured him- not, indeed, with the intention of rendering evil for
evil, but with that of preserving his honour- 'non ut malum pro malo
reddat, sed ut conservet honorem.' See you how carefully they guard
against the intention of rendering evil for evil, because the
Scripture condemns it? This is what they will tolerate on no account.
Thus Lessius observes, that 'if a man has received a blow on the face,
he must on no account have an intention to avenge himself; but he may
lawfully have an intention to avert infamy, and may, with that view,
repel the insult immediately, even at the point of the sword- etiam
cum gladio!' So far are we from permitting any one to cherish the
design of taking vengeance on his enemies that our fathers will not
allow any even to wish their death- by a movement of hatred. 'If your
enemy is disposed to injure you,' says Escobar, 'you have no right to
wish his death, by a movement of hatred; though you may, with a view
to save yourself from harm.' So legitimate, indeed, is this wish, with
such an intention, that our great Hurtado de Mendoza says that 'we may
pray God to visit with speedy death those who are bent on persecuting
us, if there is no other way of escaping from it.'"
"May it please your reverence," said I, "the Church has forgotten
to insert a petition to that effect among her prayers."
"They have not put in everything into the prayers that one may
lawfully ask of God," answered the monk. "Besides, in the present
case, the thing was impossible, for this same opinion is of more
recent standing than the Breviary. You are not a good chronologist,
friend. But, not to wander from the point, let me request vour
attention to the following passage, cited by Diana from Gaspar
Hurtado, one of Escobar's four-and-twenty fathers: 'An incumbent may,
without any mortal sin, desire the decease of a life-renter on his
benefice, and a son that of his father, and rejoice when it happens;
provided always it is for the sake of the profit that is to accrue
from the event, and not from personal aversion.'"
"Good!" cried I. "That is certainly a very happy hit; and I can
easily see that the doctrine admits of a wide application. But yet
there are certain cases, the solution of which, though of great
importance for gentlemen, might present still greater difficulties."
"Propose them, if you please, that we may see," said the monk.
"Show me, with all your directing of the intention," returned I,
"that it is allowable to fight a duel."
"Our great Hurtado de Mendoza," said the father, "will satisfy you
on that point in a twinkling. 'If a gentleman,' says he, in a passage
cited by Diana, 'who is challenged to fight a duel, is well known to
have no religion, and if the vices to which he is openly and
unscrupulously addicted are such as would lead people to conclude, in
the event of his refusing to fight, that he is actuated, not by the
fear of God, but by cowardice, and induce them to say of him that he
was a hen, and not a man, gallina, et non vir; in that case he may, to
save his honour, appear at the appointed spot- not, indeed, with the
express intention of fighting a duel, but merely with that of
defending himself, should the person who challenged him come there
unjustly to attack him. His action in this case, viewed by itself,
will be perfectly indifferent; for what moral evil is there in one
stepping into a field, taking a stroll in expectation of meeting a
person, and defending one's self in the event of being attacked? And
thus the gentleman is guilty of no sin whatever; for in fact it cannot
be called accepting a challenge at all, his intention being directed
to other circumstances, and the acceptance of a challenge consisting
in an express intention to fight, which we are supposing the gentleman
never had.'"
"You have not kept your word with me, sir," said I. "This is not,
properly speaking, to permit duelling; on the contrary, the casuist is
so persuaded that this practice is forbidden that, in licensing the
action in question, he carefully avoids calling it a duel."
"Ah!" cried the monk, "you begin to get knowing on my hand, I am
glad to see. I might reply that the author I have quoted grants all
that duellists are disposed to ask. But since you must have a
categorical answer, I shall allow our Father Layman to give it for me.
He permits duelling in so many words, provided that, in accepting the
challenge, the person directs his intention solely to the preservation
of his honour or his property: 'If a soldier or a courtier is in such
a predicament that he must lose either his honour or his fortune
unless he accepts a challenge, I see nothing to hinder him from doing
so in self-defence.' The same thing is said by Peter Hurtado, as
quoted by our famous Escobar; his words are: 'One may fight a duel
even to defend one's property, should that be necessary; because every
man has a right to defend his property, though at the expense of his
enemy's life!'"
I was struck, on hearing these passages, with the reflection that,
while the piety of the king appears in his exerting all his power to
prohibit and abolish the practice of duelling in the State, the piety
of the Jesuits is shown in their employing all their ingenuity to
tolerate and sanction it in the Church. But the good father was in
such an excellent key for talking that it would have been cruel to
have interrupted him; so he went on with his discourse.
"In short," said he, "Sanchez (mark, now, what great names I am
quoting to you!) Sanchez, sir, goes a step further; for he shows how,
simply by managing the intention rightly, a person may not only
receive a challenge, but give one. And our Escobar follows him."
"Prove that, father," said I, "and I shall give up the point: but
I will not believe that he has written it, unless I see it in print."
"Read it yourself, then," he replied: and, to be sure, I read the
following extract from the Moral Theology of Sanchez: "It is perfectly
reasonable to hold that a man may fight a duel to save his life, his
honour, or any considerable portion of his property, when it is
apparent that there is a design to deprive him of these unjustly, by
law-suits and chicanery, and when there is no other way of preserving
them. Navarre justly observes that, in such cases, it is lawful either
to accept or to send a challenge- licet acceptare et offerre duellum.
The same author adds that there is nothing to prevent one from
despatching one's adversary in a private way. Indeed, in the
circumstances referred to, it is advisable to avoid employing the
method of the duel, if it is possible to settle the affair by
privately killing our enemy; for, by this means, we escape at once
from exposing our life in the combat, and from participating in the
sin which our opponent would have committed by fighting the duel!"
"A most pious assassination!" said I. "Still, however, pious
though it be, it is assassination, if a man is permitted to kill his
enemy in a treacherous manner."
"Did I say that he might kill him treacherously?" cried the monk.
"God forbid! I said he might kill him privately, and you conclude that
he may kill him treacherously, as if that were the same thing! Attend,
sir, to Escobar's definition before allowing yourself to speak again
on this subject: 'We call it killing in treachery when the person who
is slain had no reason to suspect such a fate. He, therefore, that
slays his enemy cannot be said to kill him in treachery, even although
the blow should be given insidiously and behind his back- licet per
insidias aut a tergo percutiat.' And again: 'He that kills his enemy,
with whom he was reconciled under a promise of never again attempting
his life, cannot be absolutely said to kill in treachery, unless there
was between them all the stricter friendship- arctior amicitia.' You
see now you do not even understand what the terms signify, and yet you
pretend to talk like a doctor."
"I grant you this is something quite new to me," I replied; "and I
should gather from that definition that few, if any, were ever killed
in treachery; for people seldom take it into their heads to
assassinate any but their enemies. Be this as it may, however, it
seems that, according to Sanchez, a man may freely slay (I do not say
treacherously, but only insidiously and behind his back) a
calumniator, for example, who prosecutes us at law?"
"Certainly he may," returned the monk, "always, however, in the
way of giving a right direction to the intention: you constantly
forget the main point. Molina supports the same doctrine; and what is
more, our learned brother Reginald maintains that we may despatch the
false witnesses whom he summons against us. And, to crown the whole,
according to our great and famous fathers Tanner and Emanuel Sa, it is
lawful to kill both the false witnesses and the judge himself, if he
has had any collusion with them. Here are Tanner's very words: 'Sotus
and Lessius think that it is not lawful to kill the false witnesses
and the magistrate who conspire together to put an innocent person to
death; but Emanuel Sa and other authors with good reason impugn that
sentiment, at least so far as the conscience is concerned.' And he
goes on to show that it is quite lawful to kill both the witnesses and
the judge."
"Well, father," said I, "I think I now understand pretty well your
principle regarding the direction of the intention: but I should like
to know something of its consequences, and all the cases in which this
method of yours arms a man with the power of life and death. Let us go
over them again, for fear of mistake, for equivocation here might be
attended with dangerous results. Killing is a matter which requires to
be well-timed, and to be backed with a good probable opinion. You have
assured me, then, that by giving a proper turn to the intention, it is
lawful, according to your fathers, for the preservation of one's
honour, or even property, to accept a challenge to a duel, to give one
sometimes, to kill in a private way a false accuser, and his witnesses
along with him, and even the judge who has been bribed to favour them;
and you have also told me that he who has got a blow may, without
avenging himself, retaliate with the sword. But you have not told me,
father, to what length he may go."
"He can hardly mistake there," replied the father, "for he may go
all the length of killing his man. This is satisfactorily proved by
the learned Henriquez, and others of our fathers quoted by Escobar, as
follows: 'It is perfectly right to kill a person who has given us a
box on the ear, although he should run away, provided it is not done
through hatred or revenge, and there is no danger of giving occasion
thereby to murders of a gross kind and hurtful to society. And the
reason is that it is as lawful to pursue the thief that has stolen our
honour, as him that has run away with our property. For, although your
honour cannot be said to be in the hands of your enemy in the same
sense as your goods and chattels are in the hands of the thief, still
it may be recovered in the same way- by showing proofs of greatness
and authority, and thus acquiring the esteem of men. And, in point of
fact, is it not certain that the man who has received a buffet on the
ear is held to be under disgrace, until he has wiped off the insult
with the blood of his enemy?'"
I was so shocked on hearing this that it was with great difficulty
I could contain myself; but, in my anxiety to hear the rest, I allowed
him to proceed.
"Nay," he continued, "it is allowable to prevent a buffet, by
killing him that meant to give it, if there be no other way to escape
the insult. This opinion is quite common with our fathers. For
example, Azor, one of the four-and-twenty elders, proposing the
question, 'Is it lawful for a man of honour to kill another who
threatens to give him a slap on the face, or strike him with a stick?'
replies, 'Some say he may not; alleging that the life of our neighbour
is more precious than our honour, and that it would be an act of
cruelty to kill a man merely to avoid a blow. Others, however, think
that it is allowable; and I certainly consider it probable, when there
is no other way of warding off the insult; for, otherwise, the honour
of the innocent would be constantly exposed to the malice of the
insolent.' The same opinion is given by our great Filiutius; by Father
Hereau, in his Treatise on Homicide, by Hurtado de Mendoza, in his
Disputations, by Becan, in his Summary; by our Fathers Flahaut and
Lecourt, in those writings which the University, in their third
petition, quoted at length, in order to bring them into disgrace
(though in this they failed); and by Escobar. In short, this opinion
is so general that Lessius lays it down as a point which no casuist
has contested; he quotes a great many that uphold, and none that deny
it; and particularly Peter Navarre, who, speaking of affronts in
general (and there is none more provoking than a box on the ear),
declares that 'by the universal consent of the casuists, it is lawful
to kill the calumniator, if there be no other way of averting the
affront- ex sententia omnium, licet contumeliosum occidere, si aliter
ea injuria arceri nequit.' Do you wish any more authorities?" asked
the monk.
I declared I was much obliged to him; I had heard rather more than
enough of them already. But, just to see how far this damnable
doctrine would go, I said, "But, father, may not one be allowed to
kill for something still less? Might not a person so direct his
intention as lawfully to kill another for telling a lie, for example?"
"He may," returned the monk; "and according to Father Baldelle,
quoted by Escobar, 'you may lawfully take the life of another for
saying, "You have told a lie"; if there is no other way of shutting
his mouth.' The same thing may be done in the case of slanders. Our
Fathers Lessius and Hereau agree in the following sentiments: 'If you
attempt to ruin my character by telling stories against me in the
presence of men of honour, and I have no other way of preventing this
than by putting you to death, may I be permitted to do so? According
to the modern authors, I may, and that even though I have been really
guilty of the crime which you divulge, provided it is a secret one,
which you could not establish by legal evidence. And I prove it thus:
If you mean to rob me of my honour by giving me a box on the ear, I
may prevent it by force of arms; and the same mode of defence is
lawful when you would do me the same injury with the tongue. Besides,
we may lawfully obviate affronts and, therefore, slanders. In fine,
honour is dearer than life; and as it is lawful to kill in defence of
life, it must be so to kill in defence of honour.' There, you see, are
arguments in due form; this is demonstration, sir- not mere
discussion. And, to conclude, this great man Lessius shows, in the
same place, that it is lawful to kill even for a simple gesture, or a
sign of contempt. 'A man's honour,' he remarks, 'may be attacked or
filched away in various ways- in all of which vindication appears very
reasonable; as, for instance, when one offers to strike us with a
stick, or give us a slap on the face, or affront us either by words or
signs- sive per signa.'"
"Well, father," said I, "it must be owned that you have made every
possible provision to secure the safety of reputation; but it strikes
me that human life is greatly in danger, if any one may be
conscientiously put to death simply for a defamatory speech or a saucy
gesture."
"That is true," he replied; "but, as our fathers are very
circumspect, they have thought it proper to forbid putting this
doctrine into practice on such trifling occasions. They say, at least,
'that it ought hardly to be reduced to practice- practice vix probari
potest.' And they have a good reason for that, as you shall see."
"Oh, I know what it will be," interrupted I; "because the law of
God forbids us to kill, of course."
"They do not exactly take that ground," said the father; "as a
matter of conscience, and viewing the thing abstractly, they hold it
allowable."
"And why then, do they forbid it?"
"I shall tell you that, sir. It is because, were we to kill all
the defamers among us, we should very shortly depopulate the country.
'Although,' says Reginald, 'the opinion that we may kill a man for
calumny is not without its probability in theory, the contrary one
ought to be followed in practice; for, in our mode of defending
ourselves, we should always avoid doing injury to the commonwealth;
and it is evident that by killing people in this way there would be
too many murders. 'We should be on our guard,' says Lessius, 'lest the
practice of this maxim prove hurtful to the State; for in this case it
ought not to be permitted- tunc enim non est permittendus.'"
"What, father! is it forbidden only as a point of policy, and not
of religion? Few people, I am afraid, will pay any regard to such a
prohibition, particularly when in a passion. Very probably they might
think they were doing no harm to the State, by ridding it of an
unworthy member."
"And accordingly," replied the monk, "our Filiutius has fortified
that argument with another, which is of no slender importance, namely,
'that for killing people after this manner, one might be punished in a
court of justice.'"
"There now, father; I told you before, that you will never be able
to do anything worth the while, unless you get the magistrates to go
along with you."
"The magistrates," said the father, "as they do not penetrate into
the conscience, judge merely of the outside of the action, while we
look principally to the intention; and hence it occasionally happens
that our maxims are a little different from theirs."
"Be that as it may, father; from yours, at least, one thing may be
fairly inferred- that, by taking care not to injure the commonwealth,
we may kill defamers with a safe conscience, provided we can do it
with a sound skin. But, sir, after having seen so well to the
protection of honour, have you done nothing for property? I am aware
it is of inferior importance, but that does not signify; I should
think one might direct one's intention to kill for its preservation
also."
"Yes," replied the monk; "and I gave you a hint to that effect
already, which may have suggested the idea to you. All our casuists
agree in that opinion; and they even extend the permission to those
cases 'where no further violence is apprehended from those that steal
our property; as, for example, where the thief runs away.' Azor, one
of our Society, proves that point."
"But, sir, how much must the article be worth, to justify our
proceeding to that extremity?"
"According to Reginald and Tanner, 'the article must be of great
value in the estimation of a judicious man.' And so think Layman and
Filiutius."
"But, father, that is saying nothing to the purpose; where am I to
find 'a judicious man' (a rare person to meet with at any time), in
order to make this estimation? Why do they not settle upon an exact
sum at once?"
"Ay, indeed!" retorted the monk; "and was it so easy, think you,
to adjust the comparative value between the life of a man, and a
Christian man, too, and money? It is here I would have you feel the
need of our casuists. Show me any of your ancient fathers who will
tell for how much money we may be allowed to kill a man. What will
they say, but 'Non occides- Thou shalt not kill?'"
"And who, then, has ventured to fix that sum?" I inquired.
"Our great and incomparable Molina," he replied- "the glory of our
Society- who has, in his inimitable wisdom, estimated the life of a
man 'at six or seven ducats; for which sum he assures us it is
warrantable to kill a thief, even though he should run off'; and he
adds, 'that he would not venture to condemn that man as guilty of any
sin who should kill another for taking away an article worth a crown,
or even less- unius aurei, vel minoris adhuc valoris'; which has led
Escobar to lay it down, as a general rule, 'that a man may be killed
quite regularly, according to Molina, for the value of a
crown-piece.'"
"O father," cried I; "where can Molina have got all this wisdom to
enable him to determine a matter of such importance, without any aid
from Scripture, the councils, or the fathers? It is quite evident that
he has obtained an illumination peculiar to himself, and is far beyond
St. Augustine in the matter of homicide, as well as of grace. Well,
now, I suppose I may consider myself master of this chapter of morals;
and I see perfectly that, with the exception of ecclesiastics, nobody
need refrain from killing those who injure them in their property or
reputation."
"What say you?" exclaimed the monk. "Do you, then, suppose that it
would be reasonable that those, who ought of all men to be most
respected, should alone be exposed to the insolence of the wicked? Our
fathers have provided against that disorder; for Tanner declares that
'Churchmen, and even monks, are permitted to kill, for the purpose of
defending not only their lives, but their property, and that of their
community.' Molina, Escobar, Becan, Reginald, Layman, Lessius, and
others, hold the same language. Nay, according to our celebrated
Father Lamy, priests and monks may lawfully prevent those who would
injure them by calumnies from carrying their ill designs into effect,
by putting them to death. Care, however, must always be taken to
direct the intention properly. His words are: 'An ecclesiastic or a
monk may warrantably kill a defamer who threatens to publish the
scandalous crimes of his community, or his own crimes, when there is
no other way of stopping him; if, for instance, he is prepared to
circulate his defamations unless promptly despatched. For, in these
circumstances, as the monk would be allowed to kill one who threatened
to take his life, he is also warranted to kill him who would deprive
him of his reputation or his property, in the same way as the men of
the world.'"
"I was not aware of that," said I; "in fact, I have been
accustomed simply enough to believe the very reverse, without
reflecting on the matter, in consequence of having heard that the
Church had such an abhorrence of bloodshed as not even to permit
ecclesiastical judges to attend in criminal cases."
"Never mind that," he replied; "our Father Lamy has completely
proved the doctrine I have laid down, although, with a humility which
sits uncommonly well on so great a man, he submits it to the judgement
of his judicious readers. Caramuel, too, our famous champion, quoting
it in his Fundamental Theology, p. 543. thinks it so certain, that he
declares the contrary opinion to be destitute of probability, and
draws some admirable conclusions from it, such as the following, which
he calls 'the conclusion of conclusions- conclusionum conclusio':
'That a priest not only may kill a slanderer, but there are certain
circumstances in which it may be his duty to do so- etiam aliquando
debet occidere.' He examines a great many new questions on this
principle, such as the following, for instance: 'May the Jesuits kill
the Jansenists?'"
"A curious point of divinity that, father! " cried I. "I hold the
Jansenists to be as good as dead men, according to Father Lamy's
doctrine."
"There, now, you are in the wrong," said the monk: "Caramuel
infers the very reverse from the same principles."
"And how so, father?"
"Because," he replied, "it is not in the power of the Jansenists
to injure our reputation. 'The Jansenists,' says he, 'call the Jesuits
Pelagians, may they not be killed for that? No; inasmuch as the
Jansenists can no more obscure the glory of the Society than an owl
can eclipse that of the sun; on the contrary, they have, though
against their intention, enhanced it- occidi non possunt, quia nocere
non potuerunt.'"
"Ha, father! do the lives of the Jansenists, then, depend on the
contingency of their injuring your reputation? If so, I reckon them
far from being in a safe position; for supposing it should be thought
in the slightest degree probable that they might do you some mischief,
why, they are killable at once! You have only to draw up a syllogism
in due form, and, with a direction of the intention, you may despatch
your man at once with a safe conscience. Thrice happy must those hot
spirits be who cannot bear with injuries, to be instructed in this
doctrine! But woe to the poor people who have offended them! Indeed,
father, it would be better to have to do with persons who have no
religion at all than with those who have been taught on this system.
For, after all, the intention of the wounder conveys no comfort to the
wounded. The poor man sees nothing of that secret direction of which
you speak; he is only sensible of the direction of the blow that is
dealt him. And I am by no means sure but a person would feel much less
sorry to see himself brutally killed by an infuriated villain than to
find himself conscientiously stilettoed by a devotee. To be plain with
you, father, I am somewhat staggered at all this; and these questions
of Father Lamy and Caramuel do not please me at all."
"How so?" cried the monk. "Are you a Jansenist?"
"I have another reason for it," I replied. "You must know I am in
the habit of writing from time to time, to a friend of mine in the
country, all that I can learn of the maxims of your doctors. Now,
although I do no more than simply report and faithfully quote their
own words, yet I am apprehensive lest my letter should fall into the
hands of some stray genius who may take into his head that I have done
you injury, and may draw some mischievous conclusion from your
premisses."
"Away!" cried the monk; "no fear of danger from that quarter, I'll
give you my word for it. Know that what our fathers have themselves
printed, with the approbation of our superiors, it cannot be wrong to
read nor dangerous to publish."
I write you, therefore, on the faith of this worthy father's word
of honour. But, in the meantime, I must stop for want of paper- not of
passages; for I have got as many more in reserve, and good ones too,
as would require volumes to contain them. I am,
You did not suppose that anybody would have the curiosity to know
who we were; but it seems there are people who are trying to make it
out, though they are not very happy in their conjectures. Some take me
for a doctor of the Sorbonne; others ascribe my letters to four or
five persons, who, like me, are neither priests nor Churchmen. All
these false surmises convince me that I have succeeded pretty well in
my object, which was to conceal myself from all but yourself and the
worthy monk, who still continues to bear with my visits, while I still
contrive, though with considerable difficulty, to bear with his
conversations. I am obliged, however, to restrain myself; for, were he
to discover how much I am shocked at his communications, he would
discontinue them and thus put it out of my power to fulfil the promise
I gave you, of making you acquainted with their morality. You ought to
think a great deal of the violence which I thus do to my own feelings.
It is no easy matter, I can assure you, to stand still and see the
whole system of Christian ethics undermined by such a set of monstrous
principles, without daring to put in a word of flat contradiction
against them. But, after having borne so much for your satisfaction, I
am resolved I shall burst out for my own satisfaction in the end, when
his stock of information has been exhausted. Meanwhile, I shall
repress my feelings as much as I possibly can for I find that the more
I hold my tongue, he is the more communicative. The last time I saw
him, he told me so many things that I shall have some difficulty in
repeating them all. On the point of restitution you will find they
have some most convenient principles. For, however the good monk
palliates his maxims, those which I am about to lay before you really
go to sanction corrupt judges, usurers, bankrupts, thieves,
prostitutes and sorcerers- all of whom are most liberally absolved
from the obligation of restoring their ill-gotten gains. It was thus
the monk resumed the conversation:
"At the commencement of our interviews, I engaged to explain to
you the maxims of our authors for all ranks and classes; and you have
already seen those that relate to beneficiaries, to priests, to monks,
to domestics, and to gentlemen. Let us now take a cursory glance at
the remaining, and begin with the judges.
"Now I am going to tell you one of the most important and
advantageous maxims which our fathers have laid down in their favour.
Its author is the learned Castro Palao, one of our four-and-twenty
elders. His words are: 'May a judge, in a question of right and wrong,
pronounce according to a probable opinion, in preference to the more
probable opinion? He may, even though it should be contrary to his own
judgement- imo contra propriam opinionem.'"
"Well, father," cried I, "that is a very fair commencement! The
judges, surely, are greatly obliged to you; and I am surprised that
they should be so hostile, as we have sometimes observed, to your
probabilities, seeing these are so favourable to them. For it would
appear from this that you give them the same power over men's fortunes
as you have given to yourselves over their consciences."
"You perceive we are far from being actuated by self-interest,"
returned he; "we have had no other end in view than the repose of
their consciences; and to the same useful purpose has our great Molina
devoted his attention, in regard to the presents which may be made
them. To remove any scruples which they might entertain in accepting
of these on certain occasions, he has been at the pains to draw out a
list of all those cases in which bribes may be taken with a good
conscience, provided, at least, there be no special law forbidding
them. He says: 'Judges may receive presents from parties when they are
given them either for friendship's sake, or in gratitude for some
former act of justice, or to induce them to give justice in future, or
to oblige them to pay particular attention to their case, or to engage
them to despatch it promptly.' The learned Escobar delivers himself to
the same effect: 'If there be a number of persons, none of whom have
more right than another to have their causes disposed of, will the
judge who accepts of something from one of them, on condition-
expacto- of taking up his cause first, be guilty of sin? Certainly
not, according to Layman; for, in common equity, he does no injury to
the rest by granting to one, in consideration of his present, what he
was at liberty to grant to any of them he pleased; and besides, being
under an equal obligation to them all in respect of their right, he
becomes more obliged to the individual who furnished the donation, who
thereby acquired for himself a preference above the rest- a preference
which seems capable of a pecuniary valuation- quae obligatio videtur
pretio aestimabilis.'"
"May it please your reverence," said I, "after such a permission,
I am surprised that the first magistrates of the kingdom should know
no better. For the first president has actually carried an order in
Parliament to prevent certain clerks of court from taking money for
that very sort of preference- a sign that he is far from thinking it
allowable in judges; and everybody has applauded this as a reform of
great benefit to all parties."
The worthy monk was surprised at this piece of intelligence, and
replied: "Are you sure of that? I heard nothing about it. Our opinion,
recollect, is only probable; the contrary is probable also."
"To tell you the truth, father," said I, "people think that the
first president has acted more than probably well, and that he has
thus put a stop to a course of public corruption which has been too
long winked at."
"I am not far from being of the same mind," returned he; "but let
us waive that point, and say no more about the judges."
"You are quite right, sir," said I; "indeed, they are not half
thankful enough for all you have done for them."
"That is not my reason," said the father; "but there is so much to
be said on all the different classes that we must study brevity on
each of them. Let us now say a word or two about men of business. You
are aware that our great difficulty with these gentlemen is to keep
them from usury- an object to accomplish which our fathers have been
at particular pains; for they hold this vice in such abhorrence that
Escobar declares 'it is heresy to say that usury is no sin'; and
Father Bauny has filled several pages of his Summary of Sins with the
pains and penalties due to usurers. He declares them 'infamous during
their life, and unworthy of sepulture after their death.'"
"O dear! " cried I, "I had no idea he was so severe."
"He can be severe enough when there is occasion for it," said the
monk; "but then this learned casuist, having observed that some are
allured into usury merely from the love of gain, remarks in the same
place that 'he would confer no small obligation on society, who, while
he guarded it against the evil effects of usury, and of the sin which
gives birth to it, would suggest a method by which one's money might
secure as large, if not a larger profit, in some honest and lawful
employment than he could derive from usurious dealings."
"Undoubtedly, father, there would be no more usurers after that."
"Accordingly," continued he, "our casuist has suggested 'a general
method for all sorts of persons- gentlemen, presidents, councillors,'
and a very simple process it is, consisting only in the use of
certain words which must be pronounced by the person in the act of
lending his money; after which he may take his interest for it without
fear of being a usurer, which he certainly would be on any other
plan."
"And pray what may those mysterious words be, father?"
"I will give you them exactly in his own words," said the father;
"for he has written his Summary in French, you know, 'that it may be
understood by everybody,' as he says in the preface: 'The person from
whom the loan is asked must answer, then, in this manner: I have got
no money to lend, I have got a little, however, to lay out for an
honest and lawful profit. If you are anxious to have the sum you
mention in order to make something of it by your industry, dividing
the profit and loss between us, I may perhaps be able to accommodate
you. But now I think of it, as it may be a matter of difficulty to
agree about the profit, if you will secure me a certain portion of it,
and give me so much for my principal, so that it incur no risk, we may
come to terms much sooner, and you shall touch the cash immediately.'
Is not that an easy plan for gaining money without sin? And has not
Father Bauny good reason for concluding with these words: 'Such, in my
opinion, is an excellent plan by which a great many people, who now
provoke the just indignation of God by their usuries, extortions, and
illicit bargains, might save themselves, in the way of making good,
honest, and legitimate profits'?"
"O sir!" I exclaimed, "what potent words these must be! Doubtless
they must possess some latent virtue to chase away the demon of usury
which I know nothing of, for, in my poor judgement, I always thought
that that vice consisted in recovering more money that what was lent."
"You know little about it indeed," he replied. "Usury, according
to our fathers, consists in little more than the intention of taking
the interest as usurious. Escobar, accordingly, shows you how you may
avoid usury by a simple shift of the intention. 'It would be downright
usury,' says he 'to take interest from the borrower, if we should
exact it as due in point of justice; but if only exacted as due in
point of gratitude, it is not usury. Again, it is not lawful to have
directly the intention of profiting by the money lent; but to claim it
through the medium of the benevolence of the borrower- media
benevolentia- is not usury.' These are subtle methods; but, to my
mind, the best of them all (for we have a great choice of them) is
that of the Mohatra bargain."
"The Mohatra, father!"
"You are not acquainted with it, I see," returned he. "The name is
the only strange thing about it. Escobar will explain it to you: 'The
Mohatra bargain is effected by the needy person purchasing some goods
at a high price and on credit, in order to sell them over again, at
the same time and to the same merchant, for ready money and at a cheap
rate.' This is what we call the Mohatra- a sort of bargain, you
perceive, by which a person receives a certain sum of ready money by
becoming bound to pay more."
"But, sir, I really think nobody but Escobar has employed such a
term as that; is it to be found in any other book?"
"How little you do know of what is going on, to be sure!" cried
the father. "Why, the last work on theological morality, printed at
Paris this very year, speaks of the Mohatra, and learnedly, too. It is
called Epilogus Summarum, and is an abridgment of all the summaries of
divinity- extracted from Suarez, Sanchez, Lessius, Fagundez, Hurtado,
and other celebrated casuists, as the title bears. There you will find
it said, on p. 54, that 'the Mohatra bargain takes place when a man
who has occasion for twenty pistoles purchases from a merchant goods
to the amount of thirty pistoles, payable within a year, and sells
them back to him on the spot for twenty pistoles ready money.' This
shows you that the Mohatra is not such an unheard-of term as you
supposed."
"But, father, is that sort of bargain lawful?"
"Escobar," replied he, "tells us in the same place that there are
laws which prohibit it under very severe penalties."
"It is useless, then, I suppose?"
"Not at all; Escobar, in the same passage, suggests expedients for
making it lawful: 'It is so, even though the principal intention both
of the buyer and seller is to make money by the transaction, provided
the seller, in disposing of the goods, does not exceed their highest
price, and in re-purchasing them does not go below their lowest price,
and that no previous bargain has been made, expressly or otherwise.'
Lessius, however, maintains that 'even though the merchant has sold
his goods, with the intention of re-purchasing them at the lowest
price, he is not bound to make restitution of the profit thus
acquired, unless, perhaps, as an act of charity, in the case of the
person from whom it had been exacted being in poor circumstances, and
not even then, if he cannot do it without inconvenience- si commode
non potest.' This is the utmost length to which they could go."
"Indeed, sir," said I, "any further indulgence would, I should
think, be rather too much."
"Oh, our fathers know very well when it is time for them to stop!"
cried the monk. "So much, then, for the utility of the Mohatra. I
might have mentioned several other methods, but these may suffice; and
I have now to say a little in regard to those who are in embarrassed
circumstances. Our casuists have sought to relieve them, according to
their condition of life. For, if they have not enough of property for
a decent maintenance, and at the same time for paying their debts,
they permit them to secure a portion by making a bankruptcy with their
creditors. This has been decided by Lessius, and confirmed by Escobar,
as follows: 'May a person who turns bankrupt, with a good conscience
keep back as much of his personal estate as may be necessary to
maintain his family in a respectable way- ne indecore vivat? I hold,
with Lessius, that he may, even though he may have acquired his wealth
unjustly and by notorious crimes- ex injustilia et notorio delicto;
only, in this case, he is not at liberty to retain so large an amount
as he otherwise might.'"
"Indeed, father! what a strange sort of charity is this, to allow
property to remain in the hands of the man who has acquired it by
rapine, to support him in his extravagance rather than go into the
hands of his creditors, to whom it legitimately belongs!"
"It is impossible to please everybody," replied the father; "and
we have made it our particular study to relieve these unfortunate
people. This partiality to the poor has induced our great Vasquez,
cited by Castro Palao, to say that 'if one saw a thief going to rob a
poor man, it would be lawful to divert him from his purpose by
pointing out to him some rich individual, whom he might rob in place
of the other.' If you have not access to Vasquez or Castro Palao, you
will find the same thing in your copy of Escobar; for, as you are
aware, his work is little more than a compilation from twenty-four of
the most celebrated of our fathers. You will find it in his treatise,
entitled The Practice of our Society, in the Matter of Charity towards
our Neighbours."
"A very singular kind of charity this," I observed, "to save one
man from suffering loss, by inflicting it upon another! But I suppose
that, to complete the charity, the charitable adviser would be bound
in conscience to restore to the rich man the sum which he had made him
lose?"
"Not at all, sir," returned the monk; "for he did not rob the man-
he only advised the other to do it. But only attend to this notable
decision of Father Bauny, on a case which will still more astonish
you, and in which you would suppose there was a much stronger
obligation to make restitution. Here are his identical words: 'A
person asks a soldier to beat his neighbour, or to set fire to the
barn of a man that has injured him. The question is whether, in the
essence of the soldier, the person who employed him to commit these
outrages is bound to make reparation out of his own pocket for the
damage that has followed? My opinion is that he is not. For none can
be held bound to restitution, where there has been no violation of
justice; and is justice violated by asking another to do us a favour?
As to the nature of the request which he made, he is at liberty either
to acknowledge or deny it; to whatever side he may incline, it is a
matter of mere choice; nothing obliges him to it, unless it may be the
goodness, gentleness, and easiness of his disposition. If the soldier,
therefore, makes no reparation for the mischief he has done, it ought
not to be exacted from him at whose request he injured the innocent.'"
This sentence had very nearly broken up the whole conversation,
for I was on the point of bursting into a laugh at the idea of the
goodness and gentleness of a burner of barns, and at these strange
sophisms which would exempt from the duty of restitution the principal
and real incendiary, whom the civil magistrate would not exempt from
the halter. But, had I not restrained myself, the worthy monk, who was
perfectly serious, would have been displeased; he proceeded,
therefore, without any alteration of countenance, in his observations.
"From such a mass of evidence, you ought to be satisfied now of
the futility of your objections; but we are losing sight of our
subject. To revert, then, to the succour which our fathers apply to
persons in straitened circumstances, Lessius, among others, maintains
that 'it is lawful to steal, not only in a case of extreme necessity,
but even where the necessity is grave, though not extreme.'"
"This is somewhat startling, father," said I. "There are very few
people in this world who do not consider their cases of necessity to
be grave ones, and to whom, accordingly, you would not give the right
of stealing with a good conscience. And, though you should restrict
the permission to those only who are really and truly in that
condition, you open the door to an infinite number of petty larcenies
which the magistrates would punish in spite of your grave necessity,
and which you ought to repress on a higher principle- you who are
bound by your office to be the conservators, not of justice only, but
of charity between man and man, a grace which this permission would
destroy. For after all, now, is it not a violation of the law of
charity, and of our duty to our neighbour, to deprive a man of his
property in order to turn it to our own advantage? Such, at least, is
the way I have been taught to think hitherto."
"That will not always hold true," replied the monk; "for our great
Molina has taught us that 'the rule of charity does not bind us to
deprive ourselves of a profit, in order thereby to save our neighbour
from a corresponding loss.' He advances this in corroboration of what
he had undertaken to prove- 'that one is not bound in conscience to
restore the goods which another had put into his hands in order to
cheat his creditors.' Lessius holds the same opinion, on the same
ground. Allow me to say, sir, that you have too little compassion for
people in distress. Our fathers have had more charity than that comes
to: they render ample justice to the poor, as well as the rich; and, I
may add, to sinners as well as saints. For, though far from having any
predilection for criminals, they do not scruple to teach that the
property gained by crime may be lawfully retained. 'No person,' says
Lessius, speaking generally, 'is bound, either by the law of nature or
by positive laws (that is, by any law), to make restitution of what
has been gained by committing a criminal action, such as adultery,
even though that action is contrary to justice.' For, as Escobar
comments on this writer, 'though the property which a woman acquires
by adultery is certainly gained in an illicit way, yet once acquired,
the possession of it is lawful- quamvis mulier illicite acquisat,
licite tamen retinet acquisita.' It is on this principle that the most
celebrated of our writers have formally decided that the bribe
received by a judge from one of the parties who has a bad case, in
order to procure an unjust decision in his favour, the money got by a
soldier for killing a man, or the emoluments gained by infamous
crimes, may be legitimately retained. Escobar, who has collected this
from a number of our authors, lays down this general rule on the point
that 'the means acquired by infamous courses, such as murder, unjust
decisions, profligacy, are legitimately possessed, and none are
obliged to restore them.' And, further, 'they may dispose of what they
have received for homicide, profligacy, as they please; for the
possession is just, and they have acquired a propriety in the fruits
of their iniquity.'"
"My dear father," cried I, "this is a mode of acquisition which I
never heard of before; and I question much if the law will hold it
good, or if it will consider assassination, injustice, and adultery,
as giving valid titles to property."
"I do not know what your law-books may say on the point," returned
the monk; "but I know well that our books, which are the genuine rules
for conscience, bear me out in what I say. It is true they make one
exception, in which restitution is positively enjoined; that is, in
the case of any receiving money from those who have no right to
dispose of their property such as minors and monks. 'Unless,' says the
great Molina, 'a woman has received money from one who cannot dispose'
of it, such as a monk or a minor- nisi mulier accepisset ab eo qui
alienare non potest, ut a religioso et filio familias. In this case
she must give back the money.' And so says Escobar."
"May it please your reverence," said I, "the monks, I see, are
more highly favoured in this way than other people."
"By no means," he replied; "have they not done as much generally
for all minors, in which class monks may be viewed as continuing all
their lives? It is barely an act of justice to make them an exception;
but with regard to all other people, there is no obligation whatever
to refund to them the money received from them for a criminal action.
For, as has been amply shown by Lessius, 'a wicked action may have its
price fixed in money, by calculating the advantage received by the
person who orders it to be done and the trouble taken by him who
carries it into execution; on which account the latter is not bound to
restore the money he got for the deed, whatever that may have been-
homicide, injustice, or a foul act' (for such are the illustrations
which he uniformly employs in this question); 'unless he obtained the
money from those having no right to dispose of their property. You may
object, perhaps, that he who has obtained money for a piece of
wickedness is sinning and, therefore, ought neither to receive nor
retain it. But I reply that, after the thing is done, there can be no
sin either in giving or in receiving payment for it.' The great
Filiutius enters still more minutely into details, remarking 'that a
man is bound in conscience to vary his payments for actions of this
sort, according to the different conditions of the individuals who
commit them, and some may bring a higher price than others.' This he
confirms by very solid arguments."
He then pointed out to me, in his authors, some things of this
nature so indelicate that I should be ashamed to repeat them; and
indeed the monk himself, who is a good man, would have been horrified
at them himself, were it not for the profound respect which he
entertains for his fathers, and which makes him receive with
veneration everything that proceeds from them. Meanwhile, I held my
tongue, not so much with the view of allowing him to enlarge on this
matter as from pure astonishment at finding the books of men in holy
orders stuffed with sentiments at once so horrible, so iniquitous, and
so silly. He went on, therefore, without interruption in his
discourse, concluding as follows:
"From these premisses, our illustrious Molina decides the
following question (and after this, I think you will have got enough):
'If one has received money to perpetrate a wicked action, is he
obliged to restore it? We must distinguish here,' says this great man;
'if he has not done the deed, he must give back the cash; if he has,
he is under no such obligation!' Such are some of our principles
touching restitution. You have got a great deal of instruction to-day;
and I should like, now, to see what proficiency you have made. Come,
then, answer me this question: 'Is a judge, who has received a sum of
money from one of the parties before him, in order to pronounce a
judgement in his favour, obliged to make restitution?'"
"You were just telling me a little ago, father, that he was not."
"I told you no such thing," replied the father; "did I express
myself so generally? I told you he was not bound to make restitution,
provided he succeeded in gaining the cause for the party who had the
wrong side of the question. But if a man has justice on his side,
would you have him to purchase the success of his cause, which is his
legitimate right? You are very unconscionable. Justice, look you, is a
debt which the judge owes, and therefore he cannot sell it; but he
cannot be said to owe injustice, and therefore he may lawfully receive
money for it. All our leading authors, accordingly, agree in teaching
'that though a judge is bound to restore the money he had received for
doing an act of justice, unless it was given him out of mere
generosity, he is not obliged to restore what he has received from a
man in whose favour he has pronounced an unjust decision.'"
This preposterous decision fairly dumbfounded me, and, while I was
musing on its pernicious tendencies, the monk had prepared another
question for me. "Answer me again," said he, "with a little more
circumspection. Tell me now, 'if a man who deals in divination is
obliged to make restitution of the money he has acquired in the
exercise of his art?'"
"Just as you please, your reverence," said I.
"Eh! what!- just as I please! Indeed, but you are a pretty
scholar! It would seem, according to your way of talking, that the
truth depended on our will and pleasure. I see that, in the present
case, you would never find it out yourself: so I must send you to
Sanchez for a solution of the problem- no less a man than Sanchez. In
the first place, he makes a distinction between 'the case of the
diviner who has recourse to astrology and other natural means, and
that of another who employs the diabolical art. In the one case, he
says, the diviner is bound to make restitution; in the other he is
not.' Now, guess which of them is the party bound?"
"It is not difficult to find out that," said I.
"I see what you mean to say," he replied. "You think that he ought
to make restitution in the case of his having employed the agency of
demons. But you know nothing about it; it is just the reverse. 'If,'
says Sanchez, 'the sorcerer has not taken care and pains to discover,
by means of the devil, what he could not have known otherwise, he must
make restitution- si nullam operam apposuit ut arte diaboli id sciret,
but if he has been at that trouble, he is not obliged.'"
"And why so, father?"
"Don't you See?" returned he. "It is because men may truly divine
by the aid of the devil, whereas astrology is a mere sham."
"But, sir, should the devil happen not to tell the truth (and he
is not much more to be trusted than astrology), the magician must, I
should think, for the same reason, be obliged to make restitution?"
"Not always," replied the monk: "Distinguo, as Sanchez says, here.
If the magician be ignorant of the diabolic art- si sit artis
diabolicae ignarus- he is bound to restore: but if he is an expert
sorcerer, and has done all in his power to arrive at the truth, the
obligation ceases; for the industry of such a magician may be
estimated at a certain sum of money.'"
"There is some sense in that," I said; "for this is an excellent
plan to induce sorcerers to aim at proficiency in their art, in the
hope of making an honest livelihood, as you would say, by faithfully
serving the public."
"You are making a jest of it, I suspect," said the father: "that
is very wrong. If you were to talk in that way in places where you
were not known, some people might take it amiss and charge you with
turning sacred subjects into ridicule."
"That, father, is a charge from which I could very easily
vindicate myself; for certain I am that whoever will be at the trouble
to examine the true meaning of my words will find my object to be
precisely the reverse; and perhaps, sir, before our conversations are
ended, I may find an opportunity of making this very amply apparent."
"Ho, ho," cried the monk, "there is no laughing in your head now."
"I confess," said I, "that the suspicion that I intended to laugh
at things sacred would be as painful for me to incur as it would be
unjust in any to entertain it."
"I did not say it in earnest," returned the father; "but let us
speak more seriously."
"I am quite disposed to do so, if you prefer it; that depends upon
you, father. But I must say, that I have been astonished to see your
friends carrying their attentions to all sorts and conditions of men
so far as even to regulate the legitimate gains of sorcerers."
"One cannot write for too many people," said the monk, "nor be too
minute in particularising cases, nor repeat the same things too often
in different books. You may be convinced of this by the following
anecdote, which is related by one of the gravest of our fathers, as
you may well suppose, seeing he is our present Provincial- the
reverend Father Cellot: 'We know a person,' says he, 'who was carrying
a large sum of money' in his pocket to restore it, in obedience to the
orders of his confessor, and who, stepping into a bookseller's shop by
the way, inquired if there was anything new?- numquid novi?- when the
bookseller showed him a book on moral theology, recently published;
and turning over the leaves carelessly, and without reflection, he
lighted upon a passage describing his own case, and saw that he was
under no obligation to make restitution: upon which, relieved from the
burden of his scruples, he returned home with a purse no less heavy,
and a heart much lighter, than when he left it- abjecta scrupuli
sarcina, retento auri pondere, levior domum repetiit.'
"Say, after hearing that, if it is useful or not to know our
maxims? Will you laugh at them now? or rather, are you not prepared to
join with Father Cellot in the pious reflection which he makes on the
blessedness of that incident? 'Accidents of that kind,' he remarks,
'are, with God, the effect of his providence; with the guardian angel,
the effect of his good guidance; with the individuals to whom they
happen, the effect of their predestination. From all eternity, God
decided that the golden chain of their salvation should depend on such
and such an author, and not upon a hundred others who say the same
thing, because they never happen to meet with them. Had that man not
written, this man would not have been saved. All, therefore, who find
fault with the multitude of our authors, we would beseech, in the
bowels of Jesus Christ, to beware of envying others those books which
the eternal election of God and the blood of Jesus Christ have
purchased for them!' Such are the eloquent terms in which this learned
man proves successfully the proposition which he had advanced, namely,
'How useful it must be to have a great many writers on moral theology-
quam utile sit de theologia morali multos scribere!'"
"Father," said I, "I shall defer giving you my opinion of that
passage to another opportunity; in the meantime, I shall only say that
as your maxims are so useful, and as it is so important to publish
them, you ought to continue to give me further instruction in them.
For I can assure you that the person to whom I send them shows my
letters to a great many people. Not that we intend to avail ourselves
of them in our own case; but, indeed, we think it will be useful for
the world to be informed about them."
"Very well," rejoined the monk, "you see I do not conceal them;
and, in continuation, I am ready to furnish you, at our next
interview, with an account of the comforts and indulgences which our
fathers allow, with the view of rendering salvation easy, and devotion
agreeable; so that, in addition to what you have hitherto learned as
to particular conditions of men, you may learn what applies in general
to all classes, and thus you will have gone through a complete course
of instruction." So saying, the monk took his leave of me. I am,
P.S. I have always forgot to tell you that there are different
editions of Escobar. Should you think of purchasing him, I would
advise you to choose the Lyons edition, having on the title page the
device of a lamb lying on a book sealed with seven seals; or the
Brussels edition of 1651. Both of these are better and larger than the
previous editions published at Lyons in the years 1644 and 1646.
I shall use as little ceremony with you as the worthy monk did
with me when I saw him last. The moment he perceived me, he came
forward, with his eyes fixed on a book which he held in his hand, and
accosted me thus: "'Would you not be infinitely obliged to any one who
should open to you the gates of paradise? Would you not give millions
of gold to have a key by which you might gain admittance whenever you
thought proper? You need not be at such expense; here is one- here are
a hundred for much less money.'"
At first I was at a loss to know whether the good father was
reading, or talking to me, but he soon put the matter beyond doubt by
adding:
"These, sir, are the opening words of a fine book, written by
Father Barry of our Society; for I never give you anything of my own."
"What book is it?" asked I.
"Here is its title," he replied: "Paradise opened to Philagio, in
a Hundred Devotions to the Mother of God, easily practised."
"Indeed, father! and is each of these easy devotions a sufficient
passport to heaven?"
"It is," returned he. "Listen to what follows: 'The devotions to
the Mother of God, which you will find in this book, are so many
celestial keys, which will open wide to you the gates of paradise,
provided you practise them'; and, accordingly, he says at the
conclusion, 'that he is satisfied if you practise only one of them.'"
"Pray, then, father, do teach me one of the easiest of them."
"They are all easy," he replied, "for example- 'Saluting the Holy
Virgin when you happen to meet her image- saying the little chaplet of
the pleasures of the Virgin- fervently pronouncing the name of Mary-
commissioning the angels to bow to her for us- wishing to build her as
many churches as all the monarchs on earth have done- bidding her good
morrow every morning, and good night in the evening- saying the Ave
Maria every day, in honour of the heart of Mary'- which last devotion,
he says, possesses the additional virtue of securing us the heart of
the Virgin."
"But, father," said I, "only provided we give her our own in
return, I presume?"
"That," he replied, "is not absolutely necessary, when a person is
too much attached to the world. Hear Father Barry: 'Heart for heart
would, no doubt, be highly proper; but yours is rather too much
attached to the world, too much bound up in the creature, so that I
dare not advise you to offer, at present, that poor little slave which
you call your heart.' And so he contents himself with the Ave Maria
which he had prescribed."
"Why, this is extremely easy work," said I, "and I should really
think that nobody will be damned after that."
"Alas!" said the monk, "I see you have no idea of the hardness of
some people's hearts. There are some, sir, who would never engage to
repeat, every day, even these simple words, Good day, Good evening,
just because such a practice would require some exertion of memory.
And, accordingly, it became necessary for Father Barry to furnish them
with expedients still easier, such as wearing a chaplet night and day
on the arm, in the form of a bracelet, or carrying about one's person
a rosary, or an image of the Virgin. 'And, tell me now,' as Father
Barry says, 'if I have not provided you with easy devotions to obtain
the good graces of Mary?'"
"Extremely easy indeed, father," I observed.
"Yes," he said, "it is as much as could possibly be done, and I
think should be quite satisfactory. For he must be a wretched creature
indeed, who would not spare a single moment in all his lifetime to put
a chaplet on his arm, or a rosary in his pocket, and thus secure his
salvation; and that, too, with so much certainty that none who have
tried the experiment have ever found it to fail, in whatever way they
may have lived; though, let me add, we exhort people not to omit holy
living. Let me refer you to the example of this, given at p. 34; it is
that of a female who, while she practised daily the devotion of
saluting the images of the Virgin, spent all her days in mortal sin,
and yet was saved after all, by the merit of that single devotion."
"And how so?" cried I.
"Our Saviour," he replied, "raised her up again, for the very
purpose of showing it. So certain it is that none can perish who
practise any one of these devotions."
"My dear sir," I observed, "I am fully aware that the devotions to
the Virgin are a powerful means of salvation, and that the least of
them, if flowing from the exercise of faith and charity, as in the
case of the saints who have practised them, are of great merit; but to
make persons believe that, by practising these without reforming their
wicked lives, they will be converted by them at the hour of death, or
that God will raise them up again, does appear calculated rather to
keep sinners going on in their evil courses, by deluding them with
false peace and foolhardy confidence, than to draw them off from sin
by that genuine conversion which grace alone can effect."
"What does it matter," replied the monk, "by what road we enter
paradise, provided we do enter it? as our famous Father Binet,
formerly our Provincial, remarks on a similar subject, in his
excellent book, On the Mark of Predestination. 'Be it by hook or by
crook,' as he says, 'what need we care, if we reach at last the
celestial city.'"
"Granted," said I; "but the great question is if we will get there
at all."
"The Virgin will be answerable for that," returned he; "so says
Father Barry in the concluding lines of his book: 'If at the hour of
death, the enemy should happen to put in some claim upon you, and
occasion disturbance in the little commonwealth of your thoughts, you
have only to say that Mary will answer for you, and that he must make
his application to her.'"
"But, father, it might be possible to puzzle you, were one
disposed to push the question a little further. Who, for example, has
assured us that the Virgin will be answerable in this case?"
"Father Barry will be answerable for her," he replied. "'As for
the profit and happiness to be derived from these devotions,' he says,
'I will be answerable for that; I will stand bail for the good
Mother.'"
"But, father, who is to be answerable for Father Barry?"
"How!" cried the monk; "for Father Barry? is he not a member of
our Society; and do you need to be told that our Society is answerable
for all the books of its members? It is highly necessary and important
for you to know about this. There is an order in our Society, by which
all booksellers are prohibited from printing any work of our fathers
without the approbation of our divines and the permission of our
superiors. This regulation was passed by Henry III, 10th May 1583, and
confirmed by Henry IV, 20th December 1603, and by Louis XIII, 14th
February 1612; so that the whole of our body stands responsible for
the publications of each of the brethren. This is a feature quite
peculiar to our community. And, in consequence of this, not a single
work emanates from us which does not breathe the spirit of the
Society. That, sir, is a piece of information quite apropos."
"My good father," said I, "you oblige me very much, and I only
regret that I did not know this sooner, as it will induce me to pay
considerably more attention to your authors."
"I would have told you sooner," he replied, "had an opportunity
offered; I hope, however, you will profit by the information in
future, and, in the meantime, let us prosecute our subject. The
methods of securing salvation which I have mentioned are, in my
opinion, very easy, very sure, and sufficiently numerous; but it was
the anxious wish of our doctors that people should not stop short at
this first step, where they only do what is absolutely necessary for
salvation and nothing more. Aspiring, as they do without ceasing,
after the greater glory of God, they sought to elevate men to a higher
pitch of piety; and, as men of the world are generally deterred from
devotion by the strange ideas they have been led to form of it by some
people, we have deemed it of the highest importance to remove this
obstacle which meets us at the threshold. In this department Father Le
Moine has acquired much fame, by his work entitled Devotion Made Easy,
composed for this very purpose. The picture which he draws of devotion
in this work is perfectly charming. None ever understood the subject
before him. Only hear what he says in the beginning of his work:
'Virtue has never as yet been seen aright; no portrait of her hitherto
produced, has borne the least verisimilitude. It is by no means
surprising that so few have attempted to scale her rocky eminence. She
has been held up as a cross-tempered dame, whose only delight is in
solitude; she has been associated with toil and sorrow; and, in short,
represented as the foe of sports and diversions, which are, in fact,
the flowers of joy and the seasoning of life.'"
"But, father, I am sure, I have heard, at least, that there have
been great saints who led extremely austere lives."
"No doubt of that," he replied; "but still, to use the language of
the doctor, 'there have always been a number of genteel saints, and
well-bred devotees'; and this difference in their manners, mark you,
arises entirely from a difference of humours. 'I am far from denying,'
says my author, 'that there are devout persons to be met with, pale
and melancholy in their temperament, fond of silence and retirement,
with phlegm instead of blood in their veins, and with faces of clay;
but there are many others of a happier complexion, and who possess
that sweet and warm humour, that genial and rectified blood, which is
the true stuff that joy is made of.'
"You see," resumed the monk, "that the love of silence and
retirement is not common to all devout people; and that, as I was
saying, this is the effect rather of their complexion than their
piety. Those austere manners to which you refer are, in fact, properly
the character of a savage and barbarian, and, accordingly, you will
find them ranked by Father Le Moine among the ridiculous and brutal
manners of a moping idiot. The following is the description he has
drawn of one of these in the seventh book of his Moral Pictures. 'He
has no eyes for the beauties of art or nature. Were he to indulge in
anything that gave him pleasure, he would consider himself oppressed
with a grievous load. On festival days, he retires to hold fellowship
with the dead. He delights in a grotto rather than a palace, and
prefers the stump of a tree to a throne. As to injuries and affronts,
he is as insensible to them as if he had the eyes and ears of a
statue. Honour and glory are idols with whom he has no acquaintance,
and to whom he has no incense to offer. To him a beautiful woman is no
better than a spectre; and those imperial and commanding looks- those
charming tyrants who hold so many slaves in willing and chainless
servitude- have no more influence over his optics than the sun over
those of owls,'
"Reverend sir," said I, "had you not told me that Father Le Moine
was the author of that description, I declare I would have guessed it
to be the production of some profane fellow who had drawn it expressly
with the view of turning the saints into ridicule. For if that is not
the picture of a man entirely denied to those feelings which the
Gospel obliges us to renounce, I confess that I know nothing of the
matter."
"You may now perceive, then, the extent of your ignorance," he
replied; "for these are the features of a feeble, uncultivated mind,
'destitute of those virtuous and natural affections which it ought to
possess,' as Father Le Moine says at the close of that description.
Such is his way of teaching 'Christian virtue and philosophy,' as he
announces in his advertisement; and, in truth, it cannot be denied
that this method of treating devotion is much more agreeable to the
taste of the world than the old way in which they went to work before
our times."
"There can be no comparison between them," was my reply, "and I
now begin to hope that you will be as good as your word."
"You will see that better by-and-by," returned the monk. "Hitherto
I have only spoken of piety in general, but, just to show you more in
detail how our fathers have disencumbered it of its toils and
troubles, would it not be most consoling to the ambitious to learn
that they may maintain genuine devotion along with an inordinate love
of greatness?"
"What, father! even though they should run to the utmost excess of
ambition?"
"Yes," he replied; "for this would be only a venial sin, unless
they sought after greatness in order to offend God and injure the
State more effectually. Now venial sins do not preclude a man from
being devout, as the greatest saints are not exempt from them.
'Ambition,' says Escobar, 'which consists in an inordinate appetite
for place and power, is of itself a venial sin; but when such
dignities are coveted for the purpose of hurting the commonwealth, or
having more opportunity to offend God, these adventitious
circumstances render it mortal.'"
"Very savoury doctrine, indeed, father."
"And is it not still more savoury," continued the monk, "for
misers to be told, by the same authority, 'that the rich are not
guilty of mortal sin by refusing to give alms out of their superfluity
to the poor in the hour of their greatest need?- scio in gravi
pauperum necessitate divites non dando superflua, non peccare
mortaliter.'"
"Why truly," said I, "if that be the case, I give up all
pretension to skill in the science of sins."
"To make you still more sensible of this," returned he, "you have
been accustomed to think, I suppose, that a good opinion of one's
self, and a complacency in one's own works, is a most dangerous sin?
Now, will you not be surprised if I can show you that such a good
opinion, even though there should be no foundation for it, is so far
from being a sin that it is, on the contrary, the gift of God?"
"Is it possible, father?"
"That it is," said the monk; "and our good Father Garasse shows it
in his French work, entitled Summary of the Capital Truths of
Religion: 'It is a result of commutative justice that all honest
labour should find its recompense either in praise or in
self-satisfaction. When men of good talents publish some excellent
work, they are justly remunerated by public applause. But when a man
of weak parts has wrought hard at some worthess production, and fails
to obtain the praise of the public, in order that his labour may not
go without its reward, God imparts to him a personal satisfaction,
which it would be worse than barbarous injustic to envy him. It is
thus that God, who is infinitely just, has given even to frogs a
certain complacency in their own croaking.'"
"Very fine decisions in favour of vanity, ambition, and (n) ext
Page (p) Previous Page (u) Menu (38%) avarice!" cried I; "and envy,
father, will it be more difficult to find an excuse for it?"
"That is a delicate point," he replied. "We require to make use
here of Father Bauny's distinction, which he lay down in his Summary
of Sins.- 'Envy of the spiritual good of our neighbour is mortal but
envy of his temporal good is only venial.'"
"And why so, father?"
"You shall hear, said he. "'For the good tha consists in temporal
things is so slender, and so insignificant in relation to heaven, that
it is of no consideration in the eyes of God and His saints.'"
"But, father, if temporal good is so slender, andof so little
consideration, how do you come to permit men's lives to be taken away
in order to preserve it?"
"You mistake the matter entirely," returned the monk; "you were
told that temporal good was of o consideration in the eyes of God,
but not in the eyes of men."
"That idea never occurred to me," I replied; "and now, it is to be
hoped that, in virtue of these same distinctions, the world will get
ridof mortal sins altogether."
"Do not flatter yourself with that," said the father; "there are
still such things as mortal sins- there is sloth, for example."
"Nay, then, father dear!" I exclaimed, "afte that, farewell to all
'the joys of life!'"
"Stay," said the monk, "when you have heard Escobar's definition
of that vice, you will perhaps change your tone: 'Sloth,' he observes,
'lies in grieving that spiritual things are spiritual, as if one
should lament that the sacraments are the sources of grace; which
would be a mortal sin.'"
"O my dear sir!" cried I, "I don't think that anybody ever took it
into his head to be slothful in that way."
"And accordingly," he replied, "Escobar afterwards remarks: 'I
must confess that it is very rarely that a person falls into the sin
of sloth.' You see now how important it is to define things properly?"
"Yes, father, and this brings to my mind your other definitions
about assassinations, ambuscades, and superfluities. But why have you
not extended your method to all cases, and given definitions of all
vices in your way, so that people may no longer sin in gratifying
themselves?"
"It is not always essential," he replied, "to accomplish that
purpose by changing the definitions of things. I may illustrate this
by referring to the subject of good cheer, which is accounted one of
the greatest pleasures of life, and which Escobar thus sanctions in
his Practice according to our Society: 'Is it allowable for a person
to eat and drink to repletion, unnecessarily, and solely for pleasure?
Certainly he may, according to Sanchez, provided he does not thereby
injure his health; because the natural appetite may be permitted to
enjoy its proper functions.'"
"Well, father, that is certainly the most complete passage, and
the most finished maxim in the whole of your moral system! What
comfortable inferences may be drawn from it! Why, and is gluttony,
then, not even a venial sin?"
"Not in the shape I have just referred to," he replied; "but,
according to the same author, it would be a venial sin 'were a person
to gorge himself, unnecessarily, with eating and drinking, to such a
degree as to produce vomiting.' So much for that point. I would now
say a little about the facilities we have invented for avoiding sin in
worldly conversations and intrigues. One of the most embarrassing of
these cases is how to avoid telling lies, particularly when one is
anxious to induce a belief in what is false. In such cases, our
doctrine of equivocations has been found of admirable service,
according to which, as Sanchez has it, 'it is permitted to use
ambiguous terms, leading people to understand them in another sense
from that in which we understand them ourselves.'"
"I know that already, father," said I.
"We have published it so often," continued he, "that at length, it
seems, everybody knows of it. But do you know what is to be done when
no equivocal words can be got?"
"No, father."
"I thought as much, said the Jesuit; "this is something new, sir:
I mean the doctrine of mental reservations. 'A man may swear,' as
Sanchez says in the same place, 'that he never did such a thing
(though he actually did it), meaning within himself that he did not do
so on a certain day, or before he was born, or understanding any other
such circumstance, while the words which he employs have no such sense
as would discover his meaning. And this is very convenient in many
cases, and quite innocent, when necessary or conducive to one's
health, honour, or advantage.'"
"Indeed, father! is that not a lie, and perjury to boot?"
"No," said the father; "Sanchez and Filiutius prove that it is
not; for, says the latter, 'it is the intention that determines the
quality of the action.' And he suggests a still surer method for
avoiding falsehood, which is this: After saying aloud, 'I swear that I
have not done that,' to add, in a low voice, 'to-day'; or after saying
aloud, 'I swear,' to interpose in a whisper, 'that I say,' and then
continue aloud, 'that I have done that.' This, you perceive, is
telling the truth."
"I grant it," said I; "it might possibly, however, be found to be
telling the truth in a low key, and falsehood in a loud one; besides,
I should be afraid that many people might not have sufficient presence
of mind to avail themselves of these methods."
"Our doctors," replied the Jesuit, "have taught, in the same
passage, for the benefit of such as might not be expert in the use of
these reservations, that no more is required of them, to avoid lying,
than simply to say that 'they have not done' what they have done,
provided 'they have, in general, the intention of giving to their
language the sense which an able man would give to it.' Be candid,
now, and confess if you have not often felt yourself embarrassed, in
consequence of not knowing this?"
"Sometimes," said I.
"And will you not also acknowledge," continued he, "that it would
often prove very convenient to be absolved in conscience from keeping
certain engagements one may have made?"
"The most convenient thing in the world!" I replied.
"Listen, then, to the general rule laid down by Escobar: 'Promises
are not binding, when the person in making them had no intention to
bind himself. Now, it seldom happens that any have such an intention,
unless when they confirm their promises by an oath or contract; so
that when one simply says, "I will do it," he means that he will do it
if he does not change his mind; for he does not wish, by saying that,
to deprive himself of his liberty.' He gives other rules in the same
strain, which you may consult for yourself, and tells us, in
conclusion, 'that all this is taken from Molina and our other authors,
and is therefore settled beyond all doubt.'"
"My dear father," I observed, "I had no idea that the direction of
the intention possessed the power of rendering promises null and
void."
"You must perceive," returned he, "what facility this affords for
prosecuting the business of life. But what has given us the most
trouble has been to regulate the commerce between the sexes; our
fathers being more chary in the matter of chastity. Not but that they
have discussed questions of a very curious and very indulgent
character, particularly in reference to married and betrothed
persons."
At this stage of the conversation I was made acquainted with the
most extraordinary questions you can well imagine. He gave me enough
of them to fill many letters; but, as you show my communications to
all sorts of persons, and as I do not choose to be the vehicle of such
reading to those who would make it the subject of diversion, I must
decline even giving the quotations.
The only thing to which I can venture to allude, out of all the
books which he showed me, and these in French, too, is a passage which
you will find in Father Bauny's Summary, p. 165, relating to certain
little familiarities, which, provided the intention is well directed,
he explains "as passing for gallant"; and you will be surprised to
find, on p. 148 a principle of morals, as to the power which daughters
have to dispose of their persons without the leave of their relatives,
couched in these terms: "When that is done with the consent of the
daughter, although the father may have reason to complain, it does not
follow that she, or the person to whom she has sacrificed her honour,
has done him any wrong, or violated the rules of justice in regard to
him; for the daughter has possession of her honour, as well as of her
body, and can do what she pleases with them, bating death or
mutilation of her members." Judge, from that specimen, of the rest. It
brings to my recollection a passage from a heathen poet, a much better
casuist, it would appear, than these reverend doctors; for he says,
"that the person of a daughter does not belong wholly to herself, but
partly to her father and partly to her mother, without whom she cannot
dispose of it, even in marriage." And I am much mistaken if there is a
single judge in the land who would not lay down as law the very
reverse of this maxim of Father Bauny.
This is all I dare tell you of this part of our conversation,
which lasted so long that I was obliged to beseech the monk to change
the subject. He did so and proceeded to entertain me with their
regulations about female attire.
"We shall not speak," he said, "of those who are actuated by
impure intentions; but, as to others, Escobar remarks that 'if the
woman adorn herself without any evil intention, but merely to gratify
a natural inclination to vanity- ob naturalem fastus inclinationem-
this is only a venial sin, or rather no sin at all.' And Father Bauny
maintains, that 'even though the woman knows the bad effect which her
care in adorning her person may have upon the virtue of those who may
behold her, all decked out in rich and precious attire, she would not
sin in so dressing.' And, among others, he cites our Father Sanchez as
being of the same mind."
"But, father, what do your authors say to those passages of
Scripture which so strongly denounce everything of that sort?"
"Lessius has well met that objection," said the monk, "by
observing, 'that these passages of Scripture have the force of
precepts only in regard to the women of that period, who were expected
to exhibit, by their modest demeanour, an example of edification to
the Pagans.'"
"And where did he find that, father"?
"It does not matter where he found it," replied he; "it is enough
to know that the sentiments of these great men are always probable of
themselves. It deserves to be noticed, however, that Father Le Moine
has qualified this general permission; for he will on no account allow
it to be extended to the old ladies. 'Youth,' he observes, 'is
naturally entitled to adorn itself, nor can the use of ornament be
condemned at an age which is the flower and verdure of life. But there
it should be allowed to remain: it would be strangely out of season to
seek for roses on the snow. The stars alone have a right to be always
dancing, for they have the gift of perpetual youth. The wisest course
in this matter, therefore, for old women, would be to consult good
sense and a good mirror, to yield to decency and necessity, and to
retire at the first approach of the shades of night.'"
"A most judicious advice," I observed.
"But," continued the monk, "just to show you how careful our
fathers are about everything you can think of, I may mention that,
after granting the ladies permission to gamble, and foreseeing that,
in many cases, this license would be of little avail unless they had
something to gamble with, they have established another maxim in their
favour, which will be found in Escobar's chapter on larceny, no. 13:
'A wife,' says he, 'may gamble, and for this purpose may pilfer money
from her husband.'"
"Well, father, that is capital!
"There are many other good things besides that," said the father;
"but we must waive them and say a little about those more important
maxims, which facilitate the practice of holy things- the manner of
attending mass, for example. On this subject, our great divines,
Gaspard Hurtado and Coninck, have taught 'that it is quite sufficient
to be present at mass in body, though we may be absent in spirit,
provided we maintain an outwardly respectful deportment.' Vasquez goes
a step further, maintaining 'that one fulfils the precept of hearing
mass, even though one should go with no such intention at all.' All
this is repeatedly laid down by Escobar, who, in one passage,
illustrates the point by the example of those who are dragged to mass
by force, and who put on a fixed resolution not to listen to it."
"Truly, sir," said I, "had any other person told me that, I would
not have believed it."
"In good sooth," he replied, "it requires all the support which
the authority of these great names can lend it; and so does the
following maxim by the same Escobar, 'that even a wicked intention,
such as that of ogling the women, joined to that of hearing mass
rightly, does not hinder a man from fulfilling the service.' But
another very convenient device, suggested by our learned brother
Turrian, is that 'one may hear the half of a mass from one priest, and
the other half from another; and that it makes no difference though he
should hear first the conclusion of the one, and then the commencement
of the other.' I might also mention that it has been decided by
several of our doctors to be lawful 'to hear the two halves of a mass
at the same time, from the lips of two different priests, one of whom
is commencing the mass, while the other is at the elevation; it being
quite possible to attend to both parties at once, and two halves of a
mass making a whole- duae medietates unam missam constituunt.' 'From
all which,' says Escobar, 'I conclude, that you may hear mass in a
very short period of time; if, for example, you should happen to hear
four masses going on at the same time, so arranged that when the first
is at the commencement, the second is at the gospel, the third at the
consecration, and the last at the communion.'"
"Certainly, father, according to that plan, one may hear mass any
day at Notre Dame in a twinkling."
"Well," replied he, "that just shows how admirably we have
succeeded in facilitating the hearing of mass. But I am anxious now to
show you how we have softened the use of the sacraments, and
particularly that of penance. It is here that the benignity of our
fathers shines in its truest splendour; and you will be really
astonished to find that devotion, a thing which the world is so much
afraid of, should have been treated by our doctors with such
consummate skill that, to use the words of Father Le Moine, in his
Devotion Made Easy, demolishing the bugbear which the devil had placed
at its threshold, they have rendered it easier than vice and more
agreeable than pleasure; so that, in fact, simply to live is
incomparably more irksome than to live well. Is that not a marvellous
change, now?"
"Indeed, father, I cannot help telling you a bit of my mind: I am
sadly afraid that you have overshot the mark, and that this indulgence
of yours will shock more people than it will attract. The mass, for
example, is a thing so grand and so holy that, in the eyes of a great
many, it would be enough to blast the credit of your doctors forever
to show them how you have spoken of it."
"With a certain class," replied the monk, "I allow that may be the
case; but do you not know that we accommodate ourselves to all sorts
of persons? You seem to have lost all recollection of what I have
repeatedly told you on this point. The first time you are at leisure,
therefore, I propose that we make this the theme of our conversation,
deferring till then the lenitives we have introduced into the
confessional. I promise to make you understand it so well that you
will never forget it."
With these words we parted, so that our next conversation, I
presume, will turn on the policy of the Society. I am,
P.S. Since writing the above, I have seen Paradise Opened by a
Hundred Devotions Easily Practised, by Father Barry; and also the Mark
of Predestination, by Father Binet; both of them pieces well worth the
seeing.
I have not come yet to the policy of the Society, but shall first
introduce you to one of its leading principles. I refer to the
palliatives which they have applied to confession, and which are
unquestionably the best of all the schemes they have fallen upon to
"attract all and repel none." It is absolutely necessary to know
something of this before going any further; and, accordingly, the monk
judged it expedient to give me some instructions on the point, nearly
as follows:
"From what I have already stated," he observed, "you may judge of
the success with which our doctors have laboured to discover, in their
wisdom, that a great many things, formerly regarded as forbidden, are
innocent and allowable; but as there are some sins for which one can
find no excuse, and for which there is no remedy but confession, it
became necessary to alleviate, by the methods I am now going to
mention, the difficulties attending that practice. Thus, having shown
you, in our previous conversations, how we relieve people from
troublesome scruples of conscience by showing them that what they
believed to be sinful was indeed quite innocent, I proceed now to
illustrate our convenient plan for expiating what is really sinful,
which is effected by making confession as easy a process as it was
formerly a painful one."
"And how do you manage that, father?"
"Why," said he, "it is by those admirable subtleties which are
peculiar to our Company, and have been styled by our fathers in
Flanders, in The Image of the First Century, 'the pious finesse, the
holy artifice of devotion- piam et religiosam calliditatem, et
pietatis solertiam.' By the aid of these inventions, as they remark in
the same place, 'crimes may be expiated nowadays alacrius- with more
zeal and alacrity than they were committed in former days, and a great
many people may be washed from their stains almost as cleverly as they
contracted them- plurimi vix citius maculas contrahunt quam eluunt.'"
"Pray, then, father, do teach me some of these most salutary
lessons of finesse."
"We have a good number of them, answered the monk; "for there are
a great many irksome things about confession, and for each of these we
have devised a palliative. The chief difficulties connected with this
ordinance are the shame of confessing certain sins, the trouble of
specifying the circumstances of others, the penance exacted for them,
the resolution against relapsing into them, the avoidance of the
proximate occasions of sins, and the regret for having committed them.
I hope to convince you to-day that it is now possible to get over all
this with hardly any trouble at all; such is the care we have taken to
allay the bitterness and nauseousness of this very necessary medicine.
For, to begin with the difficulty of confessing certain sins, you are
aware it is of importance often to keep in the good graces of one's
confessor; now, must it not be extremely convenient to be permitted,
as you are by our doctors, particularly Escobar and Suarez, 'to have
two confessors, one for the mortal sins and another for the venial, in
order to maintain a fair character with your ordinary confessor- uti
bonam famam apud ordinarium tueatur- provided you do not take occasion
from thence to indulge in mortal sin?' This is followed by another
ingenious contrivance for confessing a sin, even to the ordinary
confessor, without his perceiving that it was committed since the last
confession, which is, 'to make a general confession, and huddle this
last sin in a lump among the rest which we confess.' And I am sure you
will own that the following decision of Father Bauny goes far to
alleviate the shame which one must feel in confessing his relapses,
namely, 'that, except in certain cases, which rarely occur, the
confessor is not entitled to ask his penitent if the sin of which he
accuses himself is an habitual one, nor is the latter obliged to
answer such a question; because the confessor has no right to subject
his penitent to the shame of disclosing his frequent relapses.'"
"Indeed, father! I might as well say that a physician has no right
to ask his patient if it is long since he had the fever. Do not sins
assume quite a different aspect according to circumstances? and should
it not be the object of a genuine penitent to discover the whole state
of his conscience to his confessor, with the same sincerity and
open-heartedness as if he were speaking to Jesus Christ himself, whose
place the priest occupies? If so, how far is he from realizing such a
disposition who, by concealing the frequency of his relapses, conceals
the aggravations of his offence!"
I saw that this puzzled the worthy monk, for he attempted to elude
rather than resolve the difficulty by turning my attention to another
of their rules, which only goes to establish a fresh abuse, instead of
justifying in the least the decision of Father Bauny; a decision
which, in my opinion, is one of the most pernicious of their maxims,
and calculated to encourage profligate men to continue in their evil
habits.
"I grant you," replied the father, "that habit aggravates the
malignity of a sin, but it does not alter its nature; and that is the
reason why we do not insist on people confessing it, according to the
rule laid down by our fathers, and quoted by Escobar, 'that one is
only obliged to confess the circumstances that alter the species of
the sin, and not those that aggravate it.' Proceeding on this rule,
Father Granados says, 'that if one has eaten flesh in Lent, all he
needs to do is to confess that he has broken the fast, without
specifying whether it was by eating flesh, or by taking two fish
meals.' And, according to Reginald, 'a sorcerer who has employed the
diabolical art is not obliged to reveal that circumstance; it is
enough to say that he has dealt in magic, without expressing whether
it was by palmistry or by a paction with the devil.' Fagundez, again,
has decided that 'rape is not a circumstance which one is bound to
reveal, if the woman give her consent.' All this is quoted by Escobar,
with many other very curious decisions as to these circumstances,
which you may consult at your leisure."
"These 'artifices of devotion' are vastly convenient in their
way," I observed.
"And yet," said the father, "notwithstanding all that, they would
go for nothing, sir, unless we had proceeded to mollify penance,
which, more than anything else, deters people from confession. Now,
however, the most squeamish have nothing to dread from it, after what
we have advanced in our theses of the College of Clermont, where we
hold that, if the confessor imposes a suitable penance, and the
penitent be unwilling to submit himself to it, the latter may go home,
'waiving both the penance and the absolution.' Or, as Escobar says, in
giving the Practice of our Society, 'if the penitent declare his
willingness to have his penance remitted to the next world, and to
suffer in purgatory all the pains due to him, the confessor may, for
the honour of the sacrament, impose a very light penance on him,
particularly if he has reason to believe that this penitent would
object to a heavier one.'"
"I really think," said I, "that, if that is the case, we ought no
longer to call confession the sacrament of penance."
"You are wrong," he replied; "for we always administer something
in the way of penance, for the form's sake."
"But, father, do you suppose that a man is worthy of receiving
absolution when he will submit to nothing painful to expiate his
offences? And, in these circumstances, ought you not to retain rather
than remit their sins? Are you not aware of the extent of your
ministry, and that you have the power of binding and loosing? Do you
imagine that you are at liberty to give absolution indifferently to
all who ask it, and without ascertaining beforehand if Jesus Christ
looses in heaven those whom you loose on earth?"
"What!" cried the father, "do you suppose that we do not know that
'the confessor (as one remarks) ought to sit in judgement on the
disposition of his penitent, both because he is bound not to dispense
the sacraments to the unworthy, Jesus Christ having enjoined him to be
a faithful steward and not give that which is holy unto dogs; and
because he is a judge, and it is the duty of a judge to give righteous
judgement, by loosing the worthy and binding the unworthy, and he
ought not to absolve those whom Jesus Christ condemns.'
"Whose words are these, father?"
"They are the words of our father Filiutius," he replied.
"You astonish me," said I; "I took them to be a quotation from one
of the fathers of the Church. At all events, sir, that passage ought
to make an impression on the confessors, and render them very
circumspect in the dispensation of this sacrament, to ascertain
whether the regret of their penitents is sufficient, and whether their
promises of future amendment are worthy of credit."
"That is not such a difficult matter," replied the father;
"Filiutius had more sense than to leave confessors in that dilemma,
and accordingly he suggests an easy way of getting out of it, in the
words immediately following: 'The confessor may easily set his mind at
rest as to the disposition of his penitent; for, if he fail to give
sufficient evidence of sorrow, the confessor has only to ask him if he
does not detest the sin in his heart, and, if he answers that he does,
he is bound to believe it. The same thing may be said of resolutions
as to the future, unless the case involves an obligation to
restitution, or to avoid some proximate occasion of sin.'"
"As to that passage, father, I can easily believe that it is
Filiutius' own."
"You are mistaken though," said the father, "for he has extracted
it, word for word, from Suarez."
"But, father, that last passage from Filiutius overturns what he
had laid down in the former. For confessors can no longer be said to
sit as judges on the disposition of their penitents, if they are bound
to take it simply upon their word, in the absence of all satisfying
signs of contrition. Are the professions made on such occasions so
infallible, that no other sign is needed? I question much if
experience has taught your fathers that all who make fair promises are
remarkable for keeping them; I am mistaken if they have not often
found the reverse."
"No matter," replied the monk; "confessors are bound to believe
them for all that; for Father Bauny, who has probed this question to
the bottom, has concluded 'that at whatever time those who have fallen
into frequent relapses, without giving evidence of amendment, present
themselves before a confessor, expressing their regret for the past,
and a good purpose for the future, he is bound to believe them on
their simple averment, although there may be reason to presume that
such resolution only came from the teeth outwards. Nay,' says he,
'though they should indulge subsequently to greater excess than ever
in the same delinquencies, still, in my opinion, they may receive
absolution.' There now! that, I am sure, should silence you."
"But, father," said I, "you impose a great hardship, I think, on
the confessors, by thus obliging them to believe the very reverse of
what they see."
"You don't understand it," returned he; "all that is meant is that
they are obliged to act and absolve as if they believed that their
penitents would be true to their engagements, though, in point of
fact, they believe no such thing. This is explained, immediately
afterwards, by Suarez and Filiutius. After having said that 'the
priest is bound to believe the penitent on his word,' they add: 'It is
not necessary that the confessor should be convinced that the good
resolution of his penitent will be carried into effect, nor even that
he should judge it probable; it is enough that he thinks the person
has at the time the design in general, though he may very shortly
after relapse. Such is the doctrine of all our authors- ita docent
omnes autores.' Will you presume to doubt what has been taught by our
authors?"
"But, sir, what then becomes of what Father Petau himself is
obliged to own, in the preface to his Public Penance, 'that the holy
fathers, doctors, and councils of the Church agree in holding it as a
settled point that the penance preparatory to the eucharist must be
genuine, constant, resolute, and not languid and sluggish, or subject
to after-thoughts and relapses?'"
"Don't you observe," replied the monk, "that Father Petau is
speaking of the ancient Church? But all that is now so little in
season, to use a common saying of our doctors, that, according to
Father Bauny, the reverse is the only true view of the matter. 'There
are some,' says he, 'who maintain that absolution ought to be refused
to those who fall frequently into the same sin, more especially if,
after being often absolved, they evince no signs of amendment; and
others hold the opposite view. But the only true opinion is that they
ought not to be refused absolution; and, though they should be nothing
the better of all the advice given them, though they should have
broken all their promises to lead new lives, and been at no trouble to
purify themselves, still it is of no consequence; whatever may be said
to the contrary, the true opinion which ought to be followed is that
even in all these cases, they ought to be absolved.' And again:
'Absolution ought neither to be denied nor delayed in the case of
those who live in habitual sins against the law of God, of nature, and
of the Church, although there should be no apparent prospect of future
amendment- etsi emendationis futurae nulla spes appareat.'"
"But, father, this certainty of always getting absolution may
induce sinners- "
"I know what you mean," interrupted the Jesuit; "but listen to
Father Bauny, Q. 15: 'Absolution may be given even to him who candidly
avows that the hope of being absolved induced him to sin with more
freedom than he would otherwise have done.' And Father Caussin,
defending this proposition, says 'that, were this not true, confession
would be interdicted to the greater part of mankind; and the only
resource left poor sinners would be a branch and a rope.'"
"O father, how these maxims of yours will draw people to your
confessionals!"
"Yes, he replied, "you would hardly believe what numbers are in
the habit of frequenting them; 'we are absolutely oppressed and
overwhelmed, so to speak, under the crowd of our penitents-
penitentium numero obruimur'- as is said in The Image of the First
Century."
"I could suggest a very simple method," said I, "to escape from
this inconvenient pressure. You have only to oblige sinners to avoid
the proximate occasions of sin; that single expedient would afford you
relief at once."
"We have no wish for such a relief," rejoined the monk; "quite the
reverse; for, as is observed in the same book, 'the great end of our
Society is to labor to establish the virtues, to wage war on the
vices, and to save a great number of souls.' Now, as there are very
few souls inclined to quit the proximate occasions of sin, we have
been obliged to define what a proximate occasion is. 'That cannot be
called a proximate occasion,' says Escobar, 'where one sins but
rarely, or on a sudden transport- say three or four times a year'; or,
as Father Bauny has it, once or twice in a month.' Again, asks this
author, 'what is to be done in the case of masters and servants, or
cousins, who, living under the same roof, are by this occasion tempted
to sin?'"
"They ought to be separated," said I.
"That is what he says, too, 'if their relapses be very frequent:
but if the parties offend rarely, and cannot be separated without
trouble and loss, they may, according to Suarez and other authors, be
absolved, provided they promise to sin no more, and are truly sorry
for what is past.'"
This required no explanation, for he had already informed me with
what sort of evidence of contrition the confessor was bound to rest
satisfied.
"And Father Bauny," continued the monk, "permits those who are
involved in the proximate occasions of sin, 'to remain as they are,
when they cannot avoid them without becoming the common talk of the
world, or subjecting themselves to inconvenience.' 'A priest,' he
remarks in another work, 'may and ought to absolve a woman who is
guilty of living with a paramour, if she cannot put him away
honourably, or has some reason for keeping him- si non potest honeste
ejicere, aut habeat aliquam causam retinendi- provided she promises to
act more virtuously for the future.'"
"Well, father," cried I, "you have certainly succeeded in relaxing
the obligation of avoiding the occasions of sin to a very comfortable
extent, by dispensing with the duty as soon as it becomes
inconvenient; but I should think your fathers will at least allow it
be binding when there is no difficulty in the way of its performance?"
"Yes," said the father, "though even then the rule is not without
exceptions. For Father Bauny says, in the same place, 'that any one
may frequent profligate houses, with the view of converting their
unfortunate inmates, though the probability should be that he fall
into sin, having often experienced before that he has yielded to their
fascinations. Some doctors do not approve of this opinion, and hold
that no man may voluntarily put his salvation in peril to succour his
neighbor; yet I decidedly embrace the opinion which they controvert.'"
"A novel sort of preachers these, father! But where does Father
Bauny find any ground for investing them with such a mission?"
"It is upon one of his own principles," he replied, "which he
announces in the same place after Basil Ponce. I mentioned it to you
before, and I presume you have not forgotten it. It is, 'that one may
seek an occasion of sin, directly and expressly- primo et per se- to
promote the temporal or spiritual good of himself or his neighbour.'"
On hearing these passages, I felt so horrified that I was on the
point of breaking out; but, being resolved to hear him to an end, I
restrained myself, and merely inquired: "How, father, does this
doctrine comport with that of the Gospel, which binds us to 'pluck out
the right eye,' and 'cut off the right hand,' when they 'offend,' or
prove prejudicial to salvation? And how can you suppose that the man
who wilfully indulges in the occasions of sins, sincerely hates sin?
Is it not evident, on the contrary, that he has never been properly
touched with a sense of it, and that he has not yet experienced that
genuine conversion of heart, which makes a man love God as much as he
formerly loved the creature?"
"Indeed!" cried he, "do you call that genuine contrition? It seems
you do not know that, as Father Pintereau says, 'all our fathers
teach, with one accord, that it is an error, and almost a heresy, to
hold that contrition is necessary; or that attrition alone, induced by
the sole motive, the fear of the pains of hell, which excludes a
disposition to offend, is not sufficient with the sacrament?'"
"What, father! do you mean to say that it is almost an article of
faith that attrition, induced merely by fear of punishment, is
sufficient with the sacrament? That idea, I think, is peculiar to your
fathers; for those other doctors who hold that attrition is sufficient
along with the sacrament, always take care to show that it must be
accompanied with some love to God at least. It appears to me,
moreover, that even your own authors did not always consider this
doctrine of yours so certain. Your Father Suarez, for instance, speaks
of it thus: 'Although it is a probable opinion that attrition is
sufficient with the sacrament, yet it is not certain, and it may be
false- non est certa, et potest esse falsa. And, if it is false,
attrition is not sufficient to save a man; and he that dies knowingly
in this state, wilfully exposes himself to the grave peril of eternal
damnation. For this opinion is neither very ancient nor very common-
nec valde antiqua, nec multum communis.' Sanchez was not more prepared
to hold it as infallible when he said in his Summary that 'the sick
man and his confessor, who content themselves at the hour of death
with attrition and the sacrament, are both chargeable with mortal sin,
on account of the great risk of damnation to which the penitent would
be exposed, if the opinion that attrition is sufficient with the
sacrament should not turn out to be true. Comitolus, too, says that
'we should not be too sure that attrition suffices with the
sacrament.'"
Here the worthy father interrupted me. "What!" he cried, "you read
our authors then, it seems? That is all very well; but it would be
still better were you never to read them without the precaution of
having one of us beside you. Do you not see, now, that, from having
read them alone, you have concluded, in your simplicity, that these
passages bear hard on those who have more lately supported our
doctrine of attrition? Whereas it might be shown that nothing could
set them off to greater advantage. Only think what a triumph it is for
our fathers of the present day to have succeeded in disseminating
their opinion in such short time, and to such an extent that, with the
exception of theologians, nobody almost would ever suppose but that
our modern views on this subject had been the uniform belief of the
faithful in all ages! So that, in fact, when you have shown, from our
fathers themselves, that, a few years ago, 'this opinion was not
certain,' you have only succeeded in giving our modern authors the
whole merit of its establishment!
"Accordingly," he continued, "our cordial friend Diana, to gratify
us, no doubt, has recounted the various steps by which the opinion
reached its present position. 'In former days, the ancient schoolmen
maintained that contrition was necessary as soon as one had committed
a mortal sin; since then, however, it has been thought that it is not
binding except on festival days; afterwards, only when some great
calamity threatened the people; others, again, that it ought not to be
long delayed at the approach of death. But our fathers, Hurtado and
Vasquez, have ably refuted all these opinions and established that one
is not bound to contrition unless he cannot be absolved in any other
way, or at the point of death!' But, to continue the wonderful
progress of this doctrine, I might add, what our fathers, Fagundez,
Granados, and Escobar, have decided, 'that contrition is not necessary
even at death; because,' say they, 'if attrition with the sacrament
did not suffice at death, it would follow that attrition would not be
sufficient with the sacrament. And the learned Hurtado, cited by Diana
and Escobar, goes still further; for he asks: 'Is that sorrow for sin
which flows solely from apprehension of its temporal consequences,
such as having lost health or money, sufficient? We must distinguish.
If the evil is not regarded as sent by the hand of God, such a sorrow
does not suffice; but if the evil is viewed as sent by God, as, in
fact, all evil, says Diana, except sin, comes from him, that kind of
sorrow is sufficient.' Our Father Lamy holds the same doctrine."
"You surprise me, father; for I see nothing in all that attrition
of which you speak but what is natural; and in this way a sinner may
render himself worthy of absolution without supernatural grace at all.
Now everybody knows that this is a heresy condemned by the Council."
"I should have thought with you," he replied; "and yet it seems
this must not be the case, for the fathers of our College of Clermont
have maintained (in their Theses of the 23rd May and 6th June 1644)
'that attrition may be holy and sufficient for the sacrament, although
it may not be supernatural'; and (in that of August 1643) 'that
attrition, though merely natural, is sufficient for the sacrament,
provided it is honest.' I do not see what more could be said on the
subject, unless we choose to subjoin an inference, which may be easily
drawn from these principles, namely, that contrition, so far from
being necessary to the sacrament, is rather prejudicial to it,
inasmuch as, by washing away sins of itself, it would leave nothing
for the sacrament to do at all. That is, indeed, exactly what the
celebrated Jesuit Father Valencia remarks. (Book iv, disp.7, q.8,
p.4.) 'Contrition,' says he, 'is by no means necessary in order to
obtain the principal benefit of the sacrament; on the contrary, it is
rather an obstacle in the way of it- imo obstat potius quominus
effectus sequatur.' Nobody could well desire more to be said in
commendation of attrition."
"I believe that, father, said I; "but you must allow me to tell
you my opinion, and to show you to what a dreadful length this
doctrine leads. When you say that 'attrition, induced by the mere
dread of punishment,' is sufficient, with the sacrament, to justify
sinners, does it not follow that a person may always expiate his sins
in this way, and thus be saved without ever having loved God all his
lifetime? Would your fathers venture to hold that?"
"I perceive," replied the monk, "from the strain of your remarks,
that you need some information on the doctrine of our fathers
regarding the love of God. This is the last feature of their morality,
and the most important of all. You must have learned something of it
from the passages about contrition which I have quoted to you. But
here are others still more definite on the point of love to God- Don't
interrupt me, now; for it is of importance to notice the connection.
Attend to Escobar, who reports the different opinions of our authors,
in his Practice of the Love of God according to our Society. The
question is: 'When is one obliged to have an actual affection for
God?' Suarez says it is enough if one loves Him before being articulo
mortis- at the point of death- without determining the exact time.
Vasquez, that it is sufficient even at the very point of death.
Others, when one has received baptism. Others, again, when one is
bound to exercise contrition. And others, on festival days. But our
father, Castro Palao, combats all these opinions, and with good
reason- merito. Hurtado de Mendoza insists that we are obliged to love
God once a year; and that we ought to regard it as a great favour that
we are not bound to do it oftener. But our Father Coninck thinks that
we are bound to it only once in three or four years; Henriquez, once
in five years; and Filiutius says that it is probable that we are not
strictly bound to it even once in five years. How often, then, do you
ask? Why, he refers it to the judgement of the judicious."
I took no notice of all this badinage, in which the ingenuity of
man seems to be sporting, in the height of insolence, with the love of
God.
"But," pursued the monk, "our Father Antony Sirmond surpasses all
on this point, in his admirable book, The Defence of Virtue, where, as
he tells the reader, 'he speaks French in France,' as follows: 'St.
Thomas says that we are obliged to love God as soon as we come to the
use of reason: that is rather too soon! Scotus says every Sunday;
pray, for what reason? Others say when we are sorely tempted: yes, if
there be no other way of escaping the temptation. Scotus says when we
have received a benefit from God: good, in the way of thanking Him for
it. Others say at death: rather late! As little do I think it binding
at the reception of any sacrament: attrition in such cases is quite
enough, along with confession, if convenient. Suarez says that it is
binding at some time or another; but at what time?- he leaves you to
judge of that for yourself- he does not know; and what that doctor did
not know I know not who should know.' In short, he concludes that we
are not strictly bound to more than to keep the other commandments,
without any affection for God, and without giving Him our hearts,
provided that we do not hate Him. To prove this is the sole object of
his second treatise. You will find it in every page; more especially
where he says: 'God, in commanding us to love Him, is satisfied with
our obeying Him in his other commandments. If God had said: "Whatever
obedience thou yieldest me, if thy heart is not given to me, I will
destroy thee!" would such a motive, think you, be well fitted to
promote the end which God must, and only can, have in view? Hence it
is said that we shall love God by doing His will, as if we loved Him
with affection, as if the motive in this case was real charity. If
that is really our motive, so much the better; if not, still we are
strictly fulfilling the commandment of love, by having its works, so
that (such is the goodness of God!) we are commanded, not so much to
love Him, as not to hate Him.'
"Such is the way in which our doctors have discharged men from the
painful obligation of actually loving God. And this doctrine is so
advantageous that our Fathers Annat, Pintereau, Le Moine, and Antony
Sirmond himself, have strenuously defended it when it has been
attacked. You have only to consult their answers to the Moral
Theology. That of Father Pintereau, in particular, will enable you to
form some idea of the value of this dispensation, from the price which
he tells us that it cost, which is no less than the blood of Jesus
Christ. This crowns the whole. It appears, that this dispensation from
the painful obligation to love God, is the privilege of the
Evangelical law, in opposition to the Judaical. 'It was reasonable,'
he says, 'that, under the law of grace in the New Testament, God
should relieve us from that troublesome and arduous obligation which
existed under the law of bondage, to exercise an act of perfect
contrition, in order to be justified; and that the place of this
should be supplied by the sacraments, instituted in aid of an easier
disposition. Otherwise, indeed, Christians, who are the children,
would have no greater facility in gaining the good graces of their
Father than the Jews, who were the slaves, had in obtaining the mercy
of their Lord and Master.'"
"O father!" cried I; "no patience can stand this any longer. It is
impossible to listen without horror to the sentiments I have just
heard."
"They are not my sentiments," said the monk.
"I grant it, sir," said I; "but you feel no aversion to them; and,
so far from detesting the authors of these maxims, you hold them in
esteem. Are you not afraid that your consent may involve you in a
participation of their guilt? and are you not aware that St. Paul
judges worthy of death, not only the authors of evil things, but also
'those who have pleasure in them that do them?' Was it not enough to
have permitted men to indulge in so many forbidden things under the
covert of your palliations? Was it necessary to go still further and
hold out a bribe to them to commit even those crimes which you found
it impossible to excuse, by offering them an easy and certain
absolution; and for this purpose nullifying the power of the priests,
and obliging them, more as slaves than as judges, to absolve the most
inveterate sinners- without any amendment of life, without any sign of
contrition except promises a hundred times broken, without penance
'unless they choose to accept of it', and without abandoning the
occasions of their vices, 'if they should thereby be put to any
inconvenience?'
"But your doctors have gone even beyond this; and the license
which they have assumed to tamper with the most holy rules of
Christian conduct amounts to a total subversion of the law of God.
They violate 'the great commandment on which hang all the law and the
prophets'; they strike at the very heart of piety; they rob it of the
spirit that giveth life; they hold that to love God is not necessary
to salvation; and go so far as to maintain that 'this dispensation
from loving God is the privilege which Jesus Christ has introduced
into the world!' This, sir, is the very climax of impiety. The price
of the blood of Jesus Christ paid to obtain us a dispensation from
loving Him! Before the incarnation, it seems men were obliged to love
God; but since 'God has so loved the world as to give His only
begotten Son,' the world, redeemed by him, is released from loving
Him! Strange divinity of our days- to dare to take off the 'anathema'
which St. Paul denounces on those 'that love not the Lord Jesus!' To
cancel the sentence of St. John: 'He that loveth not, abideth in
death!' and that of Jesus Christ himself: 'He that loveth me not
keepeth not my precepts!' and thus to render those worthy of enjoying
God through eternity who never loved God all their life! Behold the
Mystery of Iniquity fulfilled! Open your eyes at length, my dear
father, and if the other aberrations of your casuists have made no
impression on you, let these last, by their very extravagance, compel
you to abandon them. This is what I desire from the bottom of my
heart, for your own sake and for the sake of your doctors; and my
prayer to God is that He would vouchsafe to convince them how false
the light must be that has guided them to such precipices; and that He
would fill their hearts with that love of Himself from which they have
dared to give man a dispensation!"
After some remarks of this nature, I took my leave of the monk,
and I see no great likelihood of my repeating my visits to him. This,
however, need not occasion you any regret; for, should it be necessary
to continue these communications on their maxims, I have studied their
books sufficiently to tell you as much of their morality, and more,
perhaps, of their policy, than he could have done himself. I am,
I have seen the letters which you are circulating in opposition to
those which I wrote to one of my friends on your morality; and I
perceive that one of the principal points of your defence is that I
have not spoken of your maxims with sufficient seriousness. This
charge you repeat in all your productions, and carry it so far as to
allege, that I have been "guilty of turning sacred things into
ridicule."
Such a charge, fathers, is no less surprising than it is
unfounded. Where do you find that I have turned sacred things into
ridicule? You specify "the Mohatra contract, and the story of John
d'Alba." But are these what you call "sacred things?" Does it really
appear to you that the Mohatra is something so venerable that it would
be blasphemy not to speak of it with respect? And the lessons of
Father Bauny on larceny, which led John d'Alba to practise it at your
expense, are they so sacred as to entitle you to stigmatize all who
laugh at them as profane people?
What, fathers! must the vagaries of your doctors pass for the
verities of the Christian faith, and no man be allowed to ridicule
Escobar, or the fantastical and unchristian dogmas of your authors,
without being stigmatized as jesting at religion? Is it possible you
can have ventured to reiterate so often an idea so utterly
unreasonable? Have you no fears that, in blaming me for laughing at
your absurdities, you may only afford me fresh subject of merriment;
that you may make the charge recoil on yourselves, by showing that I
have really selected nothing from your writings as the matter of
raillery but what was truly ridiculous; and that thus, in making a
jest of your morality, I have been as far from jeering at holy things,
as the doctrine of your casuists is far from being the holy doctrine
of the Gospel?
Indeed, reverend sirs, there is a vast difference between laughing
at religion and laughing at those who profane it by their extravagant
opinions. It were impiety to be wanting in respect for the verities
which the Spirit of God has revealed; but it were no less impiety of
another sort to be wanting in contempt for the falsities which the
spirit of man opposes to them.
For, fathers (since you will force me into this argument), I
beseech you to consider that, just in proportion as Christian truths
are worthy of love and respect, the contrary errors must deserve
hatred and contempt; there being two things in the truths of our
religion: a divine beauty that renders them lovely, and a sacred
majesty that renders them venerable; and two things also about errors:
an impiety, that makes them horrible, and an impertinence that renders
them ridiculous. For these reasons, while the saints have ever
cherished towards the truth the twofold sentiment of love and fear-
the whole of their wisdom being comprised between fear, which is its
beginning, and love, which is its end- they have, at the same time,
entertained towards error the twofold feeling of hatred and contempt,
and their zeal has been at once employed to repel, by force of
reasoning, the malice of the wicked, and to chastise, by the aid of
ridicule, their extravagance and folly.
Do not then expect, fathers, to make people believe that it is
unworthy of a Christian to treat error with derision. Nothing is
easier than to convince all who were not aware of it before that this
practice is perfectly just- that it is common with the fathers of the
Church, and that it is sanctioned by Scripture, by the example of the
best of saints, and even by that of God himself.
Do we not find God at once hates and despises sinners; so that
even at the hour of death, when their condition is most sad and
deplorable, Divine Wisdom adds mockery to the vengeance which consigns
them to eternal punishment? "In interitu vestro ridebo et subsannabo-
I will laugh at your calamity." The saints, too, influenced by the
same feeling, will join in the derision; for, according to David, when
they witness the punishment of the wicked, "they shall fear, and yet
laugh at it- videbunt justi et timebunt, et super eum ridebunt." And
Job says: "Innocens subsannabit eos- The innocent shall laugh at
them."
It is worthy of remark here that the very first words which God
addressed to man after his fall contain, in the opinion of the
fathers, "bitter irony" and mockery. After Adam had disobeyed his
Maker, in the hope, suggested by the devil, of being like God, it
appears from Scripture that God, as a punishment, subjected him to
death; and after having reduced him to this miserable condition, which
was due to his sin, He taunted him in that state with the following
terms of derision: "Behold, the man has become as one of us!- Ecce
Adam quasi unus ex nobis!"- which, according to St. Jerome and the
interpreters, is "a grievous and cutting piece of irony," with which
God "stung him to the quick." "Adam," says Rupert, "deserved to be
taunted in this manner, and he would be naturally made to feel his
folly more acutely by this ironical expression than by a more serious
one." St. Victor, after making the same remark, adds, "that this irony
was due to his sottish credulity, and that this species of rainery is
an act of justice, merited by him against whom it was directed."
Thus you see, fathers, that ridicule is, in some cases, a very
appropriate means of reclaiming men from their errors, and that it is
accordingly an act of justice, because, as Jeremiah says, "the actions
of those that err are worthy of derision, because of their vanity-
vana sunt es risu digna." And so far from its being impious to laugh
at them, St. Augustine holds it to be the effect of divine wisdom:
"The wise laugh at the foolish, because they are wise, not after their
own wisdom, but after that divine wisdom which shall laugh at the
death of the wicked."
The prophets, accordingly, filled with the Spirit of God, have
availed themselves of ridicule, as we find from the examples of Daniel
and Elias. In short, examples of it are not wanting in the discourses
of Jesus Christ himself. St. Augustine remarks that, when he would
humble Nicodemus, who deemed himself so expert in his knowledge of the
law, "perceiving him to be pulled up with pride, from his rank as
doctor of the Jews, he first beats down his presumption by the
magnitude of his demands, and, having reduced him so low that he was
unable to answer, What! says he, you a master in Israel, and not know
these things!- as if he had said, Proud ruler, confess that thou
knowest nothing." St. Chrysostom and St. Cyril likewise observe upon
this that "he deserved to be ridiculed in this manner."
You may learn from this, fathers, that should it so happen, in our
day that persons who enact the part of "masters" among Christians, as
Nicodemus and the Pharisees did among the Jews, show themselves so
ignorant of the first principles of religion as to maintain, for
example, that "a man may be saved who never loved God all his life,"
we only follow the example of Jesus Christ when we laugh at such a
combination of ignorance and conceit.
I am sure, fathers, these sacred examples are sufficient to
convince you that to deride the errors and extravagances of man is not
inconsistent with the practice of the saints; otherwise we must blame
that of the greatest doctors of the Church, who have been guilty of
it- such as St. Jerome, in his letters and writings against Jovinian,
Vigilantius, and the Pelagians; Tertullian, in his Apology against the
follies of idolaters; St. Augustine against the monks of Africa, whom
he styles "the hairy men"; St. Irenaeus the Gnostics; St. Bernard and
the other fathers of the Church, who, having been the imitators of the
apostles, ought to be imitated by the faithful in all time coming;
for, say what we will, they are the true models for Christians, even
of the present day.
In following such examples, I conceived that I could not go far
wrong; and, as I think I have sufficiently established this position,
I shall only add, in the admirable words of Tertullian, which give the
true explanation of the whole of my proceeding in this matter: "What I
have now done is only a little sport before the real combat. I have
rather indicated the wounds that might be given you than inflicted
any. If the reader has met with passages which have excited his
risibility, he must ascribe this to the subjects themselves. There are
many things which deserve to be held up in this way to ridicule and
mockery, lest, by a serious refutation, we should attach a weight to
them which they do not deserve. Nothing is more due to vanity than
laughter; and it is the Truth properly that has a right to laugh,
because she is cheerful, and to make sport of her enemies, because she
is sure of the victory. Care must be taken, indeed, that the raillery
is not too low, and unworthy of the truth; but, keeping this in view,
when ridicule may be employed with effect, it is a duty to avail
ourselves of it." Do you not think fathers, that this passage is
singularly applicable to our subject? The letters which I have
hitherto written are "merely a little sport before a real combat." As
yet, I have been only playing with the foils and "rather indicating
the wounds that might be given you than inflicting any." I have merely
exposed your passages to the light, without making scarcely a
reflection on them. "If the reader has met with any that have excited
his risibility, he must ascribe this to the subjects themselves." And,
indeed, what is more fitted to raise a laugh than to see a matter so
grave as that of Christian morality decked out with fancies so
grotesque as those in which you have exhibited it? One is apt to form
such high anticipations of these maxims, from being told that "Jesus
Christ himself has revealed them to the fathers of the Society," that
when one discovers among them such absurdities as "that a priest,
receiving money to say a mass, may take additional sums from other
persons by giving up to them his own share in the sacrifice"; "that a
monk is not to be excommunicated for putting off his habit, provided
it is to dance, swindle, or go incognito into infamous houses"; and
"that the duty of hearing mass may be fulfilled by listening to four
quarters of a mass at once from different priests"- when, I say, one
listens to such decisions as these, the surprise is such that it is
impossible to refrain from laughing; for nothing is more calculated to
produce that emotion than a startling contrast between the thing
looked for and the thing looked at. And why should the greater part of
these maxims be treated in any other way? As Tertullian says, "To
treat them seriously would be to sanction them."
What! is it necessary to bring up all the forces of Scripture and
tradition, in order to prove that running a sword through a man's
body, covertly and behind his back, is to murder him in treachery? or,
that to give one money as a motive to resign a benefice, is to
purchase the benefice? Yes, there are things which it is duty to
despise, and which "deserve only to be laughed at." In short, the
remark of that ancient author, "that nothing is more due to vanity
than derision, with what follows, applies to the case before us so
justly and so convincingly, as to put it beyond all question that we
may laugh at errors without violating propriety.
And let me add, fathers, that this may be done without any breach
of charity either, though this is another of the charges you bring
against me in your publications. For, according to St. Augustine,
"charity may sometimes oblige us to ridicule the errors of men, that
they may be induced to laugh at them in their turn, and renounce them-
Haec tu misericorditer irride, ut eis ridenda ac fugienda commendes."
And the same charity may also, at other times, bind us to repel them
with indignation, according to that other saying of St. Gregory of
Nazianzen: "The spirit of meekness and charity hath its emotions and
its heats." Indeed, as St. Augustine observes, "who would venture to
say that truth ought to stand disarmed against falsehood, or that the
enemies of the faith shall be at liberty to frighten the faithful with
hard words, and jeer at them with lively sallies of wit; while the
Catholics ought never to write except with a coldness of style enough
to set the reader asleep?"
Is it not obvious that, by following such a course, a wide door
would be opened for the introduction of the most extravagant and
pernicious dogmas into the Church; while none would be allowed to
treat them with contempt, through fear of being charged with violating
propriety, or to confute them with indignation, from the dread of
being taxed with want of charity?
Indeed, fathers! shall you be allowed to maintain, "that it is
lawful to kill a man to avoid a box on the ear or an affront," and
must nobody be permitted publicly to expose a public error of such
consequence? Shall you be at liberty to say, "that a judge may in
conscience retain a fee received for an act of injustice," and shall
no one be at liberty to contradict you? Shall you print, with the
privilege and approbation of your doctors, "that a man may be saved
without ever having loved God"; and will you shut the mouth of those
who defend the true faith, by telling them that they would violate
brotherly love by attacking you, and Christian modesty by laughing at
your maxims? I doubt, fathers, if there be any persons whom you could
make believe this; if however, there be any such, who are really
persuaded that, by denouncing your morality, I have been deficient in
the charity which I owe to you, I would have them examine, with great
jealousy, whence this feeling takes its rise within them. They may
imagine that it proceeds from a holy zeal, which will not allow them
to see their neighbour impeached without being scandalized at it; but
I would entreat them to consider that it is not impossible that it may
flow from another source, and that it is even extremely likely that it
may spring from that secret, and often self-concealed dissatisfaction,
which the unhappy corruption within us seldom fails to stir up against
those who oppose the relaxation of morals. And, to furnish them with a
rule which may enable them to ascertain the real principle from which
it proceeds, I will ask them if, while they lament the way in which
the religious have been treated, they lament still more the manner in
which these religious have treated the truth; if they are incensed,
not only against the letters, but still more against the maxims quoted
in them. I shall grant it to be barely possible that their resentment
proceeds from some zeal, though not of the most enlightened kind; and,
in this case, the passages I have just cited from the fathers will
serve to enlighten them. But if they are merely angry at the
reprehension, and not at the things reprehended, truly, fathers, I
shall never scruple to tell them that they are grossly mistaken, and
that their zeal is miserably blind.
Strange zeal, indeed! which gets angry at those that censure
public faults, and not at those that commit them! Novel charity this,
which groans at seeing error confuted, but feels no grief at seeing
morality subverted by that error. If these persons were in danger of
being assassinated, pray, would they be offended at one advertising
them of the stratagem that had been laid for them; and instead of
turning out of their way to avoid it, would they trifle away their
time in whining about the little charity manifested in discovering to
them the criminal design of the assassins? Do they get waspish when
one tells them not to eat such an article of food, because it is
poisoned? or not to enter such a city, because it has the plague?
Whence comes it, then, that the same persons who set down a man as
wanting in charity, for exposing maxims hurtful to religion, would, on
the contrary, think him equally deficient in that grace were he not to
disclose matters hurtful to health and life, unless it be from this,
that their fondness for life induces them to take in good part every
hint that contributes to its preservation, while their indifference to
truth leads them, not only to take no share in its defence, but even
to view with pain the efforts made for the extirpation of falsehood?
Let them seriously ponder, as in the sight of God, how shameful,
and how prejudicial to the Church, is the morality which your casuists
are in the habit of propagating; the scandalous and unmeasured license
which they are introducing into public manners; the obstinate and
violent hardihood with which you support them. And if they do not
think it full time to rise against such disorders, their blindness is
as much to be pitied as yours, fathers; and you and they have equal
reason to dread that saying of St. Augustine, founded on the words of
Jesus Christ, in the Gospel: "Woe to the blind leaders! woe to the
blind followers!- Vae caecis ducentibus! vae caecis sequentibus!"
But, to leave you no room in future, either to create such
impressions on the minds of others, or to harbour them in your own, I
shall tell you, fathers (and I am ashamed I should have to teach you
what I should have rather learnt from you), the marks which the
fathers of the Church have given for judging when our animadversions
flow from a principle of piety and charity, and when from a spirit of
malice and impiety.
The first of these rules is that the spirit of piety always
prompts us to speak with sincerity and truthfulness; whereas malice
and envy make use of falsehood and calumny. "Splendentia et
vehementia, sed rebus veris- Splendid and vehement in words, but true
in things," as St. Augustine says. The dealer in falsehood is an agent
of the devil. No direction of the intention can sanctify slander; and
though the conversion of the whole earth should depend on it, no man
may warrantably calumniate the innocent: because none may do the least
evil, in order to accomplish the greatest good; and, as the Scripture
says, "the truth of God stands in no need of our lie." St. Hilary
observes that "it is the bounden duty of the advocates of truth, to
advance nothing in its support but true things." Now, fathers, I can
declare before God that there is nothing that I detest more than the
slightest possible deviation from the truth, and that I have ever
taken the greatest care, not only not to falsify (which would be
horrible), but not to alter or wrest, in the slightest possible
degree, the sense of a single passage. So closely have I adhered to
this rule that, if I may presume to apply them to the present case, I
may safely say, in the words of the same St. Hilary: "If we advance
things that are false, let our statements be branded with infamy; but
if we can show that they are public and notorious, it is no breach of
apostolic modesty or liberty to expose them."
It is not enough, however, to tell nothing but the truth; we must
not always tell everything that is true; we should publish only those
things which it is useful to disclose, and not those which can only
hurt, without doing any good. And, therefore, as the first rule is to
speak with truth, the second is to speak with discretion. "The
wicked," says St. Augustine, "in persecuting the good, blindly follow
the dictates of their passion; but the good, in their prosecution of
the wicked, are guided by a wise discretion, even as the surgeon
warily considers where he is cutting, while the murderer cares not
where he strikes." You must be sensible, fathers, that in selecting
from the maxims of your authors, I have refrained from quoting those
which would have galled you most, though I might have done it, and
that without sinning against discretion, as others who were both
learned and Catholic writers, have done before me. All who have read
your authors know how far I have spared you in this respect. Besides,
I have taken no notice whatever of what might be brought against
individual characters among you; and I would have been extremely sorry
to have said a word about secret and personal failings, whatever
evidence I might have of them, being persuaded that this is the
distinguishing property of malice, and a practice which ought never to
be resorted to, unless where it is urgently demanded for the good of
the Church. It is obvious, therefore, that, in what I have been
compelled to advance against your moral maxims, I have been by no
means wanting in due consideration: and that you have more reason to
congratulate yourself on my moderation than to complain of my
indiscretion.
The third rule, fathers, is: That when there is need to employ a
little raillery, the spirit of piety will take care to employ it
against error only, and not against things holy; whereas the spirit of
buffoonery, impiety, and heresy, mocks at all that is most sacred. I
have already vindicated myself on that score; and indeed there is no
great danger of falling into that vice so long as I confine my remarks
to the opinions which I have quoted from your authors.
In short, fathers, to abridge these rules, I shall only mention
another, which is the essence and the end of all the rest: That the
spirit of charity prompts us to cherish in the heart a desire for the
salvation of those against whom we dispute, and to address our prayers
to God while we direct our accusations to men. "We ought ever," says
St. Augustine, "to preserve charity in the heart, even while we are
obliged to pursue a line of external conduct which to man has the
appearance of harshness; we ought to smite them with a sharpness,
severe but kindly, remembering that their advantage is more to be
studied than their gratification." I am sure, fathers, that there is
nothing in my letters from which it can be inferred that I have not
cherished such a desire towards you; and as you can find nothing to
the contrary in them, charity obliges you to believe that I have been
really actuated by it. It appears, then, that you cannot prove that I
have offended against this rule, or against any of the other rules
which charity inculcates; and you have no right to say, therefore,
that I have violated it.
But, fathers, if you should now like to have the pleasure of
seeing, within a short compass, a course of conduct directly at
variance with each of these rules, and bearing the genuine stamp of
the spirit of buffoonery, envy, and hatred, I shall give you a few
examples of it; and, that they may be of the sort best known and most
familiar to you, I shall extract them from your own writings.
To begin, then, with the unworthy manner in which your authors
speak of holy things, whether in their sportive and gallant effusions,
or in their more serious pieces, do you think that the parcel of
ridiculous stories, which your father Binet has introduced into his
Consolation to the Sick, are exactly suitable to his professed object,
which is that of imparting Christian consolation to those whom God has
chastened with affliction? Will you pretend to say that the profane,
foppish style in which your Father Le Moine has talked of piety in his
Devotion made Easy is more fitted to inspire respect than contempt for
the picture that he draws of Christian virtues? What else does his
whole book of Moral Pictures breathe, both in its prose and poetry,
but a spirit full of vanity, and the follies of this world? Take, for
example, that ode in his seventh book, entitled, "Eulogy on
Bashfulness, showing that all beautiful things are red, or inclined to
redden." Call you that a production worthy of a priest? The ode is
intended to comfort a lady, called Delphina, who was sadly addicted to
blushing. Each stanza is devoted to show that certain red things are
the best of things, such as roses, pomegranates, the mouth, the
tongue; and it is in the midst of this badinage, so disgraceful in a
clergyman, that he has the effrontery to introduce those blessed
spirits that minister before God, and of whom no Christian should
speak without reverence:
"The cherubim- those glorious choirs-
Composed of head and plumes,
Whom God with His own Spirit inspires,
And with His eyes illumes.
These splendid faces, as they fly,
Are ever red and burning high,
With fire angelic or divine;
And while their mutual flames combine,
The waving of their wings supplies
A fan to cool their ecstasies!
But redness shines with better grace,
Delphina, on thy beauteous face,
Where modesty sits revelling-
Arrayed in purple, like a king,"
What think you of this, fathers? Does this preference of the
blushes of Delphina to the ardour of those spirits, which is neither
more nor less than the ardour of divine love, and this simile of the
fan applied to their mysterious wings, strike you as being very
Christian-like in the lips which consecrate the adorable body of Jesus
Christ? I am quite aware that he speaks only in the character of a
gallant and to raise a smile; but this is precisely what is called
laughing at things holy. And is it not certain, that, were he to get
full justice, he could not save himself from incurring a censure?
although, to shield himself from this, he pleads an excuse which is
hardly less censurable than the offence, "that the Sorbonne has no
jurisdiction over Parnassus, and that the errors of that land are
subject neither to censure nor the Inquisition"; as if one could act
the blasphemer and profane fellow only in prose! There is another
passage, however, in the preface, where even this excuse fails him,
when he says, "that the water of the river, on whose banks he composes
his verses, is so apt to make poets, that, though it were converted
into holy water, it would not chase away the demon of poesy." To match
this, I may add the following flight of your Father Garasse, in his
Summary of the Capital Truths in Religion, where, speaking of the
sacred mystery of the incarnation, he mixes up blasphemy and heresy in
this fashion: "The human personality was grafted, as it were, or set
on horseback, upon the personality of the Word!" And omitting many
others, I might mention another passage from the same author, who,
speaking on the subject of the name of Jesus, ordinarily written thus,
+
I.H.S. observes that "some have taken away the cross from the top
of it, leaving the characters barely thus, I.H.S.- which," says he,
"is a stripped Jesus!"
Such is the indecency with which you treat the truths of religion,
in the face of the inviolable law which binds us always to speak of
them with reverence. But you have sinned no less flagrantly against
the rule which obliges us to speak of them with truth and discretion.
What is more common in your writings than calumny? Can those of Father
Brisacier be called sincere? Does he speak with truth when he says
that "the nuns of Port-Royal do not pray to the saints, and have no
images in their church?" Are not these most outrageous falsehoods,
when the contrary appears before the eyes of all Paris? And can he be
said to speak with discretion when he stabs the fair reputation of
these virgins, who lead a life so pure and austere, representing them
as "impenitent, unsacramentalists, uncommunicants, foolish virgins,
visionaries, Calagans, desperate creatures, and anything you please,"
loading them with many other slanders, which have justly incurred the
censure of the late Archbishop of Paris? Or when he calumniates
priests of the most irreproachable morals, by asserting "that they
practise novelties in confession, to entrap handsome innocent females,
and that he would be horrified to tell the abominable crimes which
they commit." Is it not a piece of intolerable assurance to advance
slanders so black and base, not merely without proof, but without the
slightest shadow, or the most distant semblance of truth? I shall not
enlarge on this topic, but defer it to a future occasion, for I have
something more to say to you about it; but what I have now produced is
enough to show that you have sinned at once against truth and
discretion.
But it may be said, perhaps, that you have not offended against
the last rule at least, which binds you to desire the salvation of
those whom you denounce, and that none can charge you with this,
except by unlocking the secrets of your breasts, which are only known
to God. It is strange, fathers, but true, nevertheless, that we can
convict you even of this offence; that while your hatred to your
opponents has carried you so far as to wish their eternal perdition,
your infatuation has driven you to discover the abominable wish that,
so far from cherishing in secret desires for their salvation, you have
offered up prayers in public for their damnation; and that, after
having given utterance to that hideous vow in the city of Caen, to the
scandal of the whole Church, you have since then ventured, in Paris,
to vindicate, in your printed books, the diabolical transaction. After
such gross offences against piety, first ridiculing and speaking
lightly of things the most sacred; next falsely and scandalously
calumniating priests and virgins; and lastly, forming desires and
prayers for their damnation, it would be difficult to add anything
worse. I cannot conceive, fathers, how you can fail to be ashamed of
yourselves, or how you could have thought for an instant of charging
me with a want of charity, who have acted all along with so much truth
and moderation, without reflecting on your own horrid violations of
charity, manifested in those deplorable exhibitions, which make the
charge recoil against yourselves.
In fine, fathers, to conclude with another charge which you bring
against me, I see you complain that among the vast number of your
maxims which I quote, there are some which have been objected to
already, and that I "say over again, what others have said before me."
To this I reply that it is just because you have not profited by what
has been said before that I say it over again. Tell me now what fruit
has appeared from all the castigations you have received in all the
books written by learned doctors and even the whole University? What
more have your Fathers Annat, Caussin, Pintereau, and Le Moine done,
in the replies they have put forth, except loading with reproaches
those who had given them salutary admonitions? Have you suppressed the
books in which these nefarious maxims are taught? Have you restrained
the authors of these maxims? Have you become more circumspect in
regard to them? On the contrary, is it not the fact that since that
time Escobar has been repeatedly reprinted in France and in the Low
Countries, and that your fathers Cellot, Bagot, Bauny, Lamy, Le Moine,
and others, persist in publishing daily the same maxims over again, or
new ones as licentious as ever? Let us hear no more complaints, then,
fathers, either because I have charged you with maxims which you have
not disavowed, or because I have objected to some new ones against
you, or because I have laughed equally at them all. You have only to
sit down and look at them, to see at once your own confusion and my
defence. Who can look without laughing at the decision of Bauny,
respecting the person who employs another to set fire to his
neighbour's barn; that of Cellot on restitution; the rule of Sanchez
in favour of sorcerers; the plan of Hurtado for avoiding the sin of
duelling by taking a walk through a field and waiting for a man; the
compliments of Bauny for escaping usury; the way of avoiding simony by
a detour of the intention, and keeping clear of falsehood by speaking
high and low; and such other opinions of your most grave and reverend
doctors? Is there anything more necessary, fathers, for my
vindication? And, as Tertullian says, "can anything be more justly due
to the vanity and weakness of these opinions than laughter?" But,
fathers, the corruption of manners, to which your maxims lead,
deserves another sort of consideration; and it becomes us to ask, with
the same ancient writer: "Whether ought we to laugh at their folly, or
deplore their blindness?- Rideam vanitatem, an exprobrem caecitatem?"
My humble opinion is that one may either laugh at them or weep over
them, as one is in the humour. "Haec tolerabilius vel ridentur, vel
flentur, " as St. Augustine says. The Scripture tells us that "there
is a time to laugh, and a time to weep"; and my hope is, fathers, that
I may not find verified, in your case, these words in the Proverbs:
"If a wise man contendeth with a foolish man, whether he rage or
laugh, there is no rest."
P.S.- On finishing this letter, there was put in my hands one of
your publications, in which you accuse me of falsification, in the
case of six of your maxims quoted by me, and also with being in
correspondence with heretics. You will shortly receive, I trust, a
suitable reply; after which, fathers, I rather think you will not feel
very anxious to continue this species of warfare.
I was prepared to write you on the subject of the abuse with which
you have for some time past been assailing me in your publications, in
which you salute me with such epithets as "reprobate," "buffoon,"
"blockhead," "merry- Andrew," "impostor," "slanderer," "cheat,"
"heretic," "Calvinist in disguise," "disciple of Du Moulin,"
"possessed with a legion of devils," and everything else you can think
of. As I should be sorry to have all this believed of me, I was
anxious to show the public why you treated me in this manner; and I
had resolved to complain of your calumnies and falsifications, when I
met with your Answers, in which you bring these same charges against
myself. This will compel me to alter my plan; though it will not
prevent me from prosecuting it in some sort, for I hope, while
defending myself, to convict you of impostures more genuine than the
imaginary ones which you have ascribed to me. Indeed, fathers, the
suspicion of foul play is much more sure to rest on you than on me. It
is not very likely, standing as I do, alone, without power or any
human defence against such a large body, and having no support but
truth and integrity, that I would expose myself to lose everything by
laying myself open to be convicted of imposture. It is too easy to
discover falsifications in matters of fact such as the present. In
such a case there would have been no want of persons to accuse me, nor
would justice have been denied them. With you, fathers, the case is
very different; you may say as much as you please against me, while I
may look in vain for any to complain to. With such a wide difference
between our positions, though there had been no other consideration to
restrain me, it became me to study no little caution. By treating me,
however, as a common slanderer, you compel me to assume the defensive,
and you must be aware that this cannot be done without entering into a
fresh exposition and even into a fuller disclosure of the points of
your morality. In provoking this discussion, I fear you are not acting
as good politicians. The war must be waged within your own camp and at
your own expense; and, although you imagine that, by embroiling the
questions with scholastic terms, the answers will be so tedious,
thorny, and obscure, that people will lose all relish for the
controversy, this may not, perhaps, turn out to be exactly the case; I
shall use my best endeavours to tax your patience as little as
possible with that sort of writing. Your maxims have something
diverting about them, which keeps up the good humour of people to the
last. At all events, remember that it is you that oblige me to enter
upon this eclaircissement, and let us see which of us comes off best
in self-defence.
The first of your Impostures, as you call them, is on the opinion
of Vasquez upon alms-giving. To avoid all ambiguity, then, allow me to
give a simple explanation of the matter in dispute. It is well known,
fathers, that, according to the mind of the Church, there are two
precepts touching alms: 1st, "To give out of our superfluity in the
case of the ordinary necessities of the poor"; and 2nd, "To give even
out of our necessaries, according to our circumstances, in cases of
extreme necessity." Thus says Cajetan, after St. Thomas; so that, to
get at the mind of Vasquez on this subject, we must consider the rules
he lays down, both in regard to necessaries and superfluities.
With regard to superfluity, which is the most common source of
relief to the poor, it is entirely set aside by that single maxim
which I have quoted in my Letters: "That what the men of the world
keep with the view of improving their own condition, and that of their
relatives, is not properly superfluity; so that such a thing as
superfluity is rarely to be met with among men of the world, not even
excepting kings." It is very easy to see, fathers, that, according to
this definition, none can have superfluity, provided they have
ambition; and thus, so far as the greater part of the world is
concerned, alms-giving is annihilated. But even though a man should
happen to have superfluity, he would be under no obligation, according
to Vasquez, to give it away in the case of ordinary necessity; for he
protests against those who would thus bind the rich. Here are his own
words: "Corduba," says he, "teaches that when we have a superfluity we
are bound to give out of it in cases of ordinary necessity; but this
does not please me- sed hoc non placet- for we have demonstrated the
contrary against Cajetan and Navarre." So, fathers, the obligation to
this kind of alms is wholly set aside, according to the good pleasure
of Vasquez.
With regard to necessaries, out of which we are bound to give in
cases of extreme and urgent necessity, it must be obvious, from the
conditions by which he has limited the obligation, the richest man in
all Paris may not come within its reach one in a lifetime. I shall
only refer to two of these. The first is: That "we must know that the
poor man cannot be relieved from any other quarter- haec intelligo et
caetera omnia, quando SCIO nullum alium opem laturum." What say you to
this, fathers? Is it likely to happen frequently in Paris, where there
are so many charitable people, that I must know that there is not
another soul but myself to relieve the poor wretch who begs an alms
from me? And yet, according to Vasquez, if I have not ascertained that
fact, I may send him away with nothing. The second condition is: That
the poor man be reduced to such straits "that he is menaced with some
fatal accident, or the ruin of his character"- none of them very
common occurrences. But what marks still more the rarity of the cases
in which one is bound to give charity, is his remark, in another
passage, that the poor man must be so ill off, "that he may
conscientiously rob the rich man!" This must surely be a very
extraordinary case, unless he will insist that a man may be ordinarily
allowed to commit robbery. And so, after having cancelled the
obligation to give alms out of our superfluities, he obliges the rich
to relieve the poor only in those cases when he would allow the poor
to rifle the rich! Such is the doctrine of Vasquez, to whom you refer
your readers for their edification!
I now come to your pretended Impostures. You begin by enlarging on
the obligation to alms-giving which Vasquez imposes on ecclesiastics.
But on this point I have said nothing; and I am prepared to take it up
whenever you choose. This, then, has nothing to do with the present
question. As for laymen, who are the only persons with whom we have
now to do, you are apparently anxious to have it understood that, in
the passage which I quoted, Vasquez is giving not his own judgement,
but that of Cajetan. But as nothing could be more false than this, and
as you have not said it in so many terms, I am willing to believe, for
the sake of your character, that you did not intend to say it.
You next loudly complain that, after quoting that maxim of
Vasquez, "Such a thing as superfluity is rarely if ever to be met with
among men of the world, not excepting kings," I have inferred from it,
"that the rich are rarely, if ever, bound to give alms out of their
superfluity." But what do you mean to say, fathers? If it be true that
the rich have almost never superfluity, is it not obvious that they
will almost never be bound to give alms out of their superfluity? I
might have put it into the form of a syllogism for you, if Diana, who
has such an esteem for Vasquez that he calls him "the phoenix of
genius," had not drawn the same conclusion from the same premisses;
for, after quoting the maxim of Vasquez, he concludes, "that, with
regard to the question, whether the rich are obliged to give alms out
of their superfluity, though the affirmation were true, it would
seldom, or almost never, happen to be obligatory in practice." I have
followed this language word for word. What, then, are we to make of
this, fathers? When Diana quotes with approbation the sentiments of
Vasquez, when he finds them probable, and "very convenient for rich
people," as he says in the same place, he is no slanderer, no
falsifier, and we hear no complaints of misrepresenting his author;
whereas, when I cite the same sentiments of Vasquez, though without
holding him up as a phoenix, I am a slanderer, a fabricator, a
corrupter of his maxims. Truly, fathers, you have some reason to be
apprehensive, lest your very different treatment of those who agree in
their representation, and differ only in their estimate of your
doctrine, discover the real secret of your hearts and provoke the
conclusion that the main object you have in view is to maintain the
credit and glory of your Company. It appears that, provided your
accommodating theology is treated as judicious complaisance, you never
disavow those that publish it, but laud them as contributing to your
design; but let it be held forth as pernicious laxity, and the same
interest of your Society prompts you to disclaim the maxims which
would injure you in public estimation. And thus you recognize or
renounce them, not according to the truth, which never changes, but
according to the shifting exigencies of the times, acting on that
motto of one of the ancients, "Omnia pro tempore, nihil pro veritate-
Anything for the times, nothing for the truth." Beware of this,
fathers; and that you may never have it in your power again to say
that I drew from the principle of Vasquez a conclusion which he had
disavowed, I beg to inform you that he has drawn it himself:
"According to the opinion of Cajetan, and according to my own- et
secundum nostram- (he says, chap. i., no. 27), one is hardly obliged
to give alms at all when one is only obliged to give them out of one's
superfluity." Confess then, fathers, on the testimony of Vasquez
himself, that I have exactly copied his sentiment; and think how you
could have the conscience to say that "the reader, on consulting the
original, would see to his astonishment that he there teaches the very
reverse!"
In fine, you insist, above all, that if Vasquez does not bind the
rich to give alms out of their superfluity, he obliges them to atone
for this by giving out of the necessaries of life. But you have
forgotten to mention the list of conditions which he declares to be
essential to constitute that obligation, which I have quoted, and
which restrict it in such a way as almost entirely to annihilate it.
In place of giving this honest statement of his doctrine, you tell us,
in general terms, that he obliges the rich to give even what is
necessary to their condition. This is proving too much, fathers; the
rule of the Gospel does not go so far; and it would be an error, into
which Vasquez is very far, indeed, from having fallen. To cover his
laxity, you attribute to him an excess of severity which would be
reprehensible; and thus you lose all credit as faithful reporters of
his sentiments. But the truth is, Vasquez is quite free from any such
suspicion; for he has maintained, as I have shown, that the rich are
not bound, either in justice or in charity, to give of their
superfluities, and still less of their necessaries, to relieve the
ordinary wants of the poor; and that they are not obliged to give of
the necessaries, except in cases so rare that they almost never
happen.
Having disposed of your objections against me on this head, it
only remains to show the falsehood of your assertion that Vasquez is
more severe than Cajetan. This will by very easily done. That cardinal
teaches "that we are bound in justice to give alms out of our
superfluity, even in the ordinary wants of the poor; because,
according to the holy fathers, the rich are merely the dispensers of
their superfluity, which they are to give to whom they please, among
those who have need of it." And accordingly, unlike Diana, who says of
the maxims of Vasquez that they will be "very convenient and agreeable
to the rich and their confessors," the cardinal, who has no such
consolation to afford them, declares that he has nothing to say to the
rich but these words of Jesus Christ: "It is easier for a camel to go
through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into
heaven"; and to their confessors: "If the blind lead the blind, both
shall fall into the ditch." So indispensable did he deem this
obligation! This, too, is what the fathers and all the saints have
laid down as a certain truth. "There are two cases," says St. Thomas,
"in which we are bound to give alms as a matter of justice- ex debito
legali: one, when the poor are in danger; the other, when we possess
superfluous property." And again: "The three-tenths which the Jews
were bound to eat with the poor, have been augmented under the new
law; for Jesus Christ wills that we give to the poor, not the tenth
only, but the whole of our superfluity." And yet it does not seem good
to Vasquez that we should be obliged to give even a fragment of our
superfluity; such is his complaisance to the rich, such his hardness
to the poor, such his opposition to those feelings of charity which
teach us to relish the truth contained in the following words of St.
Gregory, harsh as it may sound to the rich of this world: "When we
give the poor what is necessary to them, we are not so much bestowing
on them what is our property as rendering to them what is their own;
and it may be said to be an act of justice rather than a work of
mercy."
It is thus that the saints recommend the rich to share with the
poor the good things of this earth, if they would expect to possess
with them the good things of heaven. While you make it your business
to foster in the breasts of men that ambition which leaves no
superfluity to dispose of, and that avarice which refuses to part with
it, the saints have laboured to induce the rich to give up their
superfluity, and to convince them that they would have abundance of
it, provided they measured it, not by the standard of covetousness,
which knows no bounds to its cravings, but by that of piety, which is
ingenious in retrenchments, so as to have wherewith to diffuse itself
in the exercise of charity. "We will have a great deal of
superfluity," says St. Augustine, "if we keep only what is necessary:
but if we seek after vanities, we will never have enough. Seek,
brethren, what is sufficient for the work of God"- that is, for
nature- "and not for what is sufficient for your covetousness," which
is the work of the devil: "and remember that the superfluities of the
rich are the necessaries of the poor."
I would fondly trust, fathers, that what I have now said to you
may serve, not only for my vindication- that were a small matter- but
also to make you feel and detest what is corrupt in the maxims of your
casuists, and thus unite us sincerely under the sacred rules of the
Gospel, according to which we must all be judged.
As to the second point, which regards simony, before proceeding to
answer the charges you have advanced against me, I shall begin by
illustrating your doctrine on this subject. Finding yourselves placed
in an awkward dilemma, between the canons of the Church, which impose
dreadful penalties upon simoniacs, on the one hand, and the avarice of
many who pursue this infamous traffic on the other, you have recourse
to your ordinary method, which is to yield to men what they desire,
and give the Almighty only words and shows. For what else does the
simoniac want but money in return for his benefice? And yet this is
what you exempt from the charge of simony. And as the name of simony
must still remain standing, and a subject to which it may be ascribed,
you have substituted, in the place of this, an imaginary idea, which
never yet crossed the brain of a simoniac, and would not serve him
much though it did- the idea, namely, that simony lies in estimating
the money considered in itself as highly as the spiritual gift or
office considered in itself. Who would ever take it into his head to
compare things so utterly disproportionate and heterogeneous? And yet,
provided this metaphysical comparison be not drawn, any one may,
according to your authors, give away a benefice, and receive money in
return for it, without being guilty of simony.
Such is the way in which you sport with religion, in order to
gratify the worst passions of men; and yet only see with what gravity
your Father Valentia delivers his rhapsodies in the passage cited in
my letters. He says: "One may give a spiritual for a temporal good in
two ways- first, in the way of prizing the temporal more than the
spiritual, and that would be simony; secondly, in the way of taking
the temporal as the motive and end inducing one to give away the
spiritual, but without prizing the temporal more than the spiritual,
and then it is not simony. And the reason is that simony consists in
receiving something temporal as the just price of what is spiritual.
If, therefore, the temporal is sought- si petatur temporale- not as
the price, but only as the motive determining us to part with the
spiritual, it is by no means simony, even although the possession of
the temporal may be principally intended and expected- minime erit
simonia, etiamsi temporale principaliter intendatur et expectetur."
Your redoubtable Sanchez has been favoured with a similar revelation;
Escobar quotes him thus: "If one give a spiritual for a temporal good,
not as the price, but as a motive to induce the collator to give it,
or as an acknowledgement if the benefice has been actually received,
is that simony? Sanchez assures us that it is not." In your Caen
Theses of 1644 you say: "It is a probable opinion, taught by many
Catholics, that it is not simony to exchange a temporal for a
spiritual good, when the former is not given as a price." And as to
Tanner, here is his doctrine, exactly the same with that of Valentia;
and I quote it again to show you how far wrong it is in you to
complain of me for saying that it does not agree with that of St.
Thomas, for he avows it himself in the very passage which I quoted in
my letter: "There is properly and truly no simony," says he, "unless
when a temporal good is taken as the price of a spiritual; but when
taken merely as the motive for giving the spiritual, or as an
acknowledgement for having received it, this is not simony, at least
in point of conscience." And again: "The same thing may be said,
although the temporal should be regarded as the principal end, and
even preferred to the spiritual; although St. Thomas and others appear
to hold the reverse, inasmuch as they maintain it to be downright
simony to exchange a spiritual for a temporal good, when the temporal
is the end of the transaction."
Such, then, being your doctrine on simony, as taught by your best
authors, who follow each other very closely in this point, it only
remains now to reply to your charges of misrepresentation. You have
taken no notice of Valentia's opinion, so that his doctrine stands as
it was before. But you fix on that of Tanner, maintaining that he has
merely decided it to be no simony by divine right; and you would have
it to be believed that, in quoting the passage, I have suppressed
these words, divine right. This, fathers, is a most unconscionable
trick; for these words, divine right, never existed in that passage.
You add that Tanner declares it to be simony according to positive
right. But you are mistaken; he does not say that generally, but only
of particular cases, or, as he expresses it, in casibus a jure
expressis, by which he makes an exception to the general rule he had
laid down in that passage, "that it is not simony in point of
conscience," which must imply that it is not so in point of positive
right, unless you would have Tanner made so impious as to maintain
that simony, in point of positive right, is not simony in point of
conscience. But it is easy to see your drift in mustering up such
terms as "divine right, positive right, natural right, internal and
external tribunal, expressed cases, outward presumption," and others
equally little known; you mean to escape under this obscurity of
language, and make us lose sight of your aberrations. But, fathers,
you shall not escape by these vain artifices; for I shall put some
questions to you so simple, that they will not admit of coming under
your distinguo.
I ask you, then, without speaking of "positive rights," of
"outward presumptions," or "external tribunals"- I ask if, according
to your authors, a beneficiary would be simoniacal, were he to give a
benefice worth four thousand livres of yearly rent, and to receive ten
thousand francs ready money, not as the price of the benefice, but
merely as a motive inducing him to give it? Answer me plainly,
fathers: What must we make of such a case as this according to your
authors? Will not Tanner tell us decidedly that "this is not simony in
point of conscience, seeing that the temporal good is not the price of
the benefice, but only the motive inducing to dispose of it?" Will not
Valentia, will not your own Theses of Caen, will not Sanchez and
Escobar, agree in the same decision and give the same reason for it?
Is anything more necessary to exculpate that beneficiary from simony?
And, whatever might be your private opinion of the case, durst you
deal with that man as a simonist in your confessionals, when he would
be entitled to stop your mouth by telling you that he acted according
to the advice of so many grave doctors? Confess candidly, then, that,
according to your views, that man would be no simonist; and, having
done so, defend the doctrine as you best can.
Such, fathers, is the true mode of treating questions, in order to
unravel, instead of perplexing them, either by scholastic terms, or,
as you have done in your last charge against me here, by altering the
state of the question. Tanner, you say, has, at any rate, declared
that such an exchange is a great sin; and you blame me for having
maliciously suppressed this circumstance, which, you maintain,
"completely justifies him." But you are wrong again, and that in more
ways than one. For, first, though what you say had been true, it would
be nothing to the point, the question in the passage to which I
referred being, not if it was sin, but if it was simony. Now, these
are two very different questions. Sin, according to your maxims,
obliges only to confession- simony obliges to restitution; and there
are people to whom these may appear two very different things. You
have found expedients for making confession a very easy affair; but
you have not fallen upon ways and means to make restitution an
agreeable one. Allow me to add that the case which Tanner charges with
sin is not simply that in which a spiritual good is exchanged for a
temporal, the latter being the principal end in view, but that in
which the party "prizes the temporal above the spiritual," which is
the imaginary case already spoken of. And it must be allowed he could
not go far wrong in charging such a case as that with sin, since that
man must be either very wicked or very stupid who, when permitted to
exchange the one thing for the other, would not avoid the sin of the
transaction by such a simple process as that of abstaining from
comparing the two things together. Besides, Valentia, in the place
quoted, when treating the question- if it be sinful to give a
spiritual good for a temporal, the latter being the main
consideration- and after producing the reasons given for the
affirmative, adds, "Sed hoc non videtur mihi satis certum- But this
does not appear to my mind sufficiently certain."
Since that time, however, your father, Erade Bille, professor of
cases of conscience at Caen, has decided that there is no sin at all
in the case supposed; for probable opinions, you know, are always in
the way of advancing to maturity. This opinion he maintains in his
writings of 1644, against which M. Dupre, doctor and professor at
Caen, delivered that excellent oration, since printed and well known.
For though this Erade Bille confesses that Valentia's doctrine,
adopted by Father Milhard and condemned by the Sorbonne, "is contrary
to the common opinion, suspected of simony, and punishable at law when
discovered in practice," he does not scruple to say that it is a
probable opinion, and consequently sure in point of conscience, and
that there is neither simony nor sin in it. "It is a probable opinion,
he says, "taught by many Catholic doctors, that there is neither any
simony nor any sin in giving money, or any other temporal thing, for a
benefice, either in the way of acknowledgement, or as a motive,
without which it would not be given, provided it is not given as a
price equal to the benefice." This is all that could possibly be
desired. In fact, according to these maxims of yours, simony would be
so exceedingly rare that we might exempt from this sin even Simon
Magus himself, who desired to purchase the Holy Spirit and is the
emblem of those simonists that buy spiritual things; and Gehazi, who
took money for a miracle and may be regarded as the prototype of the
simonists that sell them. There can be no doubt that when Simon, as we
read in the Acts, "offered the apostles money, saying, Give me also
this power"; he said nothing about buying or selling, or fixing the
price; he did no more than offer the money as a motive to induce them
to give him that spiritual gift; which being, according to you, no
simony at all, he might, had be but been instructed in your maxims,
have escaped the anathema of St. Peter. The same unhappy ignorance was
a great loss to Gehazi, when he was struck with leprosy by Elisha;
for, as he accepted the money from the prince who had been
miraculously cured, simply as an acknowledgement, and not as a price
equivalent to the divine virtue which had effected the miracle, he
might have insisted on the prophet healing him again on pain of mortal
sin; seeing, on this supposition, he would have acted according to the
advice of your grave doctors, who, in such cases, oblige confessors to
absolve their penitents and to wash them from that spiritual leprosy
of which the bodily disease is the type.
Seriously, fathers, it would be extremely easy to hold you up to
ridicule in this matter, and I am at a loss to know why you expose
yourselves to such treatment. To produce this effect, I have nothing
more to do than simply to quote Escobar, in his Practice of Simony
according to the Society of Jesus; "Is it simony when two Churchmen
become mutually pledged thus: Give me your vote for my election as
Provincial, and I shall give you mine for your election as prior? By
no means." Or take another: "It is not simony to get possession of a
benefice by promising a sum of money, when one has no intention of
actually paying the money; for this is merely making a show of simony,
and is as far from being real simony as counterfeit gold is from the
genuine." By this quirk of conscience, he has contrived means, in the
way of adding swindling to simony, for obtaining benefices without
simony and without money.
But I have no time to dwell longer on the subject, for I must say
a word or two in reply to your third accusation, which refers to the
subject of bankrupts. Nothing can be more gross than the manner in
which you have managed this charge. You rail at me as a libeller in
reference to a sentiment of Lessius, which I did not quote myself, but
took from a passage in Escobar; and, therefore, though it were true
that Lessius does not hold the opinion ascribed to him by Escobar,
what can be more unfair than to charge me with the misrepresentation?
When I quote Lessius or others of your authors myself, I am quite
prepared to answer for it; but, as Escobar has collected the opinions
of twenty-four of your writers, I beg to ask if I am bound to
guarantee anything beyond the correctness of my citations from his
book? Or if I must, in addition, answer for the fidelity of all his
quotations of which I may avail myself? This would be hardly
reasonable; and yet this is precisely the case in the question before
us. I produced in my letter the following passage from Escobar, and
you do not object to the fidelity of my translation: "May the
bankrupt, with a good conscience, retain as much of his property as is
necessary to afford him an honourable maintenance- ne indecore vivat?
I answer, with Lessius, that he may- cum Lessio assero posse." You
tell me that Lessius does not hold that opinion. But just consider for
a moment the predicament in which you involve yourselves. If it turns
out that he does hold that opinion, you will be set down as impostors
for having asserted the contrary; and if it is proved that he does not
hold it, Escobar will be the impostor; so it must now of necessity
follow that one or other of the Society will be convicted of
imposture. Only think what a scandal! You cannot, it would appear,
foresee the consequences of things. You seem to imagine that you have
nothing more to do than to cast aspersions upon people, without
considering on whom they may recoil. Why did you not acquaint Escobar
with your objection before venturing to publish it? He might have
given you satisfaction. It is not so very troublesome to get word from
Valladolid, where he is living in perfect health, and completing his
grand work on Moral Theology, in six volumes, on the first of which I
mean to say a few words by-and-by. They have sent him the first ten
letters; you might as easily have sent him your objection, and I am
sure he would have soon returned you an answer, for he has doubtless
seen in Lessius the passage from which he took the ne indecore vivat.
Read him yourselves, fathers, and you will find it word for word, as I
have done. Here it is: "The same thing is apparent from the
authorities cited, particularly in regard to that property which he
acquires after his failure, out of which even the delinquent debtor
may retain as much as is necessary for his honourable maintenance,
according to his station of life- ut non indecore vivat. Do you ask if
this rule applies to goods which he possessed at the time of his
failure? Such seems to be the judgement of the doctors."
I shall not stop here to show how Lessius, to sanction his maxim,
perverts the law that allows bankrupts nothing more than a mere
livelihood, and that makes no provision for "honourable maintenance."
It is enough to have vindicated Escobar from such an accusation- it is
more, indeed, than what I was in duty bound to do. But you, fathers,
have not done your duty. It still remains for you to answer the
passage of Escobar, whose decisions, by the way, have this advantage,
that, being entirely independent of the context and condensed in
little articles, they are not liable to your distinctions. I quoted
the whole of the passage, in which "bankrupts are permitted to keep
their goods, though unjustly acquired, to provide an honourable
maintenance for their families"- commenting on which in my letters, I
exclaim: "Indeed, father! by what strange kind of charity would you
have the ill-gotten property of a bankrupt appropriated to his own
use, instead of that of his lawful creditors?" This is the question
which must be answered; but it is one that involves you in a sad
dilemma, and from which you in vain seek to escape by altering the
state of the question, and quoting other passages from Lessius, which
have no connection with the subject. I ask you, then: May this maxim
of Escobar be followed by bankrupts with a safe conscience, or no? And
take care what you say. If you answer, "No," what becomes of your
doctor, and your doctrine of probability? If you say, "Yes," I delate
you to the Parliament.
In this predicament I must now leave you, fathers; for my limits
will not permit me to overtake your next accusation, which respects
homicide. This will serve for my next letter, and the rest will
follow.
In the meanwhile, I shall make no remarks on the advertisements
which you have tagged to the end of each of your charges, filled as
they are with scandalous falsehoods. I mean to answer all these in a
separate letter, in which I hope to show the weight due to your
calumnies. I am sorry, fathers, that you should have recourse to such
desperate resources. The abusive terms which you heap on me will not
clear up our disputes, nor will your manifold threats hinder me from
defending myself You think you have power and impunity on your side;
and I think I have truth and innocence on mine. It is a strange and
tedious war when violence attempts to vanquish truth. All the efforts
of violence cannot weaken truth, and only serve to give it fresh
vigour. All the lights of truth cannot arrest violence, and only serve
to exasperate it. When force meets force, the weaker must succumb to
the stronger; when argument is opposed to argument, the solid and the
convincing triumphs over the empty and the false; but violence and
verity can make no impression on each other. Let none suppose,
however, that the two are, therefore, equal to each other; for there
is this vast difference between them, that violence has only a certain
course to run, limited by the appointment of Heaven, which overrules
its effects to the glory of the truth which it assails; whereas verity
endures forever and eventually triumphs over its enemies, being
eternal and almighty as God himself.
I have just seen your last production, in which you have continued
your list of Impostures up to the twentieth and intimate that you mean
to conclude with this the first part of your accusations against me,
and to proceed to the second, in which you are to adopt a new mode of
defence, by showing that there are other casuists besides those of
your Society who are as lax as yourselves. I now see the precise
number of charges to which I have to reply; and as the fourth, to
which we have now come, relates to homicide, it may be proper, in
answering it, to include the 11th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, and
18th, which refer to the same subject.
In the present letter, therefore, my object shall be to vindicate
the correctness of my quotations from the charges of falsity which you
bring against me. But as you have ventured, in your pamphlets, to
assert that "the sentiments of your authors on murder are agreeable to
the decisions of popes and ecclesiastical laws," you will compel me,
in my next letter, to confute a statement at once so unfounded and so
injurious to the Church. It is of some importance to show that she is
innocent of your corruptions, in order that heretics may be prevented
from taking advantage of your aberrations, to draw conclusions tending
to her dishonour. And thus, viewing on the one hand your pernicious
maxims, and on the other the canons of the Church which have uniformly
condemned them, people will see, at one glance, what they should shun
and what they should follow.
Your fourth charge turns on a maxim relating to murder, which you
say I have falsely ascribed to Lessius. It is as follows: "That if a
man has received a buffet, he may immediately pursue his enemy, and
even return the blow with the sword, not to avenge himself, but to
retrieve his honour." This, you say, is the opinion of the casuist
Victoria. But this is nothing to the point. There is no inconsistency
in saying that it is at once the opinion of Victoria and of Lessius;
for Lessius himself says that it is also held by Navarre and
Henriquez, who teach identically the same doctrine. The only question,
then, is if Lessius holds this view as well as his brother casuists.
You maintain "that Lessius quotes this opinion solely for the purpose
of refuting it, and that I, therefore, attribute to him a sentiment
which he produces only to overthrow- the basest and most disgraceful
act of which a writer can be guilty." Now I maintain, fathers, that he
quotes the opinion solely for the purpose of supporting it. Here is a
question of fact, which it will be very easy to settle. Let us see,
then, how you prove your allegation, and you will see afterwards how I
prove mine.
To show that Lessius is not of that opinion, you tell us that he
condemns the practice of it; and in proof of this, you quote one
passage of his (l. 2, c. 9, n. 92), in which he says, in so many
words, "I condemn the practice of it." I grant that, on looking for
these words, at number 92, to which you refer, they will be found
there. But what will people say, fathers, when they discover, at the
same time, that he is treating in that place of a question totally
different from that of which we are speaking, and that the opinion of
which he there says that he condemns the practice has no connection
with that now in dispute, but is quite distinct? And yet to be
convinced that this is the fact, we have only to open the book to
which you refer, and there we find the whole subject in its connection
as follows: At number 79 he treats the question, "If it is lawful to
kill for a buffet?" and at number 80 he finishes this matter without a
single word of condemnation. Having disposed of this question, he
opens a new one at 81, namely, "If it is lawful to kill for slanders?"
and it is when speaking of this question that he employs the words you
have quoted: "I condemn the practice of it."
Is it not shameful, fathers, that you should venture to produce
these words to make it be believed that Lessius condemns the opinion
that it is lawful to kill for a buffet? and that, on the ground of
this single proof, you should chuckle over it, as you have done, by
saying: "Many persons of honour in Paris have already discovered this
notorious falsehood by consulting Lessius, and have thus ascertained
the degree of credit due to that slanderer?" Indeed! and is it thus
that you abuse the confidence which those persons of honour repose in
you? To show them that Lessius does not hold a certain opinion, you
open the book to them at a place where he is condemning another
opinion; and these persons, not having begun to mistrust your good
faith and never thinking of examining whether the author speaks in
that place of the subject in dispute, you impose on their credulity. I
make no doubt, fathers, that, to shelter yourselves from the guilt of
such a scandalous lie, you had recourse to your doctrine of
equivocations; and that, having read the passage in a loud voice, you
would say, in a lower key, that the author was speaking there of
something else. But I am not so sure whether this saving clause, which
is quite enough to satisfy your consciences, will be a very
satisfactory answer to the just complaint of those "honourable
persons," when they shall discover that you have hoodwinked them in
this style.
Take care, then, fathers, to prevent them by all means from seeing
my letters; for this is the only method now left to you to preserve
your credit for a short time longer. This is not the way in which I
deal with your writings: I send them to all my friends; I wish
everybody to see them. And I verily believe that both of us are in the
right for our own interests; for, after having published with such
parade this fourth Imposture, were it once discovered that you have
made it up by foisting in one passage for another, you would be
instantly denounced. It will be easily seen that if you could have
found what you wanted in the passage where Lessius treated of this
matter, you would not have searched for it elsewhere, and that you had
recourse to such a trick only because you could find nothing in that
passage favourable to your purpose.
You would have us believe that we may find in Lessius what you
assert, "that he does not allow that this opinion (that a man may be
lawfully killed for a buffet) is probable in theory"; whereas Lessius
distinctly declares, at number 80: "This opinion, that a man may kill
for a buffet, is probable in theory." Is not this, word for word, the
reverse of your assertion? And can we sufficiently admire the
hardihood with which you have advanced, in set phrase, the very
reverse of a matter of fact! To your conclusion, from a fabricated
passage, that Lessius was not of that opinion, we have only to place
Lessius himself, who, in the genuine passage, declares that he is of
that opinion.
Again, you would have Lessius to say "that he condemns the
practice of it"; and, as I have just observed, there is not in the
original a single word of condemnation; all that he says is: "It
appears that it ought not to be easily permitted in practice- In praxi
non videtur facile permittenda." Is that, fathers, the language of a
man who condemns a maxim? Would you say that adultery and incest ought
not to be easily permitted in practice? Must we not, on the contrary,
conclude that as Lessius says no more than that the practice ought not
to be easily permitted, his opinion is that it may be permitted
sometimes, though rarely? And, as if he had been anxious to apprise
everybody when it might be permitted, and to relieve those who have
received affronts from being troubled with unreasonable scruples from
not knowing on what occasions they might lawfully kill in practice, he
has been at pains to inform them what they ought to avoid in order to
practise the doctrine with a safe conscience. Mark his words: "It
seems," says he, "that it ought not to be easily permitted, because of
the danger that persons may act in this matter out of hatred or
revenge, or with excess, or that this may occasion too many murders."
From this it appears that murder is freely permitted by Lessius, if
one avoids the inconveniences referred to- in other words, if one can
act without hatred or revenge and in circumstances that may not open
the door to a great many murders. To illustrate the matter, I may give
you an example of recent occurrence- the case of the buffet of
Compiegne. You will grant that the person who received the blow on
that occasion has shown, by the way in which he has acted, that he was
sufficiently master of the passions of hatred and revenge. It only
remained for him, therefore, to see that he did not give occasion to
too many murders; and you need hardly be told, fathers, it is such a
rare spectacle to find Jesuits bestowing buffets on the officers of
the royal household that he had no great reason to fear that a murder
committed on this occasion would be likely to draw many others in its
train. You cannot, accordingly, deny that the Jesuit who figured on
that occasion was killable with a safe conscience, and that the
offended party might have converted him into a practical illustration
of the doctrine of Lessius. And very likely, fathers, this might have
been the result had he been educated in your school, and learnt from
Escobar that the man who has received a buffet is held to be disgraced
until he has taken the life of him who insulted him. But there is
ground to believe that the very different instructions which he
received from a curate, who is no great favourite of yours, have
contributed not a little in this case to save the life of a Jesuit.
Tell us no more, then, of inconveniences which may, in many
instances, be so easily got over, and in the absence of which,
according to Lessius, murder is permissible even in practice. This is
frankly avowed by your authors, as quoted by Escobar, in his Practice
of Homicide, according to your Society. "Is it allowable," asks this
casuist, "to kill him who has given me a buffet? Lessius says it is
permissible in speculation, though not to be followed in practice- non
consulendum in praxi- on account of the risk of hatred, or of murders
prejudicial to the State. Others, however, have judged that, by
avoiding these inconveniences, this is permissible and safe in
practice- in praxi probabilem et tutam judicarunt Henriquez," See how
your opinions mount up, by little and little, to the climax of
probabilism! The present one you have at last elevated to this
position, by permitting murder without any distinction between
speculation and practice, in the following terms: "It is lawful, when
one has received a buffet, to return the blow immediately with the
sword, not to avenge one's self, but to preserve one's honour." Such
is the decision of your fathers of Caen in 1644, embodied in their
publications produced by the university before parliament, when they
presented their third remonstrance against your doctrine of homicide,
as shown in the book then emitted by them, on page 339.
Mark, then, fathers, that your own authors have themselves
demolished this absurd distinction between speculative and practical
murder- a distinction which the university treated with ridicule, and
the invention of which is a secret of your policy, which it may now be
worth while to explain. The knowledge of it, besides being necessary
to the right understanding of your 15th, 16th, 17th, and 18th charges,
is well calculated, in general, to open up, by little and little, the
principles of that mysterious policy.
In attempting, as you have done, to decide cases of conscience in
the most agreeable and accommodating manner, while you met with some
questions in which religion alone was concerned- such as those of
contrition, penance, love to God, and others only affecting the inner
court of conscience- you encountered another class of cases in which
civil society was interested as well as religion- such as those
relating to usury, bankruptcy, homicide, and the like. And it is truly
distressing to all that love the Church to observe that, in a vast
number of instances, in which you had only Religion to contend with,
you have violated her laws without reservation, without distinction,
and without compunction; because you knew that it is not here that God
visibly administers his justice. But in those cases in which the State
is interested as well as Religion, your apprehension of man's justice
has induced you to divide your decisions into two shares. To the first
of these you give the name of speculation; under which category
crimes, considered in themselves, without regard to society, but
merely to the law of God, you have permitted, without the least
scruple, and in the way of trampling on the divine law which condemns
them. The second you rank under the denomination of practice, and
here, considering the injury which may be done to society, and the
presence of magistrates who look after the public peace, you take
care, in order to keep yourselves on the safe side of the law, not to
approve always in practice the murders and other crimes which you have
sanctioned in speculation. Thus, for example, on the question, "If it
be lawful to kill for slanders?" your authors, Filiutius, Reginald,
and others, reply: "This is permitted in speculation- ex probabile
opinione licet; but is not to be approved in practice, on account of
the great number of murders which might ensue, and which might injure
the State, if all slanderers were to be killed, and also because one
might be punished in a court of justice for having killed another for
that matter." Such is the style in which your opinions begin to
develop themselves, under the shelter of this distinction, in virtue
of which, without doing any sensible injury to society, you only ruin
religion. In acting thus, you consider yourselves quite safe. You
suppose that, on the one hand, the influence you have in the Church
will effectually shield from punishment your assaults on truth; and
that, on the other, the precautions you have taken against too easily
reducing your permissions to practice will save you on the part of the
civil powers, who, not being judges in cases of conscience, are
properly concerned only with the outward practice. Thus an opinion
which would be condemned under the name of practice, comes out quite
safe under the name of speculation. But this basis once established,
it is not difficult to erect on it the rest of your maxims. There is
an infinite distance between God's prohibition of murder and your
speculative permission of the crime; but between that permission and
the practice the distance is very small indeed. It only remains to
show that what is allowable in speculation is also so in practice; and
there can be no want of reasons for this. You have contrived to find
them in far more difficult cases. Would you like to see, fathers, how
this may be managed? I refer you to the reasoning of Escobar, who has
distinctly decided the point in the first six volumes of his grand
Moral Theology, of which I have already spoken- a work in which he
shows quite another spirit from that which appears in his former
compilation from your four-and-twenty elders. At that time he thought
that there might be opinions probable in speculation, which might not
be safe in practice; but he has now come to form an opposite judgment,
and has, in this, his latest work, confirmed it. Such is the wonderful
growth attained by the doctrine of probability in general, as well as
by every probable opinion in particular, in the course of time.
Attend, then, to what he says: "I cannot see how it can be that an
action which seems allowable in speculation should not be so likewise
in practice; because what may be done in practice depends on what is
found to be lawful in speculation, and the things differ from each
other only as cause and effect. Speculation is that which determines
to action. Whence it follows that opinions probable in speculation may
be followed with a safe conscience in practice, and that even with
more safety than those which have not been so well examined as matters
of speculation."
Verily, fathers, your friend Escobar reasons uncommonly well
sometimes; and, in point of fact, there is such a close connection
between speculation and practice, that when the former has once taken
root, you have no difficulty in permitting the latter, without any
disguise. A good illustration of this we have in the permission "to
kill for a buffet," which, from being a point of simple speculation,
was boldly raised by Lessius into a practice "which ought not easily
to be allowed"; from that promoted by Escobar to the character of "an
easy practice"; and from thence elevated by your fathers of Caen, as
we have seen, without any distinction between theory and practice,
into a full permission. Thus you bring your opinions to their full
growth very gradually. Were they presented all at once in their
finished extravagance, they would beget horror; but this slow
imperceptible progress gradually habituates men to the sight of them
and hides their offensiveness. And in this way the permission to
murder, in itself so odious both to Church and State, creeps first
into the Church, and then from the Church into the State.
A similar success has attended the opinion of "killing for
slander," which has now reached the climax of a permission without any
distinction. I should not have stopped to quote my authorities on this
point from your writings, had it not been necessary in order to put
down the effrontery with which you have asserted, twice over, in your
fifteenth Imposture, "that there never was a Jesuit who permitted
killing for slander." Before making this statement, fathers, you
should have taken care to prevent it from coming under my notice,
seeing that it is so easy for me to answer it. For, not to mention
that your fathers Reginald, Filiutius, and others, have permitted it
in speculation, as I have already shown, and that the principle laid
down by Escobar leads us safely on to the practice, I have to tell you
that you have authors who have permitted it in so many words, and
among others Father Hereau in his public lectures, on the conclusion
of which the king put him under arrest in your house, for having
taught, among other errors, that when a person who has slandered us in
the presence of men of honour, continues to do so after being warned
to desist, it is allowable to kill him, not publicly, indeed, for fear
of scandal, but in a private way- sed clam.
I have had occasion already to mention Father Lamy, and you do not
need to be informed that his doctrine on this subject was censured in
1649 by the University of Louvain. And yet two months have not elapsed
since your Father Des Bois maintained this very censured doctrine of
Father Lamy and taught that "it was allowable for a monk to defend the
honour which he acquired by his virtue, even by killing the person who
assails his reputation- etiam cum morte invasoris"; which has raised
such a scandal in that town that the whole of the cures united to
impose silence on him, and to oblige him, by a canonical process, to
retract his doctrine. The case is now pending in the Episcopal court.
What say you now, fathers? Why attempt, after that, to maintain
that "no Jesuit ever held that it was lawful to kill for slander?" Is
anything more necessary to convince you of this than the very opinions
of your fathers which you quote, since they do not condemn murder in
speculation, but only in practice, and that, too, "on account of the
injury that might thereby accrue to the State"? And here I would just
beg to ask whether the whole matter in dispute between us is not
simply and solely to ascertain if you have or have not subverted the
law of God which condemns murder? The point in question is, not
whether you have injured the commonwealth, but whether you have
injured religion. What purpose, then, can it serve, in a dispute of
this kind, to show that you have spared the State, when you make it
apparent, at the same time, that you have destroyed the faith? Is this
not evident from your saying that the meaning of Reginald, on the
question of killing for slanders, is, "that a private individual has a
right to employ that mode of defence, viewing it simply in itself"? I
desire nothing beyond this concession to confute you. "A private
individual," you say, "has a right to employ that mode of defence"
(that is, killing for slanders), "viewing the thing in itself'; and,
consequently, fathers, the law of God, which forbids us to kill, is
nullified by that decision.
It serves no purpose to add, as you have done, "that such a mode
is unlawful and criminal, even according to the law of God, on account
of the murders and disorders which would follow in society, because
the law of God obliges us to have regard to the good of society." This
is to evade the question: for there are two laws to be observed- one
forbidding us to kill, and another forbidding us to harm society.
Reginald has not, perhaps, broken the law which forbids us to do harm
to society; but he has most certainly violated that which forbids us
to kill. Now this is the only point with which we have to do. I might
have shown, besides, that your other writers, who have permitted these
murders in practice, have subverted the one law as well as the other.
But, to proceed, we have seen that you sometimes forbid doing harm to
the State; and you allege that your design in that is to fulfil the
law of God, which obliges us to consult the interests of society. That
may be true, though it is far from being certain, as you might do the
same thing purely from fear of the civil magistrate. With your
permission, then, we shall scrutinize the real secret of this
movement.
Is it not certain, fathers, that if you had really any regard to
God, and if the observance of his law had been the prime and principal
object in your thoughts, this respect would have invariably
predominated in all your leading decisions and would have engaged you
at all times on the side of religion? But, if it turns out, on the
contrary, that you violate, in innumerable instances, the most sacred
commands that God has laid upon men, and that, as in the instances
before us, you annihilate the law of God, which forbids these actions
as criminal in themselves, and that you only scruple to approve of
them in practice, from bodily fear of the civil magistrate, do you not
afford us ground to conclude that you have no respect to God in your
apprehensions, and that if you yield an apparent obedience to his law,
in so far as regards the obligation to do no harm to the State, this
is not done out of any regard to the law itself, but to compass your
own ends, as has ever been the way with politicians of no religion?
What, fathers! will you tell us that, looking simply to the law of
God, which says, "Thou shalt not kill," we have a right to kill for
slanders? And after having thus trampled on the eternal law of God, do
you imagine that you atone for the scandal you have caused, and can
persuade us of your reverence for Him, by adding that you prohibit the
practice for State reasons and from dread of the civil arm? Is not
this, on the contrary, to raise a fresh scandal? I mean not by the
respect which you testify for the magistrate; that is not my charge
against you, and it is ridiculous in you to banter, as you have done,
on this matter. I blame you, not for fearing the magistrate, but for
fearing none but the magistrate. And I blame you for this, because it
is making God less the enemy of vice than man. Had you said that to
kill for slander was allowable according to men, but not according to
God, that might have been something more endurable; but when you
maintain that what is too criminal to be tolerated among men may yet
be innocent and right in the eyes of that Being who is righteousness
itself, what is this but to declare before the whole world, by a
subversion of principle as shocking in itself as it is alien to the
spirit of the saints, that while you can be braggarts before God, you
are cowards before men?
Had you really been anxious to condemn these homicides, you would
have allowed the commandment of God which forbids them to remain
intact; and had you dared at once to permit them, you would have
permitted them openly, in spite of the laws of God and men. But, your
object being to permit them imperceptibly, and to cheat the
magistrate, who watches over the public safety, you have gone craftily
to work. You separate your maxims into two portions. On the one side,
you hold out "that it is lawful in speculation to kill a man for
slander"; and nobody thinks of hindering you from taking a speculative
view of matters. On the other side, you come out with this detached
axiom, "that what is permitted in speculation is also permissible in
practice"; and what concern does society seem to have in this general
and metaphysical-looking proposition? And thus these two principles,
so little suspected, being embraced in their separate form, the
vigilance of the magistrate is eluded; while it is only necessary to
combine the two together to draw from them the conclusion which you
aim at- namely, that it is lawful in practice to put a man to death
for a simple slander.
It is, indeed, fathers, one of the most subtle tricks of your
policy to scatter through your publications the maxims which you club
together in your decisions. It is partly in this way that you
establish your doctrine of probabilities, which I have frequently had
occasion to explain. That general principle once established, you
advance propositions harmless enough when viewed apart, but which,
when taken in connection with that pernicious dogma, become positively
horrible. An example of this, which demands an answer, may be found in
the 11th page of your Impostures, where you allege that "several
famous theologians have decided that it is lawful to kill a man for a
box on the ear." Now, it is certain that, if that had been said by a
person who did not hold probabilism, there would be nothing to find
fault with in it; it would in this case amount to no more than a
harmless statement, and nothing could be elicited from it. But you,
fathers, and all who hold that dangerous tenet, "that whatever has
been approved by celebrated authors is probable and safe in
conscience," when you add to this "that several celebrated authors are
of opinion that it is lawful to kill a man for a box on the ear," what
is this but to put a dagger into the hand of all Christians, for the
purpose of plunging it into the heart of the first person that insults
them, and to assure them that, having the judgement of so many grave
authors on their side, they may do so with a perfectly safe
conscience?
What monstrous species of language is this, which, in announcing
that certain authors hold a detestable opinion, is at the same time
giving a decision in favour of that opinion- which solemnly teaches
whatever it simply tells! We have learnt, fathers, to understand this
peculiar dialect of the Jesuitical school; and it is astonishing that
you have the hardihood to speak it out so freely, for it betrays your
sentiments somewhat too broadly. It convicts you of permitting murder
for a buffet, as often as you repeat that many celebrated authors have
maintained that opinion.
This charge, fathers, you will never be able to repel; nor will
you be much helped out by those passages from Vasquez and Suarez that
you adduce against me, in which they condemn the murders which their
associates have approved. These testimonies, disjoined from the rest
of your doctrine, may hoodwink those who know little about it; but we,
who know better, put your principles and maxims together. You say,
then, that Vasquez condemns murders; but what say you on the other
side of the question, my reverend fathers? Why, "that the probability
of one sentiment does not hinder the probability of the opposite
sentiment; and that it is warrantable to follow the less probable and
less safe opinion, giving up the more probable and more safe one."
What follows from all this taken in connection, but that we have
perfect freedom of conscience to adopt any one of these conflicting
judgements which pleases us best? And what becomes of all the effect
which you fondly anticipate from your quotations? It evaporates in
smoke, for we have no more to do than to conjoin for your condemnation
the maxims which you have disjoined for your exculpation. Why, then,
produce those passages of your authors which I have not quoted, to
qualify those which I have quoted, as if the one could excuse the
other? What right does that give you to call me an "impostor"? Have I
said that all your fathers are implicated in the same corruptions?
Have I not, on the contrary, been at pains to show that your interest
lay in having them of all different minds, in order to suit all your
purposes? Do you wish to kill your man?- here is Lessius for you. Are
you inclined to spare him?- here is Vasquez. Nobody need go away in
ill humour- nobody without the authority of a grave doctor. Lessius
will talk to you like a Heathen on homicide, and like a Christian, it
may be, on charity. Vasquez, again, will descant like a Heathen on
charity, and like a Christian on homicide. But by means of
probabilism, which is held both by Vasquez and Lessius, and which
renders all your opinions common property, they will lend their
opinions to one another, and each will be held bound to absolve those
who have acted according to opinions which each of them has condemned.
It is this very variety, then, that confounds you. Uniformity, even in
evil, would be better than this. Nothing is more contrary to the
orders of St. Ignatius and the first generals of your Society than
this confused medley of all sorts of opinions, good and bad. I may,
perhaps, enter on this topic at some future period; and it will
astonish many to see how far you have degenerated from the original
spirit of your institution, and that your own generals have foreseen
that the corruption of your doctrine on morals might prove fatal, not
only to your Society, but to the Church universal.
Meanwhile, I repeat that you can derive no advantage from the
doctrine of Vasquez. It would be strange, indeed, if, out of all the
that have written on morals, one or two could not be found who may
have hit upon a truth which has been confessed by all Christians.
There is no glory in maintaining the truth, according to the Gospel,
that it is unlawful to kill a man for smiting us on the face; but it
is foul shame to deny it. So far, indeed, from justifying you, nothing
tells more fatally against you than the fact that, having doctors
among you who have told you the truth, you abide not in the truth, but
love the darkness rather than the light. You have been taught by
Vasquez that it is a Heathen, and not a Christian, opinion to hold
that we may knock down a man for a blow on the cheek; and that it is
subversive both of the Gospel and of the Decalogue to say that we may
kill for such a matter. The most profligate of men will acknowledge as
much. And yet you have allowed Lessius, Escobar, and others, to
decide, in the face of these well-known truths, and in spite of all
the laws of God against manslaughter, that it is quite allowable to
kill a man for a buffet!
What purpose, then, can it serve to set this passage of Vasquez
over against the sentiment of Lessius, unless you mean to show that,
in the opinion of Vasquez, Lessius is a "Heathen" and a "profligate"?
and that, fathers, is more than I durst have said myself. What else
can be deduced from it than that Lessius "subverts both the Gospel and
the Decalogue"; that, at the last day, Vasquez will condemn Lessius on
this point, as Lessius will condemn Vasquez on another; and that all
your fathers will rise up in judgement one against another, mutually
condemning each other for their sad outrages on the law of Jesus
Christ?
To this conclusion, then, reverend fathers, must we come at
length, that, as your probabilism renders the good opinions of some of
your authors useless to the Church, and useful only to your policy,
they merely serve to betray, by their contrariety, the duplicity of
your hearts. This you have completely unfolded, by telling us, on the
one hand, that Vasquez and Suarez are against homicide, and on the
other hand, that many celebrated authors are for homicide; thus
presenting two roads to our choice and destroying the simplicity of
the Spirit of God, who denounces his anathema on the deceitful and the
double-hearted: "Voe duplici corde, et ingredienti duabus viis!- Woe
be to the double hearts, and the sinner that goeth two ways!"
If I had merely to reply to the three remaining charges on the
subject of homicide, there would be no need for a long discourse, and
you will see them refuted presently in a few words; but as I think it
of much more importance to inspire the public with a horror at your
opinions on this subject than to justify the fidelity of my
quotations, I shall be obliged to devote the greater part of this
letter to the refutation of your maxims, to show you how far you have
departed from the sentiments of the Church and even of nature itself.
The permissions of murder, which you have granted in such a variety of
cases, render it very apparent, that you have so far forgotten the law
of God, and quenched the light of nature, as to require to be remanded
to the simplest principles of religion and of common sense.
What can be a plainer dictate of nature than that "no private
individual has a right to take away the life of another"? "So well are
we taught this of ourselves," says St. Chrysostom, "that God, in
giving the commandment not to kill, did not add as a reason that
homicide was an evil; because," says that father, "the law supposes
that nature has taught us that truth already." Accordingly, this
commandment has been binding on men in all ages. The Gospel has
confirmed the requirement of the law; and the Decalogue only renewed
the command which man had received from God before the law, in the
person of Noah, from whom all men are descended. On that renovation of
the world, God said to the patriarch: "At the hand of man, and at the
hand of every man's brother, will I require the life of man. Whoso
sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed; for man is made
in the image of God." (Gen. ix. 5, 6.) This general prohibition
deprives man of all power over the life of man. And so exclusively has
the Almighty reserved this prerogative in His own hand that, in
accordance with Christianity, which is at utter variance with the
false maxims of Paganism, man has no power even over his own life.
But, as it has seemed good to His providence to take human society
under His protection, and to punish the evil-doers that give it
disturbance, He has Himself established laws for depriving criminals
of life; and thus those executions which, without this sanction, would
be punishable outrages, become, by virtue of His authority, which is
the rule of justice, praiseworthy penalties. St. Augustine takes an
admirable view of this subject. "God," he says, "has himself qualified
this general prohibition against manslaughter, both by the laws which
He has instituted for the capital punishment of malefactors, and by
the special orders which He has sometimes issued to put to death
certain individuals. And when death is inflicted in such cases, it is
not man that kills, but God, of whom man may be considered as only the
instrument, in the same way as a sword in the hand of him that wields
it. But, these instances excepted, whosoever kills incurs the guilt of
murder."
It appears, then, fathers, that the right of taking away the life
of man is the sole prerogative of God, and that, having ordained laws
for executing death on criminals, He has deputed kings or
commonwealths as the depositaries of that power- a truth which St.
Paul teaches us, when, speaking of the right which sovereigns possess
over the lives of their subjects, he deduces it from Heaven in these
words: "He beareth not the sword in vain; for he is the minister of
God to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil." (Rom. 13. 4.) But as
it is God who has put this power into their hands, so He requires them
to exercise it in the same manner as He does himself; in other words,
with perfect justice; according to what St. Paul observes in the same
passage: "Rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt
thou, then, not be afraid of the power? Do that which is good: for he
is the minister of God to thee for good." And this restriction, so far
from lowering their prerogative, exalts it, on the contrary, more than
ever; for it is thus assimilated to that of God who has no power to do
evil, but is all-powerful to do good; and it is thus distinguished
from that of devils, who are impotent in that which is good, and
powerful only for evil. There is this difference only to be observed
betwixt the King of Heaven and earthly sovereigns, that God, being
justice and wisdom itself, may inflict death instantaneously on
whomsoever and in whatsoever manner He pleases; for, besides His being
the sovereign Lord of human life, it certain that He never takes it
away either without cause or without judgement, because He is as
incapable of injustice as He is of error. Earthly potentates, however,
are not at liberty to act in this manner; for, though the ministers of
God, still they are but men, and not gods. They may be misguided by
evil counsels, irritated by false suspicions, transported by passion,
and hence they find themselves obliged to have recourse, in their turn
also, to human agency, and appoint magistrates in their dominions, to
whom they delegate their power, that the authority which God has
bestowed on them may be employed solely for the purpose for which they
received it.
I hope you understand, then, fathers, that, to avoid the crime of
murder, we must act at once by the authority of God, and according to
the justice of God; and that, when these two conditions are not
united, sin is contracted; whether it be by taking away life with his
authority, but without his justice; or by taking it away with justice,
but without his authority. From this indispensable connection it
follows, according to St. Augustine, "that he who, without proper
authority, kills a criminal, becomes a criminal himself, chiefly for
this reason, that he usurps an authority which God has not given him";
and on the other hand, magistrates, though they possess this
authority, are nevertheless chargeable with murder, if, contrary to
the laws which they are bound to follow, they inflict death on an
innocent man.
Such are the principles of public safety and tranquillity which
have been admitted at all times and in all places, and on the basis of
which all legislators, sacred and profane, from the beginning of the
world, have founded their laws. Even Heathens have never ventured to
make an exception to this rule, unless in cases where there was no
other way of escaping the loss of chastity or life, when they
conceived, as Cicero tells us, "that the law itself seemed to put its
weapons into the hands of those who were placed in such an emergency."
But with this single exception, which has nothing to do with my
present purpose, that such a law was ever enacted, authorizing or
tolerating, as you have done, the practice of putting a man to death,
to atone for an insult, or to avoid the loss of honour or property,
where life is not in danger at the same time; that, fathers, is what I
deny was ever done, even by infidels. They have, on the contrary, most
expressly forbidden the practice. The law of the Twelve Tables of Rome
bore, "that it is unlawful to kill a robber in the daytime, when he
does not defend himself with arms"; which, indeed, had been prohibited
long before in the 22d chapter of Exodus. And the law Furem, in the
Lex Cornelia, which is borrowed from Ulpian, forbids the killing of
robbers even by night, if they do not put us in danger of our lives.
Tell us now, fathers, what authority you have to permit what all
laws, human as well as divine, have forbidden; and who gave Lessius a
right to use the following language? "The book of Exodus forbids the
killing of thieves by day, when they do not employ arms in their
defence; and in a court of justice, punishment is inflicted on those
who kill under these circumstances. In conscience, however, no blame
can be attached to this practice, when a person is not sure of being
able otherwise to recover his stolen goods, or entertains a doubt on
the subject, as Sotus expresses it; for he is not obliged to run the
risk of losing any part of his property merely to save the life of a
robber. The same privilege extends even to clergymen." Such
extraordinary assurance! The law of Moses punishes those who kill a
thief when he does not threaten our lives, and the law of the Gospel,
according to you, will absolve them! What, fathers! has Jesus Christ
come to destroy the law, and not to fulfil it? "The civil judge," says
Lessius, "would inflict punishment on those who should kill under such
circumstances; but no blame can be attached to the deed in
conscience." Must we conclude, then, that the morality of Jesus Christ
is more sanguinary, and less the enemy of murder, than that of Pagans,
from whom our judges have borrowed their civil laws which condemn that
crime? Do Christians make more account of the good things of this
earth, and less account of human life, than infidels and idolaters? On
what principle do you proceed, fathers? Assuredly not upon any law
that ever was enacted either by God or man- on nothing, indeed, but
this extraordinary reasoning: "The laws," say you, "permit us to
defend ourselves against robbers, and to repel force by force;
self-defence, therefore, being permitted, it follows that murder,
without which self-defence is often impracticable, may be considered
as permitted also."
It is false, fathers, that, because self-defence is allowed,
murder may be allowed also. This barbarous method of self-vindication
lies at the root of all your errors, and has been justly stigmatized
by the Faculty of Louvain, in their censure of the doctrine of your
friend Father Lamy, as "a murderous defence- defensio occisiva." I
maintain that the laws recognize such a wide difference between murder
and self-defence that, in those very cases in which the latter is
sanctioned, they have made a provision against murder, when the person
is in no danger of his life. Read the words, fathers, as they run in
the same passage of Cujas: "It is lawful to repulse the person who
comes to invade our property; but we are not permitted to kill him."
And again: "If any should threaten to strike us, and not to deprive us
of life, it is quite allowable to repulse him; but it is against all
law to put him to death."
Who, then, has given you a right to say, as Molina, Reginald,
Filiutius, Escobar, Lessius, and others among you, have said, "that it
is lawful to kill the man who offers to strike us a blow"? or, "that
it is lawful to take the life of one who means to insult us, by the
common consent of all the casuists," as Lessius says. By what
authority do you, who are mere private individuals, confer upon other
private individuals, not excepting clergymen, this right of killing
and slaying? And how dare you usurp the power of life and death, which
belongs essentially to none but God, and which is the most glorious
mark of sovereign authority? These are the points that demand
explanation; and yet you conceive that you have furnished a triumphant
reply to the whole, by simply remarking, in your thirteenth Imposture,
"that the value for which Molina permits us to kill a thief, who flies
without having done us any violence, is not so small as I have said,
and that it must be a much larger sum than six ducats!" How extremely
silly! Pray, fathers, where would you have the price to be fixed? At
fifteen or sixteen ducats? Do not suppose that this will produce any
abatement in my accusations. At all events, you cannot make it exceed
the value of a horse; for Lessius is clearly of opinion, "that we may
lawfully kill the thief that runs off with our horse." But I must tell
you, moreover, that I was perfectly correct when I said that Molina
estimates the value of the thief's life at six ducats; and, if you
will not take it upon my word, we shall refer it to an umpire to whom
you cannot object. The person whom I fix upon for this office is your
own Father Reginald, who, in his explanation of the same passage of
Molina (l.28, n. 68), declares that "Molina there determines the sum
for which it is not allowable to kill at three, or four, or five
ducats." And thus, fathers, I shall have Reginald, in addition to
Molina, to bear me out.
It will be equally easy for me to refute your fourteenth
Imposture, touching Molina's permission to "kill a thief who offers to
rob us of a crown." This palpable fact is attested by Escobar, who
tells us "that Molina has regularly determined the sum for which it is
lawful to take away life, at one crown." And all you have to lay to my
charge in the fourteenth Imposture is, that I have suppressed the last
words of this passage, namely, "that in this matter every one ought to
study the moderation of a just self-defence." Why do you not complain
that Escobar has also omitted to mention these words? But how little
tact you have about you! You imagine that nobody understands what you
mean by self-defence. Don't we know that it is to employ "a murderous
defence"? You would persuade us that Molina meant to say that if a
person, in defending his crown, finds himself in danger of his life,
he is then at liberty to kill his assailant, in self-preservation. If
that were true, fathers, why should Molina say in the same place that
"in this matter he was of a contrary judgement from Carrer and Bald,"
who give permission to kill in self-preservation? I repeat, therefore,
that his plain meaning is that, provided the person can save his crown
without killing the thief, he ought not to kill him; but that, if he
cannot secure his object without shedding blood, even though he should
run no risk of his own life, as in the case of the robber being
unarmed, he is permitted to take up arms and kill the man, in order to
save his crown; and in so doing, according to him, the person does not
transgress "the moderation of a just defence." To show you that I am
in the right, just allow him to explain himself: "One does not exceed
the moderation of a just defence," says he, "when he takes up arms
against a thief who has none, or employs weapons which give him the
advantage over his assailant. I know there are some who are of a
contrary judgement; but I do not approve of their opinion, even in the
external tribunal."
Thus, fathers, it is unquestionable that your authors have given
permission to kill in defence of property and honour, though life
should be perfectly free from danger. And it is upon the same
principle that they authorize duelling, as I have shown by a great
variety of passages from their writings, to which you have made no
reply. You have animadverted in your writings only on a single passage
taken from Father Layman, who sanctions the above practice, "when
otherwise a person would be in danger of sacrificing his fortune or
his honour"; and here you accuse me with having suppressed what he
adds, "that such a case happens very rarely." You astonish me,
fathers: these are really curious impostures you charge me withal. You
talk as if the question were whether that is a rare case? when the
real question is if, in such a case, duelling is lawful? These are two
very different questions. Layman, in the quality of a casuist, ought
to judge whether duelling is lawful in the case supposed; and he
declares that it is. We can judge without his assistance whether the
case be a rare one; and we can tell him that it is a very ordinary
one. Or, if you prefer the testimony of your good friend Diana, he
will tell you that "the case is exceedingly common." But, be it rare
or not, and let it be granted that Layman follows in this the example
of Navarre, a circumstance on which you lay so much stress, is it not
shameful that he should consent to such an opinion as that, to
preserve a false honour, it is lawful in conscience to accept of a
challenge, in the face of the edicts of all Christian states, and of
all the canons of the Church, while in support of these diabolical
maxims you can produce neither laws, nor canons, nor authorities from
Scripture, or from the fathers, nor the example of a single saint,
nor, in short, anything but the following impious synogism: "Honour is
more than life; it is allowable to kill in defence of life; therefore
it is allowable to kill in defence of honour!" What, fathers! because
the depravity of men disposes them to prefer that factitious honour
before the life which God hath given them to be devoted to his
service, must they be permitted to murder one another for its
preservation? To love that honour more than life is in itself a
heinous evil; and yet this vicious passion, which, when proposed as
the end of our conduct, is enough to tarnish the holiest of actions,
is considered by you capable of sanctifying the most criminal of them!
What a subversion of all principle is here, fathers! And who does
not see to what atrocious excesses it may lead? It is obvious, indeed,
that it will ultimately lead to the commission of murder for the most
trifling things imaginable, when one's honour is considered to be
staked for their preservation- murder, I venture to say, even for an
apple! You might complain of me, fathers, for drawing sanguinary
inferences from your doctrine with a malicious intent, were I not
fortunately supported by the authority of the grave Lessius, who makes
the following observation, in number 68: "It is not allowable to take
life for an article of small value, such as for a crown or for an
apple- aut pro pomo- unless it would be deemed dishonourable to lose
it. In this case, one may recover the article, and even, if necessary,
kill the aggressor, for this is not so much defending one's property
as retrieving one's honour." This is plain speaking, fathers; and,
just to crown your doctrine with a maxim which includes all the rest,
allow me to quote the following from Father Hereau, who has taken it
from Lessius: "The right of self-defence extends to whatever is
necessary to protect ourselves from all injury."
What strange consequences does this inhuman principle involve! and
how imperative is the obligation laid upon all, and especially upon
those in public stations, to set their face against it! Not the
general good alone, but their own personal interest should engage them
to see well to it; for the casuists of your school whom I have cited
in my letters extend their permissions to kill far enough to reach
even them. Factious men, who dread the punishment of their outrages,
which never appear to them in a criminal light, easily persuade
themselves that they are the victims of violent oppression, and will
be led to believe at the same time, "that the right of self-defence
extends to whatever is necessary to protect themselves from all
injury." And thus, relieved from contending against the checks of
conscience, which stifle the greater number of crimes at their birth,
their only anxiety will be to surmount external obstacles.
I shall say no more on this subject, fathers; nor shall I dwell on
the other murders, still more odious and important to governments,
which you sanction, and of which Lessius, in common with many others
of your authors, treats in the most unreserved manner. It was to be
wished that these horrible maxims had never found their way out of
hell; and that the devil, who is their original author, had never
discovered men sufficiently devoted to his will to publish them among
Christians.
From all that I have hitherto said, it is easy to judge what a
contrariety there is betwixt the licentiousness of your opinions and
the severity of civil laws, not even excepting those of Heathens. How
much more apparent must the contrast be with ecclesiastical laws,
which must be incomparably more holy than any other, since it is the
Church alone that knows and possesses the true holiness! Accordingly,
this chaste spouse of the Son of God, who, in imitation of her
heavenly husband, can shed her own blood for others, but never the
blood of others for herself, entertains a horror at the crime of
murder altogether singular, and proportioned to the peculiar
illumination which God has vouchsafed to bestow upon her. She views
man, not simply as man, but as the image of the God whom she adores.
She feels for every one of the race a holy respect, which imparts to
him, in her eyes, a venerable character, as redeemed by an infinite
price, to be made the temple of the living God. And therefore she
considers the death of a man, slain without the authority of his
Maker, not as murder only, but as sacrilege, by which she is deprived
of one of her members; for, whether he be a believer or an unbeliever,
she uniformly looks upon him, if not as one, at least as capable of
becoming one, of her own children.
Such, fathers, are the holy reasons which, ever since the time
that God became man for the redemption of men, have rendered their
condition an object of such consequence to the Church that she
uniformly punishes the crime of homicide, not only as destructive to
them, but as one of the grossest outrages that can possibly be
perpetrated against God. In proof of this I shall quote some examples,
not from the idea that all the severities to which I refer ought to be
kept up (for I am aware that the Church may alter the arrangement of
such exterior discipline), but to demonstrate her immutable spirit
upon this subject. The penances which she ordains for murder may
differ according to the diversity of the times, but no change of time
can ever effect an alteration of the horror with which she regards the
crime itself.
For a long time the Church refused to be reconciled, till the very
hour of death, to those who had been guilty of wilful murder, as those
are to whom you give your sanction. The celebrated Council of Ancyra
adjudged them to penance during their whole lifetime; and,
subsequently, the Church deemed it an act of sufficient indulgence to
reduce that term to a great many years. But, still more effectually to
deter Christians from wilful murder, she has visited with most severe
punishment even those acts which have been committed through
inadvertence, as may be seen in St. Basil, in St. Gregory of Nyssen,
and in the decretals of Popes Zachary and Alexander II. The canons
quoted by Isaac, bishop of Langres (tr. 2. 13), "ordain seven years of
penance for having killed another in self-defence." And we find St.
Hildebert, bishop of Mans, replying to Yves de Chartres, "that he was
right in interdicting for life a priest who had, in self-defence,
killed a robber with a stone."
After this, you cannot have the assurance to persist in saying
that your decisions are agreeable to the spirit or the canons of the
Church. I defy you to show one of them that permits us to kill solely
in defence of our property (for I speak not of cases in which one may
be called upon to defend his life- se suaquae liberando); your own
authors, and, among the rest, Father Lamy, confess that no such canon
can be found. "There is no authority," he says, "human or divine,
which gives an express permission to kill a robber who makes no
resistance." And yet this is what you permit most expressly. I defy
you to show one of them that permits us to kill in vindication of
honour, for a buffet, for an affront, or for a slander. I defy you to
show one of them that permits the killing of witnesses, judges, or
magistrates, whatever injustice we may apprehend from them. The spirit
of the church is diametrically opposite to these seditious maxims,
opening the door to insurrections to which the mob is naturally prone
enough already. She has invariably taught her children that they ought
not to render evil for evil; that they ought to give place unto wrath;
to make no resistance to violence; to give unto every one his due-
honour, tribute, submission; to obey magistrates and superiors, even
though they should be unjust, because we ought always to respect in
them the power of that God who has placed them over us. She forbids
them, still more strongly than is done by the civil law, to take
justice into their own hands; and it is in her spirit that Christian
kings decline doing so in cases of high treason, and remit the
criminals charged with this grave offence into the hands of the
judges, that they may be punished according to the laws and the forms
of justice, which in this matter exhibit a contrast to your mode of
management so striking and complete that it may well make you blush
for shame.
As my discourse has taken this turn, I beg you to follow the
comparison which I shall now draw between the style in which you would
dispose of your enemies, and that in which the judges of the land
dispose of criminals. Everybody knows, fathers, that no private
individual has a right to demand the death of another individual; and
that though a man should have ruined us, maimed our body, burnt our
house, murdered our father, and was prepared, moreover, to assassinate
ourselves, or ruin our character, our private demand for the death of
that person would not be listened to in a court of justice. Public
officers have been appointed for that purpose, who make the demand in
the name of the king, or rather, I would say, in the name of God. Now,
do you conceive, fathers, that Christian legislators have established
this regulation out of mere show and grimace? Is it not evident that
their object was to harmonize the laws of the state with those of the
Church, and thus prevent the external practice of justice from
clashing with the sentiments which all Christians are bound to cherish
in their hearts? It is easy to see how this, which forms the
commencement of a civil process, must stagger you; its subsequent
procedure absolutely overwhelms you.
Suppose then, fathers, that these official persons have demanded
the death of the man who has committed all the above-mentioned crimes,
what is to be done next? Will they instantly plunge a dagger in his
breast? No, fathers; the life of man is too important to be thus
disposed of; they go to work with more decency; the laws have
committed it, not to all sorts of persons, but exclusively to the
judges, whose probity and competency have been duly tried. And is one
judge sufficient to condemn a man to death? No; it requires seven at
the very least; and of these seven there must not be one who has been
injured by the criminal, lest his judgement should be warped or
corrupted by passion. You are aware also, fathers, that, the more
effectually to secure the purity of their minds, they devote the hours
of the morning to these functions. Such is the care taken to prepare
them for the solemn action of devoting a fellow-creature to death; in
performing which they occupy the place of God, whose ministers they
are, appointed to condemn such only as have incurred his condemnation.
For the same reason, to act as faithful administrators of the
divine power of taking away human life, they are bound to form their
judgement solely according to the depositions of the witnesses, and
according to all the other forms prescribed to them; after which they
can pronounce conscientiously only according to law, and can judge
worthy of death those only whom the law condemns to that penalty. And
then, fathers, if the command of God obliges them to deliver over to
punishment the bodies of the unhappy culprits, the same divine statute
binds them to look after the interests of their guilty souls, and
binds them the more to this just because they are guilty; so that they
are not delivered up to execution till after they have been afforded
the means of providing for their consciences. All this is quite fair
and innocent; and yet, such is the abhorrence of the Church to blood
that she judges those to be incapable of ministering at her altars who
have borne any share in passing or executing a sentence of death,
accompanied though it be with these religious circumstances; from
which we may easily conceive what idea the Church entertains of
murder.
Such, then, being the manner in which human life is disposed of by
the legal forms of justice, let us now see how you dispose of it.
According to your modern system of legislation, there is but one
judge, and that judge is no other than the offended party. He is at
once the judge, the party, and the executioner. He himself demands
from himself the death of his enemy; he condemns him, he executes him
on the spot; and, without the least respect either for the soul or the
body of his brother, he murders and damns him for whom Jesus Christ
died; and all this for the sake of avoiding a blow on the cheek, or a
slander, or an offensive word, or some other offence of a similar
nature, for which, if a magistrate, in the exercise of legitimate
authority, were condemning any to die, he would himself be impeached;
for, in such cases, the laws are very far indeed from condemning any
to death. In one word, to crown the whole of this extravagance, the
person who kills his neighbour in this style, without authority and in
the face of all law, contracts no sin and commits no disorder, though
he should be religious and even a priest! Where are we, fathers? Are
these really religious, and priests, who talk in this manner? Are they
Christians? are they Turks? are they men? or are they demons? And are
these "the mysteries revealed by the Lamb to his Society"? or are they
not rather abominations suggested by the Dragon to those who take part
with him?
To come to the point, with you, fathers, whom do you wish to be
taken for?- for the children of the Gospel, or for the enemies of the
Gospel? You must be ranged either on the one side or on the other; for
there is no medium here. "He that is not with Jesus Christ is against
him." Into these two classes all mankind are divided. There are,
according to St. Augustine, two peoples and two worlds, scattered
abroad over the earth. There is the world of the children of God, who
form one body, of which Jesus Christ is the king and the head; and
there is the world at enmity with God, of which the devil is the king
and the head. Hence Jesus Christ is called the King and God of the
world, because he has everywhere his subjects and worshippers; and
hence the devil is also termed in Scripture the prince of this world,
and the god of this world, because he has everywhere his agents and
his slaves. Jesus Christ has imposed upon the Church, which is his
empire, such laws as he, in his eternal wisdom, was pleased to ordain;
and the devil has imposed on the world, which is his kingdom, such
laws as he chose to establish. Jesus Christ has associated honour with
suffering; the devil with not suffering. Jesus Christ has told those
who are smitten on the one cheek to turn the other also; and the devil
has told those who are threatened with a buffet to kill the man that
would do them such an injury. Jesus Christ pronounces those happy who
share in his reproach; and the devil declares those to be unhappy who
lie under ignominy. Jesus Christ says: Woe unto you when men shall
speak well of you! and the devil says: Woe unto those of whom the
world does not speak with esteem!
Judge, then, fathers, to which of these kingdoms you belong. You
have heard the language of the city of peace, the mystical Jerusalem;
and you have heard the language of the city of confusion, which
Scripture terms "the spiritual Sodom." Which of these two languages do
you understand? which of them do you speak? Those who are on the side
of Jesus Christ have, as St. Paul teaches us, the same mind which was
also in him; and those who are the children of the devil- ex patre
diabolo- who has been a murderer from the beginning, according to the
saying of Jesus Christ, follow the maxims of the devil. Let us hear,
therefore, the language of your school. I put this question to your
doctors: When a person has given me a blow on the cheek, ought I
rather to submit to the injury than kill the offender? or may I not
kill the man in order to escape the affront? Kill him by all means- it
is quite lawful! exclaim, in one breath, Lessius, Molina, Escobar,
Reginald, Filiutius, Baldelle, and other Jesuits. Is that the language
of Jesus Christ? One question more: Would I lose my honour by
tolerating a box on the ear, without killing the person that gave it?
"Can there be a doubt," cries Escobar, "that so long as a man suffers
another to live who has given him a buffet, that man remains without
honour?" Yes, fathers, without that honour which the devil transfuses,
from his own proud spirit into that of his proud children. This is the
honour which has ever been the idol of worldly-minded men. For the
preservation of this false glory, of which the god of this world is
the appropriate dispenser, they sacrifice their lives by yielding to
the madness of duelling; their honour, by exposing themselves to
ignominious punishments; and their salvation, by involving themselves
in the peril of damnation- a peril which, according to the canons of
the Church, deprives them even of Christian burial. We have reason to
thank God, however, for having enlightened the mind of our monarch
with ideas much purer than those of your theology. His edicts bearing
so severely on this subject, have not made duelling a crime- they only
punish the crime which is inseparable from duelling. He has checked,
by the dread of his rigid justice, those who were not restrained by
the fear of the justice of God; and his piety has taught him that the
honour of Christians consists in their observance of the mandates of
Heaven and the rules of Christianity, and not in the pursuit of that
phantom which, airy and unsubstantial as it is, you hold to be a
legitimate apology for murder. Your murderous decisions being thus
universally detested, it is highly advisable that you should now
change your sentiments, if not from religious principle, at least from
motives of policy. Prevent, fathers, by a spontaneous condemnation of
these inhuman dogmas, the melancholy consequences which may result
from them, and for which you will be responsible. And to impress your
minds with a deeper horror at homicide, remember that the first crime
of fallen man was a murder, committed on the person of the first holy
man; that the greatest crime was a murder, perpetrated on the person
of the King of saints; and that, of all crimes, murder is the only one
which involves in a common destruction the Church and the state,
nature and religion.
I have just seen the answer of your apologist to my Thirteenth
Letter, but if he has nothing better to produce in the shape of a
reply to that letter, which obviates the greater part of his
objections, he will not deserve a rejoinder. I am sorry to see him
perpetually digressing from his subject, to indulge in rancorous abuse
both of the living and the dead. But, in order to gain some credit to
the stories with which you have furnished him, you should not have
made him publicly disavow a fact so notorious as that of the buffet of
Compiegne. Certain it is, fathers, from the deposition of the injured
party, that he received upon his cheek a blow from the hand of a
Jesuit; and all that your friends have been able to do for you has
been to raise a doubt whether he received the blow with the back or
the palm of the hand, and to discuss the question whether a stroke on
the cheek with the back of the hand can be properly denominated a
buffet. I know not to what tribunal it belongs to decide this point;
but shall content myself, in the meantime, with believing that it was,
to say the very least, a probable buffet. This gets me off with a safe
conscience.
As your scurrilities are daily increasing, and as you are
employing them in the merciless abuse of all pious persons opposed to
your errors, I feel myself obliged, for their sake and that of the
Church, to bring out that grand secret of your policy, which I
promised to disclose some time ago, in order that all may know,
through means of your own maxims, what degree of credit is due to your
calumnious accusations.
I am aware that those who are not very well acquainted with you
are at a great loss what to think on this subject, as they find
themselves under the painful necessity, either of believing the
incredible crimes with which you charge your opponents, or (what is
equally incredible) of setting you down as slanderers. "Indeed!" they
exclaim, "were these things not true, would clergymen publish them to
the world- would they debauch their consciences and damn themselves by
venting such libels?" Such is their way of reasoning, and thus it is
that the palpable proof of your falsifications coming into collision
with their opinion of your honesty, their minds hang in a state of
suspense between the evidence of truth, which they cannot gainsay, and
the demands of charity, which they would not violate. It follows that
since their high esteem for you is the only thing that prevents them
from discrediting your calumnies, if we can succeed in convincing them
that you have quite a different idea of calumny from that which they
suppose you to have, and that you actually believe that in blackening
and defaming your adversaries you are working out your own salvation,
there can be little question that the weight of truth will determine
them immediately to pay no regard to your accusations. This, fathers,
will be the subject of the present letter.
My design is not simply to show that your writings are full of
calumnies; I mean to go a step beyond this. It is quite possible for a
person to say a number of false things believing them to be true; but
the character of a liar implies the intention to tell lies. Now I
undertake to prove, fathers, that it is your deliberate intention to
tell lies, and that it is both knowingly and purposely that you load
your opponents with crimes of which you know them to be innocent,
because you believe that you may do so without falling from a state of
grace. Though you doubtless know this point of your morality as well
as I do, this need not prevent me from telling you about it; which I
shall do, were it for no other purpose than to convince all men of its
existence, by showing them that I can maintain it to your face, while
you cannot have the assurance to disavow it, without confirming, by
that very disavowment, the charge which I bring against you.
The doctrine to which I allude is so common in your schools that
you have maintained it not only in your books, but, such is your
assurance, even in your public theses; as, for example, in those
delivered at Louvain in the year 1645, where it occurs in the
following terms: "What is it but a venial sin to culminate and forge
false accusations to ruin the credit of those who speak evil of us?"
So settled is this point among you that, if any one dare to oppose it,
you treat him as a blockhead and a hare-brained idiot. Such was the
way in which you treated Father Quiroga, the German Capuchin, when he
was so unfortunate as to impugn the doctrine. The poor man was
instantly attacked by Dicastille, one of your fraternity; and the
following is a specimen of the manner in which he manages the dispute:
"A certain rueful-visaged, bare-footed, cowled friar-cucullatus
gymnopoda- whom I do not choose to name, had the boldness to denounce
this opinion, among some women and ignorant people, and to allege that
it was scandalous and pernicious against all good manners, hostile to
the peace of states and societies, and, in short, contrary to the
judgement not only of all Catholic doctors, but of all true Catholics.
But in opposition to him I maintained, as I do still, that calumny,
when employed against a calumniator, though it should be a falsehood,
is not a mortal sin, either against justice or charity: and, to prove
the point, I referred him to the whole body of our fathers, and to
whole universities, exclusively composed of them whom I had consulted
on the subject; and among others the reverend Father John Gans,
confessor to the Emperor; the reverend Father Daniel Bastele,
confessor to the Archduke Leopold; Father Henri, who was preceptor to
these two princes; all the public and ordinary professors of the
university of Vienna" (wholly composed of Jesuits); "all the
professors of the university of Gratz" (all Jesuits); "all the
professors of the university of Prague" (where Jesuits are the
masters);- "from all of whom I have in my possession approbations of
my opinions, written and signed with their own hands; besides having
on my side the reverend Father Panalossa, a Jesuit, preacher to the
Emperor and the King of Spain; Father Pilliceroli, a Jesuit, and many
others, who had all judged this opinion to be probable, before our
dispute began." You perceive, fathers, that there are few of your
opinions which you have been at more pains to establish than the
present, as indeed there were few of them of which you stood more in
need. For this reason, doubtless, you have authenticated it so well
that the casuists appeal to it as an indubitable principle. "There can
be no doubt," says Caramuel, "that it is a probable opinion that we
contract no mortal sin by calumniating another, in order to preserve
our own reputation. For it is maintained by more than twenty grave
doctors, by Gaspard Hurtado, and Dicastille, Jesuits, so that, were
this doctrine not probable, it would be difficult to find any one such
in the whole compass of theology."
Wretched indeed must that theology be, and rotten to the very
core, which, unless it has been decided to be safe in conscience to
defame our neighbor's character to preserve our own, can hardly boast
of a safe decision on any other point! How natural is it, fathers,
that those who hold this principle should occasionally put it in
practice! corrupt propensity of mankind leans so strongly in that
direction of itself that, the obstacle of conscience once being
removed, it would be folly to suppose that it will not burst forth
with all its native impetuosity. If you desire an example of this,
Caramuel will furnish you with one that occurs in the same passage:
"This maxim of Father Dicastille," he says, "having been communicated
by a German countess to the daughters of the Empress, the belief thus
impressed on their minds that calumny was only a venial sin, gave rise
in the course of a few days to such an immense number of false and
scandalous tales that the whole court was thrown into a flame and fill
ed with alarm. It is easy, indeed, to conceive what a fine use these
ladies would make of the new light they had acquired. Matters
proceeded to such a length, that it was found necessary to call in the
assistance of a worthy Capuchin friar, a man of exemplary life, called
Father Quiroga" (the very man whom Dicastille rails at so bitterly),
"who assured them that the maxim was most pernicious, especially among
women, and was at the greatest pains to prevail upon the Empress to
abolish the practice of it entirely." We have no reason, therefore, to
be surprised at the bad effects of this doctrine; on the contrary, the
wonder would be if it had failed to produce them. Self-love is always
ready enough to whisper in our ear, when we are attacked, that we
suffer wrongfully; and more particularly in your case, fathers, whom
vanity has blinded so egregiously as to make you believe that to wound
the honour of your Society is to wound that of the Church. There would
have been good ground to look on it as something miraculous, if you
had not reduced this maxim to practice. Those who do not know you are
ready to say: How could these good fathers slander their enemies, when
they cannot do so but at the expense of their own salvation? But, if
they knew you better, the question would be: How could these good
fathers forego the advantage of decrying their enemies, when they have
it in their power to do so without hazarding their salvation? Let
none, therefore, henceforth be surprised to find the Jesuits
calumniators; they can exercise this vocation with a safe conscience;
there is no obstacle in heaven or on earth to prevent them. In virtue
of the credit they have acquired in the world, they can practise
defamation without dreading the justice of mortals; and, on the
strength of their self-assumed authority in matters of conscience,
they have invented maxims for enabling them to do it without any fear
of the justice of God.
This, fathers, is the fertile source of your base slanders. On
this principle was Father Brisacier led to scatter his calumnies about
him, with such zeal as to draw down on his head the censure of the
late Archbishop of Paris. Actuated by the same motives, Father D'Anjou
launched his invectives from the pulpit of the Church of St. Benedict
in Paris on the 8th of March, 1655, against those honourable gentlemen
who were intrusted with the charitable funds raised for the poor of
Picardy and Champagne, to which they themselves had largely
contributed; and, uttering a base falsehood, calculated (if your
slanders had been considered worthy of any credit) to dry up the
stream of that charity, he had the assurance to say, "that he knew,
from good authority, that certain persons had diverted that money from
its proper use, to employ it against the Church and the State"; a
calumny which obliged the curate of the parish, who is a doctor of the
Sorbonne, to mount the pulpit the very next day, in order to give it
the lie direct. To the same source must be traced the conduct of your
Father Crasset, who preached calumny at such a furious rate in Orleans
that the Archbishop of that place was under the necessity of
interdicting him as a public slanderer. In this mandate, dated the 9th
of September last, his lordship declares: "That whereas he had been
informed that Brother Jean Crasset, priest of the Society of Jesus,
had delivered from the pulpit a discourse filled with falsehoods and
calumnies against the ecclesiastics of this city, falsely and
maliciously charging them with maintaining impious and heretical
propositions, such as: That the commandments of God are impracticable;
that internal grace is irresistible; that Jesus Christ did not die for
all men; and others of a similar kind, condemned by Innocent X: he
therefore hereby interdicts the aforesaid Crasset from preaching in
his diocese, and forbids all his people to hear him, on pain of mortal
disobedience." The above, fathers, is your ordinary accusation, and
generally among the first that you bring against all whom it is your
interest to denounce. And, although you should find it as impossible
to substantiate the charge against any of them, as Father Crasset did
in the case of the clergy of Orleans, your peace of conscience will
not be in the least disturbed on that account; for you believe that
this mode of calumniating your adversaries is permitted you with such
certainty that you have no scruple to avow it in the most public
manner, and in the face of a whole city.
A remarkable proof of this may be seen in the dispute you had with
M. Puys, curate of St. Nisier at Lyons; and the story exhibits so
complete an illustration of your spirit that I shall take the liberty
of relating some of its leading circumstances. You know, fathers,
that, in the year 1649, M. Puys translated into French an excellent
book, written by another Capuchin friar, On the duty which Christians
owe to their own parishes, against those that would lead them away
from them, without using a single invective, or pointing to any monk
or any order of monks in particular. Your fathers, however, were
pleased to put the cap on their own heads; and without any respect to
an aged pastor, a judge in the Primacy of France, and a man who was
held in the highest esteem by the whole city, Father Alby wrote a
furious tract against him, which you sold in your own church upon
Assumption Day; in which book, among other various charges, he accused
him of having made himself scandalous by his gallantries," described
him as suspected of having no religion, as a heretic, excommunicated,
and, in short, worthy of the stake. To this M. Puys made a reply; and
Father Alby, in a second publication, supported his former
allegations. Now, fathers, is it not a clear point either that you
were calumniators, or that you believed all that you alleged against
that worthy priest to be true; and that, on this latter assumption, it
became you to see him purified from all these abominations before
judging him worthy of your friendship? Let us see, then, what happened
at the accommodation of the dispute, which took place in the presence
of a great number of the principal inhabitants of the town on the 25th
of September, 1650. Before all these witnesses M. Puys made a
declaration, which was neither more nor less than this: "That what he
had written was not directed against the fathers of the Society of
Jesus; that he had spoken in general of those who alienated the
faithful from their parishes, without meaning by that to attack the
Society; and that, so far from having such an intention, the Society
was the object of his esteem and affection." By virtue of these words
alone, without either retraction or absolution, M. Puys recovered, all
at once, from his apostasy, his scandals, and his excommunication; and
Father Alby immediately thereafter addressed him in the following
express terms: "Sir, it was in consequence of my believing that you
meant to attack the Society to which I have the honour to belong that
I was induced to take up the pen in its defence; and I considered that
the mode of reply which I adopted was such as I was permitted to
employ. But, on a better understanding of your intention, I am now
free to declare that there is nothing in your work to prevent me from
regarding you as a man of genius, enlightened in judgement, profound
and orthodox in doctrine, and irreproachable in manners; in one word,
as a pastor worthy of your Church. It is with much pleasure that I
make this declaration, and I beg these gentlemen to remember what I
have now said."
They do remember it, fathers; and, allow me to add, they were more
scandalized by the reconciliation than by the quarrel. For who can
fail to admire this speech of Father Alby? He does not say that he
retracts, in consequence of having learnt that a change had taken
place in the faith and manners of M. Puys, but solely because, having
understood that he had no intention of attacking your Society, there
was nothing further to prevent him from regarding the author as a good
Catholic. He did not then believe him to be actually a heretic! And
yet, after having, contrary to his conviction, accused him of this
crime, he will not acknowledge he was in the wrong, but has the
hardihood to say that he considered the method he adopted to be "such
as he was permitted to employ!"
What can you possibly mean, fathers, by so publicly avowing the
fact that you measure the faith and the virtue of men only by the
sentiments they entertain towards your Society? Had you no
apprehension of making yourselves pass, by your own acknowledgement,
as a band of swindlers and slanderers? What, fathers! must the same
individual without undergoing any personal transformation, but simply
according as you judge him to have honoured or assailed your
community, be "pious" or "impious," "irreproachable" or
"excommunicated," "a pastor worthy of the Church," or "worthy of the
stake"; in short, "a Catholic" or "a heretic"? To attack your Society
and to be a heretic are, therefore, in your language, convertible
terms! An odd sort of heresy this, fathers! And so it would appear
that, when we see many good Catholics branded, in your writings, by
the name of heretia, it means nothing more than that you think they
attack you! It is well, fathers, that we understand this strange
dialect, according to which there can be no doubt that I must be a
great heretic. It is in this sense, then, that you so often favour me
with this appellation! Your sole reason for cutting me off from the
Church is because you conceive that my letters have done you harm;
and, accordingly, all that I have to do, in order to become a good
Catholic, is either to approve of your extravagant morality, or to
convince you that my sole aim in exposing it has been your advantage.
The former I could not do without renouncing every sentiment of piety
that I ever possessed; and the latter you will be slow to acknowledge
till you are well cured of your errors. Thus am I involved in heresy,
after a very singular fashion; for, the purity of my faith being of no
avail for my exculpation, I have no means of escaping from the charge,
except either by turning traitor to my own conscience, or by reforming
yours. Till one or other of these events happen, I must remain a
reprobate and a slanderer; and, let me be ever so faithful in my
citations from your writings, you will go about crying everywhere:
"What an instrument of the devil must that man be, to impute to us
things of which there is not the least mark or vestige to be found in
our books!" And, by doing so, you will only be acting in conformity
with your fixed maxim and your ordinary practice: to such latitude
does your privilege of telling lies extend! Allow me to give you an
example of this, which I select on purpose; it will give me an
opportunity of replying, at the same time, to your ninth Imposture:
for, in truth, they only deserve to be refuted in passing.
About ten or twelve years ago, you were accused of holding that
maxim of Father Bauny, "that it is permissible to seek directly (primo
et per se) a proximate occasion of sin, for the spiritual or temporal
good of ourselves or our neighbour" (tr.4, q.14); as an example of
which, he observes: "It is allowable to visit infamous places, for the
purpose of converting abandoned females, even although the practice
should be very likely to lead into sin, as in the case of one who has
found from experience that he has frequently yielded to their
temptations." What answer did your Father Caussin give to this charge
in the year 1644? "Just let any one look at the passage in Father
Bauny," said he, "let him peruse the page, the margins, the preface,
the appendix, in short, the whole book from beginning to end, and he
will not discover the slightest vestige of such a sentence, which
could only enter into the mind of a man totally devoid of conscience,
and could hardly have been forged by any other but an instrument of
Satan." Father Pintereau talks in the same style: "That man must be
lost to all conscience who would teach so detestable a doctrine; but
he must be worse than a devil who attributes it to Father Bauny.
Reader, there is not a single trace or vestige of it in the whole of
his book." Who would not believe that persons talking in this tone
have good reason to complain, and that Father Bauny has, in very deed,
been misrepresented? Have you ever asserted anything against me in
stronger terms? And, after such a solemn asseveration, that "there was
not a single trace or vestige of it in the whole book, " who would
imagine that the passage is to be found, word for word, in the place
referred to?
Truly, fathers, if this be the means of securing your reputation,
so long as you remain unanswered, it is also, unfortunately, the means
of destroying it forever, so soon as an answer makes its appearance.
For so certain is it that you told a lie at the period before
mentioned, that you make no scruple of acknowledging, in your
apologies of the present day, that the maxim in question is to be
found in the very place which had been quoted; and, what is most
extraordinary, the same maxim which, twelve years ago, was
"detestable," has now become so innocent that in your ninth Imposture
(p. 10) you accuse me of "ignorance and malice, in quarrelling with
Father Bauny for an opinion which has not been rejected in the
School." What an advantage it is, fathers, to have to do with people
that deal in contradictions! I need not the aid of any but yourselves
to confute you; for I have only two things to show: first, That the
maxim in dispute is a worthless one; and, secondly, That it belongs to
Father Bauny; and I can prove both by your own confession. In 1644,
you confessed that it was "detestable"; and, in 1656, you avow that it
is Father Bauny's. This double acknowledgement completely justifies
me, fathers; but it does more, it discovers the spirit of your policy.
For, tell me, pray, what is the end you propose to yourselves in your
writings? Is it to speak with honesty? No, fathers; that cannot be,
since your defences destroy each other. Is it to follow the truth of
the faith? As little can this be your end; since, according to your
own showing, you authorize a "detestable" maxim. But, be it observed
that while you said the maxim was "detestable," you denied, at the
same time, that it was the property of Father Bauny, and so he was
innocent; and when you now acknowledge it to be his, you maintain, at
the same time, that it is a good maxim, and so he is innocent still.
The innocence of this monk, therefore, being the only thing common to
your two answers, it is obvious that this was the sole end which you
aimed at in putting them forth; and that, when you say of one and the
same maxim, that it is in a certain book, and that it is not; that it
is a good maxim, and that it is a bad one; your sole object is to
whitewash some one or other of your fraternity; judging in the matter,
not according to the truth, which never changes, but according to your
own interest, which is varying every hour. Can I say more than this?
You perceive that it amounts to a demonstration; but it is far from
being a singular instance, and, to omit a multitude of examples of the
same thing, I believe you will be contented with my quoting only one
more.
You have been charged, at different times, with another
proposition of the same Father Bauny, namely:. "That absolution ought
to be neither denied nor deferred in the case of those who live in the
habits of sin against the law of God, of nature, and of the Church,
although there should be no apparent prospect of future amendment-
etsi emendationis futurae spes nulla appareat." Now, with regard to
this maxim, I beg you to tell me, fathers, which of the apologies that
have been made for it is most to your liking; whether that of Father
Pintereau, or that of Father Brisacier, both of your Society, who have
defended Father Bauny, in your two different modes- the one by
condemning the proposition, but disavowing it to be Father Bauny's;
the other by allowing it to be Father Bauny's, but vindicating the
proposition? Listen, then, to their respective deliverances. Here
comes that of Father Pintereau (p. 8): "I know not what can be called
a transgression of all the bounds of modesty, a step beyond all
ordinary impudence, if the imputation to Father Bauny of so damnable a
doctrine is not worthy of that designation. Judge, reader, of the
baseness of that calumny; see what sort of creatures the Jesuits have
to deal with; and say if the author of so foul a slander does not
deserve to be regarded from henceforth as the interpreter of the
father of lies." Now for Father Brisacier: "It is true, Father Bauny
says what you allege." (That gives the lie direct to Father Pintereau,
plain enough.) "But," adds he, in defence of Father Bauny, "if you who
find so much fault with this sentiment wait, when a penitent lies at
your feet, till his guardian angel find security for his rights in the
inheritance of heaven; if you wait till God the Father swear by
himself that David told a lie, when he said by the Holy Ghost that
'all men are liars,' fallible and perfidious; if you wait till the
penitent be no longer a liar, no longer frail and changeable, no
longer a sinner, like other men; if you wait, I say, till then, you
will never apply the blood of Jesus Christ to a single soul."
What do you really think now, fathers, of these impious and
extravagant expressions? According to them, if we would wait "till
there be some hope of amendment" in sinners before granting their
absolution, we must wait "till God the Father swear by himself," that
they will never fall into sin any more! What, fathers! is no
distinction to be made between hope and certainty? How injurious is it
to the grace of Jesus Christ to maintain that it is so impossible for
Christians ever to escape from crimes against the laws of God, nature,
and the Church, that such a thing cannot be looked for, without
supposing "that the Holy Ghost has told a lie"; and, if absolution is
not granted to those who give no hope of amendment, the blood of Jesus
Christ will be useless, forsooth, and would never be applied to a
single soul!" To what a sad pass have you come, fathers by this
extravagant desire of upholding the glory of your authors, when you
can find only two ways of justifying them- by imposture or by impiety;
and when the most innocent mode by which you can extricate yourselves
is by the barefaced denial of facts as patent as the light of day!
This may perhaps account for your having recourse so frequently to
that very convenient practice. But this does not complete the sum of
your accomplishments in the art of self-defence. To render your
opponents odious, you have had recourse to the forging of documents,
such as that Letter of a Minister to M. Arnauld, which you circulated
through all Paris, to induce the belief that the work on Frequent
Communion, which had been approved by so many bishops and doctors, but
which, to say the truth, was rather against you, had been concocted
through secret intelligence with the ministers of Charenton. At other
times, you attribute to your adversaries writings full of impiety,
such as the Circular Letter of the Jansenists, the absurd style of
which renders the fraud too gross to be swallowed, and palpably
betrays the malice of your Father Meynier, who has the impudence to
make use of it for supporting his foulest slanders. Sometimes, again,
you will quote books which were never in existence, such as The
Constitution of the Holy Sacrament, from which you extract passages,
fabricated at pleasure and calculated to make the hair on the heads of
certain good simple people, who have no idea of the effrontery with
which you can invent and propagate falsehoods, actually to bristle
with horror. There is not, indeed, a single species of calumny which
you have not put into requisition; nor is it possible that the maxim
which excuses the vice could have been lodged in better hands.
But those sorts of slander to which we have adverted are rather
too easily discredited; and, accordingly, you have others of a more
subtle character, in which you abstain from specifying particulars, in
order to preclude your opponents from getting any hold, or finding any
means of reply; as, for example, when Father Brisacier says that "his
enemies are guilty of abominable crimes, which he does not choose to
mention." Would you not think it were impossible to prove a charge so
vague as this to be a calumny? An able man, however, has found out the
secret of it; and it is a Capuchin again, fathers. You are unlucky in
Capuchins, as times now go; and I foresee that you may be equally so
some other time in Benedictines. The name of this Capuchin is Father
Valerien, of the house of the Counts of Magnis. You shall hear, by
this brief narrative, how he answered your calumnies. He had happily
succeeded in converting Prince Ernest, the Landgrave of
Hesse-Rheinsfelt. Your fathers, however, seized, as it would appear,
with some chagrin at seeing a sovereign prince converted without their
having had any hand in it, immediately wrote a book against the friar
(for good men are everywhere the objects of your persecution), in
which, by falsifying one of his passages, they ascribed to him an
heretical doctrine. They also circulated a letter against him, in
which they said: "Ah, we have such things to disclose" (without
mentioning what) "as will gall you to the quick! If you don't take
care, we shall be forced to inform the pope and the cardinals about
it." This manoeuvre was pretty well executed; and I doubt not,
fathers, but you may speak in the same style of me; but take warning
from the manner in which the friar answered in his book, which was
printed last year at Prague (p.112, "What shall I do," he says, "to
counteract these vague and indefinite insinuations? How shall I refute
charges which have never been specified? Here, however, is my plan. I
declare, loudly and publicly, to those who have threatened me, that
they are notorious slanderers and most impudent liars, if they do not
discover these crimes before the whole world. Come forth, then, mine
accusers! and publish your lies upon the house-tops, in place of
telling them in the ear, and keeping yourselves out of harm's way by
telling them in the ear. Some may think this a scandalous way of
managing the dispute. It was scandalous, I grant, to impute to me such
a crime as heresy, and to fix upon me the suspicion of many others
besides; but, by asserting my innocence, I am merely applying the
proper remedy to the scandal already in existence."
Truly, fathers, never were your reverences more roughly handled,
and never was a poor man more completely vindicated. Since you have
made no reply to such a peremptory challenge, it must be concluded
that you are unable to discover the slightest shadow of criminality
against him. You have had very awkward scrapes to get through
occasionally; but experience has made you nothing the wiser. For, some
time after this happened, you attacked the same individual in a
similar strain, upon another subject; and he defended himself after
the same spirited manner, as follows: "This class of men, who have
become an intolerable nuisance to the whole of Christendom, aspire,
under the pretext of good works, to dignities and domination, by
perverting to their own ends almost all laws, human and divine,
natural and revealed. They gain over to their side, by their doctrine,
by the force of fear, or of persuasion, the great ones of the earth,
whose authority they abuse for the purpose of accomplishing their
detestable intrigues. Meanwhile their enterprises, criminal as they
are, are neither punished nor suppressed; on the contrary, they are
rewarded; and the villains go about them with as little fear or
remorse as if they were doing God service. Everybody is aware of the
fact I have now stated; everybody speaks of it with execration; but
few are found capable of opposing a despotism so powerful. This,
however, is what I have done. I have already curbed their insolence;
and, by the same means, I shall curb it again. I declare, then, that
they are most impudent liars- mentiris impudentissime. If the charges
they have brought against me be true, let them prove it; otherwise
they stand convicted of falsehood, aggravated by the grossest
effrontery. Their procedure in this case will show who has the right
upon his side. I desire all men to take a particular observation of
it; and beg to remark, in the meantime, that this precious cabal, who
will not suffer the most trifling charge which they can possibly repel
to lie upon them, made a show of enduring, with great patience, those
from which they cannot vindicate themselves, and conceal, under a
counterfeit virtue, their real impotency. My object, therefore, in
provoking their modesty by this sharp retort, is to let the plainest
people understand that, if my enemies hold their peace, their
forbearance must be ascribed, not to the meekness of their natures,
but to the power of a guilty conscience." He concludes with the
following sentence: "These gentry, whose history is well known
throughout the whole world, are so glaringly iniquitous in their
measures, and have become so insolent in their impunity, that if I did
not detest their conduct, and publicly express my detestation too, not
merely for my own vindication, but to guard the simple against its
seducing influence, I must have renounced my allegiance to Jesus
Christ and his Church."
Reverend fathers, there is no room for tergiversation. You must
pass for convicted slanderers, and take comfort in your old maxim that
calumny is no crime. This honest friar has discovered the secret of
shutting your mouths; and it must be employed on all occasions when
you accuse people without proof. We have only to reply to each slander
as it appears, in the words of the Capuchin: "Mentiris impudentissime-
You are most impudent liars." For instance, what better answer does
Father Brisacier deserve when he says of his opponents that they are
"the gates of hell; the devil's bishops; persons devoid of faith,
hope, and charity; the builders of Antichrist's exchequer"; adding, "I
say this of him, not by way of insult, but from deep conviction of its
truth"? Who would be at the pains to demonstrate that he is not "a
gate of hell," and that he has no concern with "the building up of
Antichrist's exchequer"?
In like manner, what reply is due to all the vague speeches of
this sort which are to be found in your books and advertisements on my
letters; such as the following, for example: "That restitutions have
been converted to private uses, and thereby creditors have been
reduced to beggary; that bags of money have been offered to learned
monks, who declined the bribe; that benefices are conferred for the
purpose of disseminating heresies against the faith; that pensioners
are kept in the houses of the most eminent churchmen, and in the
courts of sovereigns; that I also am a pensioner of Port-Royal; and
that, before writing my letters, I had composed romances"- I, who
never read one in my life, and who do not know so much as the names of
those which your apologist has published? What can be said in reply to
all this, fathers, if you do not mention the names of all these
persons you refer to, their words, the time, and the place, except-
Mentiris impudentissime? You should either be silent altogether, or
relate and prove all the circumstances, as I did when I told you the
anecdotes of Father Alby and John d'Alba. Otherwise, you will hurt
none but yourselves. Your numerous fables might, perhaps, have done
you some service, before your principles were known; but now that the
whole has been brought to light, when you begin to whisper as usual,
"A man of honor, who desired us to conceal his name, has told us some
horrible stories of these same people"- you will be cut short at once,
and reminded of the Capuchin's "Mentiris impudentissime." Too long by
far have you been permitted to deceive the world, and to abuse the
confidence which men were ready to place in your calumnious
accusations. It is high time to redeem the reputation of the
multitudes whom you have defamed. For what innocence can be so
generally known, as not to suffer some injury from the daring
aspersions of a body of men scattered over the face of the earth, and
who, under religious habits, conceal minds so utterly irreligious that
they perpetrate crimes like calumny, not in opposition to, but in
strict accordance with, their moral maxims? I cannot, therefore, be
blamed for destroying the credit which might have been awarded you,
seeing it must be allowed to be a much greater act of justice to
restore to the victims of your obloquy the character which they did
not deserve to lose, than to leave you in the possession of a
reputation for sincerity which you do not deserve to enjoy. And, as
the one could not be done without the other, how important was it to
show you up to the world as you really are! In this letter I have
commenced the exhibition; but it will require some time to complete
it. Published it shall be, fathers, and all your policy will be
inadequate to save you from the disgrace; for the efforts which you
may make to avert the blow will only serve to convince the most obtuse
observers that you were terrified out of your wits, and that, your
consciences anticipating the charges I had to bring against you, you
have put every oar in the water to prevent the discovery.
I now come to consider the rest of your calumnies, and shall begin
with those contained in your advertisements, which remain to be
noticed. As all your other writings, however, are equally well stocked
with slander, they will furnish me with abundant materials for
entertaining you on this topic as long as I may judge expedient. In
the first place, then, with regard to the fable which you have
propagated in all your writings against the Bishop of Ypres, I beg
leave to say, in one word, that you have maliciously wrested the
meaning of some ambiguous expressions in one of his letters which,
being capable of a good sense, ought, according to the spirit of the
Gospel, to have been taken in good part, and could only be taken
otherwise according to the spirit of your Society. For example, when
he says to a friend, "Give yourself no concern about your nephew; I
will furnish him with what he requires from the money that lies in my
hands," what reason have you to interpret this to mean that he would
take that money without restoring it, and not that he merely advanced
it with the purpose of replacing it? And how extremely imprudent was
it for you to furnish a refutation of your own lie, by printing the
other letters of the Bishop of Ypres, which clearly show that, in
point of fact, it was merely advanced money, which he was bound to
refund. This appears, to your confusion, from the following terms in
the letter, to which you give the date of July 30, 1619: "Be not
uneasy about the money advanced; he shall want for nothing so long as
he is here"; and likewise from another, dated January 6, 1620, where
he says: "You are in too great haste; when the account shall become
due, I have no fear but that the little credit which I have in this
place will bring me as much money as I require."
If you are convicted slanderers on this subject, you are no less
so in regard to the ridiculous story about the charity-box of St.
Merri. What advantage, pray, can you hope to derive from the
accusation which one of your worthy friends has trumped up against
that ecclesiastic? Are we to conclude that a man is guilty, because he
is accused? No, fathers. Men of piety, like him, may expect to be
perpetually accused, so long as the world contains calumniators like
you. We must judge of him, therefore, not from the accusation, but
from the sentence; and the sentence pronounced on the case (February
23, 1656) justifies him completely. Moreover, the person who had the
temerity to involve himself in that iniquitous process, was disavowed
by his colleagues, and himself compelled to retract his charge. And as
to what you allege, in the same place, about "that famous director,
who pocketed at once nine hundred thousand livres," I need only refer
you to Messieurs the cures of St. Roch and St. Paul, who will bear
witness, before the whole city of Paris, to his perfect
disinterestedness in the affair, and to your inexcusable malice in
that piece of imposition.
Enough, however, for such paltry falsities. These are but the
first raw attempts of your novices, and not the master-strokes of your
"grand professed." To these do I now come, fathers; I come to a
calumny which is certainly one of the basest that ever issued from the
spirit of your Society. I refer to the insufferable audacity with
which you have imputed to holy nuns, and to their directors, the
charge of "disbelieving the mystery of transubstantiation and the real
presence of Jesus Christ in the eucharist." Here, fathers, is a
slander worthy of yourselves. Here is a crime which God alone is
capable of punishing, as you alone were capable of committing it. To
endure it with patience would require an humility as great as that of
these calumniated ladies; to give it credit would demand a degree of
wickedness equal to that of their wretched defamers. I propose not,
therefore, to vindicate them; they are beyond suspicion. Had they
stood in need of defence, they might have commanded abler advocates
than me. My object in what I say here is to show, not their innocence,
but your malignity. I merely intend to make you ashamed of yourselves,
and to let the whole world understand that, after this, there is
nothing of which you are not capable.
You will not fail, I am certain, notwithstanding all this, to say
that I belong to Port-Royal; for this is the first thing you say to
every one who combats your errors: as if it were only at Port-Royal
that persons could be found possessed of sufficient zeal to defend,
against your attacks, the purity of Christian morality. I know,
fathers, the work of the pious recluses who have retired to that
monastery, and how much the Church is indebted to their truly solid
and edifying labours. I know the excellence of their piety and their
learning. For, though I have never had the honour to belong to their
establishment, as you, without knowing who or what I am, would fain
have it believed, nevertheless, I do know some of them, and honour the
virtue of them all. But God has not confined within the precincts of
that society all whom he means to raise up in opposition to your
corruptions. I hope, with his assistance, fathers, to make you feel
this; and if he vouchsafe to sustain me in the design he has led me to
form, of employing in his service all the resources I have received
from him, I shall speak to you in such a strain as will, perhaps, give
you reason to regret that you have not had to do with a man of
Port-Royal. And to convince you of this, fathers, I must tell you
that, while those whom you have abused with this notorious slander
content themselves with lifting up their groans to Heaven to obtain
your forgiveness for the outrage, I feel myself obliged, not being in
the least affected by your slander, to make you blush in the face of
the whole Church, and so bring you to that wholesome shame of which
the Scripture speaks, and which is almost the only remedy for a
hardness of heart like yours: "Imple facies eorum ignominia, et
quaerent nomen tuum, Domine- Fill their faces with shame, that they
may seek thy name, O Lord."
A stop must be put to this insolence, which does not spare the
most sacred retreats. For who can be safe after a calumny of this
nature? For shame, fathers! to publish in Paris such a scandalous
book, with the name of your Father Meynier on its front, and under
this infamous title, Port-Royal and Geneva in concert against the most
holy Sacrament of the Altar, in which you accuse of this apostasy, not
only Monsieur the abbe of St. Cyran, and M. Arnauld, but also Mother
Agnes, his sister, and all the nuns of that monastery, alleging that
"their faith, in regard to the eucharist, is as suspicious as that of
M. Arnauld," whom you maintain to be "a down-right Calvinist." I here
ask the whole world if there be any class of persons within the pale
of the Church, on whom you could have advanced such an abominable
charge with less semblance of truth. For tell me, fathers, if these
nuns and their directors had been "in concert with Geneva against the
most holy sacrament of the altar" (the very thought of which is
shocking), how they should have come to select as the principal object
of their piety that very sacrament which they held in abomination? How
should they have assumed the habit of the holy sacrament? taken the
name of the Daughters of the Holy Sacrament? called their church the
Church of the Holy Sacrament? How should they have requested and
obtained from Rome the confirmation of that institution, and the right
of saying every Thursday the office of the holy sacrament, in which
the faith of the Church is so perfectly expressed, if they had
conspired with Geneva to banish that faith from the Church? Why would
they have bound themselves, by a particular devotion, also sanctioned
by the Pope, to have some of their sisterhood, night and day without
intermission, in presence of the sacred host, to compensate, by their
perpetual adorations towards that perpetual sacrifice, for the impiety
of the heresy that aims at its annihilation? Tell me, fathers, if you
can, why, of all the mysteries of our religion, they should have
passed by those in which they believed, to fix upon that in which they
believed not? and how they should have devoted themselves, so fully
and entirely, to that mystery of our faith, if they took it, as the
heretics do, for the mystery of iniquity? And what answer do you give
to these clear evidences, embodied not in words only, but in actions;
and not in some particular actions, but in the whole tenor of a life
expressly dedicated to the adoration of Jesus Christ, dwelling on our
altars? What answer, again, do you give to the books which you ascribe
to Port-Royal, all of which are full of the most precise terms
employed by the fathers and the councils to mark the essence of that
mystery? It is at once ridiculous and disgusting to hear you replying
to these as you have done throughout your libel. M. Arnauld, say you,
talks very well about transubstantiation; but he understands, perhaps,
only "a significative transubstantiation." True, he professes to
believe in "the real presence"; who can tell, however, but he means
nothing more than "a true and real figure"? How now, fathers! whom,
pray, will you not make pass for a Calvinist whenever you please, if
you are to allowed the liberty of perverting the most canonical and
sacred expressions by the wicked subtleties of your modern
equivocations? Who ever thought of using any other terms than those in
question, especially in simple discourses of devotion, where no
controversies are handled? And yet the love and the reverence in which
they hold this sacred mystery have induced them to give it such a
prominence in all their writings that I defy you, fathers, with all
your cunning, to detect in them either the least appearance of
ambiguity, or the slightest correspondence with the sentiments of
Geneva.
Everybody knows, fathers, that the essence of the Genevan heresy
consists, as it does according to your own showing, in their believing
that Jesus Christ is not contained in this sacrament; that it is
impossible he can be in many places at once; that he is, properly
speaking, only in heaven, and that it is as there alone that he ought
to be adored, and not on the altar; that the substance of the bread
remains; that the body of Jesus Christ does not enter into the mouth
or the stomach; that he can only be eaten by faith, and accordingly
wicked men do not eat him at all; and that the mass is not a
sacrifice, but an abomination. Let us now hear, then, in what way
"Port-Royal is in concert with Geneva." In the writings of the former
we read, to your confusion, the following statement: That "the flesh
and blood of Jesus Christ are contained under the species of bread and
wine"; that "the Holy of Holies is present in the sanctuary, and that
there he ought to be adored"; that "Jesus Christ dwells in the sinners
who communicate, by the real and veritable presence of his body in
their stomach, although not by the presence of his Spirit in their
hearts"; that "the dead ashes of the bodies of the saints derive their
principal dignity from that seed of life which they retain from the
touch of the immortal and vivifying flesh of Jesus Christ"; that "it
is not owing to any natural power, but to the almighty power of God,
to whom nothing is impossible, that the body of Jesus Christ is
comprehended under the host, and under the smallest portion of every
host"; that "the divine virtue is present to produce the effect which
the words of consecration signify"; that "Jesus Christ, while be is
lowered and hidden upon the altar, is, at the same time, elevated in
his glory; that he subsists, of himself and by his own ordinary power,
in divers places at the same time- in the midst of the Church
triumphant, and in the midst of the Church militant and travelling";
that "the sacramental species remain suspended, and subsist
extraordinarily, without being upheld by any subject; and that the
body of Jesus Christ is also suspended under the species, and that it
does not depend upon these, as substances depend upon accidents"; that
"the substance of the bread is changed, the immutable accidents
remaining the same"; that "Jesus Christ reposes in the eucharist with
the same glory that he has in heaven"; that "his glorious humanity
resides in the tabernacles of the Church, under the species of bread,
which forms its visible covering; and that, knowing the grossness of
our natures, he conducts us to the adoration of his divinity, which is
present in all places, by the adoring of his humanity, which is
present in a particular place"; that "we receive the body of Jesus
Christ upon the tongue, which is sanctified by its divine touch";
"that it enters into the mouth of the priest"; that "although Jesus
Christ has made himself accessible in the holy sacrament, by an act of
his love and graciousness, he preserves, nevertheless, in that
ordinance, his inaccessibility, as an inseparable condition of his
divine nature; because, although the body alone and the blood alone
are there, by virtue of the words- vi verborum, as the schoolmen say-
his whole divinity may, notwithstanding, be there also, as well as his
whole humanity, by a necessary conjunction." In fine, that "the
eucharist is at the same time sacrament and sacrifice"; and that
"although this sacrifice is a commemoration of that of the cross, yet
there is this difference between them, that the sacrifice of the mass
is offered for the Church only, and for the faithful in her communion;
whereas that of the cross has been offered for all the world, as the
Scripture testifies."
I have quoted enough, fathers, to make it evident that there was
never, perhaps, a more imprudent thing attempted than what you have
done. But I will go a step farther, and make you pronounce this
sentence against yourselves. For what do you require from a man, in
order to remove all suspicion of his being in concert and
correspondence with Geneva? "If M. Arnauld," says your Father Meynier,
p.93, "had said that, in this adorable mystery, there is no substance
of the bread under the species, but only the flesh and the blood of
Jesus Christ, I should have confessed that he had declared himself
absolutely against Geneva." Confess it, then, ye revilers! and make
him a public apology. How often have you seen this declaration made in
the passages I have just cited? Besides this, however, the Familiar
Theology of M. de St. Cyran having been approved by M. Arnauld, it
contains the sentiments of both. Read, then, the whole of lesson 15th,
and particularly article 2d, and you will there find the words you
desiderate, even more formally stated than you have done yourselves.
"Is there any bread in the host, or any wine in the chalice? No: for
all the substance of the bread and the wine is taken away, to give
place to that of the body and blood of Jesus Christ, the which
substance alone remains therein, covered by the qualities and species
of bread and wine."
How now, fathers! will you still say that Port-Royal teaches
"nothing that Geneva does not receive," and that M. Arnauld has said
nothing in his second letter "which might not have been said by a
minister of Charenton"? See if you can persuade Mestrezat to speak as
M. Arnauld does in that letter, on page 237. Make him say that it is
an infamous calumny to accuse him of denying transubstantiation; that
he takes for the fundamental principle of his writings the truth of
the real presence of the Son of God, in opposition to the heresy of
the Calvinists; and that he accounts himself happy for living in a
place where the Holy of Holies is continually adored in the
sanctuary"- a sentiment which is still more opposed to the belief of
the Calvinists than the real presence itself; for, as Cardinal
Richelieu observes in his Controversies (p. 536): "The new ministers
of France having agreed with the Lutherans, who believe the real
presence of Jesus Christ in the eucharist; they have declared that
they remain in a state of separation from the Church on the point of
this mystery, only on account of the adoration which Catholics render
to the eucharist." Get all the passages which I have extracted from
the books of Port-Royal subscribed at Geneva, and not the isolated
passages merely, but the entire treatises regarding this mystery, such
as the Book of Frequent Communion, the Explication of the Ceremonies
of the Mass, the Exercise during Mass, the Reasons of the Suspension
of the Holy Sacrament, the Translation of the Hymns in the Hours of
Port-Royal, in one word, prevail upon them to establish at Charenton
that holy institution of adoring, without intermission, Jesus Christ
contained in the eucharist, as is done at Port-Royal, and it will be
the most signal service which you could render to the Church; for in
this case it will turn out, not that Port-Royal is in concert with
Geneva, but that Geneva is in concert with Port-Royal and with the
whole Church.
Certainly, fathers, you could not have been more unfortunate than
in selecting Port-Royal as the object of attack for not believing in
the eucharist; but I will show what led you to fix upon it. You know I
have picked up some small acquaintance with your policy; in this
instance you have acted upon its maxims to admiration. If Monsieur the
abbe of St. Cyran, and M. Arnauld, had only spoken of what ought to be
believed with great respect to this mystery, and said nothing about
what ought to be done in the way of preparation for its reception,
they might have been the best Catholics alive; and no equivocations
would have been discovered in their use of the terms real presence and
transubstantiation. But, since all who combat your licentious
principles must needs be heretics, and heretics, too, in the very
point in which they condemn your laxity, how could M. Arnauld escape
falling under this charge on the subject of the eucharist, after
having published a book expressly against your profanations of that
sacrament? What! must he be allowed to say, with impunity, that "the
body of Jesus Christ ought not to be given to those who habitually
lapse into the same crimes, and who have no prospect of amendment; and
that such persons ought to be excluded, for some time, from the altar,
to purify themselves by sincere penitence, that they may approach it
afterwards with benefit"? Suffer no one to talk in this strain,
fathers, or you will find that fewer people will come to your
confessionals. Father Brisacier says that "were you to adopt this
course, you would never apply the blood of Jesus Christ to a single
individual." It would be infinitely more for your interest were every
one to adopt the views of your Society, as set forth by your Father
Mascarenhas, in a book approved by your doctors, and even by your
reverend Father-General, namely: "That persons of every description,
and even priests, may receive the body of Jesus Christ on the very day
they have polluted themselves with odious crimes; that, so far from
such communions implying irreverence, persons who partake of them in
this manner act a commendable part; that confessors ought not to keep
them back from the ordinance, but, on the contrary, ought to advise
those who have recently committed such crimes to communicate
immediately; because, although the Church has forbidden it, this
prohibition is annulled by the universal practice in all places of the
earth."
See what it is, fathers, to have Jesuits in all places of the
earth! Behold the universal practice which you have introduced, and
which you are anxious everywhere to maintain! It matters nothing that
the tables of Jesus Christ are filled with abominations, provided that
your churches are crowded with people. Be sure, therefore, cost what
it may, to set down all that dare to say a word against your practice
as heretics on the holy sacrament. But how can you do this, after the
irrefragable testimonies which they have given of their faith? Are you
not afraid of my coming out with the four grand proofs of their heresy
which you have adduced? You ought, at least, to be so, fathers, and I
ought not to spare your blushing. Let us, then, proceed to examine
proof the first.
"M. de St. Cyran," says Father Meynier, "consoling one of his
friends upon the death of his mother (tom. i., let. 14), says that the
most acceptable sacrifice that can be offered up to God, on such
occasions, is that of patience; therefore he is a Calvinist." This is
marvellously shrewd reasoning, fathers; and I doubt if anybody will be
able to discover the precise point of it. Let us learn it, then, from
his own mouth. "Because," says this mighty controversialist, "it is
obvious that he does not believe in the sacrifice of the mass; for
this is, of all other sacrifices, the most acceptable unto God." Who
will venture to say now that the do not know how to reason? Why, they
know the art to such perfection that they will extract heresy out of
anything you choose to mention, not even excepting the Holy Scripture
itself! For example, might it not be heretical to say, with the wise
man in Ecclesiasticus, "There is nothing worse than to love money"; as
if adultery, murder, or idolatry, were not far greater crimes? Where
is the man who is not in the habit of using similar expressions every
day? May we not say, for instance, that the most acceptable of all
sacrifices in the eyes of God is that of a contrite and humbled heart;
just because, in discourses of this nature, we simply mean to compare
certain internal virtues with one another, and not with the sacrifice
of the mass, which is of a totally different order, and infinitely
more exalted? Is this not enough to make you ridiculous, fathers? And
is it necessary, to complete your discomfiture, that I should quote
the passages of that letter in which M. de St. Cyran speaks of the
sacrifice of the mass as "the most exce