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<jt$
ffe
clear,
proveshis
This Apollinaris proved soteriologically (what the
e fcai iy,°Bib-
man
specuia-
God must have done and
did
wise the same has no power to save
:
suffered, other-
Mvaro?
dv&pdtxou
tively.
oo xarapysT rov
the
vol)?
and
Mvarov the Deity became through Christ ;
X6yo<s
of the entire
humanity
nature became through Christ the Biblically
trdpg
;
the
human
of the Deity)
—he was a very able exegete—and specula-
tively (the
human
the Divine
is
the
nature
mover
is
this relationship
;
the Myos aapxa>$ei$ to
its
manifestation;
is
Christ
always the thing moved,
comes in
the heavenly
Adam, who
consequently possesses incarnation potentially
way he always was
hidden ofiooofftos
accidental
Logos
is
;
If the
differs
from
always Mediator
and humanity T^Sne.
he was
fitted for
way
therefore is the incarnation in no
and
Apollinaris
in a
;
»od? eWa^xo?; his flesh is
to his Divinity, because
incarnation
and
perfect development
;
all
mere inspiration
p.ea6nq<s
— between
however, one does not
went
;
the
Deity
know how
far
here)
mystery two
=
one (see the parallel to the
1MB DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. mystery, three
=
279
one) is at all to be described, then
the doctrine of Apollinaris, measured by the presup-
and aims
positions
of the
Greek conception of Chris-
tianity as religion,
is
he found faithful
disciples,
yes,
For
perfect.
and
this reason, too,
monophysites,
all
even the pious Greek orthodox are at the bottom
Apollinarists
:
The acceptance of an individual human
personality in Christ does
away with
his
power as
Redeemer, just as the idea of two unmixed natures robs the incarnation of
Apollinaris struck out the believers before
and
and
For that reason
its effect.
after
human voD? like all Greek him —he, however, openly
energetically.
But the demand
for a complete *
human nature once
proclaimed could no longer be passed over in silence
One could the of
to
still
say according to Apollinaris, that
human voug would God also appeared
have
:
not be saved;
sypod of Alexanipoiiinasecedes.
the doctrine
God was made Therefore the full humanity was
suffered.
to totter, if
already acknowledged at the Synod of Alexandria, 362,
and the Cappadocians rose against
teacher,
who was
obliged (375) to withdraw from the
Church, but formed a church of his also
their revered
condemned him.
The
full
own
the
West
homousios of Christ
with humanity was exalted to a doctrine. the gospel reports had a part therein
the Cappadocians were able to set to
;
;
Certainly
but that which
up
in opposition
Apollinaris were only wretched formulas, full
of contradictions
only one
;
:
There are two natures, and yet
there are not
two Sons, but the Divinity
The Cappadocian Formulas.
;
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
280
acts in Christ in one
way, the humanity in another
Christ had
human
necessity.
In reality the Cappadocians thought like
freedom, but acted under Divine
Apollinaris, but they " perfect
mand
had
make a
place for the
man", while the Greek piety did not de-
this consideration.
had dictated the doctrine Athanasian
to the
to
oßoou
The sovereignty to Apollinaris;
of faith
he added
the corresponding Chris-
tology; like Athanasius he hesitated at no sacrifice for the sake of his faith.
in upholding the full
His opponents, however,
humanity (human
after all a great service to the
Church
subject) did
of the future.
They were now obliged to try and reconcile the contradictions (not two Sons, and yet two independent In what form that was to issue no one natures) .
knew
as yet.
CHAPTER
IX.
CONTINUATION: THE DOCTRINE OF THE PERSONAL UNION OF THE DIVINE AND HUMAN NATURE IN THE INCARNATE SON OF GOD. Sources
:
The writings of Cyril and of the Antiochians, Hef ele, Conciliengesch. Bd.I.and II.
the acts of the councils.,
N
n rnn°tr!fContro versy
*
^
ie
complete being?
,
Nestorian Controversy.
God and
the complete
— How
man
can
the
be united in one
The most zealous opponents
of Apollinaris
were his compatriots, and in part also his philosophical
sympathizers, the Antiochians.
from the formula,
"
complete
They deduced
God and complete man",
.
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. two
the consequence of of Tarsus
and above
281
Diodorus
different natures.
Theodore of Mopsuestia,
all
Diodorus of Tarsus
and Theodore of
Mopsu-
distinguished for their sober theology, excellent exegesis
estia.
and severe asceticism, were thorough Nicenes,
but they at the same time rightly recognized that
complete humanity without freedom and changeableness
a chimera
is
ity are contrasted
consequently Deity and human-
;
and cannot by any means be fused
into one (incapable of suffering, capable of suffering)
In accord therewith they constructed their Christology,
which was therefore not fashioned according
to soteriological conceptions, but rather
Christ consists of two sep-
gelical picture of Christ.
arate natures (no
sumed the nature dwelt therein
and
ivtoat?
of
4' U(7Uy! t)
the God-Logos as-
;
an individual man, that
this indwelling
;
by the evan-
was not
is,
Two Separate Natures.
he
substantial,
also not merely inspirational, but xaräxdpw, i.e.
God united and
joined
(
himself to the
man
Jesus in an especial manner, yet analogous to his
union with pious
as in a temple; his
what
tially
it
The Logos dwelt
souls.
human
was but ;
to a perfect condition
it
nature remained substan-
developed
and constancy.
therefore only a relative one
was
in Christ
itself
gradually
The union was
(£va>ffts ffjfentjf)
in the beginning only relatively perfect ;
itself
a moral union
altation
;
(poaets,
odore uses the later formula son "
;
it
it is
in
but by the verification and ex-
one adorable subject was
exhibited ifowp&w tos
and
ivä r^v :
"
finally
and forever
npo
Two
The-
natures, one per-
but with him the unity of the person
is
merely
Two Natures,
One
Person.
— OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
282
one of names, of honor and adoration
He
substantial unity.
sons, because
an adorable
incarnation, therefore, one
may
The functions
strictly distributed
To A Entheos
S
call
Mary
= nature)
and,
Of an
izpoewTzov.
man on
the part of
of Jesus Christ are to be
between the Deity and humanity.
fteoröxos is
This doctrine
no sense a
not definitely speak,
but only of an assumption of the the Logos.
in
has quite distinctly two per-
two natures* (person
besides, for believers
;
is
absurd.
distinguished from that of the
Samosatians only by the assertion of the personality of the
invito
God-Logos
Theodoro
in Christ.
—nevertheless
That the Antiochians
In truth
an
is
Jesus
avti-ptitizois
ev&eog.
contented themselves with
was a consequence of their rationalism. However deserving of acknowledgment their spiritual
this
conception of the problem
is, still
they were farther
removed from the conception of redemption as a new birth and as forgiveness of sin, than the repre-
They
sentatives of the realistic idea of redemption.
knew
of a Perfecter of
humanity who conducts
through knowledge and asceticism unto a araffis,
but they
knew nothing
new
xard-
But
of a Restorer.
since they did not docetically explain away, or
accommodation
set
forth
Christ, they held before the
the
its
when
by
qualities of
Church the picture
historical Christ, at a time
obliged to depart in
human
it
of the
the Church
was
formulas of doctrine farther
and farther from the same. True, a picture could have no great effect in which they emphasized the
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. empty freedom and capacity equally with wisdom and asceticism. points of
283
of suffering
Their opponents, the Alexandrians, relied upon the tradition
became man;
and even
and that he
later,
their deductions lacked
apprehensible clearness;
could not be otherwise
;
serving of
little
many
but that the
all
respects de-
and had tradition on
This piety demanded only a strong and
sure declaration of the mystery, nothing Ttpo(T7.u\>zi<jftu>
ment
431,
esteem, strove for the fundamental
idea of piety, like Athanasius, his side.
till
and their faith was
C}T ril of Alexandria, in
surer.
candria.
which embarrassed the Antiochians,
that Christ possessed the Divine physis really
cjrii
to appTjzov).
Upon
of the faith Cyril never
more X fftat7: V
the theor'etical state-
wasted
many words
but he was immediately in danger of transgressing the limits of his idea of faith, to explain the mystery, definite.
whenever he sought
and his terminology was
His faith did not proceed from the
in-
histor-
God who was made man. This God was incorporated in the complete human nature, and yet he remained the same. He did not
ical Christ,
but from the
transform himself, but he took humanity into the unity of his being, without losing any of the
latter.
He was the same afterwards as before, the one subject. What the body suffered, he suffered. Therefore Cyril used
phrase\:
els
with special preference the following
xal 6 a»r6?,
namely, the God-Logos^
Tzoielv TTJv ffdpxa oixovofitxtog. fisßivjjxev otcep qv, ix els",
duo
töiav
(/'offecov
Goviksuais duo (püaswv xaff ivwaiv ädtd
T1
}ncar-° nation.
f
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
284
Hence
xai arpirtTco?.
ßia
tween
and
ivtooi? (puoty.rj
:
osfrapxw/jLivrj)
birooxaot?
.
and
(xatf vizooxaotv
The difference be-
Cyril hardly touched upon.
Yet he never said ixdbo b-ooxdoewv, or evtoocs zarä (pbavj. With him y>uot$ and 01*00x0.01$ coincide as regards the Divine nature
He
not.
as regards the
;
human
nature they do
became an
rejected the idea that Christ
individual man., although he acknowledged
humanity
constituents of
Logos which has assumed
n Natu?e
can he be the Redeemer.
human nature;
:
distinguished as fcwpta for suffering
the
only thus
two natures,
there-
The God-incarnate, which is 1*0*1%. The Deity's capacity
to be sure, not the consequence of
is,
own
the unity; but the Logos suffers in his
Nevertheless he
is
Before the incarnation
there were, according to Cyril, after only one, to wit
the
Christ
in Christ.
Assumes
all
is #eo?
For that reason,
also,
and Mary
flesh.«
is aea&lx&s.
can the odp% Christi in the
eucharist give Divine life
;
for the
same
is filled
with
the Deity. 1"
SyMwfophysitic.
^kis conception itism
;
but
it
is
at the bottom pure
does not wish to be
so,
monophys-
and, in assert-
ing the humanity of Christ as not to be explained
away, itic
it
guards against the consequent monophys-
formula.
Cyril
was
really orthodox, that
is,
he
taught what lay as a consequent in the orthodox doctrine respecting Christ.
apparent
—both
But the contradiction
is
natures were to be present, una-
bridged and unmixed, inclusive of a
human
Logos,
and yet there should be but one God-incarnate na-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
285
I
and the human part
ture,
subjectless.
is
It is also
apparent that the picture of the real Christ cannot j
be maintained by this view
:
\
Docetic explanations
must necessarily be admitted* (i.e. accommodation). I
But
more valuable than that of the Chalcedon creed, because by it faith can make it clear to itself that Christ assumed the comthis doctrine
plete
human
is
after all
nature, substantially united
himself and elevated
it
it
The
to the Divine.*
with
contro-
versy broke out in Constantinople through the vain, blustering, but not ignoble bishop Nestorius (428),
who, hated by the Alexandrians as an Antiochian
and envied
for his chair, stirred
up hatred impru-
dently by his sermons and by his attacks upon those
favoring Cyril, and specially by branding the word öeuTöxo?
now
and the
to eradicate the " rottenness of
linaris"
;
He sought
like as heathenish fables.
Arius and Apol-
as a Christologian, however, he
by no means
stood at the extreme left of orthodoxy, like Theodore.
He
stirred
up an agitation
and the imperial
now
ladies
took a hand in
in the capital
was rather
to the üsoToxo?
;
the
monks
were against him, and Cyril
it.
The formulas which each
used did not sound very differently self
;
— Nestorius him-
inclined to agree, with reservations,
but behind the formulas there lay a
deep dogmatic and ecclesiastico-political contrast. Cyril fought for the one God-incarnate nature, and for
He was able to Roman bishop, to whom at
primacy in the Orient.
for himself the
the bishop of Constantinople seemed a
gain over that time
more power-
Nestorius
-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
286 cceiestius.
f u j r i V al
than the one of Alexandria.
Coelestius,
also personally irritated at Nestorius, repudiated his
own
Christological
view which approached very
nearly to that of Nestorius, joined the anathematization of Cyril
and demanded
Cyril,
tion.
hurling
of Nestorius a recanta-
counter-anathemas
against
Nestorius, compelled the calling of a general council
But he was able
by the emperor who favored him. council of Ephesus.
to
general council at direct the ö
Ephesus
(431)
in
.
such a manner, that from the beginning
The decrees
split.
of the
it
began to
Egyptian-Roman party
were recognized afterwards as the decrees of the council, while the
emperor did not originally recog-
nize either these, or the decrees of the Antiochian party.
Cyril allowed no
new symbol
to be estab-
lished, but caused the deposition of Nestorius
declaration of his
own
and the
doctrine as orthodox.
Con-
trarywise the Council which was held by the Anti-
ochian sympathizers deposed Cyril. at first confirmed both depositions Nestorius Dies in Exile.
Nestorius the matter rested there.
But
The emperor and as regards
He
died in exile.
Cyril, influential at court, succeeded in
main-
taining himself, and in order not to lose his influence, he even
formed in the year 433 a union with
the Antiochians, whose ambiguous creed stood, ac-
cording to the ogy.
Yet
text,
nearer to the Antiochian theol-
for that very reason Cyril
of the situation,
remained master
and he knew how to strengthen more
and more the Alexandrian doctrine and the tical
domination.
ecclesias-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
287
The Eutychian Controversy (vid. Mansi, Acts ^JntrS versy the Councils, VI. VII.).— Cyril died in the year
11
2.
-
of
444,
,
and there were people
never
forgiven the union of
through the desire to successor
;
rule.
own
who had 433 which he made
in his
party
Dioscuros became his
Dioscuros
he was not equal to him and yet he was
not unlike him.
Dioscuros endeavored to carry out
the scheme of his predecessor in the chair of Alexan-
make
Egypt a domain, to rule the Church of the Orient as pope and to actually subject to himself emperor and state. Already Theophilus and dria, to
of
Cyril had relied upon the this matter,
and
had an equal
also
monks and
the masses in
upon the Roman bishop, who
interest in suppressing the bishop of
Constantinople.
They had, furthermore, relaxed the
union with Greek science (contest against Origen-
power
ism), in order not to displease the great
the age, pious barbarism. really gain his object
odosius
II. (council of
of
Dioscuros seemed to
under the weak emperor TheEphesus, 449)
;
but close upon
the greatest victory followed the catastrophe.
This
was brought about by the powerful empress Pulcheria,
Empress J.
and her consort Marcian, who recalled
more the Byzantine state-idea and through Leo
I.,
who
to
of ruling the Church,
at the decisive
relinquished the traditional policy of the
moment
Roman
chair to assist Alexandria against Constantinople,
made common cause with of the capital
moment
the emperor and bishop
and overthrew Dioscuros.
of his
fall,
uiciicriä.
mind once
But
at the
the opposition between the hith-
LeoL
-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
288
erto united to
come
powers (emperor and pope) was destined
out.
Both wanted
to take
advantage of the
The emperor was not willing to surrender the Church of the Orient to the pope (who had been called upon for assistance), although he set up the victory.
dogmatic formula of the pope as the only means of saving the Oriental Church
;
and the pope could not
endure that the patriarch of the capital should supplant the other patriarchs of the Orient, that this
church as a creature of the emperor should be at the latter's
beck and
call,
and that the chair should be
placed on a level with that of St. Peter's. counciiof Chalcedon.
In con-
sequence of the Chalcedon council the state indeed rL
momentarily triumphed over the Church, but in giving to the same
more than
its
own dogmatic formula, which had
half the faithful against
it, it
split the
empire, laid the foundation for the secession of large provinces, south
and north, strengthened
its
most
powerful adversary, the bishop of Rome, at a mo-
ment when by the the latter
fall of
was placed
at the
the "West
Roman
empire
head of the Occident, and
thus prepared a condition of affairs, which limited the Byzantine dominion to the eastern Mediterra-
nean coast provinces. These are the general circumstances under which the is
in Eutyches.
Eutj'chian controversy occurred, and thereby declared
what an important part
politics
had
it.
Through the union of 433 the Christological question had already become stagnant. According to
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
289
the interpretation of the formula, everybody could
The Alexandrian
be taken for a heretic.
which
made
really tallied
in fact
doctrine,
with the faith of the Orientals,
more and more progress
in spite of the
energetic counter-efforts of the honest and best-hated
Theodore; and Dioscuros carried himself like a chief bishop over
and
Palestine
surrendered the Church to
The emperor
Syria.
him
Dioscuros
outright.
persecuted the Antiochian sympathizers, endeavored to
exterminate the phrase "two natures", and even
allowed creeds to pass which sounded suspiciously Apollinaristic.
But when the
old Archimandrite
Eut} ches in Constantinople expressed his Cyrillian r
Christology in terms like the following not of like essence with us, he has no
but a
of Antioch, then
:
"
My God is
personal opponents
ä^p6r.oo^
(Domnus
Eusebius of Dorylaeum) took this
occasion to denounce
him
to the patriarch Flavian,
who, himself no decided Christologian, profited by the opportunity to get rid of an ecclesiastic favored
by the
court.
At a synod
in Constantinople (448)
de
^^"
at
Eutyches was condemned as a Valentinian and nopfefm Apollinarist, although he after some hesitation ac-
knowledged the formula
:
"
Out
of
two natures, one
From both sides, the court, the capital and the Roman bishop were now set in motion. Dioscuros saw that the moment for settling the quesChrist".
tion of
power had come, but not
less did
Leo
I.
While the former obtained from the emperor the calling of a council and was being equipped for it 19
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
290
with unheard-of sovereignty as the true pope, the latter
now saw — in
spite of the decision of his prede-
cessor, Ccelestius, in favor of Cyril
—in Eutyches the
worst heretic, in Flavian his dear, persecuted friend,
and sought
to frustrate
letters to influential
the council by numerous
persons and he wrote to Flavian
the celebrated epistle, in which, as respects ChrisLeo's Celebrated Letter.
toward the Tertullian-Augustinian
tology, he veered
In this letter the doctrine of two natures
conception. is strictly
alt er ins seil,
carried out
i
("
communione, quod proprium
operante quod verbi est et
quod carnis expedient
forma cum
agit utraque
est"),
came
est,
exsequenti
and the old Occidental,
expounded, that
one
verbo
juristic
must believe
in
one Person, which has two separate natures (substances)
at
its
disposal,
—an
expedient which
truly neither monophysitic nor Nestorian, since
is it
sharply distinguishes between the Person and the
two
natures,
magnitudes
;
and therefore but
it
really introduces three
certainly stands nearer to Nesto-
rianism and does not do justice to the decisive interest of
faith,
but excludes every concrete form of
thought and consequently
nor
knows only the heresies docetism and Samosatianism. Leo certainly ac-
intellect.
of
satisfies neither piety
Besides this Leo
knowledges in his tion;
letters the interest of
our redemp-
but he gave an interpretation which Cyril
would have strongly repudiated. Council of Ephesus, 449.
In August (440) the great council of Ephesus as-
sembled under Dioscuros' direction.
Rome was
at
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. treated as non-existent, then
first
persons of
humbled
in
291 the
who, moreover, acted with
its legates,
Dioscuros put through the resolution
uncertainty.
must
that the matter
and Ephesus
(431),
stop with the synods of
which expressed the
Mcsea
old creed:
"After the incarnation there exists one incarnate nature"
;
no symbol was established
;
Eutyches was
^Instated,
reinstated and, on the basis of the Nicene creed, the chiefs of the Antiochians
;
but at the same time Fla-
vian, Eusebius of Dorylaeum, Theodoret,
nus of Antioch were deposed
;
and Dom-
in short, the
Church
was thoroughly purified from "Nestorianism". All this was done with almost unanimity. Two years later this unanimity was declared as enforced by
many
bishops
who had taken
part
(latrocinium
JEphesuinm, says Leo).
niumEpkesinura.
•
.
Dioscuros certainly, with
the aid of his fanatical monks, terrorized the synod,
but a far stronger pressure was afterwards necessary at Chalcedon.
Dioscuros in reality raised the faith of
the Orient to a fixed standard, and the incomparable
which he enjoyed had, unless foreign powers state, Rome) should interfere, the guarantee of
victory (the
But Dioscuros roused against himself
permanence.
the pope and the Byzantine state-idea, and did not calculate
wing
upon the wide-spread aversion
to the right
army, the masked Apollinarists.
of his
rehabilitated Eutyches, without expressly
He
condemn-
ing the doubtful terms which he and his followers habitually used. s-\
On
l
i
t
\t-»ii
•
the 28th of July (450) Pulchena and Marcian
Marciau and Leo.
;
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
292
succeeded Theodosius; until then Leo had vainly
Now
endeavored to raise opposition to the council. Marcian,
who was determined
to
break the indepen-
dence of the Alexandrian bishops, stood in need of
Leo desired the condemnation
him.
and the acceptance
of his
own
of Dioscuros
didactic epistle ivith-
out a council; but the emperor was obliged to sist
upon one, in order
order of things.
to bring
about a wholly
in-
new
Such a one could succeed only
if
a
new dogmatic formula were established, which placed the Egyptians in the
wrong and
the point to the Antiochians.
still
did not yield
Politics counselled the
formula of the Occident (Leo's) as the only chafcedoSf
The
way
out.
council really took place at Chalcedon in 451
to the pontificial legates
honor
;
were conceded the places of
Leo had instructed them
from the dignity
of
Rome.
to derogate
nothing
The greater part
of the
500 to 600 bishops were like-minded with Cyril and Dioscuros, highly opposed to tile to
council.
all
Nestorianism, hos-
Theodoret; but the emperor dominated the It
was
settled that Dioscuros
must be
de-
posed and a dogmatic formula in the sense of Leo's ac-
was annulled as having been "extorted". But it was just as sure that the memory and doctrine of Cyril must not be sacrificed. Dioscuros therefore was deposed after a most shamecepted, since the decree of 449
8
DepSed.
ful process, not as
an heretic, but on account of his
disobedience and
irregularities.
The majority
of
the bishops disavowed their past before the face of the imperial commissioners and abandoned Dioscuros
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. and the decree of 440; but only by
293
false representa-
and threats did the bishops allow themselves to be induced to acknowledge the canon of Leo, which tions
every Oriental could not but understand as Nestorian,
and
to sanction the doctrine that also after the
incarnation there were two natures existent in Christ.
Even vain
at the last hour
it
was attempted
—although in
—to exalt to a dogma a merety notional distinc-
tion between the natures.
At
the 5th sitting the de-
and 431 were confirmed and
crees of 325, 381
sufficiency acknowledged, but
their
was remarked,
it
on account of the heretics (who, on the one
that
side, re-
jected the &eoj6zo$ and, on the other, desired to intro-
duce a aoyyofTK; and
y.f>d.<Ti?
of the natures, " irrationally
inventing only one nature of the flesh and the Deity
and considering the Divine nature as capable
was necessary to admit the letters of to Nestorius and the Orientals, as well as the of Leo. The declaration reads rob? duo p.h
suffering
C}r ril letter
") it
:
Tipo
r^9
rrjv
hoxnv
lv(i)(7eu)$
xuptou fj.uftzUovTas^
iva xai tuv
auruv
xai
ävftpco-ov
Xpiarbv
5
rwv
was the
pszd
Sacri-
6/j.oXoysJv
uluv
riv
tO.ewv
r!)v
xbpwv auruv
riXstov rov aoruv iv ävHpwTÖz^ri^ #sov akrfi-m^ aXy-ftd)?
.
.
.
rov aordv^ Iv
duo
then
later correction, favorable to T(i>?
fiiav dk
'E-xoftevot roivov roT?
Jlp. (jufj.
zv fteozTjTt
auruv
ro 7)
ava-Kh'trrovra^^ ävaSs/iari^et (this
~azpä(7VJ
yj/iwv V.
xai
a>u
the thoughts of the heart).
fice of aylots
of
it (ix
reads
:
%va xai ruv
duo
monophysitism)
is
a
dauyyu-
ärpiirrats ädtaipiro)^ ä%wpiOTto§ yviopi^Ofiev^ ouda,uoi> T7t <s
dca
rr^v
ivatfftVj
aai£ofiivi)$
Letters of Cyril and
Leo Admitted.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
204 dt
fiäXXov r^c ldiOT7jro<s Ixaripas
xui
fiepi£6ftevov
Full
secured.
By
Staipobpevov^ äXXä
7}
oöx
er's
duo
izpoawxa
eva xai rov aurov ulov
xai
&edv Xdyov.
pLOvoyevrj
Humanity
Guvrpzyona-q? ,
UTtöffTCLfftv
fxtav
between nature and person the
this distinction
p 0W6 r of the mystery of faith was paralyzed, a conceivable mystery established, and yet the clearness
humanity
of
The formula
is
of the Antiochian conception of the
Jesus was after
not reached.
all
negative and cold
the pious
;
How
saw
their comfort, the
our nature
profit
by what occurred in the Person of Christ?
The
huxnq
vanish.
shall
hated "moralism", or the mj-sticism of the union of the Logos with every
human
soul,
seemed
to be the
was expected to believe in a
And,
besides, one
!
as an incontestible article of faith, invaluable for the
was too dearly bought. Peace was also not restored. Emperor and pope w ere at variance over future,
r
the 28th canon, even
SS:
ter to
come
Orient
fell
3
troversies.
cil.
-
to
if
they did not allow the mat-
a rupture,- and the Church of the
into dissolution.
The Monophysite Contests and the 5th Coun(Mansi, T. VII-IX; Loofs, Leontius von By-
zanz, 1887).
councils
— The
century between the 4th and 5th
shows the most complicated and confused
relations;
during the time the dogmatic situation
also constantly changes, so that a short survey is
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
295
Therefore only a few principal points
impossible.
can be here stated. (1)
The opponents
monophysites, spiritual
were
power and
Chalcedon creed, the ^JPgjSj? superior to the orthodox in creed, of the
In Egypt, parts of
activity.
Syria and Armenia, they kept the upper hand, and the emperors succeeded neither by threats nor by
concessions in gaining
them over
for
any length
of
time; these provinces rather alienated themselves
more and more from the empire and joined the monophysitic confession with their nationality, preparatory to founding independent national churches hostile
to
the
In the main persevering
Greek.
and rejecting
steadfastly in the doctrine of Cyril
the farther-reaching Apollinarian-Eutychian formulas, the
monophysites showed by inward spiritual
movements that
in their midst alone the dogmatical
legacy of the Church was
still
alive.
The newly-
awakened Aristotelianism, which as scholasticism took the place of Platonism, learned defenders,
found among them
who (John Philoponus)
,
to be sure,
approached in their speculation very near to ism.
trithe-
In regard to the Christological question there
were two main tendencies
Monoph. (Severus,
(Gieseler,
Comment, qua
opin. illustr., 2 Part., 1835 seq.).
Severians,
"
Agnoetians",
These
"Phartola-
treans ") were really opposed to the Chalcedon creed
only as a formal innovation, but agreed even to a notional distinction between Christ, and,
still
the two
natures
in
more, were zealously anxious to
— OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
296
keep the natures unmixed and to lay stress upon the creature-ship and corruptibility (in theory) of the
body
of Christ as well as
upon the limits of knowl-
edge of the soul of Christ, so that they offended even
They might have been won,
the orthodox.
Chalcedon formula,
the epistolary teaching of
i.e.
Leo, had been sacrificed.
The
others,
on the con-
Aph-
trary (Julian of Halicarnasses, " Aktistetes," " thartodoketes")
,
rejecting
it is
true the transforma-
tion of the one nature into the other,
consequences of the Phusike.
of the
the
if
tvw
assumptio the body
:
From
drew the
the
all
moment
also should be consid-
ered as imperishable and, indeed, as uncreated;
all
the attributes of the Deity were transferred to the
human
nature;
strictions,
which one observes
ture of Christ, X<*pw,
accordingly
all
affections
and
re-
in the evangelical pic-
were assumed by him freely
xard
but were not the necessary consequences of his
This conception, influenced solely by the
nature.
idea of redemption, alone corresponds to the old tradition (Irenaeus, Athanasius, etc.).
Gregory of Nyssa,
Finally there were also such monophysites
yet certainly they were not numerous
A
h0 " r!tes
—as advanced
P antne istic speculation (" Adiaphorites ") The creature is in a mysterious manner altogether conto a
:
substantial with
God; the
hioat?
in Christ is
only the expression for the general consubstantiality of his nature
the mystics;
Erigena).
and the Deity (Stephen bar Sudaili; influence
upon the Occident; Scotus
Since the 5th Council and
still
more
since
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
297
the advent of Islam, the monophysitic churches have
pined
away
in isolation, the wild national
ious fanaticism
relig-
and the barren phantasy of the monks
have delivered them over (2)
and
to barbarism.
Since coercion had no
effect,
a few emperors
Henotikon of
Zeno.
sought, in order to maintain the unity of the empire, to
suppress temporarity the Chalcedon creed (En-
cyclica of Basiliscus, 476), or to avoid
But the consequence
of Zeno, 482).
it
(Henotikon
of this policy
always was that they won over only a part of the monophysites and that they the Occident.
Thus
fell
arose,
out with
Rome and
on the account of the
Henotikon, a thirty-five years' schism with (484-519),
which served only
more independent.
make
the pope
still
The emperors could not reach a
decision to sacrifice either
Rome
or the Orient, and
In the year 519 the Chalce-
finally they lost both.
don creed was
to
Rome
fully restored, in alliance
with Rome,
by the emperor Justin, who was influenced by his
nephew Justinian.
But the theopaschite
contest
(enlargement of the trishagion by the addition: (jraupwiM? "
One
di r),uaj, i.e.,
identical, for
the validity of the formula:
was the one was
of the trinity
6
crucified "
a cultish
They are not innovation and :
could be understood in a Sabellian way, while the other
is
good orthodoxy) shows, since
518, that in
the Occident every Cyrillian explanation
of
the
Chalcedon creed was regarded with suspicion, while the orthodox in the Orient would tolerate the Chal-
cedon creed only with a Cyrillian interpretation,
C hite°con-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
298
hoping thereby
always for a reconciliation with
still
the monophysites. T
Lenntius
(3)
tium
\\ hJi e in the 5th century the
Chalcedon ortho-
doxy had upon the whole no noted dogmatic repre-
*
sentative in the Orient
was foreign
—the
strongest proof that
to the spirit of the Orient
it
—several ap-
peared after the beginning of the Gth century.
The
formula had not only in time become more venerable,
but the study of Aristotle above
weapons
for its defence.
all
furnished
The scholasticism not only
permitted the retention of the Chalcedon distinction
between nature and person, but even also welcomed it
and gave
formula
to the
lian interpretation. the Scythian
still
a strong Cyril-
This was brought about by
monk, Leontius
of
Byzantium, the most
eminent dogmatist of the 6th century, the forerunner
John
of
He
of
Damascus, and the teacher
pacified the
of Justinian.
Church by a philosophically conceiv-
able exposition of the Chalcedon creed
the
dogma
and buried
in scholastical technicalities.
He
is
the
father of the Christological new-orthodoxy, just as
the Cappadocians were the fathers of the trinitarian
new-orthodoxy.
Through
his doctrine of the en-
human
nature, he paid, in the
hypostasis of the
form
of a fine Apollinarianism, full regard to the
idea of redemption. Jl
n poi?cy
s
W
Henceforth the policy of Justinian, the royal
dogmatist, must be understood as a religious policy.
By unexampled
luck he had brought the whole em-
pire under his sway,
and he wished in
like
manner
to
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. settle finally the
law and the dogmatics
The following points
pire.
of
creed as a
emperor was inclined
to
own
and Ephesus,
discourses,
formula,
(c)
(d)
(b)
The carrying out
it
were
S :
used
Public religious
of the theopaschitic
Suppression of every more liberal and
more independent theology; that of Origen,
among
to
religious edicts in the sense
of the Christology of Leontius,
tine,
(b)
monophysites and to
The means
inclination.
Numerous imperial
side,
Chalcedon
go as far as aphthartodoket-
in order to gain over the
follow his (a)
(a)
C}T rillian interpretation of the symbol (the
Strict
,
:
em-
equal in standing to
capital decision
those of Nicaea, Constantinople
ism)
of the
view guided him
Strict adhesion to the verbal text of the
200
therefore, on the one
who had many
sympathizers
the monophysitic monks, especially in Pales-
and, on the other side, of the Antiochian theol-
ogy which >
(as the
also still possessed
numerous adherents
emperor had closed the school at Athens, so
he intended likewise to close only the
schools;
all
Christian scientific
scholastic should
remain),
(e)
Enforced naturalization of the new-orthodoxy in the Occident. difficult
:
The execution of (1)
By
these plans
was rendered
the secret monophysitic co-regency DE^coun-es
of the empress Theodora, (2)
By
the refusal of the
Occident to consent to the rejection of the Antiochians,
i.
e.
of the " three articles " (person
and writ-
ings of Theodore, anti-Cyrillian writings of Theodoret, letter of Ibas to Maris)
.
In the later condem-
nation of the Antiochians, the Occident (Facundus
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
300 of
Hermiane) rightly recognized an attempt
away with
the doctrine of the
had meant
it,
and
do
two natures, as Leo
to substitute in its place a fine
However, the emperor found
monophysitism.
Rome
to
in
a characterless pope (Vigilius), who, in grati-
fying the emperor, covered himself with disgrace
Origen and "Three Chapters " Condemned, 553.
and jeopardized his position
in the Occident (great
schisms
The emperor obtained
in the Occident).
the condemnation of Origen and of the " three chapters "
he restored the dogmatic ideas of the two
;
Ephesian councils of 431 and 419 without touching the Chalcedon creed, and he caused
all
this to be
sanctioned by obedient bishops at the oth council
But in
in Constantinople, 553.
one could
now speak with
spite of the fact that
Cyril of one God-incarnate
nature (by the side of the doctrine of the two natures)
and that the
spirit of Oriental
dogmatism had thus
gained the victory, the monophysites would not be
won; Monergis-
and Mono-
tic
theletic
Controversies.
for the
Chalcedon creed was 'too
much
detested
and the antagonisms had long since become national. 4. The Monergistic and Monotlieletic Contro-
and John of Damascus X. and XI.).— With the decisions of the
versies, the
(Mansi, T.
6th Council
4th and 5th councils, the doctrine of one will in Christ would agree, as well as the doctrine of tico
In fact before the 6th century, no one had
wills.
spoken of two wills in Christ; for the Antiochians also
had
human will
said, as once
will
was
(unity of
Paul of Samosata, that the
entirely blended
will,
with the Divine
not singleness of will).
But
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
301
the theology of Leontius tended on the whole toward
Yet
the doctrine of two wills.
—
would hardly have the dogma had alread}T since it
come
to a controversy
553,
been surrendered to theological science (scho-
lasticism)
and the cultus
had not taken possession
The rpatriarch the
,
powerful
(mysticism)
—
if politics
of the question.
of the capital,' Sersrius, counselled ö
emperor
* Heraclius
'
(610-641)
to
Emperor Heraclius, Ser g ius -
strengthen his reconquered territory in the south
and east by making advances
to the
monophysites
with the formula: The God-man, consisting of two natures, effected everything with one God-incarnate
energy. in 633
Upon this basis a union was really formed with many monophysites. But opposition
arose (Sophronius, afterward bishop of Jerusalem)
,
Honorius,
Sophro
and Sergius in union with Honorius of Rome now sought to do justice to
word
:
One should be
(that Christ
all
self-evident).
ekthesis (638).
Thus
-
by giving out the watch-
silent in
had only one
nius
regard to the energies
ü£k-q>i.a
also ran
But not only
was
still
an imperial
considered edict, the
in the Occident
were
the consequences of the doctrinal letter of Leo re-
membered, but
in the Orient the ablest theologians
(Maximus the Confessor) were the Chalcedon creed
also so attached to
through Aristotelian scholas-
ticism, that they classed the will
with the nature (not
with the Person) and therefore demanded the duality.
Now
Roman who
even monotheletism was condemned at a
synod, 641 (Pope John IV.).
rejected
the ekthesis, fled to
The
Orientals,
Carthage and
iJJJSftoSöaVi!!!!,,'.-.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
302
Rome and
prepared, in union with the pope, a formal
revolution.
was thwarted (the questo the freedom of the Church in relation the effort continued in the image con-
tion
was
This, indeed,
as
to the state
;
Yet the emperor found himself obliged surrender the ekthesis, replacing it by the typos
troversy). to
which forbade, under severe penalties, the controversy over one or two wills. But Rome did not consent to this either. (Martini.), which
At
the Lateran synod, 649
many Orientals
attended, the con-
spiracy continued against the emperor, Two-win
The two-will
give orders to the Church.
to
who dared doc-
Doctrine at
Rome,
was formulated
trine
in
strict
language,
but,
649.
strangely enough, the right of the correctly understood Sentence
:
A
conceded.
fäa (pbais too #eoD löyou
large
number
6-s
Constantinopolitan
of
patriarchs of the latter days were condemned. tin
showed
was
Mar-
signs, like a second Dioscuros-, of ruling
and stirring up the churches
of the Orient, but the
emperor Constans, the sovereign of the pope, succeeded in subduing disgraced,
him
(653).
Dishonored and
he died in the Chersonesus.
the Confessor also had to suffer.
Constans soon
found in
Rome more accommodating
remained
until his death (668)
tion,
making
Maximus popes,
and
master of the situa-
the typos of importance and putting
forward the reasonable expedient, that the two natural wills
had become, in accordance with the hypo-
static union,
The
one hypostatic
reaction
will.
which followed in Constantinople
is
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
o03
Perhaps because one needed no
Constan-
longer to pay regard to the monophysites, perhaps
fgathon.
not perfectly clear.
because wills,
science "
"
was favorable to the doctrine of two
men
perhaps because
desired to fetter, through
dogmatic concessions, the uncertain Occidental possessions
and bind them more firmly
made advances
the emperor Constantine Pogonatus
and sought to
new
entice the powerful pope
Agathon
The latter sent a doctrinal Leo I. once had, which proclaimed the inof the Roman chair and the dyotheletism.
negotiations.
epistle as fallibility
At
to
to the capital,
the 6th
council in Constantinople (680) x v
it
was
carried through after diverse proposals of intermediation and under protest, i.e.
which however finally ceased,
the formal consequences of the decree of 451
were deduced (two natural energies adtoupgrw^
üeXy/iara
arpiTtruxs;^
and two natural
ä/ieptarcuSy
a<7oyyu-w$
in
the one Christ; they were not to be considered as contradictory, for the
human
will follows
not resist nor contradict, rather
is it
Divine and almighty will; the
human
and does
subject to the will is not
suspended, but, on the other hand, a communication takes place: It as the less
the
human
is
the will of the God-Logos, just
nature, without suspension, neverthe-
became the nature of
same time many
the God-Logos).
of the Constantinopolitan patri-
archs and pope Honorius were condemned.
Rome
again dictated
its
Thus
formula, balanced the 5th
council by the 6th and insinuated itself Orient.
At
But the agreement was
into the
of short duration.
Council of
Con stan tinople 68a '
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
304
Already at the second Trullan council in 692 the
Rome
Orient took a strong position against ters of cult
— and
these were already the
in mat-
more
de-
cisive things. I
The formulas
11 "
t?SflrSy
Damascus.
cidental
;
of the Byzantine dogmatics are Oc-
but the
expressed
itself,
which
spirit,
in 431
and 553 had
retained in the interpretation of
the formulas the upper hand, and the cultus and
mystic-system have always been understood monophysitically.
On
the one side, this
was shown
in the
image-controversy, on the other, in the Christological
dogmatics of John of Damascus.
dyophysitical
In spite of the
and dyotheletical formula and the
sharp distinction between nature and person, a fine Apollinarianism, or monophysitism, has been here preserved, in so far as
it
is
taught that the God-
Logos assumed human nature (not of a man) in such a manner that the same was b}T the God-Logos.
That
is
first
individualized
the intermediate thing
already recognized by Leontius, which has no hypostasis of its
own, yet
is
also not without one but
possesses in the hypostasis of the Logos
was adjusted by the doctrine
and the idiomae-communication. w(TL?, ävTidotjis)
Damascan of
an
indepen-
Furthermore, the distinction between the na-
dence. tures
its
ei<s
directly
of the r.zpixwpr^is
The psradofj^
of the attributes of the
(oixei-
two natures, the
will so definitely conceive that he speaks
aXhjka r&v ßipwv neptzmpTjffts.
The
flesh in-
became truly God and the Deity pervades the
deified flesh.
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
C— THE TEMPORAL ENJOYMENT
305
OF REDEMP-
TION.
CHAPTER
X.
THE MYSTERIES AND MATTERS AKIN TO THEM.
Already opment
in the 6th century the
dogmatic devel-
Greek Church was concluded and
of the
Tradition-
uahsm
-
even before that each advance was obliged to con-
The reason
tend against aversion and suspicion. for
it
lay in the traditionalism or,
more
correctly, in
which more and more gained the
the ritualism,
upper hand. This ritualism also has a tender, religious, even En^{feent It originated in
Christian root. point out
and
realize the
the endeavor to
enjoyment of an already
which springs from the same source from which the future redemption flows from the God-incarnate Person of Christ and which, present
salvation,
—
—
therefore, is the ally
men
same
in kind as the latter.
thought, touching the present enjoyment of
salvation,
more
of spiritual blessings, of knowledge,
of the strengthening of etc.
Origin-
freedom unto good works,
Bat since the future redemption was
sented as a mysterious deification*,
it
sistent that they should consider the
as mysterious secrations,
and
and
to be
repre-
was only
con-
knowledge
also
communicated by holy con-
that, in accordance
with the idea of
a future physical union with the Deity, they should *
20
See page
199, note.
M y stenes
-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
306
way
endeavor to verify for the present time also the unto, Mathesis
foretaste of, this divineness.
This tendency, however, leads directly over to the
becomes Mystagogia
and
paganizing of Christianity
symptom
of
The
it.
spiritual
In this the ritual
nothing, however,
mony;
it
now
the
as the formulas of faith lost
divine,
cere-
In so
more and more
and became in ever
fid&rjats
ritual,
expressing
same time the meaning and purpose
make
magic
the chief thing;
does not bear the slightest change.
higher degree constituents of the
to
is
to
more sensitive than a
is
significance as
at the
iiutnaycayia^
and sensuous, tends more and more
and jugglery.
their
becomes
tuför)
however, originally a shadowy union of the
latter,
far
already a
or, rather, is
of
it, i.e.,
they permitted no longer of any
Wherever the dogma appear valuable
change.
only as a relic of olden times, or only in ritualistic
ceremony, there the history of Mystagogic Theology.
In
its
place
indeed the
dogma
is
at
an end.
comes the mystagogic theology, and
latter,
together and in close union with
scholasticism, took already in the 6th century the
dogma.
place of the history of
two
theology, however, has in
sides.
On
the one side,
creating for itself upon the earth a
and in making
of things, persons
terious symbols
and
ion of necromancy, religion;
for
theologians,
the
The mystagogic
to
new world
and times mys-
vehicles, it leads to the religi.e.
the
back
to the lowest
grade of
masses, and finally even
to
the spirit vanishes and the phlegma,
consecrated
matter,
remains.
As
the
Neo-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
307
Platonic philosophy degenerated into religious bar-
barism, so also Greek Christianity, fluence of the expiring antiquity to it its highest
On
worship.
ogy retains
ideals
and
under the
in-
which bequeathed
became image-
idols,
the other side, the mystagogic theol-
for the "
knowing ones "
its
primitive
pantheistic germ, the fundamental thought that
God
and nature, in the deepest sense, are one, and that nature
is
The Christian
the unfolding of the Deity.
mystagogic theologians also more or thought out and retained these ideas. lation all
less
clearly
Through specu-
and asceticism one can emancipate oneself from
mediums, mediators and
phy takes the place
vehicles.
of the mysteries
;
Mysterioso-
these, like every-
thing concrete and historical, become for the knowing ones pure symbols, and the historical redemption through Christ especially is explained It is
away.
not stransre that two such different forms as .
pantheism and fetishism, although balanced by
Pantheism, Fetishism.
ritu-
alism, should be the final product of the development,
since both were lodged already in the beginning of
the
movement and
are blood-relations;
then they
have their root in the conception of the substantial unity of
opment
God and of
The history of the develthe mysteries and of the theology of mysnature.
teries, strictly taken,
does not belong here, therefore
only a few hints will follow. 1.
At
the beginning of the 4th century the
Church
already possessed a great array of mysteries, the
number and bounds
of which,
however, had by no
gM^S, uieJTtc".
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
308
means been
definitely
determined.
Among them
baptism, together with the accompanying unction,
and the eucharist were the most esteemed; from these also some of the other mysteries have been evolved. to
Symbolic ceremonies, originally intended
accompany these mysteries, became independent.
Thus confirmation had
its origin,
out as
it
the Areopagite called
men
"
,
it ixoarijpiov
"
'pludte
tsX^t?^ ßopoo.
Later
spoke also of a mystery of the sign of the
cross, of relics, of exorcism, of six Mys-
al-
sacramentum" Augussacramentum chrismatis, and
ready numbered as a special tine pointed
which Cyprian
the Areopagite
mT °S<)
l
marriage,
etc.,
enumerates six mysteries:
GOvd%Ew<$^ sir
rsXet(ü(Tewv y povaytxy^
uuv xoixovias^ T£Ä£~7,s /j.opoo y
reXziwaew^
and /J.u
fit)
v''
and wr ^-
Uparuwv zwv iepw$
The enumeration was very arbitrary; mystery was anything sensuous whereby something holy might be thought or enjoyed. They corresponded to the heavenly mysteries, which have their source in the trinity and incarnation. As each fact xexoip.r)p.ii«ov.
of revelation is a mystery, in so far as the Divine
has through is
entered into the sensuous, so in turn
it
each sensuous medium, even a word or action, a
mystery, so soon as the sensuous vehicle
is
—there has never been a strict
a symbol or distinction be-
tween
them— of
teries
were celebrated in the highest terms as union
the Divine.
The
effects of the
mys-
with the Deity; but since they cannot restore
communion with God able to do that)
,
strict
(only Christ
lost
and freedom are
dogmatics was able to say very
< DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. little
The
about them.
feeling,
i.e.
true effect
is
purely one of
experienced in the fantasy:
is
saw, heard, smelt, and
felt
300
Men
the celestial, but a dis-
turbed conscience they could not comfort with the mysteries, nor did one hardly try to do so.
On
this
basis, since
the coarse instinct of the
masses pressed forward, mysteriosophy was develIts roots are as old as the gentile
oped.
Church and
two converging developments may be discerned, the Antiochian and the Alexandrian. The first (Ignatius, the Apostolic Constitutions, Chrysostom) attaches itself to
the cult and priests, the second to the true
gnostic, i.e. to the
The
monk.
first
sees in Divine
worship and in the priest (bishop) the true bequest of the God-incarnate life of Christ
and binds the
layman, viewed as entirely passive, to the cultus hierarchical system,
by which one becomes consecrated
immortality
the second desires to form indepen-
to
;
The Alexandrian myste-
dent virtuosos of religion. riosophy
is
heterodox, but
did not neglect a single
it
phase of the positive religion, rather did use of them
all
by the side
vancing knowledge
it
make
of the graduated ad-
(sacrifice,
blood, reconciliation,
atonement, purification, perfection, means of salvation,
mediator of salvation)
;
true,
viewing them
all
as transition stages, in order to gain through specu-
and asceticism a standpoint from which each vehicle and sacrament, everything holy which ap-
lation
pears under a sensuous cover, becomes profane, be-
cause the soul
now
lives in the
most holy and
be-
Spiiy" ochian andrian.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
310
cause in each
^he ^ W0
11
ArecTa
-
man
a Christ should be born
napou^
;
niysteriosophies, the hierarchical
gnostic, converge in the
and the
mysticism of the great un-
known Dionysius Areopagita
(preliminary
stages
are represented by Methodius, Gregory of Nyssa,
Macarius), who, on the one side, viewed the cult and priesthood as an earthly parallel to the heavenly
hierarchy (to the graded world of spirits as the unfolding of the Deity), on the other, adopted the in-
dividualism of the Neo-Platonic mysticism.
Maximus Confessor
Through
combination became the
this
power which ruled the Church, tried to monarchize
and inoculated
it,
the state
was Mys
°f
7 the Eucharist.
or
^
with the monkish resistance
it
—the only form in which
is
the Greek
to
Church
able to assert its independence.
P ecu ^ ar character of mysteriosophy, as a speculation regarding the making of the Divine perie
ceptible to the senses
and the making of the sensuous
Divine, could in no mystery be more strongly expressed than in the eucharist (Steitz, lehre d.
griech
Theo!., Bd.
Kirche,
IX-XIIL).
i.
d.
Jahrb.
Abendmahlsf.
deutsche
This, long since recognized
as the ground upon which the sublimest spiritualism
can extend
became
its
hand
to the
so developed, that
most massive sensualism,
by
it
the Christological
formula, the fundamental dogma, appeared alive and
comprehensible.
Without giving
to the speculation
on the Lord's Supper a strictly instructional the
same was
cast,
so treated in general, especially after
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
was considered as the directly upon the incarnation
Cyril of Alexandria, that
mystery which
rests
311
it
and perpetuates the mystery
of the
&£iu
su£™anti-
All other
mysteries, in so far as they also contain the blending into one of the heavenly
and
earthly, exist in reality
only by reason of the Lord's Supper.
Here only
is
given an express transmutation of the sensuous into the divine body of Christ; for this conception gained
more and more ground, abolished symbolism and finally carried
its
point altogether.
The transub-
stantiation of the consecrated bread into the
Christ
is
the continuation of the process of the in-
Thereby pure monopliysitic formulas
carnation.
were used in relation to the Lord's Supper characteristic
made
its
body of
— and
—highly
gradually the conception even
way, that the body into which the bread
per assumptionem the very body of Christ, borne by the virgin, of which formerly hardly any one had thought since the older is
transformed
is
theologians also understood under
thing "pneumatic".
Xpiaroo some-
But as the Lord's Supper as a
sacrament was united in the closest manner with the
dogma
of the incarnation
and the Christological
mula (hence the sensitiveness it
of this formula), so
for-
was
likewise connected as a sacrifice with the death on
the cross (repetition of the sacrifice on the cross howJf^esacever, the conception has not been so definitely ex- the cross. ;
fl
pressed in the Greek
Accordingly ical events,
it
Church as
in the Occident).
re-enacted the most important histor-
not as a remembrance, but as a continu-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
312 ation,
a repetition, whereby those facts were
i.e.
deprived of their meaning and significance.
At
the
same time the immoral and irreligious thirst after " realities " changed the sacred act into a repast, in which one
bit the
Deity to pieces with the teeth
(thus already Chrysostom; completion of the doctrine of the Lord's ImageWorship,
of
Greek Christianity
into image-worship, superstition
and poorly veiled
2.
Superstition, Polytheism.
Supper by John of Damascus).
The whole development
polytheism may, however, also be conceived as the victory of a religion of the second order,
which
is
always prevalent in the Church, over the spiritual religion.
The former became legitimized and was
fused with the cloctrina publica, although theolo-
As
gians enjoined certain precautions. temples were reconsecrated and churches, so
was the
angel-, saint-, image-
ligion
made
the pagan
into Christian
paganism preserved as
old
and amulet-worship.
certain measure morally obtuse.
and became in a
True, the connect-
ing links are found in the doctrina publica f
seäud°
W
re-
whose strength had once been the abomination
of idols, finally surrendered to idols
K
The
itself
;
for,
This was constructed out of the material of the
Greek philosophy; but
this
philosophy was inter-
twined by a thousand threads with the mythology
and
superstition, (2) It sanctioned the
Old Testa-
ment, though originally prescribing a spiritual interpretation of
which
it;
but the letter of the Old Testament,
in fact expressed a subordinate religious stage
of development,
became more and more powerful
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. and made advances Church, which
it
313
to the inferior tendencies of the
then appeared to legitimize,
(3)
The acts of baptism and the Lord's Supper, conceived as mysteries, opened in general the doors and windows
The
to the
faith in
inroad of the mystery-nuisance,
(4)
angels and demons, handed down from
antiquity and protected by the doctrina publica,
grew more and more powerful, was fostered
in
a
crude form by the monks, in a spiritual form by the
Neo-Platonic theologians, and threatened more and
more
become the true sphere of
to
which the inconceivable God and the of the
Church doctrine)
was hidden
piety,
(in
behind
consequence
just as inconceivable Christ
The
in the darkness, (5)
old idea that Worship
of
Saints.
there are " saints " (apostles, prophets, ecclesiastical
had already very early been culsuch a manner that these saints interceded
teachers, martyrs)
tivated in
and made atonement for men and took now more and more the place of the dethroned gods, joining themselves to the angel-hosts.
Among them Mary
stepped into the fore-ground and she
— she alone—has
of virgin Mary.
been specially benefited by the trend of the develop-
ment
of the
dogma.
A
woman, a mother now
ap-
peared near the Deitj^, and thereby at last was offered the possibility of bringing to recognition the thing after all
most foreign
to original Christianity
Holy, the Divine in female form
—the
— Mary became the
mother of God, the one who bore God*,
(6)
From
the
* Concerning angel-worship, in so far as the angels serve as mediators of the benefits of salvation, see the Areopagite concerning the spread of ;
angel-worship (especially of the idea of guardian angels) as early as the
0f Relics
-
;
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
314
earliest times,
death had been sacred to Christians as
the birth-hour of true life; accordingly everything
which had any connection with the death of Chris-
The antique
tian heroes obtained a real sanctity. idol
and amulet business made
relic-
home, but as
and bone- worship in the most disgusting form
in the ful
itself at
contrast between the
form and
its religious
insignificant,
fright-
worth Christians made
plain to themselves the loftiness of their faith,
and
the more unsesthetic a relic appeared, the higher
must be
its
worth
embodiment and f
M?Jcac ies,
of Oracles,
the guarantee of
opened
its
to those
who
recognized in the dis-
obliteration of all sensuous charms, its holiness,
(7)
Finally the Church
doors to that boundless desire to live in
etc.
a world of miracles, to enjoy the holy with the
five
4th century, see Didynius, de trinit. II., 7.— The worship of saints (churches consecrated to a certain saint) was already by about the year 300 highly developed but in the 4th century counter efforts were not wanting (also not concerning angel-worship; see the synod of Laodicea). The Gallic priest Vigilantius especially fought against it, as also against the worship of relics. But the most eminent teachers (Jerome) declared against Vigilantius and worked out a "theology of saints", reserving to God the Aarpeta, but conceding to the saints ti/u.>/
:
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. senses, to receive miraculous hints
315
from the Deity.
Even the most cultured Church fathers of later times did not know how any longer to discern between the real and unreal they lived in a world of magic and loosed completely the tie between religion and moral;
ity (aside
the
more
from asceticism), joining the closely
The ceremonies little modified, came
again
Consulting of oracles of
:
judgments of God, prodigies,
kinds,
thereby
with the sensuous.
out of the gray past of religion, to the surface
latter
etc.
The
all
syn-
ods, originally hostile to these practices, finally con-
sented to them.
The newly gained °
peculiarity J of the r
•
found
its
plainest expression in
the image-controversy
.
Greek Church
image-worship and
After image-worship had
slowly crept into the Church,
it
received a mighty
invigoration and confirmation, unheard of in antiquity,
by the dogma
of the incarnation
and the
cor-
responding treatment of the eucharist (since the 5th Christ
century). being,
yes,
Ttveuim
is
eixt&v
of God,
^woizmov
;
and yet a living
Christ
has rendered,
through the incarnation, the Divine apprehensible to the senses;
the consecrated elements are
same time, the body
sixdvsg
of
Christ,
and
itself.
These ideas called up a new world for con-
templation. to the
yet, at the
of Christ
Everything sensuous, which pertained
Church, became not only a symbol, but also a
vehicle of holy things
men and
;
monks and laytheologians. But among
thus
thus taught the
felt
the
sensuous things the image shows plainest the union
i
m a?e-
Worship church.
in
;
316
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
Images
of the holy with the material.
Mary and
of
of saints
of Christ,
were already in the 5th
century worshipped after the antique fashion
were naive enough
to
fancy themselves
now
;
(4th)
men
secure
from paganism, and they transferred their dogmatical representation
from the
deified
matter in an espe-
— the Aristotelian scholastics also was called in to aid — they were cial
manner
to the images, in
which
able to see the veritable marriage of earthly
and the heavenly tious belief in
form
(hoty)
(besides, the supersti-
images not painted by hand)
scholastics
and mystics gave
But monasticism
also
it
Monas-
.
and traded with
ticism fostered image- worship
Monasticism.
matter
it;
dogmatic form.
advanced the struggle of the
Church toward independence, in contrast with Justinian's state constitution
which
fettered the Church.
In the ?th century the ecclesiastico-monkish resist-
ance to Byzantium retreated behind dyotheletism, just as in the
behind
5th and 6th centuries
monophysitism
;
it
it
had
fled
grew more and more
powerful and sought to gain ecclesiastical freedom,
which the Occident already partly enjoyed. ful
but barbarous emperors endeavored to put an end
by substituting the army for and monks, and to break the independence
to this effort
Church by striking imagetroversy.
Power-
at its peculiarity
— the
priests
of the
image-
Thus originated the frightful image-controversy, which lasted more than a century. In it
worship.
the emperors fought for the absolutism of the state,
and had as an
ally only
a single power, the military
i^mmm
,
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. remaining
for the
317
namely, religious enlight-
allies,
enment and the primitive
tradition of the Church,
which spoke against the images, were powerless. The monks and bishops had on their side the culture,
and science
art
doras Studita)
the
Roman
and living tradition
piety tral
,
of that time (John
Damsc, Theo-
bishop and, furthermore, ;
they fought for the cen-
dogma, which they saw exemplified
in the image-
worship, and for the freedom of the Church.
they could not obtain.
latter
was that the Church retained definitely lost its
The
state.
ob
9
fiövy rjy
ßi-jV tyjV
TU7:ou diaßa(vzi).
Holy, as
peculiarity, but
its
independence with reference to the
(«(TxaGfidv
xard
#e{a
pal points
xai Tt/iTjTtxijV -puay.ovTjfftv a-o-
tzigtiv i^/iäiv älrjfhv^v Xarpziav^ y\-!zpiTzzi
...'*]
t9j<$
Its logical
eüzovos
TL/iij
to
-npioTÖ-
its princi-
The Divine and
descended through the incarnation into
the sensuous, created for itself in the
tem
E7z\
development in
was obviously concluded. it
rather,
7th council at Niceea (787) sanctioned v '
image- Worship vifieiv
The outcome,
The
Church a
sys-
which
offer
of sensuous-supersensuous objects,
themselves for man's gratification.
The image-the-
osophy corresponds to the Neo-Platonic idea (joined with the incarnation-idea) of the One, unfolding himself in
a multiplicity of graduated ideas (prototypes)
reaching
down even
to the earthly.
To Theodorus
was almost more important than dogmatic watch- word for in the authen-
Studita the image the correct tic
;
image one has the real Christ and the real holy
thing
— only the material
is different.
council at Nicsea, 787.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
318
CHAPTER CONCLUSION.
— SKETCH
XI.
OF THE
HISTORIC
BEGIN-
NINGS OF THE ORTHODOX SYSTEM.
(
Origen's Ihnstian system.
A
l.
Christian system upon the foundation
fa e f our p r i nc ipl e s
God, world, freedom and Holy
:
toward the doctrina publica,
Scriptures, tending
and making use
tails
of the total yield of the 'EMyvui)
Origen bequeathed; yet
natd&ia^
of
it
was
in
many
heterodox and as a science of the faith
intended to outbid faith
it
de-
was
Moreover the idea of
itself.
the historical redemption through the true God, Jesus
was not the all-controlling one. 2. The Church could not rest satisfied with the system. It demanded, (1) The identity of the expresChrist,
church not Content system,
sions of faith with the science of faith (especially
since Methodius),
the
c
Such a
(2)
EAAt)M7) -atosia
restriction of the use of
that the realistic sentences of the
regula fielet and of the Bible should remain intact (the opponents of
Origen
:
Epiphanius, Apollinaris,
the monks, Theophilus, Jerome), of the idea of the real
and
(3)
The introduction
historical redemption
through the God-man as the central idea (Athanasius
and his
followers)
ried out, broke
the bottom it
down
was a
down, no one
either
These demands, thoroughly car-
.
the
S}T stem of
Origen, which at
philosophical system.
But break
of the cultured Christians at first
would or could
;
for they estimated
it
as the
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP INCARNATION.
319
science from which one dare not depart and which the Christian faith needed for
its
defence.
In consequence thereof, indistinctness and free- ^esJ^nd dorn ruled till the end of the 4th century in the Ori- ^Jff 400" 3.
ental Church, into which, since Constantine, the old
world had gained an entrance.
To be
through
sure,
Arius and Athanasius the idea of redemption had
become a critical problem, and
later
it
obtained
recognition essentially in the conception which the
Christian faith at that time demanded; but every-
thing on the periphery was entirely insecure:
A
wholly spiritualistic philosophical interpretation of the Bible stood side by side with a coarse realistic
anthropomorphism by the side
one, a massive
of a
Christian-tinted Neo-Platonism, the modified rule of faith
by the side
erable shades
and the
;
of its letter.
Between were innum-
steersman and rudder were wanting,
religion of the second order, thinly veiled
paganism, forced
itself
by
its
own
into the Church, but also into the
power, not only
Church
doctrine.
Right well did the Cappadocians (Gregory of Nyssa) maintain the science of Origen in the midst of tacks right and that
it
was
at-
and they lived in the conviction
left,
possible to reconcile ecclesiastical faith
with free science. like Socrates
Ecclesiastically inclined
acknowledged them
laymen
to be in the right,
and at the same time Greek theology penetrated into the Occident and
But by the side the
fall of
became there an important leaven.
of
it
there
grew
up, especially after
Arianism, in close alliance with barbar-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
320
ism a monkish and communal orthodoxy, which was very hostile to the independent ecclesiastical science,
off the
no means of warding
latter surely neglected
and the
Were
heterodox Hellenism.
bishops (Synesius),
who
there not even
gave a different
either
terpretation to the principal dogmas, or denied contest Against S g sys tem
4.
Under such circumstances the
rowed down
was the
nius,
situation nar-
to a contest against Origen.
"EXXrjvtxij Ttatdeia
it
them?
His name
a principle, the well-known use of
signified
who
in ecclesiastical science.
passionate, learned
in-
the
In Palestine
and narrow Epipha-
disturbed the circles of the monkish ad-
mirers of Origen, together with
bishop John of
In Egypt the bishop Theophilus found
Jerusalem.
himself obliged, in order to retain his influence, to surrender Origen to the
This
is
monks and
to
condemn him.
one of the most consequential facts in the
history of theology.
Of not
less
consequence was
it,
that the greatest theologian of the Occident (Jerome), living in the Orient, once an admirer of Origen,
made common cause with Theophilus, in order to preserve his own ecclesiastical authority, and stamped Origen as a heretic.
In the controversy into which
he on that account
with his old friend Rufinus,
the
Roman
demned
in
However,
bishop took a part.
Rome
it
tical action lost
fell
(399)
Origen was also con-
and Rufinus was censured.
did not come as yet to general ecclesias-
against Origen.
The controversy was
sight of in the contest of Theophilus against
Chrysostom.
Even
in the 5th
and 6th century Ori-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION.
321
gen had numerous admirers among the monks and
laymen in the Orient, and partly hushed
his heterodoxies
were
up by them, partly approved.
The great controversy about the Christological dogma in the 5th century next silenced all other contests. But the difference between the Alexandrians and the Antiochians was also a general scientific one. 5.
The former took
idea of redemption)
istic if
left
upon tradition and
their position
counting
,
wing who
still
on some adherents
inclined toward the Origen-
Neo-Platonic philosophy and
who were tolerated
they hid their heterodoxies behind the mysticism
were sober exegetes with a
of the cult; the latter
tendency, favoring the philosophy of Aris-
critical totle,
but rejecting the spiritualizing method of Ori-
gen.
The heterodox element
in so far as they
the
arms
had not
fully
in the Alexandrians,
thrown themselves into
of traditionalism, pointed
still
in the direc-
pantheism (re-interpretation of the regula)
tion of
in the Antiochians
central dogmas.
the old
heresies
to the East,
it
;
lay in the conception of the
Forced to stand on guard against
which had
wholly
withdrawn
the Antiochians remained the "anti-
gnostic " theologians
and boasted that they carried
The last of them, Theodoret, appended to his compendium of heretical fables a 5th Book: "ftetcuv doy/jArcM krurop:q ", which must be
on the battles of the Lord.
recognized as the
first
systematic effort after Origen,
and which apparently had great influence upon John 21
g"
inThesth
(concerning the realistically conceived
speculation
on the
s
^cai con
Theo-
compeu
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
322 of
The "epitome"
Damascus.
and Christological
It unites the trinitarian
tance.
dogmas with the whole upon the
creed.
It
of great impor-
is
circle of
dogmas depending
shows an attitude as obviously
Biblical, as it is ecclesiastical
and reasonable.
keeps everywhere to the "golden mean".
It
It is al-
most complete and also pays especial regard once more It admitted none of the to the realistic eschatology. offensive doctrines of Origen,
A system
not treated as a heretic. not, but the
and yet Origen was this epitome is
uniform soberness and clearness in the
treatment of details and the careful Biblical proofs give to the whole a unique stamp. course satisfy
person of
its
;
in the first place,
It
could not of
on account of the
author, and then because everything
mystical and Neo-Platonic
is
wanting
in its doctrinal
content. Mysteri-
6.
After the Chalcedon creed
science
all
came
to
osophy and scnoiasticisni.
a stand-still in the orthodox Church
:
There were no
longer " Antiochians", or " Alexandrians " logical
work died out almost completely.
;
free theo-
However,
the century preceding the 5th council shows two
remarkable appearances.
First,
a mysteriosophy
gained more and more ground in the Church, which did not work at dogmas but stood with one foot upon the ground of the religion of the second order (superstition,
cult),
with the other upon Neo-Platonism
(the pseudo-Areopagite)
;
second, a scholasticism
grew up, which presupposed the dogma as given and appropriated it by means of apprehensible distinc-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. tions (Leontius of
Byzantium)
.
323
In the spirit of both
tendencies Justinian carried on his religious politics.
thereon he closed the school of
.Relying
Athens,
and
also the old ecclesiastical schools, the Origenistic
Antiochian.
The 5th council sanctioned the
demnation of Origen
(in 15
con-
anathemas his heterodox
sentences were rejected) and the condemnation of the "
three chapters".
origen's
Teaching dei£n"d
by
council.
Henceforth there was no longer a
theological science going back to
first
There existed only a mysticism of cult
principles.
(truly,
with a
hidden heterodox trend) and scholasticism, both in
ways
(Maximus Confessor). Thereby a condition was reached for which the "conservatives" at all times had longed; but certain
in closest connection
through the condemnation of Origen and the Antiochians one was
now
defenceless against the massive
Biblicism and a superstitious realism, and that was
a result which originally
men had
not desired.
In
the image-worship, on the one side, and the fussy
Gen.
literal translation of
1-3,
on the other,
is
re-
vealed the downfall of theological science.
As
the Cappadocians (in addition papp^^}^ to Athanasius and Cyril) above all were considered PMÜhr«S, 7.
to the
n authoritative;
ßäürj
,,
/
i
a
•
as to the ^uarayuyyta^ the Areopagite
Aristotle
andciuysostom
and Maximus; as öfitXta,
all
Chrysostom.
these,
who
to
Aristotle; as to the
But the man who comprehended
transferred the scholastico-dialectic
method, which Leontius had applied to the dogma of the incarnation, to the
vine
dogmas"
whole compass of "the
di-
as Theodoret had established them,
A
ri ~
"ie°
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
324 John
of
Damascus T»,'!i!o.iox
was j hn
Church gained Church
him the Greek Through °
Damascus.
of
its
orthodox system, but not the Greek
The work
alone.
John was none the
of
became the founda-
important for the Occident.
It
tion of mediaeval theology.
John was above
Each
scholastic.
difficulty
was
less
him only a
to
all
a
chal-
lenge to artfully split the conceptions and to find a
new
conception to which nothing in the world corre-
which
sponds, except just that difficulty
to
be
The fundamental
removed by the new conception.
question also of the science of the Middle
him
is
Ages was
The question of nomialism and realism he solved it by a modified Arisalready propounded by
:
;
All doctrines had already been provided
totelianism. for
him; he
and the works considered
them
finds
it
of the
in the decrees of councils fathers.
He
work them
over.
acknowledged
the duty of science to
Thereby the two principal dogmas were placed within the circle of the teachings of the old anti-gnostically
Of the
interpreted symbol.
Holy Scriptures a very modest use
of the
The any
letter of Scripture
rate
docians.
ogy
much more
ture narrations,
strict
linaris
made.
decidedly than with the Cappa-
concealed
this, the natural theol;
highly realistic Scrip-
which are piously
themselves around
is
dominates on the whole, at
In consequence of
is also closely
—the
allegorical explanation
it.
But what
received, twine
most perplexing
is
connection which in Athanasius, Apol-
and Cyril unites the
tion, in general, the
trinity
dogma which
and the incarna-
is
associated with
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF INCARNATION. the benefit of salvation,
'
is
325
John
entirely « dissolved.
has innumerable dogmas, which must be believed; -,
.
-,
but they stand no longer clear, under a consistent
The end to which the dogma once contributed as a means still remained, but the means are changed it is the cult, the mysteries, into which the scheme.
;
4th book also overflows.
Consequently the system
lacks an inward, vital unity.
In reality
it is
not an
explanation of faith, but an explanation of
its pre-
form
of treat-
suppositions,
and it has
its
unity in the
ment, in the high antiquity of the doctrines and in the
Holy Scriptures.
The dogmas have become the
sacred legacy of the classical antiquity of the Church
but they have sunk, so to speak, into the ground.
Image-worship mysticism and scholasticism dom>,
inate the Church.
•'"'"!
llf
"
quires
numerable Dogmas.
BOOK
II.
EXPANSION AND RECASTING OF THE DOGMA INTO A DOCTRINE CONCERNING SIN, GRACE AND THE MEANS OF GRACE UPON THE BASIS OF THE CHURCH.
CHAPTER
I.
HISTORICAL SURVEY. Baur, Vorl. üb. d. christl. DG., 2. Bd., 1866. Bach, Die DG. des MA., 2 Bde., 1873 seq. Schwane, DG. der mittl. Zeit, 1882. Thomasius- Seeberg, Die christl. DG., 2. Bd., 1. Abth., 1888. Basal Eie-
ments
Dogma
ril HE
history of
dogma
in the Occident during
of
History of
the thousand years between the migration of J °
JL_
iu
Occident.
^ie na ti ons
Reformation was evolved from
an(j the
the following elements
:
(1)
From the distinctive pecu-
liarity of Occidental Christianity as represented
Tertullian, Cyprian, Lactantius, etc.,
(2)
From
by the
Hellenic theology introduced by the theologians of the 4th century, •
(3)
From Augustinianism,
the Christianity of Augustine,
degree
— From
manic nations.
the
new needs
The
Roman
(4)
—in
of the
dogma
in the Middle 326
from
a secondar}^
Romano-Ger-
bishop became in an
increasing measure the decisive authority. tory of
i.e.
Ages
is
The his-
the history of
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
dogma
the
had
of the
Roman
home, not in
its
327
SIN, ETC.
Church, although theology-
Italy,
but in
North Africa
and France. 2.
The carrying out
of spiritual monotheism, the
disclosure of individualism
and the delineation
inward process of the Christian
life (sin
^J^|"
of the
and grace)
indicate the importance of Augustine as a pupil of
But since he
the Neo-Platonists and of Paul.
also
championed the old dogma and at the same time
new problems and aims for kingdom of God upon the earth,
brought forward
the
Church as the
his
rich
mind bore within
itself all
the tensions whose
living strength determined the history of
dogma
in
Even the system of morality and the sacramental superstition, which later almost absorbed Augustinianism, were placed by Augustine among the Occident.
the
first
new later
As
principles of his doctrine of religion.
element, Aristotelianism
a
was added during the
Middle Ages, and this strengthened the afore-
said system of morality, but on the other
hand
it
beneficially limited the Neo-Platonic mysticism. 3.
The
piety of Augustine did not live in the old
dogma, but he respected
it
as authority and used
as building-material for his doctrine of religion.
cordingly side,
dogma
other,
far-reaching transformations within theology self.
Ac-
in the Occident became, on the one
Church discipline and law and, on the
it-
The consequence was that during the Mid-
dle Ages, in spite of all changes,
men
gjjjf^g: d
it
surrendered
themselves to the illusion of simply persisting in the
TEeoiogy
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
328
dogma of
new was either
the 5th century, because the
not recognized as such, or
was reduced
ministrative rule in the indeed thority of the
Roman bishop.
the Tridentine council, of affairs.
still
to a
controverted, au-
The Reformation,
dogma
i.e.
put an end to this state
first
Only since the 16th century,
can the history of
mere ad-
in the
therefore,
Middle Ages be sep-
arated from the history of theology, and described. Pietism, Sacra-
ments, Scientific
4.
Especially to be observed are,
(1)
The history
of
pietism (Augustine, Bernard, Francis, so-called re-
Theology.
formers before the Reformation) in for the recasting of
raments, totle,
dogma,
(3) Scientific
significance
The doctrine of the sac-
(2)
theology (Augustine and Aris-
fides et ratio) in its influence
tivation of doctrine.
its
Back
there lay in the later Middle
of
upon the
these
free cul-
developments
Ages the question of per-
sonal surety of faith and of personal Christian character,
which was repressed by the active power
of the visible Church. efficient of all spiritual
until
it
The and
was the silent cotheological movements
latter
became plainly audible in the contest over
the right of the pope. Divisions in
of
History
Dogma
ot's'infetc.
5.
Division:
(1)
Occidental Christianity and Oc-
cidental Theology before Augustine, (2) Augustine, (3)
Provisional Adjustment of Prse-Augustinian and
Augustinian Christianity until Gregory Carolingian Revival,
Epoch,
(6)
lasticism tion.
(5)
I.,
(4)
The
The Clugnian-Bernardine
Epoch of the Mendicant Orders, of Schoand of the Reformers before the Reforma-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
CHAPTER
SIN, ETC.
329
II.
OCCIDENTAL CHRISTIANITY AND OCCIDENTAL THEOLOGIANS BEFORE AUGUSTINE. Nöldechen, Tertullian, Förster, Ambrosius, 1884.
Hieronymus,
1865.
Cyprian, 1885. Reinkens, Hilarius, 1864. Zöckler, Völter, Donatismus, 1882. Nitzsch, O. Ritschl,
1890.
Boethius, 1860.
Occidental Christianity, in contradistinction ^ Oriental, was determined by two personalities
1.
to
—
Tertullian
and Augustine
policy, conscious of its
the
aim
Roman Church and The Christianity J
2.
its
and the
in serving
and
was determined enthusiastic and strict
anti -gnostic rule of faith.
In accord-
everywhere in religion legal axioms and formulas,
and he conceived the relationship between God and Furthermore his theology
bears a syllogistic-dialectical stamp osophize, but
it
;
it
does not phil-
reasons, alternating between argu-
ments ex auctoritate and
e ratione.
On
the other
hand, Tertullian frequently strongly impresses one
by his psychological observation and indeed by an empirical psychology. ifest
Finally his writings man-
^practical, evangelical attitude, determined by
the fear of
God
e
popes.
bishops.
old,
as that of civil law.
a
ruling, of
ance with his juristic training he endeavored to secure
man
Augustine
the
of Tertullian
through contrast by the faith
— and, in addition, by
Tertuinan,
as the Judge, and an insistance upon
will and action, which the speculative Greeks lacked.
christianity of
Tertulhan
-
;
330
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
In
these points
all
tianity Naturalized in
Occident
by Cyprian.
and in
became typical
their
mixture his Chris-
for the Occident.
The Christianity of Tertullian, blunted in many respects and morally shallow (" de opere et eleemosynis "), yet clerically worked out (" de imitate eccle3.
siae"), became naturalized in the Occident through
Cyprian, the great authority of Latin Christendom side
by side with
it
that Ciceronian theology with
apocalyptical additions, represented
Lactantius,
maintained
itself.
by Minucius and
Religion
was "the
law", but after the Church had under compulsion declared all sins pardonable (Novatian crisis), religion
was
also the ecclesiastical penitential institute.
theologian, however, before Augustine really adjust
"lex" and "venia".
In
was
No
able to
Rome and
Carthage they labored at the strengthening of the Church, at the composing of an ecclesiastical rule of morals possible of fulfilment, and at the education of
community through divine service and penitential rules. The mass-Christianity created the clergy and the sacraments, the clergy sanctified the monthe
grel religion for the laity.
most entirely Tertullianic,
The formulas were alyet his spirit was being
crushed out. Occident Receives Origenistic
Theology and Monasticism
from Orient.
The Occident and the Orient were already separated in the age of Constantine, but the Arian contest brought them again together. The Occidental 4.
orthodoxy supported the Oriental and received from it
two great
gifts
:
and monasticism.
Scientific (Origenistic) theology
These were in reality a single
:
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
331
monasticism (the ideal of divinely inspired
gift, for
celibacy in close union with God) plication
of
is
the practical ap-
Thus the Occidental
that "science".
theology of the last half of the 4th century
is repre-
sented by two lines which converge in Augustine
The
line
of
the Greek scholars
(Hilary,
Victor-
inus Rhetor, Rufinus, Jerome) and the line of the
genuine Latin scholars (Optatus, Pacian, PrudenIn both lines, however, must
tius).
named
as
theologically
Ambrose be
most important
the
fore-
runner of Augustine. 5.
The Greek
scholars transplanted the scientific x
Ambrose, \ ictorinus,
(pneumatic) exegesis of Philo and Origen and the ^SSSiiJ speculative orthodox theology of the Cappadocians pagite.
5
"
With
into the Occident.
the
first
they silenced the
doubts in regard to the Old Testament and met the onset of Manichseism, with the second they, especially
Ambrose, relaxed the tension which existed
until after the year 381,
between the orthodoxy of the
Through three suc-
Orient and that of the Occident. cessive contributions
Greek speculation entered into
the theology of the Occident,
Victorinus and Augustine,
Through Ambrose, Through Boethius in
(1)
(2)
the Gth century (here Aristotelian), (3)
Areopagite in the 9th century.
Through the
In Victorinus
is al-
ready found that combination of Neo-Platonism and Paulinism, which forms the foundation of the Augustinian theology
;
in
Ambrose
is
already conspicu-
ous that union of speculation and religious individualism,
which characterizes the great African.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
332 Problem of Latin Church.
The
G.
real
problem of the Latin Church was the
application of the Christian law, and the ecclesiasti-
In the Orient they laid
cal treatment of sinners.
greater weight upon the effects of the cultus as a single institution
and upon
self-education
silent
through asceticism and prayer; in the Occident they
had a greater sense of standing in religious relations to law, in
which they were responsible
but also might expect from
it
to the
Church,
sacramental and pre-
catory assistance through individual appropriation.
The sense
of sin as open guilt
This reacted upon their conception of the
developed.
As
Church.
was more strongly
regards the development of the
latter,
Optatus (de scliismate Donatistarum) was the fore-
runner of Augustine, as regards the stricter conception of sin, Donatist Controversy.
Ambrose.
The Donatist controversy,
in
which the Montanist
and Novatian controversies were continued under a
had
peculiar limitation, rels
;
but
it
its roots
in personal quar-
soon acquired an importance on principle.
The Donatist party (in the course of development it became an African national party, assumed in opposition to the state, siastical attitude
which oppressed
it,
a
free, eccle-
and even cultivated a revolutionary
enthusiasm) denied
the validity of
an ordination
administered by a traitor, and therefore also the validity of the sacraments
which a
bishop, conse-
crated by a traitor, administered (consequently the
demand the old
for re-baptism)
demand
that in
.
was the last remnant of the Church not only the inIt
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF above
stitution, but
all
SIN, ETC.
333
the persons must be hol}T
,
and the Donatists were able
to appeal for their theses
to the celebrated Cyprian.
At
least a
minimum
personal worthiness in the clergy should necessary, in order that the the true Church.
idea.
Optatus above
holiness of the
it
the Catholics
of the "objective"
all
be
still
Church might remain
In opposition to
drew the consequences
of
Church
asserted that the truth and
Church resides
in the sacraments,
optatus
and
that therefore the personal quality of the adminis-
una est, cuius sanctitas de sacramentis colligitur, non de superbia personarum ponderatur") he furthermore showed, trator is immaterial (" ecclesia
;
that the Church, in contrast with the conventicle of the Donatists, held the guarantee of its truth in
They
Catholicity.
also hit
ciple in so far as they
upon an evangelical prin-
emphasized faith at the side
and with the sacrament, in opposition sanctity.
Thus already
ation for the
Roman
its
to personal
prior to Augustine the found-
Catholic doctrine of the Church
and the sacraments was laid by Optatus.
But
Am-
brose especially had emphasized faith in connection
with a deeper conception of
sin.
Since Tertullian
the conception of sin as Vitium originis and as sin
against
God was known
in the Occident.
Ambrose
extended the view in both directions and appreciated accordingly the importance of the Pauline idea of gratia, justification and remissio peccatorum ("il-
lud mihi prodest, quod
bus legis
.
.
.
non justificamur ex
operi-
gloriabor in Christo; non gloriabor,
Ambrose
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
334
quia iustus sum, sed gloriabor, quia redemptus
sum ")
.
It
was
in the Occident
sin
of epochal significance that people
became attentive
and grace, law and
when they
to Pauline ideas of
gospel, at
the very time
externalized the conception of the
and created a doctrine
of the sacraments.
Church
Ambrose
was strongly influenced by the common Catholic views respecting law, virtue and himself,
it is
true,
merit.
Peculiariiies of
cSätfan-
The more
God, the strong c feelm & °f responsibility to the Judge, the consciousness of God as a moral Power restrained or relaxed by no vital conception of j.
speculations concerning nature, the conception
man whose work
Christ as the sight of
God an
for us possesses in the
infinite value, the
factio) Dei through
of
placatio (satis-
Church as a peda-
his death, the
gogical institution securely relying upon the
means
Holy Scripture as
of salvation (the sacraments), the
lex Dei, the symbol as the sure content of doctrine,
the conceiving of the Christian
view of
more
guilt,
life
atonement and merit, even
ecclesiastically
than religiously,
represented the peculiarities of Augustine Affirms
^fornS forms Them.
18 "
from the points of
He
tianity prior to Augustine. L °
transformed them.
Above all
tion awaited a solution.
By
if
conceived
— in
these are
Occidental
Chris-
affirmed and Jyet
the soteriological ques-
the side of Manichsean,
Origenistic-Neo-Platonic and stoic-rationalistic conceptions of
evil
and
of
redemption there flickered
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP also near the year 400 here
and there
Pauline conceptions, which, as a laxities,
yet nevertheless in
SIN, ETC.
335
in the Occident
rule,
covered moral
some representatives
were expressions for evangelical convictions which did not harmonize with the times and would therefore of necessity be fatal to the Catholic
vinian)
one considers in addition that about the
If
.
Church ( Jo-
year 400 paganism was
still
a power, one can com-
He
prehend what a problem awaited Augustine!
would not have been able
to solve it for the
Occidental Church, had the latter not been
and
existed,
able existence
it
almost seems as though
had only been prolonged
world-historical
still
a
The Western Roman empire
unit at that time. still
whole
work
of
Augustine
CHAPTER
to
its
miser-
make
the
possible.
III.
THE WORLD-HISTORICAL POSITION OF AUGUSTINE AS REFORMER OF CHRISTIAN PIETY. Bindermann,
Böhringer, der h. Aug., 3 Bde., 1844-69. 1877 f. Reuter, August. Studien, 1887. Harnack, Aug. 's Confessionen, 1888. Bigg, The Christian Platonists of Alex., 1886.
Augustin,
2.
Aufl.,
One may
seek to construct Augustinianism from
the premises of the current Occidental Christianity (see the previous chapter) or
from the course
of the
training of Augustine (the pagan father, the pious Christian mother, Cicero's Hortensius, ManichsBism, Aristotelianism, Neo-Platonism with
its
mysticism
Elements AugUSiniamsm.
in t
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
and skepticism, the influence
Ambrose and
of
of
monasticism), but neither of these methods of proced-
even both of them, will entirely accomplish
ure, nor Augustine Redis-
covered Religion.
Augustine in religion discovered
the end in view.; religion
living
he recognized his heart as the lowest, the
;
God
as the highest good
;
lie
possessed an en-
chanting ability and facility for expressing inward observations: In this consist his individuality his greatness.
dued grief
man
lifts
In the love of
of his soul
united Religion
and
Morality.
in the sub-
he found that elation which
above the world and makes him another
being, while prior to
that
God and
and
him
theologians had dreamed
man must become another
being in order to be
able to be saved, or
had contented themselves with
striving after virtue.
He separated nature and grace,
but bound together religion and morality and gave to the idea of the good a the
phantom
moralism;
new meaning.
He
destroyed
of the popular antique psychology
he
discarded
the
intellectualism
and
and
optimism of antiquity, but allowed the former to vive again in the pious thought of the in the loving
God
true existence
;
re-
man who found
and in terminat-
ing Christian pessimism, he at the same time passed
beyond Made Religion a
Thing of the Heart.
it
through the surety of pardoning grace.
But more than
he held before every soul
all,
gloiy and responsibility
and
its
God.
munal and
He
cultus
— God and
form and restored life.
own
the soul, the soul
rescued religion from
as a gift and as a gracious
its
it
its
com-
to the heart
Love, unfeigned
humility and strength to overcome the world, these
— DEVELOPMENT OP DOCTRINE OF are the elements of religion and
its
SIN, ETC.
blessedness
337
they
;
spring from the actual possession of the loving God.
men who
"Happy
are
strength,
who from
the
consider Thee their
their heart
walk in Thy
steps".
This message Augustine preached to the Christianity
and of
of his time
all
times.
The Prge-Augustinian piety was a wavering between fear and hope. It lived not in the faith. Knowing and doing good, it taught, brings salvation, 1.
man
after that
own
;
man
but
does not experience
sal-
Neither baptism nor asceticism freed from
men
fear ;
Piety.
has received forgiveness for past sins
through baptism vation.
Prae-Augustinian
did not feel strong enough to trust in their
virtue, nor guilty
and believing enough
comfort in the grace of
God
in Christ.
hope remained; they were tremendous
to take
Fear and
Fear and Hope.
They
forces.
shook the world and built the Church but they were ;
not able to create for the individual a blessed
Augustine advanced from sins to sin and °
ing
God
is
him from only,
all
have
I
affiliated the guilty
the
new
sinned
"
quod vis
—
the liv-
—
"
Thou,
"
Against Thee, Thee
O
Lord, hast created
us in thy likeness, and our heart "
man and
teaching which distinguishes
his predecessors.
finds its rest in
from
The exclusiveness and firmness
baptism to grace.
with which he
quilt,' u
life.
Thee"
is restless
"da quod
till it
tubes, et tube
quod quisque novit, non fruitur, nisi et id diligit, neque quisquam in eo, quod percipit, X)ermanet nisi dilectione". This is the mighty " eo,
concord which his ear caught from the Holy Scrip-
G} nt and i Grace.
;
338
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
tures,
from the deepest contemplation of the human
heart and from the speculation concerning the A11
is
Sn' Against
God
In a
aD ^ ^ as ^ things.
that the Spirit exists
Sin
is
devoid of
spirit is
God all
against
God
Furthermore,
all
ing relationship, namely that to God.
life of
sin
for a created spirit has only
;
is sin
the only good remaining.
the sphere and the form of the inner
every natural man.
first
is
one
Sin
is
sin last-
the
disposition to be an independent being (superbia)
and unrest.
therefore is its form desire
never appeased lust and fear.
rest is revealed the
The
;
In this un-
latter is evil, the
former when striving after
when striving after perishable goods is evil. We must strive to be happy ("infelices esse nolumus sed nee velle possumus") this striving is the life bestowed upon us by God bliss (blessedness) is good,
but
—
which cannot be Mihi Adhaerere Deo Bo-
num
Est.
lost
—but there
is
only one good, one
"Mihi adhaerere deo bonum Only in the atmosphere of God does the soul est." live and rest. But the Lord who created us has redeemed us. Through grace and love which have bliss
and one
rest:
been revealed in Christ, he traction to himself,
calls
us back from dis-
makes ex nolentibus volentes and
bestows upon us thereby an incomprehensible
being which consists of faith and love. inate in
Gratis Data.
"
;
to us.
But
with that humility which renounces
The
living
faith is faith in the
gratia gratis data", and love is joy in
vidual.
These orig-
God they are the means by which the
God imparts himself Gratia
new
all
God that
blended is indi-
soul regards these favors as a perpetual
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF gift
and a holy mystery,
thing that faith
God
requires
which
God and
forget that
and in
justice
endowed with which prevails
possesses that peace
above unrest and
fear. it
sin, yet it
It
is still
339
acquires every-
it
for a heart
;
and love acquires that
before
ment
in
SIN, ETC.
which
exalts
cannot indeed for a mo-
entangled with the world
always associates grace with
sin.
Sin and misery overcome b$ faith, humility and love
—that
of faith rest
In the absorbing thoughts
Christian piety.
is
which thus continually recur the
and yet
In this
Occident
ever strives irrepressibly upward.
mode
closed itself of piety
it
soul is at
and thinking disO religion O more deeply, and the Augustinian type of feeling °
became the authoritative standard till
the Reformation, yes even
in the
Augustinlan
p ie ty
ItlnTard Occident.
this day;
till
however a quietistic, one might almost say a narcotic element is hidden therein
which
is
not found
in the Gospel. 2.
In the foregoing the piety of Augustine
one-sidedly defined.
is
only
There was also in his piety a
Catholic spirit; yes, he
first
ic
E 5^n t
in
hls Piety
*
created that intermin-
gling of the freest, individual surrender to the Divine
with the constant, obedient submission to the Church as an institution
endowed with the means
of grace,
so characteristic of Occidental Catholicism. tail
In de-
the following points are especially to be empha-
sized, in
which he affirmed the
and even enhanced the same:
"
Catholic " element,
(1)
First,
he trans-
formed the authorit}' of the Church into a religious
power and gave
to practical religion a doctrine con-
Authority t'
lmrch
-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
340
In this he was guided by two
earning the Church. considerations, viz.
Skepticism and an appreciation
:
communion as an historIn the first place, he was convinced that ical power. the isolated individual could not by any means arrive
of the value of ecclesiastical
at a full
and safe understanding
revealed teaching
—
it
of the truth of the
presents too
many
stumbling-
blocks; like as he therefore threw himself into the
arms
of the authority of the
general, that the
the faith,
Church, so he taught in
Church stands for the truth of
where the individual
is
not able to rec-
ognize the same, and that accordingly acts of faith Church Organ of Grace.
are at the
ond
same time
place, while
In the sec-
acts of obedience.
breaking with moralism he recog-
nized that the gratia had had an historical effect and
had made the Church position of the
its
Church
organism.
Insight into the
Roman em-
in the tottering
pire strengthened this view.
But not only as skeptic
and historian did Augustine recognize the importance of the Church, but also by virtue of his strong piety.
This piety wanted external authority as
every living religious faith has always wanted will God Exchanged Grace and Sacrafor
want
of the
it.
Augustine found
Church.
(2)
it
it
and
in the testimony
Although he unequivocally
knowledged in his Confessions
:
Religion
is
ac-
the pos-
n if nits.
sessing of the living God, yet in the interpretation of his theology he
exchanged the living God for
the gratia, the latter for the sacraments, and thus
compressed, as
and most
it
were, that which
is
most living
free into a material benefit entrusted to the
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
341
Misled by the burning conflicts of the time
Church.
(Donatist controversy)
he thus paid the heaviest
tribute to current ideas
and founded the sacramental
Church
of the
Middle Ages.' But wherever he goes
beyond the sacraments back
to
God
himself, there
he has always been in danger
in subsequent times
of neutralizing the importance also of Christ
and
of
losing himself in the abyss of the thought of the sole-efficiency of (3) v '
God
(doctrine of predestination).
Although with ö he acknowledged ö
his heart
all
Doctrine of Merits.
the gratia gratis data and, consequently, the sover-
eignty of faith, yet he also united with
it
the old
scheme, that the ultimate destiny of the single individual depends upon
He
"
merits
"
and upon these
only.
accordingly saw in the merita resulting from
the fides caritate formata,
munera, the aim
of all Christian development,
he thereby not only made tain the old
which indeed are Dei
it
and
easy for futurity to
scheme under the cover
re-
of his words,
but he himself also failed to perceive the real essence of
faith
(i.e.
steadfast confidence
in
God,
result-
ing from the assurance of the forgiveness of sin) as the highest gift of God. instilled love
Christ.
(4)
was
His doctrine, however, of
neutral as regards the historical
Although Augustine was able
to the joy of that blessedness
^ffS*
which the Christian
Thls Llfe
already possesses in faith and in love, yet he
was
not able to present a definite aim to the present
life
he shared in general the traditional Catholic disposition of mind,
and the quietism
6
to testify
of his piety imparted
:
342
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA. Christian activity no
to
new
That
impulses.
it
work "de civitate not intended by Augustine.
should receive such through the dei " was in reality 7
Augustine's theology
basis of the peculiar
is to
form
be understood upon the
His religious
of his piety.
theories are in part nothing else than theoretically
explained frames of in these
mind and
But
experiences.
were also collected the manifold religious
experiences and moral reflections of the old world
The psalms and Paul, Plato and the Neo-Platonists, the moralists, Tertullian and Ambrose, all are
—
found again in Augustine.
CHAPTER
IV.
THE WORLD-HISTORICAL POSITION OF AUGUSTINE AS TEACHER OF THE CHURCH. Augustine
The the
Doctrines.
ancient Church expounded
centres
of
theology from
Christplogy and the doctrine
freedom (doctrine of morals)
two centres
its
together.
;
of
Augustine drew the
The good became
to
him
axis for the contemplation of all blessings.
the
Moral
good and redemptive good should include each other (ipsa virtus et
praemium
virtutis)
dogmatics down from the heavens
;
.
He
yet did not dis-
card the old conception but amalgamated the new.
brought
it
with
In his interpretations of the symbol this
Through his prsetSne^ow- union i s most clearly manifest. m e Catholic development and conversion, then through pHcated "
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
343
with Donatism and Pelagianism, Chris-
his conflict
tianity appeared to
much
SIN, ETC.
him
in a
new form; but
inas-
as he considered the symbol as the essence of
doctrine, his conception of doctrine necessarily be-
came complicated ogy and
of
—a union of the old Catholic theol-
the old ecclesiastical scheme with his
new thoughts on into the
the doctrine of faith compressed
frame of the symbol.
This mixture of
ele-
ments, which the Occidental Church has preserved until this day,
subsequently caused contradictions
and rendered the old dogma impressionless. In detail the following discrepancies in the theol- 5S? m^'s eo ogy ogy of Augustine are especially to be noted (1) The '
:
discrepancies between .symbol
who those
him.
and
Those
Scripture.
place Scripture above the symbol, as well as
who
prescribe the opposite order, can refer to
Augustine strengthened Biblicism and at the
same time
also the position of those ecclesiastics
who
The
dis-
with Tertullian refuted the Biblicists.
(2)
crepancy between the principle of Scripture and the principle of salvation.
Augustine taught, on the
one hand, that only the substance
(i.e.
salvation) is
of importance in the Scriptures; yes,
he advanced
as far sometimes as that spiritualism
which skips
over the Scriptures
;
on the other hand, he could not
rid himself of the thought that every
Scriptures
is
absolute revelation.
(3)
word
The
of the
discrep-
ancy between his conceptions of the essence of ion
;
on the one hand,
it is faith,
love,
hope
;
relig-
yet,
on
the other, knowledge and super-terrestrial, immortal
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
344 life;
it
grace,
should aim to secure blessedness through
and again through the amor intellectualis.
Faith as conceived by Paul and a non-cosmic mysticism contend for the primacy.
The
(4)
discrep-
ancy between the doctrine of predestined grace and a doctrine of grace that is essentially an ecclesias-
and sacramental doctrine.
tical
(5)
Discrepancies
Thus
within the principal lines of thought.
in the
doctrine of grace the thought of the gratia
per
Christum not infrequently
with
{propter)
conflicts
the conception of a grace flowing independently from
Christ out of the original being of
mum bonum
summum
and
God
esse.
as the sum-
Thus,
in his
ecclesiastical doctrine, the hierarchical-sacramental
basal element is not reconciled with a liberal, uni-
versal view, such as originated with the apologists. P
One can
narfan! logic,
of
and
Ecclesiastico-sacra-
mental
-
Elements.
distinguish three planes in the theology
Augustine
The
:
predestinarian, the soteriologic,
plane of the authority an d the r J and of the sacraments Q £ ^e Church but one would not do him justice, ;
if
one should describe these elevations separately, for
in his
summary
of the
whole they are united.
because his rich spirit embraced cies
these discrepan-
and characteristically represented them as
periences, has
Church and mystics;
ex-
he become the father of the Church
of the Occident. -
all
Just
He
is
the father of the
Roman
of the Reformation, of Biblicists
yes, even
the
and
of
Renaissance and modern
empirical philosophy (psychology) are indebted to
him.
New
dogmas, in the
strict sense,
he did not
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF introduce.
was
It
a very
left to
SIN, ETC.
much
345
later period
dogmas out of the transformation wrought by him in the old dogmatic to formulate strictly definite
material,
the
new
i.e.
the condemnation of Pelagianism and
doctrine of the sacraments.
Augustiners Doctrine of the First and Last
1.
Things. Siebeck, in
d.
Ztschr.
Phil. u. phil.
f.
Kritik, 1888, S. 161
Gangauf, Metaphys. Psychol, cl. h. Aug., 1852. Storz, Die Phil. d. h. Aug., 1882. Scipio, DesAurel. Aug. Metaph., 1886. Kahl, Primat d. Willens b. Aug., 1886. Kühner, A.'s Anschauung v. d. Erlös, bedeutung Christi, 1890. ff.
The
With
fear of the
the
life of
Lord
is
the beginning ° of
wisdom
:
prayer Augustine united an inward
Augustine "Alter Arlstoteles "-
contemplation which led him, the pupil of the NeoPlatonists
and
theology.
He became
making
of Paul, to a
the
new psychology and
" alter
Aristoteles " in
the inner life the starting-point for thoughts
He
concerning the world.
first
absolutely put
mind and with it same time, however,
the näive-objective frame of antique-classical,
at the
remnants of the polytheistic view the
first
sense of
monotheistic the word)
away
theologian
among
the
the
He was
also.
(in
the
tke
Church
strict
fathers,
since he lifted the Neo-Platonic philosophy above himself.
Not unfamiliar with the realm
of knowl- ^now only
edge of the objective world, he yet wished to know but two things,
God and the
had dissolved the world
soul; for his skepticism
of external
phenomena, but
the soul,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
346
in the flight of these
inner
him
life
facts of the
had, after painful struggles, remained to
Even
as facts.
God, there
Out
phenomena the
still
if
and no
there exists no evil
exists unquestionably the fear of evil.
of this, i.e. through psychological analysis, one
can find the soul and
Hence the
world.
God and
sketch a picture of the
skeptic can arrive at the knowl-
edge of truth, for which the marrow of the soul sighs.
The fundamental form
H^piness.
of the life of the soul is the
amor) as a desire
desire for happiness (cupido,
All inclinations are only developments
blessedness.
fundamental form
of this activity)
for
(as
and they are valid
receptivity
and as
for the sphere of the
spiritual life as well as for that of the sensuous.
The
will is connected
theless
a power rising above sensuous nature
it is
(Augustine
with these inclinations, never-
is
In concreto
an indeterminist).
indeed bound to the sensuous instincts,
i.e.
it is
not free.
Theoretical freedom of election becomes real freedom
when
only only the Good Will is
Free.
the cupiditas {amor) boni has become the
only qood will is v the v Moral goodness and freedom of will coincide.
ruling ° motive for the will,
•>
free.
The
i.e.
truly free will has its freedom in the impulse of
the good (beata necessitas boni)
freedom, because
it
withdraws the
minion of the lower instincts and
and disposition ence and is
life.
of
man
This bondage
.
will
is
from the do-
realizes the destiny
to be filled
with true
exist-
In attachment to the good, therefore,
realized the higher appetitus, the true instinct of
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF self-preservation in
about his stincts
.
own
man
SIN, ETC.
347
while he gradually brings
;
destruction,
if
he follows his lower in-
For these 1 ines of thought Augustine claimed he knew that every man, meditat-
strict validity, for
With them
ing about himself, must affirm them.
Augustine united the results of the Neo-Platonic
cos-
Neo-piatonie Cbs-
mological speculation; but the simple greatness of his living conception of
them and coerced the
love
;
he
is
artificial!}^
powerfully upon
:
"
The Lord
of
Adopted,
gained elements of
God again and again
the doctrine of plest confession
God worked
gSjjSj?
into the sim-
heaven and earth
the salvation of the soul ;
whom
is
should ye
fear"? ,
V/
TiieSumThrough (through ° the Neo-Platonic speculation jt o mum Esse. proof of the nothingness of phenomena and through 6niy t True \
progressive elimination of the lower spheres of the
sensuous and conceivable) Augustine arrived at the conception of the one, unchangeable, eternal Being
(incorporea Veritas, spiritalis substantia, lux in-
commutahilis)
.
At
the
same time
this
summum
esse alone corresponds to the simplicity of the highest object of the soul's desire.
alone
is in reality
This
summum
esse
the Being, since every other being
has the quality of non-being, and can indeed not exist
but really perishes.
also be conceived as the
But, on the other hand,
development of the
it
sole
can
Sub-
stance, as the radiant artistic expression of the latter,
and in
this conception the metaphysically dissolved
phenomena and the interest therein recur thetic form. Yet this natural feeling is
in
an
still
aes-
only
Being.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
548
He
the establishing of the Augustinian conception.
does not surrender himself to
it,
but rather passes
over at once to the observation, that the soul strives
Being and seeks
for this highest
in all lower good
it
with indestructible, noble concupiscence; yet after
Monstrous
paradox presented
itself to
Here a dreadful
same.
all it hesitates to seize the
him, which he designates
"monstrum", viz., that the will does not actually want, what it wants, or rather what it seems to
as
Together with the whole weight of man's
ivant.
in-
dividual responsibility Augustine conceived this state of the case,
which was ameliorated by no
aesthetic
was so smooth to him and shadow as the " pul-
consideration, yet at times (the
cosmos with light
chrum ", Metaphysics
Trans-
formed into Ethics.
as the simile of the fulness of life of the
Hence metaphysics was formed for him into ethics. Through the
universal One).
of responsibility, to
him
as the
dividual
This
life,
God
(the
summum
summum bonum;
summum bonum
is
life for
an expression
will, as the evil.
and the
which
for the shall-be, for that
shall give to the will its
therewith for the
intoxicat-
the life-loving mortal, but
become the ruling fundamental motive for that
selfish, in-
not only the constant rest-
ing-place for the restless thinker,
ing joy of
first
time
of the natural, for that structible inclination of
feeling
esse) appeared
and the
which determines the
trans-
its
it is
which
also
shall
of the will,
freedom and
power over the sphere
which
shall free the inde-
man toward
the misera necessitas peccandi
the good from
—expression
of the
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF Thus
good.
and
ail
for
him
SIN, ETC.
inferences of the intellect
all
eudemonistic wrappings dropped from the
conception of the good to the ground. line of
For
this
thought also he claimed general validity.
But
all
fronted
him
by
now
another experience r
still
scorned
seized
349
it
followed and
Yonder good not only
analysis.
as the " shall be", but he
felt
ingly the conception of
mighty,
God
The good which
:
con-
himself
Transinto Religion.
Person,
Love.
Accord-
new
received an entirely
able to do this, the Al-
is
The summum
is
the
holy good in Person, working upon the will as
al-
is
Metaphysics and
as love and lifted out of the misery of
the monstrous contradiction of existence.
meaning
it
esse
Metaphysics and ethics are trans-
mighty Love.
formed into
is
religion.
Evil
is
not only privatio
substantiae and therefore not mere privatio .^oni, but godlessness (privatio Dei) in the creature existence
good
is
the ontological defect
;
and the moral defect in the
a defect in the attitude of love toward
but to possess
God is everything,
and peace.
free-will
is
God
being, good being,
Henceforth a stream of Divine
thought flowed forth freely from Augustine. just as inherently natural to
God
It is
to be gratia,
im-
parting himself in love, as to be causa causatrix non
causata;
That he
man however
— embarrassed
which points back only
bj^
grace,
lives by the grace of love.
by a monstrous
to a serious fall into sin
may
still
be explained
grace of love really exists
Man
is
;
existence,
—can live
but that the
a transcendent
fact.
does not arrive at freedom through indepen-
b
S aD urace
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
350
dence as regards God, but through dependence upon -
oS
him Only that love which has been bestowed upon him by God renders man blessed and good. :
16
^ n ^ ne detailed
^Res
God and and
deductions of Augustine respecting
the soul the notes of metaphysics, ethics
of the deepest Christian experience vibrate with-
God
in one another.
be enjoyed (frui
is
the only " res
= alicui
which may
amove inhaerere
rei
may
propter se ipsam), other things This sounds Neo-Platonic, but
",
it
is
only be used. resolved in a
Christian sense into the thought fide, spe et caritate :
He
is
Person.
God is Person, whom one can trust — ^.—
colendum deum.
<
above
The
all
fides
other things and
whom
one should love.
quae per dilectionem operatur becomes
the sovereign expression of religion.
The aesthetically
grounded optimism, the subtile doctrine of emanation, the idea of the sole
predestination), " non-existent "
agency of God (doctrine of
the representation of evil as
which
the
limits the good, do not indeed
entirely disappear, but they are joined in a peculiar
manner with the representation of God as the Creator of mankind which has through its own fault become a massa perditionis, and of God as the Redeemer and ordinator peccatorum. also after absolute
The
striving
knowledge and the conception of
the Christian religion in accordance with the scheme
A
ne
Aaopts Apo?ogists.
°^
^ ne
apologists (rationalistic) never failed in
gustine,
and the love
of
God which he
to
him only under the authority
to
which he obediently submitted
of
felt
Au-
was secure
outward revelation, ;
but in his
relig-
DEVELOPMENT OP DOCTRINE OF ious thinking, in
SIN, ETC.
which the appreciation
351
of the im-
portance of history was indeed not so well developed as the capacity for psychological observation, the
Christian spirit nevertheless ruled.
From
his youth J
up r Christ was the
guiding & & the apparently purely
And
principle of his soul.
many ways
philosophical deductions were in
enced by the thought of him.
silent
Christ ins
Guiding Principi«.
influ-
All of Augustine's
attempts to break through the iron plan of the immutability of God, and to discriminate between God, the world and the ego, are to be explained by the
impression of history upon him,
i.e.
of Christ.
Thus
Christ appeared to him, the religious philosopher,
more and more plainly as the way, the power and the authority. tion in general
How
often did he speak of revela-
and mean only him
!
How
often did
he speak of Christ where his predecessors spoke of revelation in general tion of the idea of the
became a certainty
to
The
!
speculative representa-
good and of
its
agency as love
him only through
the vision of
Christ and through the authoritative proclamation of the
The vision of Christ v^jjfs °f
Church respecting him.
was a new element, which he Ignatius) again introduced.
the trinity received a tion,
first (after
Paul and
Just as his doctrine of
new form through
the convic-
experienced through faith, of the unity of God,
although he adopted the old formulas, so also did his Christology, in spite of (rigid
all
adherence to tradition
combating of Apollinaris) receive a new con-
tent through the preaching of
,
Ambrose and
his
own
frtm^aui.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
352
experience. Sublimity
and Humility of Christ.
Mediaeval Key-note.
(1)
In the
place as regards Christ
first
the representation of his sublimity in his humility
was
of decisive importance to him, the actual veri-
fying of the sentence,
omne bonum
in humilitate
perflcitur (the incarnation also he represented from this point of view)
;
in this
he began to strike the
mediaeval key-notes of Christology,
whole
stress
come near us an exaltation
He
laid the
now won, that man, can apprehend God since he has
upon the
lying in the dust,
He
(2)
possibility
in our lowliness (the to be able to grasp
construed not
Greek waits
God
for
in Christ), (3)
infrequently the personality of
Christ also from the
human
and he saw in the endowments
soul of the
Redeemer
same the great example of the gratia praeveniens, which made the man Jesus what he became, (4) He conceived the man Jesus Mediator, Sacrifice, and Priest.
of the
Jesus as Mediator, as Sacrifice and Priest, through
whom we have
been reconciled to the Deity and
deemed, whose death, as the Church proclaims
it, is
the surest foundation of our faith in redemption. all
these respects Augustine introduced
new
re-
In
ideas
dogma, joining them thereto indeed only insecurely and artificially. A new Christological into the old
formula he did not create; to him Christ became the rock of faith, since he this
knew
that the influence of
Person had broken his pride and given him
strength to believe in the love of self
be found by
and he who
is
it.
The
God and
living Christ
is
proclaimed by the Church,
and the authority.
to let
him-
the truth, is
the
way
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF The
soul
is
353
guided by the quae per dilectionem This
operatur unto the vita beata. peace in the vision of God. still
SIN, ETC.
is
the blessed
Therefore knowledge
remains the aim of man.
It is
not the will that
holds the primacy, but the intellect.
Finally Augus-
tine retained the vulgar Catholic
form of thought
which confines man knowledge; in this answers
in the hereafter to
life
to it (hence
it is
Augustine's defence of monas-
The kingdom
of God,
The
earthly, is also perishable.
must be freed from the world ilitudes
an adoring
asceticism and contemplation
ticism as against Jovinian). so far as
Vi taBeata.
soul
of appearances, of sim-
and compulsory conduct.
Nevertheless Au-
gustine exerted indirectly a powerful influence upon the current eschatological ideas: the highest good, but dependence
representation of
(1) v '
Virtue
is
nepend-
not "
upon God
ence upon
G
(in the
the decisive significance of the
merita this point of view was indeed abandoned), (2)
The
priestly ascetic life should be a spiritual
S
1
5J55£
one; the magico-physical elements of Greek mysticism recede entirely (no cultus mysticism),
(3)
In
"mihi adliaerere deobonum est", intellectualism was broken down the will received its due position, (4) Love remains even the same in eterr \ nity as that which we possess in this life therefore this world and the other are still closely united, (5) the thought,
inteiiectu-
alism I>iscounted.
;
Love Abides.
;
If love
remains also in the other world, then
tualism reappears in a modified form, earthly
life,
.
intellec-
Not the
but the earthly Church has a higher
meaning; the 23
(6)
^ftu
I JJ°f1
latter is, so to speak, the holy
above
Ecciesias-
,;
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
354 all
that
most holy, and
is
it is
a duty to build
it
up
not a religion of a second order supersedes the religion,
but ecclesiasticism, the service of the Church as
a moral agency for reforming society, as an organism of the sacramental powers of love, of the Fides, tas.
the right in which Christ works, all
(7)
good and of
Higher than
monasticism stand fides, spes and Caritas; hence
the scheme of a dreary and egotistical contemplation
To be
broken.
is
ing in
sure,
all directions,
tions, the
new
Augustine succeeded in unit-
although indeed with contradic-
lines of
thought with the
The Donatist Contest.
2.
D&MiviChurch and of
The Work,
TheJDoctrine of the
tate Dei."
old.
"
Means of Grace.
the Reuter,
a.
a.
Reinkins, Gesch. phil.
O.
d. h.
Aug., 1866.
Ginzel, L. Aug. v. d. Kirche in d. Tub. Theol. Quartalschr.
Köstlin, D. Kathol. Auffass. v. d. K. in d. deutschen
1849.
Ztschr.
Lehre
f.
Begriff
Schmidt, Aug. 's Wissensch., 1856, Nr. 14. Yahrbb. f deutsche Theol. 1861 Seeberg, christl. K. I. Th., 1885. Ribbeck, Donatus u.
christl.
v. d. d.
K. in
d.
.
,
.
Aug., 1888. Augustine Adopts iSctriSeof the church,
J n the contest
with Manichseism and Donatism
Augustine, following Optatus, formulated his doctrine of the
Church upon the basis
of Cyprian's con-
ception, excluding, however, the Donatistic elements of
C}^prian and moderating the hierarchical.
In
describing the Church as authority, as an indestructible institution
of salvation, he believed that he
was merely describing a divinely produced representing
it
as
verity
communio sanctorum, he
;
in
followed
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF his
own
posed the
subjectivism
and the puritanism
make
355
In the former he op-
religious experience. critical "
SIN, ETC.
" of
the Manichseans
of the Donatists
who
desired to
the truth of the Church dependent upon the
purity of the priests;
in
the
he used his
latter
doctrine of salvation in defining his conception of the
Church.
Complicated views were the conse-
Not only does the Church appear, now as
quence.
the goal of religion,
now
as the
way
to the goal, but
the conception itself becomes a complexity of divers conceptions.
Finally the doctrine of predestination
presented itself to I.
one
as out-and-out questionable.
The most important 1
1.
Church
him
is its
unity
(in faith,
side, in Catholicity
unity of Church.
characteristic of the
hope and
on the
love,
on the other), which the same
Spirit produces that holds the trinity together
the midst of the disruption of
humanity
the divineness of the Church.
is
;
this in
a proof of
Since unity flows
•
only from love, the Church rests upon the governing
power of the divine spirit of Love; community of faith alone
is
not entirely sufficient.
From this view
•
there
follows: Caritas Christiana nisi' in imitate eccles-
iae
non potest custodiri,
teneatis,
love only
i.e.
baptismum
et fidem
unity only exists where love
where unity
phrase with
etsi
its
is.
The
is
and
application of this
consequences declares
:
Heretics not
only do not belong to the Church (for they deny the
unity of the faith) side of
it
;
,
but schismatics also stand out-
for their very separation
from the unity
proves that they are wanting in love,
i.e.
in the
•
;
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
356
Holy
operations of the
one great Church
is
the Church,
there can indeed exist faith,
H
f
church°
Therefore only the
Spirit.
and outside
heroic
of
it
even
deeds,
means of salvation, but no salvation. 2- The second characteristic of the Church is its The Church is holy as the place of the holiness. activity of Christ and of the Holy Spirit, and as the
means which
possessor of those
That she does not succeed with
vidual.
rob her of her holiness of the
sanctify the indi-
mali
et
;
cannot
even a numerical superiority
hypocritae does not endanger this
otherwise one unholy
member would
der her right questionable. discipline
all,
already ren-
The Church
exercises
and excommunication not so much
serve her holiness as to educate.
to pre-
She herself
is al-
ready secure against contamination with that which is
unholy, in view of the fact that she never sanc-
tions
it,
and she demonstrates her
holiness, since in
her midst, and only within her, real saints are begotten,
and since she everywhere elevates and sanc-
the morals of men.
tifies
In the
strict sense
only
the boni et spirituales belong to her, but in a wider
sense the unholy also, in so far as they are to be spiritualized
the sacraments
dei "
;
still
able
and remain under the influence
("
of
vasa in contumeliam in domo
they are not the house of God, but
"
in
domo "
;
communione sanctorum" but sacrament orum"). Thus the Church is a " corpus permixtum", and even heretics and schismatics they are not "in "
ultimately belong to her, in so far as they have ap-
:
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF propriated the
means
357
and remain under the But the holiness of the
of grace
discipline of the Church.
Church includes as
SIN, ETC.
its
aim the pure communio sanc-
torum (communio fideli urn), and all religious predicates of the Church are valid for this communion.
The
Church
is its
Catholicity (universality as regards space).
This
3.
third characteristic of the
Cl
$£ ot~ church -
furnishes the strongest outward proof of the truth of the Church
;
for
a fact perceptible to the senses
it is
and at the same time a miracle with which the Donatists
church
at
Church by
Carthage evidences its
itself
The great as the
true
union with Rome, with the old Orien-
churches, and with the churches of the whole
tal
world "
have nothing comparable.
(in
the Donatists
opposition
Quantum ad
totius
mundi
rightly said
pertinet partes, modi-
ca pars est in compensatione totius mundi, in qua fides Christiana no?ninatur"). 4.
The fourth
which manifests
characteristic itself, (1)
apostolical writings
the
Church
and
to trace
apostolical churches
is its
apostolicity,
in the possession of the
doctrines, (2) in the ability of
back
its
by the
existence as far as the
line of episcopal succes-
sion (this point Cyprian emphasized
more
Among
is
these churches the
portant on account of
Roman
its first
strongly).
the most im-
bishop, Peter.
He
is
the representative of the apostles, of the Church, of
weak Christians and of the ecclesiastical function the bishops. The old theory that it is necessary
of to
be in union with the sedes apostolica and cathedra
-
ApostoUc-
church
-
.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
358
Petri, Augustine retained libility of the
Roman
as undecidedly
see,
;
but as regards the
he expressed himself just
and contradictorily as
in regard to
the councils and the episcopate (naturally to
Roman
council stood higher than the Infallibility of
Church.
5.
The
sidered as firmly established
and
sufficient.
him a
bishop)
Church Augustine con-
infallibility of the
produce the arguments for
infal-
;
it
but he was able to
re-
only as relatively sound
In like manner he was convinced of
the indispensableness of the Church; but he pro-
pounded ideas (regarding the doctrine of predestination and the immutability of the eternal working
God) which annulled the same.
of Church
is
Kingdom of God on Earth.
,
6.
As
kingdom of God upon earth. Augustine, indeed, in making use of this
The Church
a rule
is
the
conception had no reference to the Church, but to the
work of God in the world, in contrast with the work of the devil. But whenever he identifies Church and kingdom of God, he means entire result of the
by the former the communio fidelium (corpus verum). But since there is only one Church, he could not but consider, in a given case, the corpus
permixtum
also as the
with the abolition of
all
he saw the millennium
kingdom
of
God; and since
apocalyptic representations
now
already realized in the
Church, in contrast with the perishing evil state of
was driven almost involuntarily to the consequence that the visible Church with its ruling priests and its regulations is the kingdom of God {de civitate dei, XX. 9-13). Thus the idea of the the world, he
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF kingdom from
of
God
passes with
359
SIN, ETC.
him through
all stages,
a historico-theological conception, which
X^ewed
y
is
neutral as regards the idea of the Church (the king-
dom
God
of
in
heaven and has been organizing
Abel upon the earth for heaven)
self since
Church
is
of the priests, but
clesia as a heavenly "
peregrinans"
ris
it
has
its
,
it-
to the
centre in the ec-
communio sanctorum
in ter-
Parallel with this conception
.
goes that other of the societas of the godless and reprobates (including the demons), which finally passes
over into the idea of the earthly kingdom (the state) as the
magnum
latrocinium.
communion originating in
sin
In opposition to this
and condemned to
nal strife, stands in general the state of
only rightful union of men. this
form
of the
of statement
Church and
But the
God
eter-
as the
latter points of
which ends in a
real theocracy
in a condemnation of the state,
Au-
gustine neither elaborated nor especially emphasized.
He had and first
mind almost throughout
spiritual strife
;
spiritual
view respecting the
pax
terrena
is
a community (the good.
powers
the popes of the Middle
drew the theocratic consequences.
to his
the
in
He also gave
state the turn, that, since
a good (even state)
Ages
if
a particular one),
which protects
it is
also
But since the pax terrena can be brought
about only by justice, and inasmuch as the latter
undoubtedly in possession of the Church alone cause as resting upon the Caritas
God)
,
it
is
(be-
originates with
the state can obtain a relative right only by
submission to the state of God.
It is clear that this
^fnated i
.
360
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
view
also,
by which the earthly
tain independence (because
state receives a cer-
has an especial mis-
it
can be easily introduced into the theocratic
sion),
Augustine himself drew only a few con-
scheme.
sequences, yet he
serve the
drew these
Church by means
That the
:
state
must
compulsory measures
of
against idolatry, heretics and schismatics, and that the Church must in general exercise an influence
upon the word and Sacrament.
n.
i.
state's right of
The Donatist
punishment, contest also necessitated a
closer consideration of the
In the
first place,
sacraments
was the
it
(vid. Optatus).
greatest advance that
Augustine recognized the word as a means of grace.
The formula,
"
ivord
and sacrament", originated
with him, yes, he esteemed the
"
ivord
" so
highly
verbum visi" crede et mandu-
that he even called the sacrament " bile ",
and with the sentence
casti " he opposed
working through mysteries and
all
to the conception "
gave
:
sacrament " so wide a range
that every sensible sign with which a redemptive
may
named (" accedit verbum ad elementum et fit sacramentum ") An especial doctrine of the sacraments is not to be drawn thereword
is
joined
be so
.
from
;
Augustine indeed not seldom goes so far in
spiritualization, that the sensible sign ible
word need only
imago
and the aud-
to be considered as
of the invisible act
signa and
accompanying them
(for-
giveness of sin, spirit of love) Baptism and Lord's supper,
2.
But, on the other hand, the sacraments
— Au-
gustine has reference as a rule in this connection only
.
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF to
baptism and the Lord's Supper
thing higher.
They are
of a higher object,
STN, ETC.
—are after
signs, instituted
«361
some-
all
by God,
with which, by virtue of the con-
stituted order of creation, they stand in a certain relationship, to
and through them grace is
him who makes use
really imparted
them (assurance
of
of the
miser icordia Christi in the sacrament, but on the other hand, actus medicinalis) tion is dependent
where the
This communica-
upon the administration
the sacraments), but
ity of
.
spirit of
it is
(objectiv-
redemptive only
love (the true Church) exists.
Thereby arose the double contradiction, that the
sac-
raments are effective everywhere and yet only in the Church, are independent of
men and
yet bound up
with the Church in their redemptiveness.
Augustine
resolved this contradiction by discriminating between
the character which the sacraments impart (stamp-
ing
it,
as
it
were) and the real communication of
The sacraments
grace.
"
sancta per se ipsa
"
can
be purloined from the Church and yet retain their efficacy,
but only within the Church do they tend
non considerandum, quis det sed quid det" but on the other hand, "habere"
effectively to salvation ("
is
not yet " utiliter habere 3.
Only with baptism (character: Inalienable
lation to Christ
(character: rifice
")
and
re-
Do
n of
gae r a-
n m and his Church) and ordination ^tioned
Inalienable
preparation
to
sac-
offer
to administer the sacraments), however,
could this view be harmonized, not indeed with the
Lord's Supper; for in this the res sacramenti
is
the
!
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
362
invisible incorporation into the
body
of Christ (con-
cerning the elements Augustine taught symbolically),
and the Lord's Supper with the
and there
the sacrificium caritatis;
was ever allied Lord's Supper (sacramentum unitatis) could exist no " character", which was inthe
therefore
is
Church
Catholic
dependent of this Church. this difficulty.
Augustine glided over
His general doctrine
of the sacra-
ments was obtained from baptism, and he discriminated therein thus artificially, in order that he might,
(1)
place the Donatists in the wrong,
(2)
maintain the characteristic of the sanctity of the Church, it
(3)
give to faith a firm support, upon which
could rely
— independent
of men.
Afterward the
was made the most of, especially in the hierarchical sense. But Augustine's emphasis " " upon the word and his spiritualism have given simultaneously offence in another direction (to Luther and to the Free- Reformers). discrimination
idea of the Church a
d p°ictu?e
Augustine's ideas in regard to the Church are full ° ° of contradictions. The true Church should also be visible,
evil
and yet
men and
to the visible
hypocrites,
Church belongs
nay even
heretics.
terna societas sacrament or um, which
is
also
The
ex-
communio
fidelium et sanctorum and finally also the nume-
rus praedestinatorum are one and the same Church
The "
"
in ecclesia esse
"
has in truth a
triple sense.
In ecclesia" are only the praedestinati, including
!
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF those
still
lievers,
sia
"
unconverted
including those
are all those
The Church
is
first
in ecclesia
who
predestination, no
It is
!
will relapse
upon
"
It is
in eccle-
founded upon
faith, love, hope,
no upon
But while taking account
!
the thought that the
foundation, and that
nem peccatorum
it "
is
forget
the
communio fide-
hope and love are
faith,
its
in terris stat per remissio-
in caritate."
Church
must not
if
humble Christian with
Church
sanctorum, that
of these
which are contradictory
that Augustine lived as an
idea of the
;
from the beginning and
there is to be only one Church, one
et
are the be-
part in the sacraments
by Christ!
divers important points
Mum
"
363
properly in heaven and yet visible as
instituted
the sacraments
"
who have
civitas upon earth yet
;
SIN, ETC.
(in reality
The predestinarian
the dissolution of the
Church) belongs to the theologian and the theosophist, the empirical idea to the Catholic polemic. is
not to be overlooked also, that Augustine
sacraments from the magical
rescued the
It first
aspect
under which they were to counterbalance a moralistic
mode of them to
thinking, and coordinated and subordinated faith.
He
first
rendered the doctrine of the
sacraments reformable.
The Pelagian Contest.
3.
Doctrine of Grace and
of Sin. Jacobi, Lehre d. Pelagius, 1842. Wörter, Pelagianismus, 1866. Klasen, Die innere Entw. d.
Reuter,
Der
a. a.
O.
Pelagianismus, 1882.
Wiggers.
Augustinismus
and
Pela-
-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
364
gianismus,
2
Gnade (Meckl.
Bdd.
1831
,
Theol.
Dieckhoff,
f.
Ztschr.
,
I.
,
1860)
.
A.
Lehre
's
Luthardt, L.
v.
d.
v. f r.
Willen. 1863.
Doctrine of Sin and Grace.
Augustine had not formulated his doctrine regard ° ö j n g g race anc| s j n when he permitted himself to be baptized into the Catholic Church (see his anti-
Manichaean writings), however he had done so before
he entered into the Pelagian contest.
Pelagius
also did not formulate his doctrine first during the
when he took offence Augustinian expression, "da quod jubes but he held
contest,
the
The two great modes
jabe quod vis".
— whether grace it sets
it
is to
nature free
at et
of thought
be reduced to nature or whether
— rose
in
arms against each
other.
The Occident, prepared through Ambrose, accepted Augustinianism with incredible alacrity. Augustine, the religious
man and
the virtuoso, encountered
in Pelagius an earnest ascetic
man
eunuch, in Julian a gay
monk, in of the
Caelestius a
world
also a resolute, determined rationalist
who was
and an inexor-
able dialectician. la ia
ism
fs
Ra10
^onasti-
Redemp-
Pelagianism
is
Christian rationalism, consistently
developed under the influence of Hellenic monasticism
;
it is
stoic
and Aristotelian popularized Occi-
tion.
dental philosophy, which
dinate to
The
itself
made
the attempt to subor-
the traditional doctrine of redemption.
influence of the Antiochian theology ca'n be
shown.
The sources
Cselestius, Pelagius
are the writings and letters of
and Julian (mostly in Augustine
and Jerome), the works
of Augustine, Jerome, Oro-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF sius,
Marius Mercator, the papal
SIN, ETC.
letters
365
and synodal
Pelagius himself was more cautious, less
decrees.
and
aggressive
The
Julian.
less
latter
truthful than Cselestius
completed
first
(without him, Augustine says,
"
and
doctrine
the
Pelagiani dogma-
machina sine architecto necessario remansis-
tis
Elements Formally and Pelagianism J Augustinianism ° ° Common to are herein related and opposed to the previous mode of jamfm and
set"). '
thought,
(1)
Each
is
founded upon the desire to unify
Each
the religious, ethical knowledge, (2)
ian
e
m
if
expelled
from tradition the dramatico-eschatological element, (3)
Each was not
culto-mystically interested, but kept
the problem within the sphere of the spirit, and
(4)
Neither puts the highest emphasis upon traditional proof (Augustine often confesses that the proof difficult to
fathers)
deduce from the extant writings of the Pelagius was anxious to show that in the
.
whole controversy
it
was not a question
but a practical question contest
power
is
of
dogma,
Augustine carried on the
;
with the conviction that the essence and
of the Christian religion
with his doctrine of grace
;
must stand
Cselestius
was
or fall
especially
interested in overthrowing the doctrine of hereditary sin
;
Julian was consciously defending the cause of
reason and freedom against a " stupid and impious
dogma"
through
which the Church was being
plunged into barbarism and the educated minority given over to the masses
who do
not understand
Aristotle. I.
Pelagius appeared in
Rome and
proclaimed to
Pe Rome.
m
366
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
common Christians monasticism and the ability every man to rise in his own strength unto virtue,
the of
avoided theological polemics but contended against
His
the quietism of the Augustinian confessions. ca?iestius
Seconds Teaching,
Both went
friend Cselestius seconded him.
Roman
North Africa, from which Pelagius however soon Cselestius applied at Carthage for a presdeparted. to
byter's
But he was complained
office.
by the Milanese deacon, Paulinus,
of (412 or 411) at a
synod at
Carthage, because he considered mortality as something natural
(to
Adam
and
universal consequences of
men) denied the
to all
,
Adam's
sin,
taught the
perfect innocence of the new-born babe, esteemed the benefit of the resurrection of Christ as not necessarily
attributable to
all,
misunderstood the difference be-
tween law and gospel, spoke of
sinless
men
before
the appearance of Christ and thought in general superficially of sinlessness
commandments tentions.
of Christ, if only
of the
one has good
in-
In spite of his assertion that he acknowl-
edged the baptism excommunicated.
unto the
for-
therefore orthodox, he
was
of children (but not
giveness of sin) and csBiestius
and the fulfilment
was
He went to Ephesus and Constan-
Excommiuiicated.
tinople.
Pelagius was in Palestine and sought to
His
maintain peace with Augustine and Jerome.
keen friend with his polemic against the tradux peccati and the baptism of infants in remissionem pec-
catorum was uncongenial his
more recent
of Jerusalem.
to
him more valuable were ;
friends in the Orient, especially
He and
others pronounced
John
him
in-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF nocent
(at
SIN, ETC.
367
the synods at Jerusalem and Diospolis
415), while the Augustinian disciples, Orosius and
Jerome, accused him of misunderstanding the Divine
5JW3 atsySodof *
415.
But only with a mental reservation did Pelagius give up the incriminating tenets of Cselestius, grace.
which accordingly remained condemned
in the Orient
In his literary labors he became simply more
also.
The North African
cautious, but did not give in.
churches (synods of Carthage and Mileve, 416) as well as Augustine applied to Innocent the condemnation of the
two
I.
in
heretics.
Rome for
The
innocent
1.
pope,
glad to have been approached by North Africa, complied (417), yet kept a
pathway
of retreat open for
Although Zosimus, his successor, induced
himself.
Zosimus.
through a cunning confession of faith by Pelagius
and won over by
Caalestius
cautious, reinstated
who now
them and
to the representations of the
general synod at Carthage
which expelled both
edict,
lowers from Rome, pope,
who
in
at first
also
grew more
remained deaf
North Africans (418)
;
yet a
and an imperial
heretics with their fol-
made an impression also upon
an epistula tractoria assented
the
to the
condemnation and required the Occidental bishops to sign the
same
(418).
Still this
ened the opposition party. clined.
Eighteen bishops de-
Their leader was Julian of Eklanum.
juvenis confidentissimus pen.
imputation strength-
He
wrote daring
of Thessalonica,
now
letters to
This
took up his sharp
Zosimus and Ruf us
which Augustine answered
(420).
Therewith began a ten years' literary feud between
Julian of
Eklanum.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
368
the two (fragments of the Julian writings in Aug.
de nuptiis et concupisc, libri sex imperf.
c.
Jul.).
c.
and opus
Jul.
During the same Augustine was
often driven into a close corner
by Julian
but the
;
feud took place post festum: Augustine was already victor
;
Julian wrote like one
He
to lose.
who has nothing more
evolved therefore his naturalism and
moralism out of his royal reason with great casting aside
all
license,
monkery, yet without any compre-
hension of the needs and right of religion.
He was
with his companions into the
finally forced to flee
Orient and he there found protection with Theodore Pe
ans
con council of 43i.
'
The Ephesian
°^ Mopsuestia.
did the
Roman
council, i.e. Cyril,
bishop the favor of condemning the
In the Orient
Pelagians (431).
men had no compre-
hension of the contest indeed at the bottom they were ;
inclined toward Pelagianism as regards the freedom of the will
;
but in the Occident also
men were
only on the points, that every baptism
sionem peccatorum, that there
is
agreed
in remis-
exists since the fall
Adam a tradux peccata which delivers the children of Adam over to death and condemnation, and of
that the grace of
God
as a power for good
is
neces-
sary unto the salvation of every man. DoSfines
* ^- Pelagius cared nothing
for
new dogmas and a
system; Julian's stoical system with dialectics, Christian etiquette
its
Aristotelian
and tendency toward
naturalism belongs to the history of theology. it is
Yet
important to note the principles of the Pelagian
doctrine
;
for
it
has
made
its
appearance in a subtle
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
369
The monastic tendency was
form again and again.
not an essential thing with Pelagius, but subordinate to the
aim
of the spontaneous development of
and
character,
to the ancient idea of moderation.
may
Just on that account one
do that which
of thought
is
is
good, and the want of clearness
righteousness, there
is
is
the kind Creator and the just Leader.
thing that he has created creature, the is
and
on religio-ethical questions unite them.
Because there
God
class Pelagius
Courageous faith in man's ability
Julian together. to
good
law and
is
;
Eveiy-
v
good, therefore also the If
free-will.
then not convertible
a God.
nature
is
good,
it
accordingly there can exist
no peccata naturalia, only peccata per accidens. ^J^ff a Human nature can be modificated only incidentally.
The most important and best endowment of this nature is free-will ("' motus animi cogente nullo") ;
reason it
comprised within the
is
to pass that
man
tio necessitatis
glorious gratia
may do
Both bring
latter.
does not live under the condi-
and does not need
prima
of
help.
It is the
God, the Creator, that we
both and can do either.
The possibilitas
boni comes from God, the voluntas and actio .
our concern. termination
Evil
is
without
is
a momentary, false
consequence to the
selt-de-
nature,
According
to
Pelagius these are bad in themselves, but can be
subdued; according to Julian
the}* are not
themselves, only so " in excess u".
Were
it
bad in other-
must baptism abolish concupiscence; and 24
^^\
voluntas" et Act im
originating in the sensuous faculties.
wise, then
v
Ours,
is
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
370 if
concupiscence
Man
good.
f
must do
is
is
bad, then the Creator
God
not
is
able to resist every sin, therefore he
so; there
have indeed been
According to Pelagius everybody goes acts contrary to
men.
sinless
to hell
who
The attempt
his better ability.
to
adjust these teachings to the Scriptures and ecclesi-
was fraught with difficulties. It was admitted that Adam, endowed with freedom of astical tradition
choice, fell; yet natural death, since
it
is
natural,
was not the consequence of his sin, but spiritual death. Inasmuch as death has not descended from him,
much
less
tradux peccati
has not sin; for the acceptance of a (original sin) leads to the absurd as-
sumption of soul-generation and to Manichaaism
(evil
nature), abolishes the Divine justice, causes matri-
mony stroys sin is an Affair of the will,
to appear unholy, therefore unlawful, all possibility of
a redemption
(for
and de-
how can
redemptive message or a law influence nature?)
always remains an
punished only for his the condition of
arbitrium
et
own
Adam ")
;
men
before his fall
("
is
stand in
liberum
quam
certainly to be acknowl-
that account grace also
edged as adjutorium.
is
only a sinful habit keeps them
down, the power of which
On
All
post peccata tarn plenum est
fuit ante peccata
edged.
sin.
Sin
.
and each
affair of the will
a
must be acknowl-
According to the degree of
convenience, the Pelagians declared grace as simply necessary, as alleviating, as superfluous. sidered
it
They
in truth only a comfortable crutch
Christians; for the sentence,
"homo
confor
libero arbitrio
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF emancipatus
est
a Deo
",
SIN, ETC.
371
excludes grace in princiG
There exists also in truth only one grace, the
ple.
enlightening, deterring, reward-offering law
may
also
ment),
(2)
distinguish,
but one (endow-
the law (illuminatio et doctrina),
gratia per Christum: of his
creational grace
(1)
;
example,
(a) his
work applied by baptism
On
giveness of sin.
(3)
(b) the fruit
to our benefit as for-
were
this point the Pelagians
not permitted to waver;
is
g£J
but they disclaimed the
gratia praeveniens, did not see in the baptism of infants a baptism in remissionem
peccatorum and
did not acknowledge the absolute necessity of forgiveness.
Children dying unbaptized are also saved,
but are not admitted into the regnum cae'lorum.
The
^
thesis of the Pelagians, that Christian grace is G
cl
secundum merita,
conferred only just as
much
abolishes grace
as the other thesis, that
sentially in the
works
same manner as the law.
judging August inianism, as ManichaBisin,
it
now
now
c
(
J°; tc
°Me?ft.
es-
While
as an innovation,
now
as inward contradiction, they
themselves brought forth the greatest contradictions (dialectically concealed),
and were innovators
in so
far as they really held fast to the old ecclesiastical
doctrine of freedom but not to the opposite pole, the
mystical doctrine of redemption, and they accord-
y
ingly sold religion to an irrational rationality and to a profoundly immoral theory of morality. III.
Augustine did not
arbitrium, but from its
start
God and
guilt in his presence
from the liberum
the soul which feels
and yet has experienced
his
\%g*
,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
372
In seeking to explain therefrom nature, the
grace.
history of the world and the history of the individual,
he
fell
into
many
contradictions
.too easily gainsaid.
and
into assumptions
But there are theses which
are,
outwardly considered, entirely untrue, but, inwardly
Thus
considered, true.
Augustine's doctrine of
is
As an
grace and sin to be judged.
expression of
psychological religious experience
it
projected into history
Besides
itself also
it
not consistent
thought that
"
God
;
false.
is
for
ity ",
God
it is
in
dominated by the
it is
in Christ creates faith
as by the other thought that "
but
true;
is
",
as well
the only Causal-
is
and these are brought only seemingly into con-
sonance by the definition of grace as gratis data. 11
Smentf
Besides Manichsean elements are visible; the letter of Scripture (generally misunderstood)
obscuring
panied
effect,
by a
had
and the religious view
moralistic
(merita)
also
an
is
accom-
which
finally
makes the decision. Humanity is, according to experience, a massa peccati, i.e. void of God; but the God-man, Christ, he alone by his death brought the power to replenish empty humanity with Divine love: that
—
—
Gratia Gratis Data.
is
the gratia gratis data, the beginning, middle
a nd end of our salvation.
massa perditionis there merus electorum. Such
Its
called,
them by virtue
justified,
is
that out of the
shall be saved a certus nu-
will be saved because
has predestined (Augustine elected,
aim
is
an
God
inf ra-lapsarian)
sanctified
and preserved
of his eternal decree.
This takes
1
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP
SIN, ETC.
37:
Church through grace, which, (1) is x* vraeo o veniens, i.e. withdraws man from his condition of sin place in the
x
\
7
and creates the good will
(
=
/
finally are not saved, because
cöoper ans
(2)
—this
Is '
Praeven
opSaS" Pe
vocatio, but this and
fis.
who
further acts of grace take place in those also
all
(;,; "
they are not elected),
developed in a series of gra-
is
dations as far as the entire and actual regeneration of
man, which makes
possible for him,
it
with love, to earn merita. lows the fides; this is
is
Out
(visible)
of the vocatio fol-
Parallel with
working of grace
it
goes the actual
in the Church, i.e.
which
which
It
be-
with bap-
which removes the reatus of hereditary
blots out past sins.
it
obedience,
belief,
gins with the remissio peccatorum, tism,
filled
gradually augmented, since
developed upon the stages of
fiducia and love.
when
sin
and
terminates in the justification
not a judgment upon the sinner, but the
is
completing of the process by virtue of which he has actually passed from
an impious
to a just state.
This takes place through the infusion of the
spirit of
love into the heart of the believer (and through the
Lord's Supper), whereby, admitted into the unity of the
communion with Christ
as sanctus desire ("
(Church), he receives
and spiritalis a new disposition and
mihi adhaerere deo bonuin
est ")
and now
has the capacity for good works ("fides impeirat,
quod
lex
imperat").
the fides and act;
is
Justification depends
upon
sub specie aeternitatis a concluded
empirically considered,
completed in this world.
it
is
The being
a process never filled
with
faith,
Justifica-
gg£j
—
.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
374
hope, and love
is
evidenced by the demonstration of
and by withdrawal from the world (asceticism). This is in turn evidenced in good works, which now
love
have merit before God (merit a), although they are
Not to
his gifts since they are begotten of his grace.
every one are perfect works granted (consilia evangelica)
but every justified person has works of faith,
;
hope and
love, (3) the highest
and best
gratia is the perseverantia which the
The vocati
elect.
have this will be since
it is
But
tion
Why
lost.
"
certain is
adhaerere Dei
He
be decisive.
only
who do
it
— in spite
is,
there also
God's
is
—that at the final judgment
"
but the moral habitus will
who can show merit a The
cance of the forgiveness of sin and of faith
love
it,
of predestina-
such are Dei munera) will be saved.
ever misconceived.
not
some only receive
secundum merita,
and sovereign grace
not the
irresistibilis in
(et sanctificati ?)
not bestowed
mystery.
is
gift of the
Augustine's thesis
is bliss
is:
(but
signifiis
how-
"Where
corresponding to the mea-
sure of love" sin,
Fan
On
this basis
Augustine formed his doctrine con-
and Origin-
the fall and the original state.
Sin
al state,
cerning
P iV io B ni
privatio boni (lack of being and of true being),
sin,
turning of
man
unto himself (pride) and concu-
piscence (sensuality)
l( :
misera necessitas non posse
non peccandi", although formal freedom dominion without the "
exists
of the devil (therefore redemption
is
amor
is
necessary).
from
Augustine desires to retain
sui " as the principal conception of sin,
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
but in reality he ranks concupiscence above latter
manifests
above
itself
all in
375
SIN, ETC.
it.
sexual lust.
The Since
this acts spontaneously (independent of the will),
it
proves, that the nature is vitiated (natura vitiata).
For that reason
propagates sin
it
consummated with
tion,
lust,
The
:
is
Ä
act of genera-
a testimony that
humanity has become a massa peccati.
Since Au-
gustine hesitated to teach traducianism as regards the origin of the soul, the body inal deposition
—becomes
the bearer of sin which
The tradux peccati runs as vitiam
infects the soul.
originis through humanity. sin, life
This hereditary sin
punishment for sin and guilt
and surrenders
(unbaptized
Church
it
Thus
vitia").
man
children
poena"), after
Since
also
—
has defiled
it
originis.
destroys the true
non posse non mori however " mittissima
all his acts ("
splendida
testify Scripture, the practice of the
Adam
natura vitiata.
and the conscience
His
of the
this hereditary sin exists as
was terrible, a complexity and concupiscence) it was Adam had not only been
fall
of all heinous sins (pride
more
;
is
ScStf
to the
(infant baptism)
sinner.
the
—contrary to the orig-
terrible, since
;
created good, but also possessed as adjutorium the
Divine grace
(for
taneous goodness)
without this there exists no spon.
This grace he
forfeited,
and
so
was its loss, that " in him " the whole human race was corrupted (not only because all wer.e that Adam, but also because from him the evil contagion
great
spread)
,
and even baptism
reditary sin
(human
lust)
is ,
not able to eradicate he-
but can only remove
its
^| d Adam
s in
-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
376
Augustine's idea of the original state ( posse
reatus.
nonpeccare and adjutorium) stands tradiction with his doctrine of grace
jutorium in the original
;
m flagrant con-
for gratia as ad-
state is the grace of
redemp-
tion, in so far as, totally unlike, it leaves the will free
and
really has
no
effect,
but
is
merely a condition of
the free decision for good, therefore not irresistibilis.
This adjutorium
way
is in
truth conceived in a Pelagian
(his doctrine of the original state
ard of the
final
judgment
doctrine of grace) and the as
human
lust) gives
rimony, and
is
is
and of the stand-
not compatible with his
natura vitiat a (when taken
no longer a place for holy mat-
therefore Manichsean.
But
all
these
grave offences cannot dim the greatness of the truth that
God works
possess nothing to adhere to
4.
AugusEn-
tine's
chindion.
which we have not received, and that
God
is
good and our good.
Augustiners Exposition of the Symbol. Neiv Doctrine of Religion. in
order to understand
know which
The
how Augustine transformed °
^e traditional doctrine of to
we
the "willing and doing", that
religion (the
of his thoughts
dogma) and ,
have passed into
clesiastical possession, it is necessary to
ec-
study his ex-
planations of the symbol, especially his Enchiridion.
In the
first
teaching
is
place the
common
here revealed.
Catholic trend of his
Conformably with the old
symbol, the doctrine of the trinity and of the doublenature
is
explained
;
the importance of the Catholic
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP öhurchis
strictly
Baptism
maintained.
377
SIN, ETC.
is
placed in
,
the foreground as the is
referred back to the death of Christ, by
dominion of the is
most important mystery, and
broken.
inary
devil, after
''
,
,
I
,',','
^
1
;
(
st
l
ÄSy!
which the
he has received his dues,
Faith often appears as something prelim-
eternal life is granted only to those meriting
;
these continue in works of love, lastly however
it;
in asceticism.
But
all
are not obliged to live thus;
one must distinguish between
His
treatment of
alms
man data and consilia.
is
broad;
it
constitutes
is
forgiveness
Within the Church there
penance. of all sins,
congrua.
under the assumption of the satisfactio There are degrees in
sin,
ranging from D |fn e|ud° f
crimes to insignificant every-day sins; in the same
manner there are also degrees of good and
of
bad men
even the best (sancti, perfecti) are not free from light sins.
There
a gradation of
bliss (according to the
The departed, but not benefited by the sacrifice of
merita) are
is
prayers
.
;
they are in a purifying
The common,
perfected good souls
the mass, alms and fire of
punishment.
many wa}'s gj™^ °n
superstitious views were in
farther intensified
by Augustine; thus
t
in regard to
,.
who
Church
of this world, to the completing
deemed
of the heavenly
mated through the of
fall of
Mary in partu and
vi e i°
Em-
phasi/jii.
,!
purgatory, to the temporary amelioration or the pun-
ishment of the condemned, to the angels
U
aid the
by the
Church which was
re-
deci-
the angels, to the virginity
to her singular purity
and
conception, to the mild beginnings toward the calculation of the value of the sacrificial death of Christ,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
:57s
finally— to the conception of salvation as visio et
fr u it to Dei, which again and again comes to the surface, and to the joining of the spiritual powers to mysteriously operating sacraments. But, on the other side, the doctrine of religion in
1
1
;
*r,
church
To the
the Enchiridion is new.
old
symbol material
was added which could be united with it only very loosely and which at the same time modifies the origIn
inal elements.
all
three articles the treatment of
sin, forgiveness of sin
and perfection in love
main thing (Ench. 10 Everything
which the very
25 seq. 41 seq. 64-68).
seq.
briefly treated old
most
new
explicitly.
appears
dogmatic material
Therefore the 3d article
appears as subordinate.
sketch the
Already in the brief
Everything depends upon
:
inward
is
religion (3-8).
In the 1st article no cosmology
is
given;
faith, hope, love; so truly
physics as the content of dogmatics aside
(0,
16 seq. )
.
dogma,
is
In reality in nd sin
The
trinity,
compressed into a unity it is
is
indeed
expressly put
Hence the various Logos-doctrines
are also all wanting.
G(
the
represented as an inward process, to
is
is treated the
is
one person
:
handed down as It is
the Creator.
(the persons are
moments
God and have no longer any cosmological mean-
m »)
•
Everything in religion
is
related to God, as the
sole source of all good,
and
tinguished from error.
Thus was a break made with
the old intellectualism.
ence to
to sin; the latter is dis-
AVhenever there
sin, there is also
is
a refer-
one to the gratia gratis
data, the predestining grace, which alone frees the
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
With
shackled will.
SIN, ETC.
a reference to the misericordia
praeven iens and subsequent the exposition
How
article closes.
differently
would
its
of the 1st
words have
sounded, had Augustine been able to treat strainedly that
!
379
— In the 2d article
which the symbol
is
it
unre-
touched quite briefly
really contains (the return of
Christ, without chiliasm)
But the following come
.
The unity of Christ's personality as the homo with whose soul the Word united itself, the predestining grace which brought this homo into to the front:
s'
J^.
of ugustintr
t(
unity of person with the Divinity, although he pos-
no
3ed
deserts, the close connection
between the
death of Christ and the redemption from the devil, the atonement and baptism, on the one side, the
thought of the appearance and history of Christ as exaltation in humility
and as the prototype of the
vita Christiana, on the other.
portance of Christ 5sed
in
this
was
to
The redemptive im-
Augustine as strongly ex-
humility in exaltation and in the
prototype (vid. Bernard and Francis) as in Christ's
The incarnation as such recedes, i.e. is placed a light which was entirely foreign to the Greeks.
death. in
Accordingly the
'2d
article
was
quite changed; the
old dogmatic material is only the building rial.
— In the 3d article
mate-
the unrestrainedness and as-
surance with which an ever-enduring forgiveness of sins within the
and the new laxity
had
Church
point.
is
Among
taught
is
the principal
the masses the growing
called forth the inexhaustible
of atonement; but
sacrament
with Augustine the new knowl-
^p^ 1
^tkS
18
*"
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
380
edge had been given through an intensifying of the consciousness of sin and a burrowing into the grace vu'Üsti.H.,
God, as Paul has taught
of
it.
True, the question of
the personal assurance of salvation
touched his soul
—he
Church and Luther of
my
his
sins
and be
—
;
had as yet not
stands between the ancient the question,
filled
How can I be rid
with the power of God? was
fundamental question.
In following the vulgar
Catholic teaching he looks about for good works
;
but
he conceived them as the product of grace and of the will
which
is
dependent upon grace
;
he accordingly
warned men against relying upon outward tus and even alms he put aside; he
acts.
knows
that
Culit is
a question of inward transformation, of a pure heart
and a new ness Sofsfn
At the same time he is sure way also to forgiveness of
that
ever stands open to the penitent, and that he
who
spirit.
a ^ er baptism the
sins
does not believe in this commits the sin against the
Holy
Spirit.
This
an entirely new interpretation
is
of the Gospel passage.
Very
explicitly
was
the con-
clusion of the S3mibol {resurrectio carnis) explained.
But the main point
here, after a short explanation
of the real theme, is
:
The new doctrine
nation as the strength of his theology the idea, essentially
new
as a doctrine
;
of predesti-
furthermore (it
stands in
place of Origen's doctrine regarding the apokatastasis), of a purification of souls in the hereafter, to-
ward which the prayers and
sacrifices of survivors
are able to contribute. Piety.
Piety: Faith and love in place of fear and hope;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP religion
Something higher than
:
doctrine, a
new
— God)
tology
:
all
that
is
called
Religion.
life in the strength of love; the doc-
trine of Scripture
hope
381
SIN, ETC.
The things
:
(the Gospel, faith, love,
God
Doctrine.
Chris-
Trinity
The one Mediator, the man Jesus, with whose
Christology.
;
the trinity
:
The one
living
;
soul the Divinity has been united, without the former
having deserved efit
;
redemption
and humility
of enemies
The new
it
:
Death
in exaltation; grace:
power
creative, changeless
for the ben-
of love; the sac-
The Word along with the sign bliss The beat a necessitas of the good the good Dependence
raments
;
:
;
upon God to his
;
history
dogma grew
True, the old
!
:
this the
Greek dog-
the more rigid,
the farther they were pushed into the background (not abolished)
;
The new
order.
they became ecclesiastical law and doctrines remained
still
fluid
had not as yet received the form and value
;
they
of dog-
Through Augustine Church doctrine became more indefinite as regards extent and importance. mas.
On
the one hand
the other
it
it
defined
to theology, since
ing.
Around the
was traced back its
to the Gospel,
on
limits less sharply in relation
a definite formulation was lack-
dogma, which maintained
old
themselves in rigid validity, a large indefinite circle of doctrines
was formed,
in
which the most impor-
tant thoughts concerning faith lived,
and which
not-
withstanding could be surveyed and firmly fixed by
no one.
That was the condition of the dogma dur-
ing the Middle Ages.
By
tion.
Grace. Sacraments.
:
God does everything according
Compare with
pleasure.
matics
:
Redemp-
the side of the rigidity
The Good. History.
382
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
there
had already begun the process of inward
dis-
solution.
CHAPTER
V.
HISTORY OF DOGMA IN THE OCCIDENT TILL THE BEGINNING OF THE MIDDLE AGES (430-604). Semipelagianismus R. E. 2 Wiggers, i. Z. and elsewhere. Lau, Gregor d. Gr. 1845.
Möller,
1854
hoiic
Church B
s
w5t £! Empire,
f
.
,
f.
h. Th.,
,
The Western Roman empire
collapsed.
The
Catholic Church stepped in as the heir of the empire, the
Roman bishop
as the heir of the emperor (Leo
and his successors in the 5th century).
I.
But the
papacy, scarcely put at the head, experienced in the
time of Justinian a severe reverse, from which Gre-
gory alone succored turies the
Roman
church was not as yet able
the barbarian nations;
pline
and Rome was not The
During the 5th and 6th cen-
it.
for they
to disci-
were Arian
free but chained to the Orient
The Franks alone became
from the 6th century on.
Franks.
Catholic, yet they at first
Rome. the
remained independent of
Nevertheless just at this time the claim of
Roman
bishop, that everything valid of Peter
was also valid of him, obDogmatic efforts were limited
(especially Mt. 16 :17 seq.)
tained recognition. to the reception
and toning down
in the sense of gluing it lic
bol,
teaching. it
As
obtained
ent form,
in
in
of
Augustinianism
on to the common Catho-
regards the old
Gaul
at
Roman sym-
that time
its
pres-
which especially the new expression
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF "
communio sanctorum " (Faustus
383
SIN, ETC.
of Reji)
is
of
importance.
I.
Contest between Semi-Pelagianism and
Augustinianism. Grateful esteem for Augustine, rejection of Pe-
Predestina-
lagianism, recognition of the universal hereditary
resistibiiis.
peccability
and
of the necessity of grace (as adiuto-
riam) did not as yet mean the recognition of predestination
and
of the
cation by works, for
gratia irresistibilis.
Justifi-
which Augustine himself
left
a
concealed place, and a correct instinct of ecclesiastical self-preservation reacted against these doctrines.
During Augustine's
life-time they
called
and doubt among the monks
forth uneasiness
Hadrumet (Aug. de gratia et corruptione et gratia)
libero arbitrio
him
and de
that in the south
Gaul (monks at Massilia and other
was an opposition
of
A year or two later (428-429)
.
his devoted friends reported to of
had already
places) there
to the doctrine of predestination
and of the inability of the the Christian preaching.
will,
because
it
paralyzed
Augustine by his writings
de praedest. sand, and de dono per sever antiae confirmed his friends, but rather goaded his opponents.
After his death the
advanced for
more
Augustine
possessed
is
not
yet
great
of Vincent,
ecclesiastic
above, p. 221),
servi dei" in southern Gaul
daringly,
Commonitorium strictly
"
quite
authority.
openly
The
which formulates the
traditional
point of view (see
aimed, at least indirectly, against
^assnia*
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
384 I,,,in
Cassian.
doctrine; the newness of Augustine's °
John
Cassi-
an, the father of
the south Gallic monks, gave in
his " collationes "
expression to semi-Pelagianism,
although he had learned
much from Augustine. The
Points of
decisive points of semi-Pelagianism are the actual
gianism.
universality of grace, the accountability (responsibility)
of
man —herein
is it
grace.
God
is in
—and
the
Accordingly the gratia
importance of good works.
praeveniens
evangelical
general admitted only as outward
created the conditions, opportunity and
possibility of our salvation
;
but inward (sanctifying)
grace concurs with the free will, which ingly a co-ordinate factor.
is
accord-
Therefore the one as well
may lead the way, and a gratia irreas much excluded as a predestination in-
as the other sistibilis is
dependent of the Divine prescience (of free actions).
The
latter involves
ism), even Hiiarius
Am hor
of
"Praedes-
an ingens sacrilegium
the reservation
if
{i.e. fatal-
must stand that God's
ways are incomprehensible (like Hilarius of Aries, _ _. n n and more decidedly, but at the same time sriven to lying, the unknown author of the " Praedestinatns ", the origin of which is still a riddle the representa_
.
—
tion
is fairly
in keeping
general doctrine
it
is
with that of Jerome, as
more hesitating than that
of
Augustine, as an expression of Christian self-judg-
ment
The defenders of Augustine, Prosper and the unknown author of the libri IL de vocatione gentium (milder than it is
a desertion of the truth).
Augustinianism) did not produce a decisive ,
effect,
although pope Cölestius reprimanded their opponents
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP During the
as over-curious people.
SIN, ETC.
last
385
decades of
the 5th century semi-Pelagianism obtained an excellent representative in the
renowned teacher
of south-
ern Gaul, Faustus of Reji, an amiable and mild
abbot and bishop,
who
Faustus. of Reji.
turned as well against Pe-
lagius "pestifer", as against the grave error of pre-
destination (in his writing, de gratia
mentis liber o arbitrio), and
clei et
humanae
who induced the
strictly
Augustinian presbyter Lucidus to recant, after that the doctrine of predestination
had been condemned
at the
synod of Aries
is still
more monkish than Cassian and
He
by Augustine. itly
Faustus in his doctrine
(475).
less influenced
already brought forward implic-
meritum de congruo et condigno. knowledge and in the endeavors of
the doctrine of
In the fides as
Meritum De Congruo et Condigno.
the will to reform itself there lies a meritum, born of the gratia
prima, which
participates in the re-
deeming grace that now works in union with the will, so that perfect
merita are produced.
Like as Pelagianism and Nestorianism, which are inwardly united, were once drawn into a fate, so also
common
was semi-Pelagianism entangled
Christological controversy visional end.
The
and found therein
theopascliite Scythian
Constantinople (see above,
p.
297),
who
in the
its
pro-
monks
in
in their
Christology especially emphasized the Divine factor,
denounced the Occidental theologians (Faustus) as enemies of the correct Christology and as opponents of grace, taking their stand
with Augustine.
The
pope gave an evasive decision, but the monks found 25
Scythian
Monks
in
Constantinople.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
386 allies Fuigentius of Ruspe.
among
who had been banished
the bishops
rom North Africa into Ruspe wrote about 520 f
Sardinia.
Fulgentius of
several important
letters
against the authority of Faustus, in which complete
Augustinianism
forth (particularity of grace,
is set
praedestinatio adpoenam). These and the reading of Augustine's sermons
had
its effect also
in south-
The age saw but the one dilemma, either Augustine is a heretic, or a holy teacher. The great Gallic preacher, who had obtained his education en-
ern Gaul.
Caesarius of Aries.
tirely
from Augustine, Caesarius of Aries
(f 542),
averted the South-Gallic opposition, which had be-
come boisterous
at the synod of Valence
by the pope he gained the victory 25
of
Orange
(525)
with the 25
;
supported
at the small
" Chapters",
synod
which the
Chapters.
pope had extracted from the writings of Augustine
and Prosper and sent
to the southern
doctrine of the early fathers.
Gauls as the
A few only in
south-
ern Gaul supported Caesarius (Avitus of Vienne, 523)
;
f
but most of the bishops were perhaps no longer
capable of following the point under controversy. Boniface II.
The approval
of pope Boniface II. strengthened the
authority of the decrees of Orange, which were later tolerantly considered
by the Tridentine council.
The
"Chapters" are Augustinian, but predestination is wanting; and the inward process of grace upon
which Gratia Praeveniens.
for
Augustine the principal emphasis lay
not deservingly appreciated. is
The gratia praeveniens
taught unequivocally, because the
of hereditary sin
and with
is
it
strict conception
the doctrine of grace
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
387
SIN, ETC.
were emphasized by the monkish views regarding
But otherwise the doc-
the impurity of matrimony. trine is in reality
an Augustinianism without Augus-
could easily be understood as such;
tine, or
i.e.
the
vulgar Catholic views concerning outward grace and
works could and would maintain themselves alongside of
it.
2.
Rome
Gregory the Great (590-604).
finally
advanced the formulas of Augustin-
ianism to victory, although
its
Gregory i.
bishops in the 6th
century withdrew far from the same.
Gregory
I.,
a
pope highly influential through his personality (a
monk) his ,
letters,
writings (regula pastoralis, dia-
expos, in Job seu moralia, Jiomil. in Ezeck.)
logic
and liturgical reforms, under the cover of Augustinian language
by means
type,
expression to
strengthened the vulgar Catholic
of superstitious elements, then
it
gave
again, and brought forward into
00
prominence the old Occidental conception of religion as legalistic organization. characteristic of religion. angels, rites,
devils,
sacraments,
punishment of
sure confidence in
Even
if
The miraculous became The latter lived among
sins, fear
sacrifices,
penitential
and hope, but not
God through
in
Christ and in love.
Gregory personally indulged in Augustinian
thoughts and manifested in his gentleness and
own way
justice,
freedom, yet the variegated form
of his theology testifies that even the best
that time were not able to
men
withdraw from the
at
relig-
Miraculous in
Rehglon
'
388
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
which antiquity had dissolved.
ious barbarism into
Gregory was in after time more read and lauded than Augustine. For nearly half a millennium he in dominated without a rival the history of dogma ^ Hai? omu- the Occident, and he really dominates Catholicism even now. He indeed created nothing new but by Gregory Doih mates
;
manner in which he accentuated the various doctrines and Church customs and introduced a secthe
ond-rate religion into theology, he created the vulgar
type of ReprodUCeS Augustine with Semi-
Modmca-
Roman
mention are the following: •
most valuable
Especially worthy of
Catholicism.
series of
cerning the inner effect
He
(1)
reproduced the
•
A
Augustine °
thoughts con° and appropriation of grace, s
in part even independent of the latter, attributing
also to the
Word (verbnm fidei)
but he gave to
all
great importance;
phases of the Augustinian ordo
salutis a semi-Pelagian cast, since he conceived the
liberum arbitrium as a factor coordinate with grace (" sacrifice of Christ Replated h>
supper.
nosmet ipsos liber are dicimur, quia liber anti
nos domino consentimus
") ;
(2) V '
He
tance of the death of Christ, perhaps ^.j
ian Augustine, but
among
view under which he placed
felt
the imporl
more
intensely
the different points of it
the apocryphal pre-
dominates: Through Christ's death the devil was overcome, after he had been cheated; in the Lord's
Supper the
sacrifice of Christ is actually repeated
(here Gregory's doctrine has
become
especially the
standard), and thus an imaginary sacrifice takes the place of the historical
;
but otherwise also the his-
torical Christ appears supplanted, viz.
by his own
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP meritum, which as the holy death
389
SIN, ETC.
result of a sinless life
and
separated from him, an actual good
is
necessary to every one in order to appease the angry
God, but in
value to the individual quite an un-
its
certain treasure
With this conception of the inmeritum Christi. Gregory to J united
(3)
;
tercession of the
'
the hitherto uncertain thoughts regarding the inter-
and the service
cession of the saints
and exalted them
He
of
Saint s,
etc.
of the angels,
to the lofty plane of "theology".
legitimized the pagan
need
intercession of
demi-gods and
which had
superstition
graded
had
deities,
re-
course to the holy bodies of martyrs and joined the service of Christ closely with that of the
classifying
saints,
and commending the archangels and
guardian-angels, and fortifying the evil practice by his doctrine
;
(4)'
Hierarch more in practice than in "
doctrine, he brought out strongly the similarity of
the
Church and the civitas Dei,
time
He
when nothing
for he lived at
of value existed save the Church.
extolled the latter as the congregatio
but in reality
it
was
to
tion, repelling the evil
idea the selves.
men
a
of that
sanctorum,
him an educational
and dispensing grace
day dare not
;
institu-
a higher
set before
To him the Roman bishop was
them-
the master
only of the sinning bishops (the laity no longer play
any part at
all),
but sinners were they
all
("si
qua
culpa in episcopis invenitur, nescio quis Petri
non sit; cum vero culpa non omnes secundum rationem humilitatis ae-
successori subiectus exigit,
quales sunt")
;
(5)
Gregory
still
knows what inner
™
cl r? h and CivitasDei .
-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
390 .
»l.i
Roman
Statutory p'roi'Srfted.
f
o-jfts O
Roman to
him
grace and virtue are, but the exterminated o paganism had notwithstanding transmitted
also its
inventory and
thought in such a perfect religious duties
its
way
which were
in part adopted old
tle that
was new, but he elevated first
Church ity,
;
lit-
to ecclesiastical
rank the
Roman
with the remnants of the mysteries
which long since had obtained
civic rights in the
Gregory had a feeling for true humil-
(6)
but he strengthened the trend which this virtue
had taken toward monastic
and
spiritual self-deception
" :
humilitas", self-denial
With
the simple sense
of truth the sense of truthfulness died out
night; and the world of the inner
—
it
became
which
life also,
Augustine had enlightened, grew dark again; Penance.
out-
customs; here also he created in reality
" religio" together
of
that he encased all
Roman
ordinances of salvation of the
n ityi s if Demai.
mode
and virtues in statutory, firmly
lined ceremonies,
Hu
religious
(7)
Gregory's deductions concerning penitence became the most consequential
;
in these his theology lived
and from them one could wholly construe
God
inscrutable
unpunished sin,
but
;
it is
is
it.
The
the Requiter and leaves no sin
in baptism he has overlooked inherited
our concern to gain blessedness through
penance and good works by the aid of the hand of grace.
Of the three parts
of penitence (conversio
mentis, confessio oris, vindictapeccati) the penalty to be paid for sin tant.
By
becomes in reality the most imporGregory the fatal transposition was first
carried out that the " satisfactiones"
,
which
origin-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP ally
SIN, ETC.
391
were considered a sure attestation of repentance,
are the satisfying penalties for sin, to
which one
sf tfonl
i£
sions,
Masses, etc.
submits in order
to
avoid eternal punishment.
The
merit of Christ and the power of the Church seem to consist in the very fact that eternal
changed into temporal;
punishment
is
these temporal penalties,
however, are again diminished, abbreviated, or prevented by the intercession of Christ and the saints,
by masses fact
for the soul,
relics,
amulets,
etc.
The
which has always been observable in the history
of religion, that
morals
it
wherever religion takes
becomes immoral,
is
its
aim from
exemplified here also.
In the main principle the severe idea of retribution dominates, in the subordinate salvation
come
tian etiquette,
all
possible
means
of
into play, in part not even with Chris-
and in the
fear rule.
Long
for this life
and
final instance casuistry
and
before this view sufficed no longer
for time,
and yet men had not dared
to reach over into eternity
considered saved?
—for who
could then be
—but Gregory was the
first to se-
curely introduce purgatory into theology, thereby
conquering an immense province for the Church, to
remove
hell farther
uncertainty a
new
away, and thus
to procure for
comfort, but no rest.
392
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
CHAPTER
VI.
HISTORY OF DOGMA IN THE TIME OF THE CARLOVINGIAN RENAISSANCE. Bach, DG. des MA., 2 Bdd., 1873 f. Reuter, Gesch. d. reHauck, KGesch. Aufklärung im MA. 2 Bdd. 1875 f Schwane, DG. d. mittleren 1887 f Deutschlands, 2 Bdd.
lig.
,
Zt. z.
,
1882.
Mitte
.
Spiess, Gesch. d. d. 13.
Jahrh.
.
,
,
1885.
,
Unterrichtswesen i. Deutschi, bis Hatch, The Growth of Church
Institutions, 1887.
Clovis' conversion to Christianity and Gregory's
ciovis.
missionary efforts
among
the Anglo-Saxons laid the
foundation for the history of the
Church among the Germans. Arianism died out
;
in the 8th
Roman
Catholic
In the 7th century
Rome was
forced to
transfer the centre of gravity of its politics to the
P
d 3harfe^
Newly converted Engat once Roman. Pepin and Charles the Great made advances to the pope. At first the new kingdom of the Franks gained more
Romano-Germanic empire. ^ an ^ an(^ Germany became
than the pope
;
but
it
soon became apparent that the
latter obtained the highest benefit
from the confeder-
ation, not because the idea in itself of the Christian
conqueror signified less than that of the successor of Peter, but because
it
demanded the foundation
of
an
actual world-empire, which, however, could be only
temporarily created. Spiritual life
and theology had, prior
of Charles the Great,
to the time
no progressive history; the
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
Carlo vingian epoch was a great and, in
393
many respects,
abortive attempt at a revival of antiquity and likewise
Whatever
also of the theology of the fathers.
of
was at hand prior to about the year 800 is compendium and excerpt (Isidore of Seville, Bede, theology
later
Rabanus),
tion", like the
is
whole of
religion.
was
revived.
Alcuin, Augustine
vance when
in a certain
men began
" institu-
measure
^Tarsus Aicum.
Through Bede and It
to really
was a great adunderstand him
— in some respects better than did Gregory (Alcuin, Agobard and others) — as an independent again
;
still
thinker Scotus Erigena alone can be named, whose
mystical pantheism, derived from the Areopagite
and Augustine
("
de divisione naturae") remained ,
however wholly without
The
was a very
ture in the 9th century (see the
effect.
effort at cul-
respectable one
manuscripts preserved to us).
England (Theodore
of Tarsus, Bede, Alcuin)
over the continent and ture of Italy,
guished.
Starting in
was strengthened by
which had never been
it
swept
the cul-
entirely extin-
But during the great convulsions
after the
third quarter of the 9th century everything seemed
again to be engulfed. of the
but
The dogmatic
controversies
age originated, in part, in the hitherto hidden
now strictly drawn consequences of Augustinian-
ism, and, in part, in the relationship then sustained
toward the Orient.
mass and
The
farther development of the
of penance, in practice
serves especial attention.
and
in theory, de-
scotus Erigena.
;
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
394
A. The Adoption Controversy.
1
Hauck, ciiristoiojry or otli
a.
j n the
a.
O.
II.
;
Gams, Kirchengesclii elite Spaniens
II.
Occident after severe contests the Christol-
of the 5th council gained the victory,
DoSnait
ogy
Occident,
spite of the 6th council this mystical view,
and
in
under
the guise of monophysitism, supplanted the strict
Chalcedon, since the superstitious ideas about the
Lord's Supper favored
it.
Spain was
less influenced
In the Muzarabic liturgy stood
by this development.
the Augustinian formula of the passio filii adopEJipandus
tivi.
Elipaiidus, the tyrannical bishop of
full of national pride,
Toledo,
brought into notice about the
year 780 the old doctrine that Christ as regards his
human
nature
is
filius dei adoptivas, the
redeemed
therefore in the fullest sense brethren of the Jesus.
Very
from that
of
which was conviction
NapL?
son J esus
>
likely
Rome
man
he desired a formula different
as an expression of the orthodoxy
From inward and with high regard for the human perFelix, bishop of Naples, who occupied to be
found only in Spain.
a chair in the empire of Charles, championed the
same (reading
of Antiochian scriptures is probable).
After that Beatus and Eterius had defended the opposition doctrine in Spain, the Franconian theolo-
gians, especially Alcuin, interfered.
Monophysites and Nestorians faced each other under new helmets
but to Charles the opportunity of proving himself the guardian of orthodoxy and the master of the
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
395
was condemned Church was welcome. Adoptionism r at the synods of Regensburg (792), Frankfurt (794),
Adoptionism Con-
demned
'
was repeatedly forced to and Frankish Spain was recalled through
and Aachen recant,
(799), Felix
theology and gentle pressure (wheel of torture) to
The
the unity of the mystical faith.
John
doctrine of
Damascus, which conceived the human na-
of
ture in Christ as impersonal
sumed nature
of the
and placed
it
as the as-
Logos in complete unity with
him, gained the victory in the Occident
Yet
also.
in spite of the realistic doctrine concerning the Lord's
Supper which crowded out the historical Christ and
demanded a tion ideas
fine
monophysitism, Augustinian-adop-
were preserved through the
later theolo-
gians of the Middle Ages.
1
B. The Predestination Controversy.
Wiggers, d.
Th.
,
i.
1859.
d. Z.
f.
h. Th., 1859.
Weizsäcker,
i.
d. Jh.
f.
Monographs on Hinkmar, by von Noorden
u. Schrörs.
The dominating
system was semi-
ecclesiastical
Pelagian; but in the 9th century Augustine was
again diligently studied.
That during the
which arose Augustinianism was stated,
notwithstanding
all
phrases, is a proof of the
The monk Gottschalk trine of predestination
it
i
?e
fa n nf" Dominant
-
crisis
after all not rein-
the good Augustinian
power of
of Orbais
ecclesiasticism.
maintained the doc-
with the power of Augustine,
likewise as the chief and original doctrine, finding in
Sei
the key to the riddle of his
own
life.
He
pro-
0tt
of
o?S
396
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
claimed the praedestinatio gemina {ad vitam et
ad
mortem) yet was of the opinion that God predestined only the good and that he merely had a fore-knowl,
edge of the Isidore
evil.
Not ivhat he said (Fulgentius and
had tanght nothing
ner in which he presented
it
to the
but the man-
Church aroused
He was condemned
Maye nce (848) by Rabanus, at Chiersey (849) by Hincmar and taken into custody as a " miser abilis monachus", enemies against him.
Rabanus,
different)
at
from which he never escaped, since he persistently fused to recant.
went over
But the most eminent theologians
to his side, not so
much
because they were
in earnest about Augustinianism, as to ties for
re-
Hincmar and
make
difficul-
to preserve as traditionalists
the Augustinian "language".
From
the
kingdom
of
Lothar especially came the opposition to the Raban-
Hincmar thesis,
that predestination should be deduced
from the prescience and be limited to the saints. Hinc-
mar
tried to defend himself at the
(853) against the
of Troyes,
synod of Chiersey
herd of Alcuin disciples (Prudentius
Ratramnus, Lupus of Ferneres, Servatus
Lupus, Remigius of Lyon, the provincial bishops)
by making in the
"
Chapters" large concessions to
Augustinianism, yet retaining in his doctrine of
one predestination, God's purpose of universal salvation, etc. "
In these objective and subjective untrue
Chapters" the point under consideration was no
longer clearly expressed.
Those
who by word
of
mouth acknowledged the whole of Augustinianism meant at that time only the half, and those who, like
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF Hincmar, rejected
any
at
a
SIN, ETC.
want Sens and in
part did in truth not
In the archbishopric of
all.
307
the south of France the resolutions of Chiersey did
At Valence,
not give satisfaction.
855, the
gemina
praedestinatio was proclaimed and Augustinianism
At
in general announced.
was not
much
so
and Toucy
(860) a
secured as a paralyza-
tion of the controversy through agreement.
mar 's
conception of the doctrine,
First's,
was
natl °*
the great synods of the
three empires at Savonieres (859) unification
prf^jsti
in reality victorious.
Hinc-
Gregory the
i.e.
The doctrine
of
God's purpose of universal salvation, of the quick
and sure
efficacy of the
sacraments and of the con-
currence of free-will continued in force
the doctrine
;
of predestination reappeared as a decorative element
in theology.
Only in
form was
this
it
compatible
with empirical ecclesiasticism.
2.
The Controversy about the Filioque and about Images. Hefele, Concil. Gesch., Bd. III.
Pichler, Gesch. d. kirchl.
Trennung zwischen dem Orient und Occident.
2 Bde.
,
1864
f.
The Augustinian-Spanish formula "filioque" (see Auf£j in I. p. 271) had been accepted in France (see the Fmoque. synod of Gentilly, 767) and was defended by the theo-
"
logians of
process,
Charlemagne
s. s.).
(libri
At Aachen,
Carolini; Alcuin, de
809, the
Frankish church
resolved that the filioque belonged to the symbol.
This resolution was provoked by a grave injustice
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
398
which the Western pilgrims were
called
upon
to en-
Although the pope approved the
dure in Jerusalem.
Spanish-Frankish doctrine, he nevertheless refused Rome Did Not Adopt 111
1
Century
admittance to the watch- word in the symbol. ^ until the 10th century does
cepted
it.
If
Rome
Not
appear to have ac-
Charlemagne widened the opening
breach between the Orient and Occident by the
"fili-
oque" and had therefor only a half-ally in the pope, he alienated himself still
more from the orthodoxy of the
Orient by his rejection of image-worship, which
woSSp
^
^e
approved. The barbaric tradition P°P e a^ so s of the Frankish church and an Augustinian element (with Charlemagne perhaps also an enlightening
one) determined the attitude of the Occidentals.
At
Frankfurt, 794, the decrees of the 7th council were laid aside, j^et the resolutions of the
also rejected.
The
church accepted the
synod of 754 were
self-confidence of the Frankish first six
councils as an expres-
sion of ecclesiastical antiquity, refused, however, to
be dictated to by Byzantium at the modern councils. Libri Carolini.
The "libri Carolini" standpoint:
We
will neither worship images, nor
attack them, but treat
was
still
retain the old ecclesiastical
them
piously.
This attitude
taken by Louis the Pious (synod of Paris,
825) and Hincmar. silence,
The pope preserved a discreet and the 7th council, which was favorable
to images, gradually obtained through
ence recognition in the Occident
also.
Rome's
influ-
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
399
SIN, ETC.
The Development, in Practice and in Theory,
3.
of the Mass {Dogma of the Eucharist) and of Penance. Bach, Reuter,
a.
O.
a.
a. a.
O.
I. I.
Abendmahlslehre
Rückert, i. Hilgenfeld's Ztchr., 1858. Choisy, Paschase, 1888. Geschichte d. Dieckhoff, Ebrard, Kahnis.
v.
Steitz,
D.
röm. Busssacrament, 1854.
The thought of image-representation was kept aloof in
an increasing measure from the Lord's Supper;
Miracle
and
öcicrci"
^minote"
men lived in a world of miracle and of sacraments, so much did the tendency necessarily increase to portray the content of the highest sacrament in an ex-
travagant manner, in order to give
among
the multitude of holy things
which allowed the
;
it
prominence
the Christology
historical Christ to disappear be-
hind the unity of the two " natures" tended toward
an ever-present
was considered chief characteristic and compendium of religion idea of the attributes of God was more and more
could be the the
mysterium, which
Christological
felt
and enjoyed
;
the mass
concentrated in the one, that he
wonder-working Will
—
all
is
the almighty,
these forces
worked
gether to bring about the following result torical rist,
body of Jesus Christ
is
:
The
to-
his-
present in the eucha-
since the elements are transformed into
identification of the sacramental ical)
and the
it.
The
real (histor-
body of Christ could the more easily be carried
out, since
men
considered
it
The Mass
from the moment of
in-
carnation a pneumatic (mysterious) body assumed
Docetism
-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
400
by the Divinity, and held docetic views in regard it, as is proven, e.g., by the controversy in regard
new
doctrine of the eucharist
mulated without age, because
it
difficulty
Paschasius Radbertus.
would have been
for-
during the Carlovingian
already actually existed, had not the
then- revived study of the
of sacrament
to
The
the birth of Jesus out of Maria clauso utero. Doctrine of Eucharist.
to
and his
Augustinian conception
spiritualistic doctrine of the
eucharist had a restraining influence.
Radbertus, abbot of Corbie,
who wrote
Paschasius the
first
mon-
ograph on the Lord's Supper (de corpore et sanguine dornini, 831), was, on the one side,
an Augustinian
and reproduced without inward sympathy or
real
comprehension the Augustinian doctrine, that the act belongs to faith
ing
but,
;
realistic,
and represents a
on the other
side,
he carried
spiritual eatit
on to the
popular doctrine, that in every mass by a
miracle of the Almighty the elements are transformed
inivardly but actually into the body which was born
Mary, and are now brought to God as a sacrifice. Outwardly as a rule no change takes place, in order
of
that the body of Christ 1
lous Trans-
>n
*
5f Elements.
teetn
-
God performs this
may
not be bitten by the
miracle,
which Paschasius
conceives as a miracle of creation; the priest simply directs his supplications to
holy food
is
in reality
now
God.
But even
if
the
the real body of Christ
himself (the obvious appearance of the elements the symbol), the fact
still
is
remains that only be-
lievers partake of the spiritual food unto immortality
— not,
however, unbelievers.
Paschasius
drew
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF neither
all
401
SIN, ETC.
the hierarchical, nor "objective" conse-
quences of the doctrine of transubstantiation, but at-
tempted to adjust the miracle to faith.
He was
not
a theologian primarily of the mass, but wished to be a theologian in the sense of Augustine and the
Greek mystics.
Nevertheless he encountered an un-
Rabanus expressed
expected contradiction.
himself,
in a letter to Eigel, in opposition to this doctrine,
and Ratramnus, a monk
of Corbie, found in his writ-
Ratramnus.
ings to Charles the Bald {de corpore et sanguine
domini) that Paschasius had not done justice to the "
" of
spirituale
tions suffer
But
Augustine.
from old
own
his
explana-
ecclesiastical cloudiness.
Ap-
parently he desires, as in the controversy about the
uterus clausus, like a good Augustinian to set aside the unwieldy miracle of almightiness contra natu-
ram and stress
to place, in the interest of faith, the
upon the
"
spiritualiter geri "
;
whole
but since he
likewise does not doubt the presence of the corpus
domini
after the consecration,
he
is
compelled to dis-
tinguish between the real body and the body. born, crucified body
was the
old
there is the ibilis
is
not in the sacrament
churchly idea
power
of the
body
substantia and, in so
receivable only
—but
—that
in the sacrament
of Christ as
far, the
by the mind
The
an invis-
invisibiiis
Substantia.
pneumatic body,
of the faithful.
over Ratramnus in a few deductions
made
More-
still far-
ther advances toward Paschasius; nevertheless the plainest
conception
creari in mysterio" 26
potentialiter
F ^lf^'
but even this conception was
MySeria
is ;
that of the
"
;
!
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
402
no longer clear
to their superstitious contemporaries
men wanted more than
and soul nour-
Paschasius had spoken the deciding word.
ishment.
The awe
faith reality
inspired by every
mass seemed
to confirm it
and the same was even heightened by the power of
SS ReheSsecL
Incarnation
tüe definite formulation of the doctrine.
and
crucifixional
mass.
What
sacrifice
were repeated at every
then could even approximate this?
was not necessary
to
change the old wording of the
prayers of the mass, which, fice,
It
emphasized the
if
they treated of sacri-
sacrifice
of praise;
for
who
The mass, however, as a sacrificial act, in which the God-man was offered up to God, had its culmination long since no more in gave heed to the words?
real
enjoyment, but in the consummation of the
ting out of sin and removal of evil.
It
blot-
had been
adopted into the great institution of atonement, and
M
S
and
masses without communion (requiems) were multi-
The primitive commemorative element of the celebration had become independent, especially since the da^ys of Gregory I., and the communion was changed, as it were, into a second celebration. The first celebration, the mass, belonged
MuitipS. plied to pacify
God.
to the laity only in so far as cially efficacious
was the only apparent of
represented an espe-
form of the Church's intercession
for the lightening of the
cant one,
it
punishment of
effect of the act
important only through
sins.
This
— an insignifi-
its
summarizing
an immense mystery
The mass was subordinated
to the institution of
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF penance
;
in the latter
was
403
SIN, ETC.
reflected the religious life,
Punishment ruled the world and the conscience.
ordlnatetö Penance -
The conception of God as almighty Will, as Retribution and Indulgence (a Christian modification of the old Eoman idea) was the ruling one. The consequence thereof was the idea that merits and satisfactions
were needed
to
of contract occasioned
had Gregory in the
I.
German
compensate for the breaches
Thus ,..,,,, view blended
by sin and oft repeated.
taught; moreover this
church and State Blended,
nations with their national ideas of
law and with their legal ever, the Occidental
restrictions.
Church did
how-
Since,
not, like the Oriental,
relinquish the administration of law
and questions of
morality entirely to the state, but rather interposed to discipline
and punish, there was developed,
to the state institution of law, the
tion of penance. institution
The
Church
parallel
institu-
detailed development of this
was a consequence
and
of the transfer
application of the discipline of penance within the cloisters to the secular clergy it
and
originated with the Irish-Scottish,
church.* Anglo-Saxon ö
punishment of
with the
i.e.
But through ° the fear
sin, of hell
and
to the laity,
of the
and purgatory, the
laity He5iienp U r-
favored the practice and established the influence of the
Church
itself.
in its entire range, even over private life
A certain deepening of
was the consequence
:
the conception of sin
The people had recourse
Church, not only in the case of grave *
Wasserschieben, Die irische Kanonensammlung,
ner, Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte L, 1888.
2.
sins,
Aufl.
,
to the
but also 1885.
Fear of Punish-
Brun-
gatory
-
:
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
404
on account of the "roots of sin" and the hidden faults (gluttony, sexual lust, avarice, anger, humor, anxiety, heartfelt aversion, arrogance, pride),
now
they
which
considered also deadly sins ; however, this
deepening was counterbalanced by the stupefying readiness with
which men acknowledged themselves
ever as sinners, and by the thought that intercession
and
satisfaction possess the
In
punishment.
ited
power
truth
to cancel the mer-
men bestowed more
thought upon punishment and the remission of the
same than upon
sin.
During the Carlovingian age
the hierarchical side of the institution of penance
Satisfactions.
was
as yet
still
lagged behind
little
developed, and the dogmatic theory ;
but the satisfactions experienced
a new development in connection with the exercise Prayers,
Alms, Exclusion O. T.
and
German Codes.
of penance in the
To the
old,
more
form of voluntary confession
:
(1)
or less, arbitrary rules in regard to
the choice and duration of the compensating punish-
ment
(prayers, alms, lamentations,
temporary exclu-
were added, in increasing measure, rules from the Old Testament and from the German code. The sion)
consequence was that the measure of the compensatory punishment itself appeared in the light of a Rehearsal of Death of Christ.
Divine ordinance,
The compensatory means were looked upon as things pleasing to God, which therefore, if nothing had been omitted, in themselves es(2)
tablish merits; the sacrificial death of Christ
be considered as the most efficacious
;
must
therefore the
rehearsal of this death (pretii copiositas mysterii
passionis) was the efficacious and convenient means
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF (masses for the dead)
;
besides,
SIN, ETC.
405
one should gain the
good will of the saints for their intercessions ought
God can demand nothing from able to bring him valuable gifts,
to be efficacious, since
them, while they are (3)
Since the exercises of penance have a material .
value before God, thev can be exchanged, ° **
'
i.e.
lessened
changes, Indulgences, Remissions.
-
by a repentant disposition here especially the Church ;
steps in,
since
institutes
it
such exchanges; thus
originated a whole system of indulgences, exchanges,
and remissions,
which the
to the establishing of
Germanic law contributed
(origin of indulgences;
remissions are of primitive antiquity),
(4)
In addi-
Substitu-
tion to exchanges, however, substitution is also possible
;
here the Germanic law had a
fluence
;
tutes, (5)
The consequence
and the
to reconcile
saints as substi-
of the whole conception
that in the doing of penance
much
stronger in-
yet the idea has also an ecclesiastical root
in the conception of Christ
was
still
men
sought not so
God, the Father, as much more
escape from God, the Judge tice entirely inverted
!
to
This soul-killing prac-
Augustinianism
;
it
had
enced Christology in the time of Gregory
I.,
influ-
and
it
operated decisively during the classic times of the
Middle Ages upon
all
and created new ones.
dogmas
of ancient standing
Augustinianism averted,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
406
CHAPTER
VII.
OF DOGMA IN THE TIME OF CLUGNY, ANSELM AND BERNARD TO THE END OF THE
HISTORY
12TH CENTURY. Reuter a. a. O. Weltanschauung, Advance Movement of Church.
Through
v.
Eicken, Gesch. u. System d. MAlichen,
1887.
the institution of penance the Church
became the decisive power in men's
An
dental Christendom.
lives in Occi-
advance movement of the
Church, therefore, must of necessity benefit the whole
This advance took place
of Occidental Christendom. at the
end of the 10th century and continued until
the 13th century, during which time the supremacy of the
Church and the mediaeval
ecclesiastical con-
ception of the world attained their perfection. ^tetjanC
^r
e
Life
one regards Christianity as doctrine, the Middle
Ages appear almost of the ancient
like
Church
if
;
a supplement to the history one regards
it
as
life,
ancient Christianity only attained
its full
ment
Church.
in the mediaeval Occidental
ancient age the motives, ancient
Monasticism.
If
life
then
develop-
In the
standards and ideas of
confronted the Church as barriers.
It
was never able to overcome these barriers, as is shown by the Greek Church Monasticism stands by the side of the Church the earthly Church is the old :
;
world supplemented by Christian etiquette.
But the
Occidental Church of the Middle
able to
carry out
much more
Ages was
securely its peculiar standards
,;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF of
monkish asceticism and
old cultus alongside of
domination of this
of the
by the one beyond, because
life
it
did not have an
Gradually
it.
407
SIN, ETC.
gathered
it
strength so as to be able finally to enlist into
its ser-
vice even the old enemy, Aristotelian science, and to
transform the same into an instrument of power.
made
all
the elements of
It
and knowledge subject
life
The inner strength of its activity was the Augustinian-ascetic piety, which broke forth in ever to itself.
new the
creations of monasticism
Roman
pope, who,
the outer power
;
as the successor of
was
Peter,
secured for himself both Christ's right and that of the
Roman
Caesars.
The Revival of Piety.
1.
Harnack, Das Monchthum, 3. Aufl., 1886. Neander, d. Bernard (hrsg. v. Deutsch, 1889) HüfTer, d. h. Bernard .
1886.
Ritschl,
i.
d.
Stud. u. Krit. 1879, S. 317
From Quedlinburg
(Matilda)
h. I.
f.
and Clugny the
re-
Quedlin-
burg and
vival of piety
the "
new
had
The Gregorian
popes,
congregations" and Bernard enforced
the laity received clergy,
its rise.
upon
it
whom
it
it
more readily than the worldly
made
greater demands.
It is
most plainly represented by the crusade enthusiasm
and by the founding of innumerable Strict discipline
in the convents,
tion of the secular clergy,
monkish regula-
the domination of the
monkish-regulated Church over the
and nations
— these were
its
convents.
aims.
laity,
Upon
princes
this found-
ciugny.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
408
ation alone Christian,
froÄe
it
i.e.
appeared possible to create a truly
an unworldly
poral life should serve the life effort of the
The whole temhereafter: Supreme the Church to gain
life.
world dominion of
the most perfect victory over the world,
Freedom from the world appeared
from the world. possible only
minion.
under the condition of universal do-
Many monks
also permitted themselves to
be blinded by this dialectics, tion between the
who
the contradic-
felt
aim and the means, and preferred
for themselves the direct
way
of popularizing flight
from the world by fleeing from the world.
Church was indeed
also
Therefore did
To perfectly exemplify
the difficult trait of a renunciation
German and
youthful.
it
courageous to battle against Simonistic
princes and worldly clericals.
the
But the
God's state and not simply
the bestower of individual bliss! incite the
escape
i.e.
The
the
Romance
world,
of the
peoples were
still
too
violent disposition toward the con-
quest of the world united with this and produced that strange frame of mind, in
which the conscious-
ness of strength alternated like a flash with humility,
longing after enjoyment with resignation, cruelty
with sentimentality.
Men
desired nothing
this world, they desired only heaven,
from
and yet they
wished to own this beautiful earth. P
of
chrtot
^^
rst re ^gi° us
individualism was not as yet
kindled (yet take note of the heresies which found access in the 11th century, partly imported from the
Orient
— Bogomils—partly
springing
up spontane-
— DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF ously), still visions
SIN, ETC.
400
were brought back from the Holy
Land crusade for which indulgences had been The picture of Christ was recovered and granted. piety was enlivened by the most vivid representations of the suffering and dying Redeemer: We should follow him in every step of his passion jourAccordingly in place of the defunct
ney.
ism", the
man
" adoption-
Jesus came again to the front and
negative asceticism received a positive form and a
The cords of Christie-mysticism, ^ which Augustine had struck only with uncertainty grew into a rapturous melody. By the side of the new, fixed aim.
— penance
sacramental Christ stepped'
medium — the image
christic-
Mysticism.
formed the
of the historical Christ sublime
in his humility, innocent, suffering punishment, life in death.
which
It
is
this piety,
impossible to estimate the effects
newly induced through the
homo", had, and in how many forms
it
"
Ecce
has developed.
a strong ° and effective form; he was the religious genius of the 12th cenSt.
Bernard
first
gave °
and therefore
tury,
it
at the
the most powerful ecclesiastic.
same time however In so far as Bernard
a system of thought and portrays the gradual
progress of love (caritas and liumilitas) even to excess,
he revived Augustine.
mined by that
His language
of the " Confessions".
ate love for Christ he
eration for that
.
m
?£
f
cen-
tury.
also the leader of the epoch
Augustinus redivivus, offers
B ?F n ard „ Religious
But
is
deter-
in passion-
went beyond Augustine.
which
is
"
Ven-
beneath us", for suffering
and humility (devotion) dawned upon him as never ,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
410
before upon
s.m°f and
He
any Christian.
venerated the cross,
shame and death as the form of the Divine appearing upon earth. The study of the Song of Songs and
('l'llS'lllt*
the crusade enthusiasm conducted
image of the
before the
Redeemer, the Bridegroom of
Into his image he sunk himself
the soul. there
crucified
him
beamed
for
him
true love
;
from
it
and shone the living
To him the sensuousness Christ's wounds melted into
truth.
of the contemplation
of
spiritual exaltation,
which, however, always rested upon the foundation of the ecclesiastical system
Bernard
of penance.
united the Neo-Platonic exercises of ascent unto
God
with the contemplation of the crucified Redeemer
and unfettered the subiectiveness of the Christic-mys-
eristic
and
ync ism
"
ticism and Christie-lyricism. led
him
in his
This contemplation
sermons on the Song of Songs to a
which not infrequently gains the Pauline and Lutheran faith unto salvation
self- judgment,
height of ("
non modi Justus sed etbeatus, cui non imputabit
deus peccatum").
had
to
But, on the other side, he also
pay the tribute of
mysticism, not only in
all
so far as the feeling of especial exaltation alternated
with that of abandonment, but also in his not being able to
Bernard as Prophet,
ward off a pantheistic tendency.
Bernard also taught that from the Christ in the
flesh
weD^a, that the historical
is
clung to
it
a
Like Origen,
was necessary to step.
the
to rise
Christ xard
This
trait
has
mysticism since his time; mysticism has learned from Bernard, whom men reverenced as a all
prophet and apostle, the Christ-contemplation; but
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF the
at
same time
it
SIN, ETC.
411
has adopted his pantheistic
The excedere et cum Christo esse" means, that in the arms of the Bridegroom the soul ceases to be an individual self. But where the soul is merged "
trend.
in the Divinity, the Divinity is dissolved into the
All-in-One.
Immeasurable
for Christology OJ has the significance °
of the
new
He
prototype and power
The scheme of the two natures was indeed retained, yet there was in truth by the side of the sacramental Christ a second Christ, the man Jesus, whose sentiment, sufferings, and deeds portrayed and propagated Divine life. is
is
vision of Christ been.
;
Augus-
View
tine's
Perfected
-
his death sacrifice, also,
the sacrifice of the man, in
whom God
was.
Thus
the Augustinian conception, already inaugurated by
Ambrose, attained here its perfection. r
In the second
1
half of the 12th century this ing, humility)
new
piety (love, suffer-
was a mighty power
But as Bernard represented between the world
in himself the contrast
of pious
and the hierarchical policy
in the Church.
Christian
sentiment
of the world-dominat
ing Church, so also most believers, naively attached to the
Church, considered
power and of humility
the
ideals of
reconcilable.
As
worldly yet the
great beggar of Assisi had not stepped forth, whose
appearance was destined to create a
crisis in the tur-
bulence of flight from the world and dominion over the world;
still
at the
end of the 12th century there
already hovered about the Church angry curses of " heretics"
who
recognized in
its
secular rule and in
e s fJ^°7 T^ fering, Humillty>
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
412
the sale of old babel,
dispensations of grace the traits of the
and Bernard himself warned the popes.
On
2.
its
the History of Ecclesiastical
Law.
V. Schulte, Gesch. d. Quellen d. Kirchenrechts I. u II. Hiuschius, Kathol. Kirchenrecht. Dentfle, Univers. d. MA., Kaufmann, Gesch. d. deutchen Univ. I. 1888. 1885. ,
PseudoIsidorean Decretals.
All that had ever been claimed by popes appeared
gathered together in the great falsification of PseudoIsidore
and was represented as ancient papal law: The
independence of the Church and
its
organs as regards
the laity, and the papal supremacy over the bishops
Upon
and the national churches.
the foundation of
Pseudo-Isidore the popes of later times built.
them
it
was not a question
of theology, but, as
To Ro-
mans, of the perfection of the law, which they had obtained for themselves as a Divine law. contest between emperor
as to
which should be the
God, and as to
whom
In the
and pope the question was real rector of the state of
the bishops should be subject.
The reformed papacy was developed under the imClugny,
Gregory Vll.
pulse of Clugny and Gregory VII. into an autocratic
power in the Church and formulated
its legislation
accordingly through numberless decretals, after hav-
ing freed
itself
in
Rome from
older constitutional best
men
the last remnants of
conditions.
Allied
with the
of the times the popes of the 12th century,
having obtained the investiture, began to design a
new
ecclesiastical law.
The
decretals
took their
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF by the side
place
413
SIN, ETC.
of the old canons, even
of the decrees of the old councils.
by the
Still,
side
strictly
taken, their authority as yet remained uncertain.
The papacy while developing into a jurisdictional LawAiS? supreme court would never have been able to gain gamated -
the monarchial leadership as regards faith and mor-
Church, which
als in the
and
faith
tion of self
cult,
had not in
is
indeed communion of
this period the
dogma and law become
perfect.
amalgamaIn
Rome
it-
the form of the dogmatic retreated completely
behind that of the law (lex dei), and the Germano-
Romance
nations at
first
them as Roman law and The great were monks and Jjurists. popes L c °
Church had once come order.
The
were defenceless; for the
juristic-scientific
to
treatment of
all
functions of
Popes,
Monks and Jurists
-
Church became the highest aim.
The study of law exercised an immense influence upon the thoughtful contemplation of the Church in all its length and breadth. That which formerly had the
been evolved under constraining influences,
Church as a
legal institute,
now became
ened or developed by thought.
The
viz.,
the
strength-
spirit of juris-
prudence, which spread over the faith of the Church,
began also dogmas.
to subordinate to
itself
the traditional
Here scholasticism had a strong
root; but I^Ratio
one must not forget that since Tertullian the Occi-
dogmas were prepared for a juristic treatment, out of which they partly originated. Upon aactoritas and ratio the dialectics of the jurists is founded. dental
It also
belongs to the great contrasts of the Middle
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
414
Ages,— Bernardine piety and Roman juristic thinkIn this way the Church was to become a ing. court of law, a merchant house in this epoch
But
it
still
and a robbers' den.
stood at the beginning of
the development.
The Revival of Science.
o.
Histories of Philosophy by Überweg, der Logik v. Prantl, Bd. II. -IV.
Erdmann, Reuter
Gesch.
Nitzsch,
mann,
i.
RE
d.
a. a.
schoiasticism.
.
it
ff.
Denifle
Kampf Zweischen
O.
KaufNominal, u.
a. a.
d.
O.
Deutsch, P. Abelard, 1883.
was the
Scholasticism
In
XIII. S., 650
Löwe,
O.
Realism. 1876.
2
Stöckl. a. a.
science of the Middle Ages. °
there were strikingly displayed the
power of the
thinking faculties and an energy capable of reduc-
ing everything real and valuable to thought, such
But scholasticism
is
"from the very centre outward
",
as perhaps no other age offers. in truth thinking
for while the scholastics principles, these
and
real history,
ment
first
were not gained from experience though in the course of the develop-
of mediaeval science increasing regard
Auctoritas and ratio
to experience.
Diaiec-
always went back to
was paid
(dialectical-de-
tical-
6
^lethod"
furtive method) dominate scholasticism, which difered from the old theology, in that the authority of the
dogma and
the practice of the
firmly adjusted,
and
in that
Church were more
men no
longer lived in
the philosophy (the antique) which went with
added the same from without. position
was drawn— at
it,
but
Its principal presup-
least until the
time of
its
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF dissolution
—from the thesis, that
all
SIN, ETC.
415
things must be
understood from theology and that therefore also
all
things must be traced back to theology.
This thesis
presupposes that the thinker himself
sensible of
dependence upon God.
his full is
is
Piety
therefore
But
the presupposition of mediaeval science.
the nature of
the mediaeval
in
piety itself lies the
Piety the Presupposcholasticism.
foundation for that contemplation which leads to for piety is the
this science ;
advancing knowledge
obtained by constant reflection upon the relation of the soul to God.
Therefore scholasticism, since
deduces all things ° Jfrom
them in him,
On
fest.
God and again comprises u ±
piety become conscious and mani-
is
that account
from mysticism
it
it
does not differ in
its
scholasti-
cism
„
is
Sel ?~
Conscious Piety *
root
the difference consists only herein,
;
that in scholasticism the knowledge of the world in its relation to
tive interest sible, to
God
gains a more independent, objec-
and the theological doctrines
be proven
;
are, if pos-
while in mysticism the reflective
trend of the process of knowledge (for the increase of
one's
own
piety)
comes out more strongly,
In the former, as a rule, more use lectics, in
made
of dia-
the latter of intuition and inward experi-
But the theology
ence.
is
also according to its
of
Thomas,
for example, can
end and aim unhesitatingly be
designated as mysticism and, vice versa, there are theologians,
but
who
who from custom
in the strength
are called mystics,
of their desire to
know
the world and to understand correctly the doctrine of the
Church do not lag behind the
so-called scho-
Theology of
Thomas
is
Mystical.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
416 Mysticism is
the
sV-hoiasti*
The aim not only
l as tics.
same (mysticism
the
is
means
the practice of scholasticism), but the also the
same
spiritual
The
(the authoritative
experience,
difficulties
traditional
the
which at
dogma of
first
made
is
are
the Church, philosophy).
their appearance
in mediaeval science were therefore removed, after
men had lectic
learned the art of subordinating the dia-
method
dogma and
to the traditional
to the
thirst for piety. tlnceof the
d(iIe
Ages
The Middle Ages received from the old Church the Holy Scriptures, the essentially completed dogma, the theology which led to this dogma, and a treasure of classical literature
loosely connected
with this
theology and the philosophico-methodical doctrines.
With
these additions to the
transmitted,
John of
hostile to the
dogma, or
at
threatened to become so (Neo-Platonism and
least Damascus.
which were
dogma elements were
In the theology °* of John of Damas-
Aristotelianism). '
7
was made to reconcile scientifically everything that was contradictory, but the Occident could not thereby be spared the work of adjustment. cus the attempt
During the Carlovingian age the strength of the Occident
was
still
the capital
it
had
made themselves undertaking was by a ius
°and Isidore.
to
work independently upon
inherited.
A
few theologians
home with Augustine, still this already followed, as we have seen,
at
partial crisis,
foreign garment B
weak
too
— others clothed themselves
in the
of the
in the
classical
authors;
scno °l s ^ ne y learned from the writings of Boethius and Isidore the rudiments of the dialectical
method and a
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
No
mild use of the ratio.
theologian except ° r Scotus As soon as they became
Erigena was independent.
more
417
SIN, ETC.
knowledge of
self-conscious, they rejected the
nature, the devil's mistress,
and antiquity.
Indeed
out these,
means of culture they could not do withand dialecticism, that is, that method
which
exposes contradictions in order to recon-
as a formal
cile
first
them,
made an
scotus
Engena.
increasing impression.
From
the Carlovingian age there runs through the learned
down
schools a chain of scientific tradition as far
But Gerbertof Rheims did
into the 11th century.
not as yet bring
it
to
an epochal climax
logical dialecticians did so first after the
that century.
as G of
||^
s
the theo-
;
middle of
Already at that time the principal
philosophico- theological question of the future
was
considered, viz. whether the conceptions of species exist respecting things or within things, or
whether
same are merely abstractions (Boethius
in Por-
the
phyry, realism and nominalism).
The
instinct of self-preservation turned
which mysticism demanded.
ecclesiastical
toward realism,
When
Roscellin in
consequence of his nominalism arrived at the consequent tritheism, both he and his
were rejected as heretical
(1092).
way
of thinking
In the 11th cen-
tury the dialecticians were viewed with great distrust.
Indeed they frequently not only attacked the
coarse superstition in religion and the barbarian
way
of thinking, but they also jeopardized orthodoxy, or
rather
what was thought
to be orthodoxy.
lighteners" they were not. 27
Looking
at
But
" en-
them more
Rosceiiin.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
418
even the boldest of them stood upon the basis
closely,
Church,
of the Bci<
";
Offends
or,
hundred same by J a
any
at
ties.
were bound
rate,
to the
True, every science, even
the most trammelled, will always find within itself
an element offensive to that faith which longs for peace;
it
which
display a freshness and joyfulness,
will
to devotion will
never be able, even in end
and aim,
when
it
it
of the
Church
;
it
will
agrees with the Church
a negative tendency, be-
to disclaim
always rightly
cause
will
appear like boldness
find, that
the principles
in the concrete expression of life
have
and have been marred by superstition
deteriorated
Thus was
and. inclination.
it
also at that time; but
was a consequence the Church, so the Church also
as the revival of science
of the
revival of
finally
recognized in theology Revival of Science;
By J
insults,
tained:
its
own
life.
the elevation of science three results were ob(1)
A deeper
insight into the Neo-Platonic-
Augustinian principles of theology as a whole,
A higher virtuosity in the art of and rational demonstration, pation with the Church philosophers.
(3)
dialectical analysis
An
fathers
The danger
(2)
increasing occu-
and the ancient
of this
deeper
insight
was a non-cosmicomystical pantheism, and the more
men devoted themselves to realism, the greater was the danger. The danger of dialecticism consisted in the dissolution of the dogma instead of naively
Dangers,
the proof of them
;
the danger of the intercourse with
the ancient philosophers lay in the reduction of historical Christianity to cosmopolitanism, to
a mere
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
general philosophy of religion upon the neutralized history. there
was
Till the
419
SIN, ETC.
the
soil of
end of the 12th century
as yet no real philosophy alongside of theo-
logy; in so far as anything of the kind existed,
was
and thus
feared,
luded to under first
" (2)"
it
happened that the danger
al-
(Berengar and his friends) was
The danger alluded
felt.
it
to
under "(1)" was
the least noticed, since Anselm, the greatest theo-
logian before Thomas, whose orthodoxy
was above
moved about most unconcernedly among
question,
the Neo-Platonic-Augistinian
Perhaps
principles.
he would have soon brought the dialectical science,
which he knew how honors, and have
to use
made
with authority, to
Willi,
von
Champeaux.
full
credible the reconcilableness
of mysticism (meditatio) with reason, of authoritative faith with ratio {credo, ut intelligam,
one
rationabili necessitate intelligere
side,
oportere
on the
omnia
ilia,
esse
quae nobis fides catholica de
Christo credere praecipit, on the other
side),
had
not some of his pupils, like Willi, von Champeaux,
drawn some
of the
dangerous consequences of Pla-
tonic realism (the one passive substance, the natural
phenomena as mere semblance) Abelard a bold
,
and had not
scientific talent appeared,
not but terrify the churchmen.
in
which could
In Abelard the trait
of the " enlightener" is not entirely
wanting
was more bold than
and his "ration-
alism" had revelation.
its
consequential,
limitations in the
;
but he
acknowledgment of
Nevertheless he opposed faith in mere
authority, yet
by no means
at all points ; he
wanted
Abelard.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
420 to
know what he
how be
and he wanted
to
show
unsafe and contradictory was the uncontrolled
orthodoxy and sicetNon.
believed,
infallible
the
which pretended
tradition
Non
{"Sic et
v
to
Thus he looked
).
upon the foundations of faith just as he looked upon the theological points represented in the dogma. His opponents, above of the trinity
all
Bernard, considered his doctrine
and the whole method
of his science
(which indeed with him and his pupils often degenerated into a formalistic art of disputation and
coupled with
unbearable
all
foreign
condemned him.
heretical; they therefore
not at
arrogance)
and
They did
observe that the questionable sentences of
the bold innovator originated in part from the fathers
was
Church
and in part were the consequences of that mys-
tical doctrine of
God, which they themselves shared
(thus his conception of history,
which seems
tralize historical Christianity in favor of
osophy compare Justin) ;
.
It is still
to neu-
Greek
phil-
more paradoxical
that Abelard, even while on the one side
drawing
these consequences, on the other introduced a kind of "
conceptualism" in the place of realism, granted to
sober thought a material influence upon the contemplation of fundamental principles, rejected the pantheistic deductions of the current
Ec
as "
Ticai 6'
"nulnded
orthodoxy and thus
laid the foundation for the classical expression of me di
dogma demanded
realism, but
was not
able to be re-
tained in thought under the complete dominion of the mystical, Neo-Platonic theology.
A lowering of
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF the Platonic celestial flight " Aristotelism",
SIN, ETC.
was needed,
as the latter
421
therefore of
was understood and
used at that time, namely, that view of things according to which whatever appears and like is not the transitory
supernatural
God
is
creature-
form of the Divine, but the
as creator has, in the real sense of
the word, called forth the creature and
same with independence.
With
this
endowed the
view Abelard
began anew, and much of that which at his time provoked opposition afterward became orthodox.
was his own fault, the fault of of clearness in the positions
the fault of his
break through.
Yet
his character, the
it
A
^}^
s
want
which he assumed, and
many heterodoxies, With Bernard and
that he did not
the mystics he
brought science into such discredit that the next generation of theologians " sentences" of
had a
difficult
footing.
The
Peter Lombard, which with a certain
jj^^nj
scientific freedom gather together the patristic tradition,
opinion and contrary opinion, and which give
a judicious review of doctrine in the spirit of the
Church, came near being condemned (1164, 1179). of St. Victor zealously opposed
Walther
Abelard as well.
But the task
him and
of theology, to fur-
nish a review of the whole territory of dogmatics and to think everything out, once undertaken, could
no
longer be put aside, and in the carrying out of this task the followers of Abelard and of Bernard drew
nearer to
each other.
Moreover, the intercourse
Mohammedans demanded an intelHugo St. Victor, however, apologetics.
with Jews and ligent
1
viltor
'
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
422
bard, contributed New
Piety
The new
c j es<
Lom-
already influenced the followers of
who had
most toward uniting the tenden-
piety,
even with
its latest require-
ments, exercises, and means of devotion, died out gradually, though not entirely, during the second half of the 12th century, together with the dialectical
Yonder
science. rejected,
with which, however,
was lost. pressions ies.
implicit faith, here boldness
many
a fresh truth
This occurred under the overwhelming im-
made by
Her law
the Church, radiant in
in life
its victor-
and doctrine became the most
worthy object of investigation and exposition. this
were
aim was blended another
With
—that of referring
all
things back to God, and of construing knowledge of Patristi-
sialism,
However,
the world as theology.
course
f
was only
in the
the 13th century that patristi cism, ecclesi-
asticism, mystic theology
came consolidated
and Aristotelianism
into powerful systems.
matical works of the 12th century the works of tion.
it
Hugo— still
Thought,
if it
The dogperhaps,
bear the stamp of aggrega-
wished
duction and meditation,
—except,
be-
was
to be still
more than
repro-
looked upon with
suspicion. 4.
Be
n
an cP Anseiui.
r
Work upon
Aniong the number
the
Dogma.
of theological disputes
and
separate condemnations, the controversy with Ber-
engar concerning the eucharist and Anselm's
new
conception of the doctrine of atonement acquired
prominence.
These alone mark a progress in the
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP dogma, which during
history of
423
SIN, ETC.
period
this
was
otherwise not enriched.
A. The Berengar Controversy. Bach, a. a. O. I. Reuter a. a. O. Schwabe, Stud. z. Gesch,
1850.
1887.
Sudendorf, Berengarius, 2. Abendmahlsstreits,
d.
Schnitzler, B. v. Tours, 1890.
The second controversy regarding
from the theological, also a philosophical
has, aside
and
the eucharist
The
ecclesiastico-political interest.
latter
Eucharist versy
-
may
Berengar, a pupil of Fulbert of Chartres,
rest here.
was the first dialectician, who, full of confidence in the art which he thought to be identical with reason, turned against an ecclesiastical superstition which
had very nearly become a dogma. the
dogma
A
criticism of
of the eucharist, however, was, in consid-
eration of the prominent standing of this doctrine, a criticism of the ruling ecclesiastical doctrine in general.
Not as a negative "enlightener", but
to op-
pose a bad custom by true tradition, and at the same
time also to
ming up
let
his light shine, Berengar wrote (sum-
in the work, de sacra
coena adv. Lanfran-
cum, 1073) and founded a school.
He saw
in the
want
of rea-
ruling doctrine of transubstantiation a son,
and he revived the Augustinian doctrine
of the
whose book, however, was considered as belonging to Scotus Erigen a, and as such
eucharist (like Ratramnus,
was condemned
at Vercelli, 1050)
the
and
Xoyixrj
in order to restore
combat the barbarous passion Berengar opened the controversy with
Xarpeia
for mysteries.
,
to
Be
ar
25Jf Lanfranc
-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
424
Lanfranc and showed that the acceptance of a bodily transubstantiation was absurd and that therefore the words of Christ must be understood a
letter to
figuratively. Signum
et
mentum.
A
purely symbolic conception he did
not teach, rather like the fathers,
m cut am, element
in the sacred act is
added by the
:
Signum
Some holy but
" coiiversio" ,
et sacra-
invisible
which means
however the ivhole Christ; bread and wine are only
He
relatively changed.
taught that the opposite
doctrine strives against reason, wherein the Divine
image B
G
r S
Do c°mi e Con-
demned.
lies
enclosed
;
he
at
Rome and
sence; he himself (1059)
favors " ineptia" casts
Berengar's doctrine was con-
aside the Divine part.
demned
who
Vercelli (1050) during his ab-
was forced
and he condescended
recant at
to
Rome
a confession,
to sign
composed by Cardinal Humbert, which showed that Berengar had not exaggerated the ruling doctrine for ;
in the confession
it
was
stated, that the elements
after the consecration are not only sacrament, but
the very hodj of Christ (sensualiter, sacra7ne7ito),
which then
the teeth of the believers.
is
also
(Hildebrand), restrained himself for
afterward
Now
masticated by
Berengar, protected in
the following years by influential
Controversy Re-
non solum
Roman some
began anew the literary
the principal writings were
first
friends
time, but
controversy. issued (Lan-
newal.
franc,
de
co7*p.
et sang,
domini adv. B.c.
1069).
Gregory VII. was in no haste to make heretics; yet in order not to prejudice his ally forced
own
authority, he fin-
Berengar for the second time to submit.
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF The learned
scholar
425
SIN, ETC.
was broken down and
his cause
Paschasius' doctrine of transubstantiation
perished.
was further developed by the opponents of Berengar (manducatio infidelium; coarse realism) still ;
even in these ence" to the
one commenced to apply
circles
dogma
" sci-
in the interest of the Church.
The coarse representations were disregarded, the tire Christ (not simply bloody pieces of his body)
acknowledged in the act
(in every particular)
,
en-
was
the dif-
Signum and sacramentum was taken into account in order to distinguish between mandatio infidelium and fideUum (especially important is Guitmund of Aversa, de corp. et sang. Christi veritate in eucharistia) The " scientific" concepference between
Guitmund of Aversa.
.
tions also concerning substance
and attributes were
already set forth, whereby the coarse corrected
itself,
while a few,
it is
"
sensualiter"
true, believed in
an incorruptibility of the attributes of the converted substances.
Furthermore there were already begin-
nings of the speculation about the ubiquity of the
The expression
substance of the body of Christ. "
trayissubstantiatio" can be traced
of
first to
Hildebert
Tours (beginning of the 12th century)
final
;
as the
Hildebert of Tours; Transubstantiation.
argument there remained always the almightj^
sovereign will of God. transubstantiation
As
a
dogma
was expressed
the doctrine of
in the
new
sion of faith at the Lateran council (1215),
confes-
which
prior to the xprofessio Jfidei Trident, was, next to the J '
Nicene, the most influential symbol. the eucharist
was here joined
The
doctrine of
directly to the trinity
Doctrine of Eucharist
^nnfty an
ls
toiogy.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
426
and
Therewith was also expressed
to Christology.
in the symbol that the trines,
same
is
and indeed in the form
substantiation
and with
("
one with these doc-
of the doctrine of tran-
transsubstantiatis
strict hierarchical trend.
pane
et vino")
Joined thereto
was a statement regarding baptism and penance ("per veram poenitentiam semper protest repa-
Boldest
Middle Ages.
rari").
Therewith indeed this development ended,
and with
it
the allied one, that every Christian
confess his sins before the parochus
(c.
21).
must The
innovation in the symbol (combination of the doctrine of the eucharist
ogy)
is
with the trinity and Christol-
the most peculiar and the boldest act of the
Middle Ages, having "filioque".
On
symbol shows
dogma were
much
greater weight than the
the other side, however, the
still
new
very plainly that only the old
dogma, and not the Augustinian
truly
sentences concerning sin, hereditary sin, grace, etc.
Catholic Christianity old
is
constituted, aside
Church dogmas, by the doctrines
from the
of the three
sacraments (baptism, penance and the eucharist).
The
rest are
no dogma at (till
dogma all.
of the second order, that
means,
This condition was for the future
the Reformation) of the greatest importance.
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
427
SIN, ETC.
Anselm's Doctrine of Satisfaction and the
B.
Doctrines of Atonement of the Theologians of the 12th Century. Gesch. d. Versöhnungslehre v. Baur u. Ritschi. Hasse, Ansehn, 2 Bde., 1852 f. Cremer, i. d. Stud. u. Krit., 1880 S. 7
ff.
Anselm
in his
work
"
Cur deus homo
"
attempted
cu^ieus
to prove the strict necessity (reasonableness) of the
death of a
God-man
for the redemption of sinful
humanity (even in Augustine are found doubts of this necessity),
and thereby raised the fundamental
the practice of penance (satisfactio
principle of
congrua) to the standard of religion in general.
Herein consists his epochal importance.
His
pre-
His Presupposi-
supposition
that sin
is
is guilt,
and indeed
guilt
against God, that the blotting out of this guilt the
main point
God
-
is
in the ivork of Christ, that the cross
of Christ is the redemption,
grace of
tion
is
nothing
(Augustine here
still
else
and that therefore the
than the work of Christ
manifested uncertainty).
In
momentous thoughts lies the evangelical truth Anselm 's deductions. Yet they suffer from grave G rave
these of
imperf ections
;
for since they take into consideration
only the " objective", they do not contain the proof of the reality of redemption, but primarily only the
proof of
its
atonement).
conditions (they contain no doctrine of
Furthermore they are based upon a
contradictory view of the honor of God, they place the Divine attributes at an intolerable variance, they
im-
tions.
428
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
make God appear
not as the Master and as almighty
Love, but as a powerful private citizen
who
is
man's
partner, they misconceive the inviolableness of the
sacred moral law and therefore the suffering of pun-
ishment, and finally they allow
mankind
deemed by human
without making
plain
how
in
man
what. Faith
jie
Anselm
(!)
himself a change of heart
The great Augustinian and
brought about. He Did Not c ian
sacrifice
to be re-
really did not
is to
it
be
dialecti-
know what faith
is,
and
therefore fancied himself able to formulate a doc-
trine of redemption in strictly necessary categories (for the
conversion of Jews and heathen), without
troubling himself about the establishing of religion in the heart, that
is,
about the awakening of faith.
That, however, means a purposing to treat religion
without religion
;
for the creating of faith is religion,
problem
^he °^
jectee""
demption and "subjective" adoption had
jective."
here also, even more than formerly;
splitting of the
problem into
" objective" reits
for
effect
Anselm
grappled with the principal problem energetically.
So much the worse were the consequences, which prevail to this
day
;
for if the
problem must be divided
into the " objective" (dramatic
and the
" subjective",
tianity proved
management of God) then has God even in Chris-
by the death
of Christ only a general
possibility of the true religion;
the religion
itself,
however, every individual must procure for himself, be it alone or by means of numerous little assistants
and expedients
(the Church).
view thinks Catholicly, even
He who if
he
shares this
calls
himself a
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
429
SIN, ETC.
Anselm in the most important problem, which it was his merit to place at
Lutheran Christian.
view the false Cath-
the head, first brought to full olic idea
God and
of
expression in the practice of penance. is
n
Doctrine of Religion.
the false old Catholic con-
ception of religion which had long since
sense he
^^\
found In this
a co-founder of the Catholic Church,
although his theory in detail has in been abandoned
—in favor of
a
still
many
respects
more convenient
Anselm in different writings
practice of the Church.
—
Monologium" "Prologium" concerning the conception of God; ontological proof) gave expression ("
,
to the conviction, that
authority,
one should believe
and then one would be able
dialogically
to prove faith
However, only
a necessity of thought.
to be
composed writing
"
upon
first
in the
Cur deus homo"
has he comprised the whole of the Christian religion
under one head and treated cally.
which
After
it
uniformly and
a very remarkable
logi-
introduction, in
Through
as a God of his especially r L J the old idea about redemption Honor.
satisfaction of the lawful claims of the devil is reflected,
he lays down the principle that the creature,
endowed with reason, has through of the
him
honor due
that
which
ent subjection. since freedom
to
this
him
sin robbed
God
in no longer rendering to
honor demands, namely, obedi-
Since
God cannot lose his honor, and
from punishment would besides bring
about a general disorder in the kingdom of God, either restitution (satisfactio)
Only thing possible.
The
,
or punishment
latter
indeed
in
is
the
itself
Restitution or Punish-
ment,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
430
would be
suitable, but since
could result only in
it
destruction and thus in the ruin of one of the most
God
precious works of
the honor of
God
(the rationabilis creatura),
does not permit
Therefore the
it.
satisfactio alone remains, which must be a restitution
Man, however,
as well as the price of punishment. Guilt of Sin
cannot render
Infinite.
to
it
he could give
for everything that
;
God, he would be compelled from duty to give to
him; moreover the guilt of sin
is infinitely great,
since already the slightest disobedience results in
nondum
endless sin (" sit "
God-Man Alone Sufficient.
considerasti quanti ponderis
How
peccatum").
totum quod deo
then
abstulit", "
alone
able to do, for only
is
quod majus
suo,
sonality is required
his
own
free
for that alone
he
bring
not in
;
But in
rendered
("
dare deo,
.
It
the sinless one, is
se
of
it
Infinite
The acceptio mortis good
God
(!),
While the least
has an infinite negative value, the
life
Good to God!
to
homo magis
morti tradit ad honorem
illius"), indeed its value is infinite.
Acceptio Mortis
bound
this sacrifice full satisfaction is
quam cum
free surrender
who of God his
natures and
nullatenus seipsum potest
injury of this
"de
must be his life, duty bound to sacrifice to
God everything else he also, to give up.
offer
Therefore a per-
can and does offer to
(sinlessness)
is
God can
it.
who has two
ivill
Divine-human life
This the God-
quam omne quod praeter deum
est
man must
and the
est",
restore
ut sicut deusper ilium
perdidit, ita per ilium recuperet"'?
man
man
shall
has an infinite positive value. of such a
which
God-man is an infinite
far exceeds his loss through
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF sin.
Christ has done
all this
"
can have resulted only
SIN, ETC.
431
his voluntary death
;
honorem
in
another purpose cannot be discovered.
dei",
for
For us
this
^
The
hitherto crush- dSS} 8 T1 d ing guilt of sin has been removed, (2) can take Resui°t!
death has a three-fold result
(1)
:
We
example of
to ourselves heartily the
death, and,
God, in acknowledging the rendering
(3)
of the satisfactio as a
man, gives us the
meritum
benefit of this
also of the
of this benefit are
This
we
a
is
Only by reason
become imitators of
able to
turn
last
God-
meritum, since he
can indeed give nothing to Christ.
Christ.
this voluntary
genial attempt of
Anselm's to transmit into the hearts of men the
power of the dramatic scheme suffers
;
but he
from a want of clearness which then prevailed
in the practice of
penance.
factio and meritum the
of redemption
In themselves satis-
are irreconcilable, for one and viewS?
same action can be only the one or the other
Merit.
(the
was no occasion for an action greater than was obligatory) But from the practice of penance one was accustomed to see " merits" in actions latter, if
there
.
in excess of duty, sation.
even
if
they served as compen-
Thus did Anselm
also jolaced the satis-
factio Christi under the point of view of merit,
which continues, even transaction, to pacify
could do this so
much
after the conclusion of the real
and appease God.
Anselm
the easier, since he considered
the service of Christ far greater than the weight of sin.
But he joined
though
leather
satisfac-
to the
thought of meritum,
by intimation, the subjective
effect of
as
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
432
the action
;
in the
framing of the conception
of sat-
he did not find a point where he could pass Nevertheless, he ended over to the "subjective". with the strong consciousness of having reasonably proved "per unius quaestionis solutionem quicquid is/ actio
in novo veterique testamento continetur". Abelard [gnored Ansel id's Satisfaction
Theory.
Anselm's satisfaction theory in subsequent times was accepted only with modifications. Abelard made no use of
it,
but went back, whenever he treated of
redemption through Christ (Comm. on Romans), to the
New
Testament and patristic tradition, bringing
prominence the important thought that we must
into
be led back to necessary). elect
God
(no
change in God's attitude
is
Primarily he refers redemption to the
and therefore teaches that the death of the God-
man must
be conceived only as an act of love, which
inflames our cold hearts
;
however he
also gives the
matter the turn, that the merit of Christ as head
of the community benefits
however
is
members;
its
no aggregation of certain good deeds, but
the fulness of the love of
God dwelling
Christ's merit is the merit of his love
tinues in constant intercession
personal Claims of the Devil.
t'h e
this merit
communion with
devil on us
>
;
in Christ.
which con-
the atonement
Christ.
is
the
Of the claims
of
Abelard would also recognize none,
and, together with the idea of the necessity of a
bloody sacrifice to appease God, he repudiated the idea of the logical necessity of the death
The righteousness of the idea ishment remained hidden
to
on the
cross.
of the suffering of pun-
him as
well as to Anselm.
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
433
SIN, ETC.
Bernard's thoughts concerning the atonement lag
behind those for Abelard
still
;
he knew
how
to ex-
Bernard Less Advanced.
more edify ingly than the
press his love for Christ
The conception of the merit of Christ (according to Anselm) became in after-times the deWhenever men meditated about the cisive one. satisfaction the strict categories of Anselm were latter.
loosened at
many
Indeed even in the
points.
pline of penance all necessity
uncertain
disci-
and "quantity" was
Moreover the Lombard contented himself
!
with recounting
all
the possible views in which, ac-
cording to tradition, one can look at the death of Christ, even that of the purchasing of
the devil,
together with the deception, and of the value of pun-
ishment, but not of the doctrine of satisfaction, be-
cause
it
has no tradition in
its favor.
At
the bottom,
however, he was a follower of Abelard (merit, awak-
ening of reciprocal love)
.
After him the haggling
and bargaining began about the value of sin and the value of the merit of Christ.
CHAPTER
VIII.
HISTORY OF DOGMA IN THE TIME OF THE MEN-
DICANT ORDERS TILL THE BEGINNING OF THE 16TH CENTURY.
The
conditions under which
during this period made
and more 28
placed
as a system of lata
more
—for which reason also the Reformabefore the old dogma — but caused more
stable
tion halted
it
dogma was
Peter
Lombard Recounts All Theories.
.
:
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
434
dissolution, since it
no longer
satisfied the individual piety, or held its
ground in
and more an inner the presence of the
1.
On
new knowledge. the History of Piety.
Hase, Franciskus, 1856. Müller, Anfänge des MinoritenMüller, die WalThode, Franciskus, 1885. 1885. In addition the works on the Joachimites, denser, 1886. Spiritualists, German Mystics (Preger) Unitas Fratres, Husordens,
,
and heretics of the Middle Ages. Döllinger, Beitr. z. Sectengesch. d. MA., 1890. Archiv, f. Litt. u. K. -Gesch. des M. A. 1 ff (especially the works of Denifle) sites
The Bernardine piety
st.
Francis Humility, Love, Obedience.
of
immersing oneself en-
tirely in the sufferings of Christ St.
"
was developed by
Francis into a piety of the imitation of Christ in
humilitate, caritate, obediential.
Humilitas
is
complete poverty, and in the form in which he represented
it
by his
life
and joined
it
with an ex-
ceeding love for Christ, Francis held before
men an
inexhaustibly rich and high ideal of Christianity, capable of the most widely different individual phases,
and breaking Classical
Expression Of Catholic Piety.
it
its
way
through, because first in
did Catholic piety receive
sion.
its classical expres-
Francis was at the same time animated by a
truly apostolic missionary spirit
and a most fervent
men's hearts and to serve ChristianHis preaching was aimed at the indi-
zeal to enkindle ity in love.
vidual soul and at the restoration of apostolic life. In wider circles it was to work as a thrilling peniA
Call to
Repentance.
tential sermon, and with this in ferred believers to the Church,
view Francis
whose most
re-
faithful
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
435
son he was, although her bishops and priests did not
This contradiction he overlooked,
serve, but ruled.
who had
but others
sians, humiliates),
preceded
and in
him did not (Walden-
their endeavor to restore
apostolic life they suspected the ruling
withdrew from
The mendicant
it.
Church and
orders have the
Mendicant
merit of having kept a great stream of awakened and active Christian life within the boundaries of the
Church side,
not a
;
of its waters already flowed out-
little
anew
took a hostile direction, stirred up
saw
apocalyptical thoughts and
in the
the old
Church the
great babel, reserving the approaching judgment at
A
one time for God, at another for the emperor. small part of the Franciscans
made common
cause
They spread over Italy, France, and J x J Germany as far as Bohemia and Brandenburg, fostering here and there confused heretical ideas, sharpening however as a rule only the consciences, awakening religious unrest or independence in the with them.
'
form of individual,
'
ascetic religiousness,
and
relax-
A
ing or combating the authority of the Church. lay Christianity developed itself tuithin the side of the Church, in religious independence
ceticism
is
at last
blessedness,
it
its
sacraments.
tie all "heretics",
to the
but since as-
always aimless and can create no
evangelical ideal of
bound
;
stands in need of the Church, of
authority and of
very firm
and by
which the trend toward
became strong
life
who
By
Awaken Religious unrest,
its
a secret but
write the ascetic-
upon their standards, remain
Church from whose oppression,
rule
La y c.nrisDevel °Ped
-
OUTLINES OP THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
436 e «sects" Not
Enduring.
From
an(* worldliness they wish to escape.
the sects
o £ Bibii c i s t S) Apocalyptics, Waldensians and Hus-
They were truly "heretical", for they still belonged to the Church from which thejr wished to escape. The numerous pious brotherhoods, which grew up and remained sites
no lasting result was gained.
(although with
Church, had
many
sighs) within the pale of the
enough
elasticity
still
"poverty" and evangelical
life,
to
make room
and
mendicant orders into membership.
for
to receive the
She soon en-
ervated them and they became her best supports.
To the
individual piety of the laity, firmly chained to
the confessional, sacraments, priest and pope, a sub-
was accorded in the Church of the Thus the mediseval Church wearily fought
ordinate existence priests. its
way through
whatever
make
the 14th and 15th centuries.
sacrifices
the minorites were
to the hierarchy, they in
For
forced
to
a manner indemnified
themselves by the unheard-of energy with which
they served the purposes of the universal Church Eitti^in-
by wallenMendi-
through the
The universal, historical impormovements caused by the Waldensians
laity.
tance of the
and mendicant orders cannot be reckoned
in
new
cants.
doctrines tirely
and
institutions,
although these were not en-
wanting, but consists in the religious awaken-
ing and in an unrest leading to a religious individualism, which they caused.
mendicant
orders
and
the
In so far as the
"ante-Reformation"
movements induced the individual
to meditate
the truths of salvation, they were the
first
upon
advance
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF toward the Reformation.
SIN, ETC.
Bat the more
religion
carried into the circles of the third rank laity in general, the
437
and
was
of the
was the watchfulness
greater
touching and the J of the old dogma, ö the inviolability ö great majority of the laity indeed desired to respect '
dogma
in the
oid
Dogma
Inviolable.
their firm standpoint amidst the un-
certainty concerning the standard of the practical
problems and concerning the correct state of the empirical
To
Church.
must
enter into particulars, especial attention
be paid, for the purpose of the history of dogma, to
Me
c nt
g[*![
J
W iYhMys-
the union of the mendicant orders with mysticism
during this inner religious awakening. is
Mysticism
a conscious, reflecting, Catholic piety, which de-
sires to
tion
grow by
this very reflection
Catholicism
:
knew only
and contempla-
this or the fides impli-
The model originated from a combination of Augustine and the Areopagite, enlivened by the cita.
Mysticism has many c Jgj^
Bernardine devotion to Christ.
forms; but national, or confessional the difference
among them
slight.
is
As
its
starting-point his-
aim pantheistic (nonwhich it holds more or
torically is pantheistic, so is its
cosmical). less
In the degree in
strongly to the historical Christ and the rules of
the Church, this light
;
aim comes more
or less clearly to
but even in the most churchly stamp of mys-
ticism the dominating thought ing,
which points beyond the
and the
soul,
the soul and
Augustine and Areop-
is
never wholly want-
historical Christ its
:
God
God; Christ the
brother; the birth of Christ in every believer (the
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
438
now
latter conceived Mysticism Says Religion
is
Life
and Love.
fantastically,
Mysticism taught that religion
from all
this lofty idea
dogma
to the
to remodel the life,
its
now
is life
spiritually).
and
love,
and
undertook to throw light upon
it
very depths of the trinity, and even
same
;
created individual religious
it
and the mystics of the mendicant orders were
But because
greatest virtuosos.
nize the rock of faith,
was
it
it
did not recog-
able only to give direc-
God)
tions for a progressus infinitus (to
,
but did
not allow the steadfast feeling of a safe possession to thrive.
The admonitions
Soul Must Return to
God by
circle,
Purification, Illu-
mination
to
of
mysticism move within the
that the soul, alienated from God,
must return
God by purification, illumination and substan-
and Union.
tial
union;
it
must be "developed", "cultivated"
and "highly-refined".
With
the rich and certain
intuition of past experience, the mystics talked of a
turning in upon the soul, of the contemplation of the
work humility, with which the outer world as the
stages
many
of
soul
God, of poverty and
must
mystics understood
accord.
how
the whole ecclesiastical apparatus of
In
all
draw upon the means of
to
salvation (sacraments, sacramental influences); for,
as with the Neo-Platonists, so also with the mystics, the most inner spiritual piety did not stand opposed
worship of idols
The Sen-
to the
suous is Sign and Pledge of
rests the sheen of a holy tradition, is the sign
the Eternal.
pledge of the eternal.
:
The sensuous, upon which
The penance sacrament
and es-
pecially played, as a rule, a great role in the " purification".
In the "illumination" the Bernardine
—
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
By
contemplations are very prominent.
439
the side of
highly doubtful directions regarding the imitation of Christ, there are also found evangelical thoughts faithful confidence in Christ.
Besides, there is em-
here the entire immersing in love, from
phasized
which was developed a great increase in
which
Renaissance and Reformation
have been prepared for. In the " substanr r union" there finally appeared the metaphysical
seem tial
latter the
to
thoughts (God as the
God
of inner life,
all,
Pantheistic
Element.
the individual as nothing
the "abysmal substance", the "peaceful pas-
Even
sivity", etc.).
the normal dogmatist
Thomas
here countenanced pantheistic ideas, which gave the
impulse to
"
extravagant" piety.
In recent times
it
has been shown by J Denifle that Master Eckhart, the '
great mystic
who was
entirely dependent
Master Eckhart.
censured by the Church, was
upon Thomas.
But however dan-
gerous these speculations have been
was nevertheless the highest
—their intention
for
freedom (see example the " German theology") which, by en-
tire
withdrawal from the world, should be attained
spiritual ,
through the feeling of the Supernatural. sense especially the
German mystics
In this
since Eckhart
While the Romance peoples above all ge^ arouse violent emotions by penitential ser-
have wrought. tried to
mons, they undertook the positive task of bringing the highest ideas of the piety of the times into the
popular language and within the ranks of the laity (Tauler,
Seuse, etc.),
discipline, the
mind
and
at
to render, through self-
home
in the world of love.
1
^
440 0f
Vl
Kod safedHere.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
They taught
(following
Thomas) that the soul can
even here upon earth so receive
God within
as to enjoy in the fullest sense
the vision of his
Being and dwell in heaven
itself.
itself
Indeed the idea
toward the
of full surrender to the Divine verged
other thought, that the soul bears the Divine within itself
and
able to develop
is
it
as spiritual freedom
and superiority beyond everything existing and conceivable.
The
directions for
intellectually precise, at others Th
Stic
aSd Mysticism.
it
are sometimes
more
more
The
quietistic.
Thomistic mysticism possesses the Augustinian assurance of gaining freedom through knowledge and of rising to this
God; the
assurance, and
Scotistic it
no longer possessed
sought the highest moods
through disciplining the will: Union of ivill tvith God, resignation, tranquillity. Herein indeed lay
a progress in the recognition of evangelical piety, which was full of import for the Reformation but ;
even the nominalists (Scotists) had definite
lost
a clear and
apprehension of the Divine will.
The way
seemed open here for the question concerning the certitudo salutis, but this remained unanswered so
long as the conception of
God was not pushed beyond
the line of the arbitrary Will.
MjSSi Influential.
Tlie importance of mysticism, especially of
mysticism,
is
German
not to be underrated even in the direc-
tion of the positive
brotherly love.
equipment of asceticism as active,
The
old
monkish instructions were
enlivened by the energetic admonition to the service of one's neighbor.
The simple
relation of
man
to
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
441
man, made sacred by the Christian commandment of love and by the peace of God, is noticeable in all the persistent organizations and castes of the Middle
Ages, and was preparing to burst them. the beginning of a
new
era can be perceived
monks became more active, more worldly in truth
alive
run wild therein
and
active.
Here :
also
The
—frequently
—and the laity became more
In the free unions, half secular,
half ecclesiastical, the pulse of a life of piety throbbed.
The
old religious orders
were in part kept alive sim-
ply artificially and lost their authority.
Among
the
Anglo-Saxons and Czechs, hitherto oppressed and kept in poverty by foreign nations, the allied itself
it
never brought about
and divided Germany a national reform
movement.
Everything socially revolutionary or
anti-hierarchical remained isolated,
the world-dominating in
wiciif and
This had a most energizing
upon Germany, but
in patient
piety
with a politico-national program (Wiclif
and Huss movements). effect
new
Avignon and when
and even when
Church had prostituted
itself
at the reform councils the cry of
11 *""
^fJJ
Avlgm,^
Romance nations for reform and insurance against the shameless financial dominance of the curia had become loud, the German peoples, with few exceptions, still kept their patience. An immense revolution, again and again retarded, was prepared during the
the 15th century, but the political
and
seldom attacked
it
appeared to threaten merely
ecclesiastical
the
old
institutions.
Piety
dogma, which through
nominalism had become wholly a sacred
relic.
It
^^^ck Dogma,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
442
turned,
it is
true, against the
new
doctrines deduced
from vicious Church practices; but as for itself it desired to be nothing else than the old ecclesiastical piety,
and indeed
it
was nothing
century mysticism clarified Thomas
ä
"
Eempis.
Imitation of Christ" by
purest expression strictest sense is
;
else.
In the 15th
Germany.
The
Thomas a Kempis
is its
itself in
but anything like reform in the
not proclaimed in the
The reformation part
little
book.
consists only in its individual-
ism and in the power with which
it
addresses
itself
to every soul.
2.
On
the History of Ecclesiastical Laiv.
The
Doctrine of the Church. In the time from Gratian to Innocent III. the papal
code of Gratian Basal,
The whole
system secured the supremacy. legislation
from 1159
to 1320 rests
decretal
upon the code
of
Gratian, and scholastic theology became subject to it.
Citations from the
Church
fathers, in great part,
were transmitted by the law-books.
Episcopus Universaiis.
The Church, which in dogmatics should ever be the communion of believers (of the predestined), was in truth a hierarchy, the pope was the episcopus universalis.
Withm
ecclesiastical limits the
German kings
mitted this development, and are responsible for
perit.
The leading thoughts in regard to the Church, which were only later finally established, were the mSISbX
followin g sential to
:
CO The hierarchical organization is esthe Church, and the Christianity of the
,;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF laity is in
Church functions
dictional
;
,
who
alone can perform
The sacramental and juris- 5u iSäts
(2)
powers of the priests are independent of
their personal worthiness
;
(3)
communion endowed with a
The Church
is
namely spiritualis
twofold potestas,
Through both
end of the world,
is
it,
which
shall
;
et
it
has a
tempor-
endure to the
Twofold
church
-
superior to and placed above the
Therefore
perishable states.
a visible
constitution originating
with Christ (and as such corpus Christi)
alts.
443
every respect bound to the intermediation
of the priests (rite ordinati)
the
SIN, ETC.
all states
and
all indi-
must be obedient to it (de necessitate salueven over heretics and heathens the power of
viduals tis);
the (4)
Church extends
(final
decision
by Boniface VIII.)
In the pope, the representative of Christ and
w^efis
Two
successor of Peter, a strictly monarchical constitution is
swords.
Whatever is valid of the valid of him the remaining
given to the Church.
hierarchy
above
is
all
;
members of the hierarchy are appointed only " in partem sollicitudinis" He is the episcopus universalis; to him therefore belong the two swords; .
and since the Christian can attain unto tion only within
Church all
is
Church, since however the
the hierarchy and the hierarchy the pope,
the world
to the
the
pope
must de necessitate salutis be subject
(bull "
falsifications,
unam
sanctam")
which arose
.
maxims were dated back
antiquity,
yet were
By
a chain of
especially within the re-
awakened polemics against the Greeks these
sanctifica-
strictly
(13th century)
into ecclesiastical
formulated
(Thomas
De cÄais.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
444
Aquinas) only after they had long been admitted in
The new law followed the new custom, which was strengthened by the mendicant orders; for the latter, thoroughly unsettled by the special practice.
provincial
cratic,
and
local
aristo-
powers completed the
The doctrine
victory of the papal autocracy. papal in-
and the
which they received,
privileges
of
was the necessary result of this This also was formulated by Thomas,
papal infallibility
development.
but not as yet carried through
;
for
on this
last point
both the historical and the provincial ecclesiastical conscience reacted (the university of Paris
buke
John XXII. as an
of
;
the re-
About 1300 the
heretic).
extravagant exaltation of the papacy in literature reached
its
height (Augustinus Triumphus, Alvarus
Pelagius), but after about 13 30
it
grew weak,
strong again only after 120 years
to
grow
(Torquemada).
In the interval the latest development of the papacy violently
was combated
Combated.
violently, but not successfully, J J ' first in
g
the ghibelline literature, to
minorite (Occam)
was
which
allied, later
for a time the
from the stand-
point of the supremacy of the councils. porarily
did
was Munich the
German
Only tem-
seat of the opposition
authors take part in
it.
The
and
real land
was France, its king and bishops, yes French nation. The latter alone preserved the
of opposition
the r
sSon
C
freedom stained at the councils (pragmatic sanction at Bourges, 1430)
;
but in the concordat of 1517
the king also sacrificed after the
it
to share
with the pope,
example of other princes, the established
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF Church
of the
By
country.
SIN, ETC.
445
about 1500 the old
tyranny had been re-established almost everywhere.
The Lateran
council, at the beginning of the 16th
century, defied the wishes of the nations as though
had been sessions
there never
The new development up
to the
at Constance
and Bale.
of the idea of the Church,
middle of the 13th century, was brought
about not by theology but by jurisprudence.
y
juSspru-
This
is
explained,
(1)
By
at
Rome,
By
the fact that the theologians, when-
(2)
^eaTnfl
the lack of interest in theology
ever they meditated about the Church, always re-
peated the dissertations of Augustine concerning the
Church as societas fidelium {numerus electorum), for which reason also the later " heretical" opinions concerning the Church are found in the great scholastics.
Only
after the
middle of the 13th century did
theology take an interest in the hierarchial, papal
Hugo °
of St.
The controversy with the Greeks,
espe-
Church idea Victor).
of the J-jurists (forerunner v
the council of Lyons,
cially after
the opportunity.
:
Hugo
St.
Victor.
1274, furnished
The importance of Thomas con-
sists in the fact that he first
developed strictly
papal conception of the Church ivithin dogmatics^ but at the same time united it artfidlij ivith the Augustinian idea from ivhich he started. Thomas adheres to it that the Church is the number j^SELt of the elect but he shows that the Church is author- Augustine, the
;
ity in doctrinal law,
and as a
institution is the exclusive
priestly sacramental
organ through which the
head of the Church procures members.
Thus he was
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
446
able to join the
new to
Nevertheless
the old.
Reformation and beyond
it
till
the
the whole hierarchical
and papal theory obtained no sure position in dogmatics
;
it
remained
ized in practice
Roman
decretal right,
was
util-
and ruled over the hearts of men
through the doctrine of the sacraments.
All that
could be expected in the interest of the hierarchy
from a formulation of the Church idea had indeed already been acquired as a secure possession. °^oma°n Fu5ie.
Because
it
was an
opposition from the centre every
opposition against the
Roman
which became clamorous
idea of the Church
in the latter half of the
Ages remained ineffectual. The significance of faith to the Church idea no one clearly recognized, and the final trend of the whole religious Middle
system toward the visio et fruitio dei no one corr C;
common round of
D
D
rs
and op ponents.
The common ° ground of the defenders of the hierarchical Church idea and their opponents was the following: (1) The Church is the communion of
rected.
those
who
shall attain
unto the vision of God, of
knows whether he belongs to this communion, he must make diligent use of the means of salvation of the Church; (3) These means of salvation, the sacraments, are be-
the predestined; (2) Since no one
stowed upon the empirical Church and attached to
They have a double purpose, first, to prepare for the life beyond by incorporation in the body of Christ, and then, since they are powers of the priests
faith
and
vivere",
;
(4)
love, to
i.e.
produce here on earth the
to cause the fulfilment of the
"
bene
law of
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF Christ; of the
ence)
(5)
SIN, ETC.
Since even upon the earth the fulfilment
law of Christ
(in poverty,
humility and obedi-
the highest duty, therefore the temporal
is
also the state, is subordinate to this also to the sacraments
Church.
Upon
this
papists
life,
aim and thus
and in every sense
common ground moved
controversies regarding the
The
447
to the all
the
Church and her reform.
drew the further consequences, that the
Hierarchy Necessary-
hierarchical order, invested with the administration of the sacraments
Church
and with the authority
to subordinate to itself the temporal
de necessitate salutis; duty of really
still
fulfilling the
to
va " tfo n
of the
life,
was
they permitted the moral
law of Christ entirely
to
recede behind the mechanically and hierarchically carried out administration of the sacraments, where.
by they degraded the Church idea, as the number of the predestined (religious) and as the
communion of those
living according to the law of Christ (moral) to a ,
phrase, of the
and sought the guarantee
Church in the
mere
for the legitimacy
strictest conception of the ob-
jective system culminating in the pope, endan-
gering however in one point
themselves the finished building
—the
re-ordinations.
The opponents,
however, hit upon "heretical" ideas, either,
(1)
By
contending against the hierarchical order, since be-
yond the bishop's office the same "by
is
neither supported
the Scriptures, nor by tradition, or,
(2)
By
allow-
ing the religious and moral idea contained in the
thought of predestination and in the conception of the
Church as the communion
of imitators of Christ,
1
^elsof °PP° nents
-
1
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
48
to supersede the idea of the empirical
Church as an
sacraments and of law, and
institution of
By
(3)
measuring, therefore, the priests and with them the
Church authorities by the law of God (in a Donatistic way), before they conceded to them the right to administer the keys, "to loose and to bind". all so-called
opposition of
and men had
"
prse-reformatory" sects
From them
root in these theses.
its
The
one could develop the seemingly most radical anti-
and has developed them
theses to the ruling Church, (devil's
Church, babel, anti-Christ,
must not blind us
to the fact that the
upon common ground.
Real l'rocrcss.
etc.)
Men
;
yet this
opponents stood
moral characteristics of the Church above the juristic and " obcertainly this was a blessed progress but jective" placed the
—
—
the fundamental ideas (Church as sacramental institution, necessity of priesthood, fruitio del as aim,
lack of esteem for civil
under the
title
life)
remained the same, and
the societas fidelium
of
only a legalistic moral Church idea
The Church
is
the
sum
was
total of those
in truth
established.
who
carry out
the apostolic life according to the law of Christ.
wSSfto Faith was considered only as one characteristic v Im under the conception of the law, and in the place of T,V '
the
commandments
of the priests stepped the Fran-
ciscan rule, or a Biblicism, against tic or
whose apocalyp-
wild excrescences one had to take refuge in
dogma and in ecclesiastical tradition. Neither a communion of believers, nor an invisible Church,
the old
as is falsely believed, did the Reformers have in
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF view, but their object
was
to
SIX. ETC.
449
improve the old Church
and sacraments by dissolving her hierarchic monarchical constitution, by abolishing her assumed of priests
political
powers and by carefully sifting her
priests
according to the standard of the law of Christ, or of the
Bible.
On
these conditions she
was
teemed by the Reformers as the
visible, holy
through which God
his
realizes
They did not recognize
also
es-
Church,
predestinations.
that the carrying out of this
was an impossibility and that this reformed Church must again become hierarchical. The Waldensians neither contested the Catholic Donatistic thesis
waiden-
worship, nor the sacraments and hierarchial constitution in themselves, but considered that the Catholic
ecclesiastics
it
a deadly sin
should exercise the
rights of successors of the apostles, without taking
upon themselves the apostolic
life,
and they protested
against the extensive governing power of the pope
and the bishops.
The Joachimites and a
part of the x
minorites united the apocalyptic with the legal
ment.
Here
also
it
was not the question
ele-
Joachimites and -
Imorites
-
of a sacra-
mental institution and priesthood, but only of the right of hierarchical divisions of rank, of the Divine investiture of the pope
and
of the ecclesiastical gov-
erning power, which was denied to the Church under the authority of the Franciscan theory.
The hand-
ing over of the whole legal sphere to the state was .
_
with
manv merelv an
for this sphere.
expression of their contempt 1 1
The professors of Paris and
-
their
itional-liberal coterie attacked the pseudo-Isidorian 29
professors at Paris
Attack Pseudo-Isi-
Q^'jJSau 01>
ment
;:
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
150
and Gregorian development of the papacy and of the constitution at the root, and yet they only intended primarily to paralyze the papal finance system and
Church through an
to heal the injury to the
palianism,
what the Church a Roman power, must be desigWiclif and Huss the latter a
which, in view
was
already
as
episco-
of
—
nated utopian.
powerful agitator in the spirit of Wiclif but without theological independence
— represent
the ripest
phase of the reform movements of the Middle Ages Wi
and
Huss
They showed
(1)
and sacramental
that the cultus
practices everywhere
were hampered and vitiated
by human tenets (indulgences, confessions, absolute pardoning power of the
ium
y
saints-,
priests,
manducatio
infidel-
image-, relic-worship, special masses,
sacramentals, Wiclif also against transubstantiation)
they demanded plainness, intelligibleness (language of the country)
and
demanded a reform larized
spirituality of
worship
of the hierarchy
mendicant orders
;
these
all,
and
(2)
;
They
of the secu-
the pope at the
head, must return to an apostolic ministry; the pope is
only the
tative;
all
first
servant of Christ, not his represen-
governing must cease;
Thomas, brought destination
ing to
it
to the front the
Church
idea, yet
while
(3)
They, like
Augustinian pre-
Thomas
in join-
the empirical idea disposes of everything
moral only through the
medium
of the sacraments,
they, without robbing the sacraments of their im-
portance, raised to the central place the
idea that
the empirical Church
in
must be the kingdom
which
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF the latu of Christ governs.
law of Christ
SIN, ETC.
They taught
451
that the
I
°f <5JJ. is
the true nota ecclesiae; therefore in SlesSe*
is
accordance with this fundamental principle the right also of the priesthood
the sacraments
and the manner of administering
must be determined.
Wiclif thereby
contested the independent right of the clergy to be representatives of the
the
means
observing
of grace of the
Church and administrators
and made
it
dependent upon the
lex Christi.
passed over by Wiclif and Huss. their
of
"Faith" was also ^mpha^ In turning with all
might against the hierarchy and against the
objective, legal
idea of the
Church system, they
placed the legal Church idea in opposition to the judicial.
The "fides caritate formata", that
is,
the observance of the law, alone gives legitimacy to the
Thus much
Church.
they did
for the
wardness of the contemplation of the Church hierarchical conception of the position to their
perverted one:
Church had
still
in-
—the
in op-
own an element of truth, though a That God builds his Church upon
earth by his grace in the midst of sin, and that holi-
ness in a religious sense
is
no mark that can be
recognized by a legal standard (on the Church idea of
Thomas and d. Ztschr,
f,
the Prae-Reformers, see Gottschick
KGesch. Bd. VIII),
i.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
452
3.
On
the History of Ecclesiastical Science.
Histories of philosophy by Erdmann, Überweg-Heinze, Werner, "Windelband, Stöckl, Baur, Vorles üb. DG. 2. Bd. ff. Ritschi, Fides 1881 3 Bde, MA. späteren d. Scholastik implicita, 1890.
causes of Revival of science.
revival of science after the beginning ° ° of
great The ö ^he
^3^
was occasioned, (1) By the mighty Church and the papacy under Inno-
cen tury
triumph of the cent III.,
(2)
Francis, (3)
By
the exaltation of piety since St.
By the enlargement and enrichment of the
general culture and by the discovery of the genuine Aristotle (contact with the Orient; transmission of
Greek philosophy through Arabs and Jews; the supernaturalistic Avicenna,
Averrhoes,
f
onfere and Aristotle.
Maimonides'
1198;
upon
influence
The two new great powers, ^e mendicant orders and Aristotle, were obliged to
Thomas and
C
1037, the pantheistic
f
others).
secure their place in science by fighting for latter conquered, since it
was
plain that he
it
had
;
the ren-
dered the best service in opposition to an eccentric
which leads
realism,
now
realism
versal
"
of
Church
in re", but
v sc?e nce.
The new P lain
a11
A
moderated
developed, which recognized the uni-
ing to need, either Authority
to pantheism.
knew how
" ante", or
science like
to
add them accord-
"post rem".
the older sought to °
ex-
God but
this
tnin g s through reference to
;
meant the same as the submission of all knowledge to the authority of the Church. In a reference
certain sense
men were more
fettered in the 13th
DEVELOPMENT OE DOCTRINE OF century than formerly
for not only the old
;
453
SIN, ETC.
dogma
(articulifidei), but the whole territory of ecclesiastical activity
was considered absolute
authority,
and
the pre-supposition that every authority in single
questions
now
weight with the ratio was
of equal
is
The theologians
expressed.
first fully
mendicant orders
of the
justified " scientifically" the
whole
constitution of the Church, with its latest institutions "
and
doctrines,
upon the same plane with the
Anselm had
credo" and the " intelligo".
striven to
upon the foundation
erect a rational structure
Anselm's Aim.
of
authoritative revelation; with the later theologians
the jumbling of authorities in a most unconcerned
manner was a
Although they adhered
principle.
the theory that theology
which culminates
speculative
science
was
Church that they continually
to the speculative structure the tenets of her
authority. exist
a
in the visio dei, yet so great
their confidence in the
added
is
to
Hence originated the theory
a natural and a revealed theology;
that there
they
still
conceived these as being in closest harmony, the one as the supplement
and complement of the other
they were confident that the whole before the bar
of reason.
material to be mastered
was
;
and
tenable even
The abundance
was unbounded,
of the
as well in
regard to revelation (the whole Bible, the doctrine
and practice
of the Church), as in regard to reason
(Aristotle).
Nevertheless they advanced from the
"
Sentences" to a system
the
Church retains
in
("
life,
summa")
:
That which
the dominion over the
Natural
and Theology,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
454 Theology (
'<>i ii
pre11
'"i-'n'out
wor ld, is also to be reflected in its theology. The new dogmatism was the dialectic-systematical treatment of ecclesiastical dogma and of the acts of the Church, for the purpose of developing the same into a single system comprehending everything in the highest sense worthy of knowledge, and of proving it,
and then of rendering serviceable to the Church all the forces of the mind and the whole knowledge of the
To
world.
this purpose,
however, was the other sub-
God and rejoicing in his But both purposes now coincided Knowl-
jective one united of rising to
SXurc?
presence.
Knowiedge
edge of the Church doctrines for
:
Church
the
is
the
knowledge
is
present
of
God,
Therein
Christ.
were these scholastics not servile workers for the
Church
— on
the contrary
:
Consciously they sought
knowledge only for the benefit of their
souls, yet
The strucbut their work in-
they breathed only within the Church. ture
which they raised
collapsed,
deed was a progress in the history of science. sununa
of
What has been
said above, has reference to the
prse-Scotistic scholasticism,
His
"
summa"
that religion lative
is
above
characterized,
and theology are
(not practical)
(1)
all
By
to
Thomas.
the conviction
essentially of a specu-
nature,
that therefore they
must be acquired by thinking, and that
finally
no
contradiction can arise between reason and revelation; (2)
By
a firm adherence to the Augustinian
doctrine of God, of (only
predestination,
sin
and grace
upon the conception of God did the Aristotelian
philosophy have an influence
;
the strict elevation of
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF Holy Scriptures
the
Thomas
SIN, ETC.
455
as the only safe revelation
from Augustine)
also accepted
;
(3)
By
a
deeply penetrating knowledge of Aristotle and by an extensive use of his philosophy, as far as Augustin-
ianism would permit;
(4)
By a
bold justification of
Church upon a genial
the highest claims of the
theory of the state and a wonderfully careful observation of the empirical tendencies of the papal sys-
tem
Church
of
and
state.
The
world-historical
Unites
importance of Thomas consists in his uniting of
Augustine and Aristotle.
As a
he
is
full of confidence
in
him
a speculative thinker,
still
pupil of Augustine
Aristotle.
and yet
are already found the germs of the destruction
of the absolute theology.
he
Thomas Augustine and
sought
validity;
to
For theology as a whole
maintain the impression of absolute
in detail arbitrary
and
relative ideas al-
ready took the place of the necessary, while he no longer deduced purely rationally the articuli fidei, like
Anselm.*
But the
strictly necessary
was
Inalso not in every Church sists upon
respect serviceable to the Church. *
The delineation of the
summa
She demanded
agrees with the fundamental idea of
The first part (119 quaest.) things from God; the second part, sec.
God: Through God to God.
treats of
God and
1st (114 quaest.) the issue of all of general morality; the second part, sec. 2d (189 quaest.) of special morality under the point of view of the return of the rational creature to God the third part, which Thomas was not able to finish, of Christ, the sacraments and eschatology. The proceeding in every separate question is by the method of contradiction. All reasons which speak against the correct In conception of the doctrine are given expression C difficultates ,r). ;
i
general the governing principle is that the whole system must be based upon the authority of revelation "utitur tarnen sacra doctrina etiam ratione humana, non quidem ad probandam fidem (quia per hoc tolleretur ;
merjtcm fidei), sed ad manifestandum aliqua alia, quae traduntur in hac doctrina. Cum enim gratia non tollat naturam, sed perficiat, oportet quod naturalis ratio subserviat fidei".
Blind Submission.
:
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
456
here also that the deal should be ä deux mains;
She wanted a theology which proved the speculative necessity of her system and one which taught
Thomas' theology alone could not
blind submission.
With
satisfy.
all its ecclesiastical
bent
it
could not
deny the fundamental thought, that God and the soul, the soul
and God are everything.
From
this
that "secondary-
Augustinian-Areopagite attitude
mysticism" will always be developed in which the individual endeavors to go his there
is
dence. Theoiogians
G
kep"
Tcfi
own way.
inward conviction, there It
was
of benefit to the
soon took another turn.
It
also indepen-
Church that theology
grew o
the "idea",
to tne "general",
is
Where
skeptical in regard o i.
which should be the
Under the continuous study of Aristotle causality became the principal idea in place of immanence. The scientific sense grew stronger; "substance".
details in their concrete expression
gained in interest
Will ruled the world, the will of God and the will of the individual, not
an unintelligible substance, or
a constructed universal
intellect.
Eeason recognized
the series of causalities
and ended
in the discernment
of
arbitrariness
and mere contingencies.
Duns
most penetrating thinker of the Middle Ages, marks this immense change but it was first
Scotus, the
;
consummated U ^f
ch°urS
since
Occam.
Tlie consequence of this
protest against the tenets,
change was not however the
Church doctrine with
its
absolute
nor the attempt to try these by the principles
upon which they were based, but the increasing
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
457
At her door was
the Church. authority J ° of
what
SIN, ETC.
laid
and auctoritas once had unitedly borne, not in an act of despair but as a self-evident ratio
Socinianism
act of obedience.
—post-Tridentine
direction indicated further
Li this
the
pursued the
Catholicism :
Submits to Authorit y
protested, Pro-
first
testantism examined into the foundations of doctrine
„ Reason
ivay, while
nom-
inalism began to rule, the ground ivas soon icon
for the
later
trinitarian development of doc-
trine.
Nominalism had great advantages: ©
It
-
see clearly
that religion
is
something
began o else
to
than
Nominal ism Had vintages"
knowledge and philosophy, while Thomas was wanting in clearness;
it
knew
the importance of the
concrete in opposition to the hollowness of the abstract (laying the foundation for a it
new
psychology)
recognized the will, laid stress upon this property
also in
God, strongly emphasized the personality of
God and thereby first put an end to the Neo-Platonic theosophy which mixed up God and the world; it grasped the positiveness of historical religion more
firmly,— but in
it
forfeited,
together with confidence
an absolute knowledge, also confidence in the
majesty of the moral law and thereby emptied the conception of
God and exposed him
to arbitrariness,
including in the "positive", to which the
Church with
of the religious
the
commands
its
whole apparatus
Church are
submitted,
—the commands
and moral law are
of the
it
arbitrary, but
absolute.
It estab-
lished in dogmatics the sovereign right of casuis-
üshed Right of casuistry.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
458 try,
already anticipated by the discipline of pen-
ance not only, but also by the dialectics of the
Thomists:
Everything in revelation depends upon
which
the Divine will lect is able to
own knowledge
plicita Sufficient,
therefore intel-
In so far however as
it
has
its
there exists a double truth, the re-
ligious
and the natural
and in
this
the faith.
;
prove at most only the " conveniens"
of things ordained.
Fides im-
arbitrary
is
;
to the
former one submits
very submission consists the merit of greater measure (not recoiling even In °
^ ^ie f r V olous) i
nominalism acknowledged the
ciency of the "fides implicita"; true,
an example
it
here found
Had
in the papal decretals.
cent IV. expressly taught that
it
was
suffi-
not Inno-
sufficient for
the laity to believe in a requiting God, as for the absurdity
res t to
Religion.
an(I authority truth.
submit to the Church doctrine?
now became
the stamp of religious
While freeing themselves from the load
speculative monstrosities sity of
Absurdity
thinking",
men
and the deceptive
of
" neces-
took upon themselves the
dreadful load of a faith the content of which they
themselves declared to be arbitrary and opaque, and
which they therefore were able
wear only as a
to
uniform. A
n"
Closely allied with this development
kmifm
St off
y
was
another,
the gradual casting off of Augustinianism and the
reinstatement of
by
Aristotle.
Roman
moralism,
The weight
of guilt
grace became relative magnitudes.
they learned that
man by
now
confirmed
and the power
From
of
Aristotle
his freedom stands inde-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
459
SIN, ETC.
pendent before God, and since they had cast Augustine's doctrine concerning the things", they
under
also,
cover
of
and
ethics
a universal religious
The
words,
his
among
Probauty
the most
The fundamental principles of and moral diplomacy were ap-
plied to objective religion ness.
last
became only probable, redemp-
tion itself through Christ was placed
uncertain categories.
and
Everything in
stripped off his doctrine of grace. religion
" first
off
holiness of
and
to subjective religious-
God was
extinguished
not entirely severe, not entirely holy.
:
He
is
Faith need
Holiness of
God
Dis-
counted
-
not be a full surrender, penance not perfect repentance, love not perfect love.
standard" (Aristotle)
wanting
is
Everywhere a
is sufficient
" certain
and whatever
is
supplied by the sacraments and by adher-
ence to the Church; for the religion of revelation
was given to make the way to heaven easy, and the Church alone is able to announce what " standard" and what accidental merits will is
satisfy
God.
This
the " Aristotelianism" or the " reasoning" of the
nominalistic
scholastics
which Luther hated and
which the Jesuits in the post-Tridentine times
fully
introduced into the Church.
At
the end of the Middle Ages, and even in the
14th century, this nominalism, which renders religion void, called forth great reactions, yet notwith-
standing
it
remained in vogue at the universities.
Not only the theologians contradicted
it
of the
Dominican order
again and again, but outside of the
order also an Augustinian reaction broke forth in
Reaction Against
No
1
^j
nal "
I 1
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
460
Bradwardiua, Wicliff, Huss, Wesel, Wessel and They stood up against Pelagianism, alothers.
though they allowed wide play to the sacraments, m the fides implicita and Church authority. A power-
P R?vWed
ful
against nominalism, which by
ally
formalistic
tury
made
its
hollow
dialectic principles in the 15th cen-
and itself
outright despicable,
was gained by
an Augustinian reaction in favor of Plato who at
was being brought to light again. A new spirit emanated from him and from the rediscovered It sought knowledge from the living, antiquit}
that time
7
:
and reached out toward those ideals which individual free and elevate
Through
world.
announced
itself
him above
common new spirit
the
violent disturbances the
and in the beginning
set the
it
seemed
threaten Christianity with paganism; yet those Nicholas of Kus, Erasmus.
to
who
represented the renaissance most brilliantly (Nichi
as
f
Kus, Erasmus and others) only wished to
do away with unspiritual ecclesiasticism and
its
empty science, but not really to jeopardize the Church and the dogma. The restored confidence in the recognizable unity of
all
things, the bold soaring of the
fantasy inspired by antiquity and the discovery of
new
alistic
science
exact science,
new
Nomindid not become by purification an but a new spirit moved among the
worlds, these founded the
science.
withered foliage of scholasticism, and gained confi-
dence and strength to extract the secrets from nature also, as well as from the vivid speculations of Plato which inspire the whole man, and from inter-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
461
But theology did not at first It was simply pushed aside. profit by it. The Christian humanists also were no theologians, but course with the living.
nJJjJ^sts y Aug^tin-
only learned patristic scholars with Platonic-Franciscan ideals, really
—at
had any longer any confidence in
cal doctrine, but
teaching,
new
4.
No
best only Augustinians.
one
ecclesiasti-
through a sense for the original
which the renaissance had awakened, a
theology was prepared.
The Reminting of Dogmatics into Scholastics. In the scholasticism of the 13th century ^ the Occi-
dental
Church obtained a homogeneous, systematic
representation of
were,
(1)
councils, of
its
The pre-suppositions
faith.
The Holy Scriptures and the dogmas of the (2) Augustinianism, (3) The development since the 9th century,
ecclesiasticism
philosophy.
Aristotelian hereafter is
still
Individual
(4)
bliss
in
The the
the finis theologiae, but in so far as
the sacraments, which serve this purpose, restore the
kingdom
of Christ
upon earth
also as a
(already since Augustine), a second
duced into theology
:
It is
but also ecclesiasticism.
power
aim was
of love intro-
not only food for the soul
But the
difference
be-
tween these two ideas has never been adjusted in Catholicism.
In them grace and merit are the two
centres of the parabola of the medisBval conception of Christianity.
Only the old articuli ficlei were dogmas
in a strict
Presuppoof
sitions as * tfcism
'
.
i
'.;-;iiftv
of
hi.
7:
pi::*
;
-
5
'
:
:'-
v
-
e
m -
'
:
-
£
-
:
-
i_7--
"•'J!'
:
..._
-•
i
1
orMRNT OK DOCTHINK
i>r\ ii
Vn olm)
proof of
ontological
from pantheism was
\ ii-.il
Gk)d
actus I«
pn
the w<
oan
'I
i
I
Qod
of
w
'I
•
.ill
ol
'\< m ifi
|
ill
in
'ii
"
.mil
,
(arbitrariness).
the
<
•
I
«
»i
1
1
n
in
i
Ihm w
een
man
as
depondonco and rnrc of I
)
conceived i"
tho
u
ill
M
)
»vi
i
o< »n
modes
as b
j
tho
thai
ITi
withoul
e
i
1
tin
Tho
i)oly theism.
and
nci >uhi
i ,
''
coneoptioiiH
Tho
c
<
-
«
»«
f<
»rmer
cognized
i
lattor
tho Divine
the ploasuro of
n py
Duns
I
God morel
liomistH
wills
I
God
n
looked in
1
tho
the
independent
l>ni
thing
relation
1
»<
1|
i
Y< inder predei bination
food
this
>n
tho
{food
thing because
;i
commands which (h
Mi«
ol
'
•
i
God and
the lattor separated
;
bound
God God
Buf
•
<>l
•
l
their diu crom to
»si
decani (jm Ktioned also tho ('(inception
ii
u »n
b<
•
our ethical
uothoism onlj probcibihov than
i
M,
moveus immobile and pronounced
)>riiii>iiii
conl rnuiel
1
outgoing Hein
r\'
I
ived of
»nci
c<
i
Will with unfathomable motives,
of
bli
;
God, denied also
ol
ho mi
i
tho uoeo
\
uoeoi
n
it n1
mo
(co
absolute
for onlj
;
v
tod
I
God's own per onal
certain t}
ii Ii
had
Ml
t
tho
(in
divine Will could be mi of
o
ing
i
included)
•
he conception
brew
eri
»\
omphn it}
al
is
the
thinkii
upon certain Icnowled
Ih
l
»I'll
Tin >m
r\
in
roc« '".in
l»"
dejx>ni
(
\
k if)
of
from tho world
is diflforonl
and noco
ficioncy I
he
;
interest
lively
«•in
ms
/>"
igical
unite
to
absolute sub itunco, self -con
is
i
Bana, David
of
and the Aristotelian conception
im, in
.
Vmnlrich
I
Thomas ondoavored
Dinanto).
of
fell
Inter Hi« dangi
l>ui
;
108
KTl
I
Ii
ii
creature, in
duty
originate
bocau irbiti
•
(
In
lod
arine
|
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
464
Theology indeed uttered the sentence "pater in filio revelatus" with the
The construction
o.
Docfcrineof
lips,
Trinity.
but heeded
it
not.
of the doctrine of the trinity
belonged entirely to scientific labor, after tritheistic
and modalistic (Abelard) attempts had been repulsed. Thomism necessarily retained an (Roscellin)
inclination to
modalism (even the Lombard was
ac-
cused of substantializing the divina essentia and
hence of "quaternity"), while the Scotistic school In the subtile
kept the Persons sharply separated. researches the trinity
The treatment
became a school problem.
of it proved
that the faith
of the
Occident did not live in this transmitted doctrine, pantheism
With Thomas
3.
of Thomas.
pantheistic
way
are
still
found remnants of the
of thinking (creation as actualiza-
which
tion of the Divine ideas ; everything
only participations dei;
verum omnium, in the world) telian idea
aration of
;
divina bonitas est finis
therefore not an independent
had already
God from
essentially completed the sep-
the creature, and he endeavored
reflected in the contest
the world.
aim
yet he by introducing the Aristo-
to restore the pare idea of creation.
were
is exists
The
contrasts
about the beginning of
In the Scotistic school God's
own
pur-
pose and that of the creatures were sharply separated.
The innumerable host
of questions concerning the
government of the world, the theodicy,
etc.,
which
scholasticism again propounded, belongs to the his-
tory of theology. all
Thomas assumed
that
God
directs
things "immediate" and also effects the cor-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
465
ruptiones reman "quasi per accidens" (Origen,
Augustine)
;
the Scotists would acknowledge only an
and contested the Neo-Platonic
indirect direction
doctrine of a
malum
the independence of 4.
in the interest of
God and
of
man.
Together with a "nota" against the "nihil-
ism" of the Lombard
who
denied that
God through o
become something, the doctrine the two natures was transmitted to the great
the incarnation has of
The conception
scholastics.
Doctrine of
Two Natures; Jolin
^emfs!
John Damascenus
of
was the prescribed one but the hypostatical union was treated as a school problem. The Thomists conceived the human as passive and accidental and ;
continued
really
in
Duns endeavored
the
monophysitic conception.
to save the
humanity
of Christ,
human knowledge of Christ and to attribute existence also to the human in-
to place certain limits to the
dividual nature of Christ.
Still
within this territory
Thomism remained victorious. Practically indeed men made use of the Christological dogma only in the dogma of the eucharist, and the latest scholasticism explained the same as necessary and reasonable (Occam. )
(God might also have assumed the natura
asinina and
still
doctrine of the
have been able
work
in the doctrine of the of the
of Christ did not
two natures, but
merit of the sinless
a divine value.
nem). bertus)
to save us).
man
Jesus,
have
its
The root
in the thought
whose
life
had
(Christus passus est secundem car-
The idea of the satisfactio (Halesius, Alwas also brought up again. Thomas treated 30
Satisfaction of Christ.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
466
but explained the redemption through the death of BeChrist as being simply the most fitting way.
it,
cause in
it is
sum
represented the
suffering, this death,
imaginary
of all
which brings before our mind
the love of God, becomes
an example for
us, recalls
us
from sin and awakens as a motive our love in return. Alongside the subjective Thomas also emphasized the objective: If tate,
God had redeemed us
he would not have been able to gain so
for us
guilt,
but also the gratia justificans
Moreover
and the gloria beatitudinis.
sl "
muS
Christ
all possible
view were quoted, from which the death of
points of sacrifi-
much
Christ's death has obtained for us not only
;
freedom from
C
sola volun-
may be
regarded.
As
abundans, since as regards
satisfactio
all
holds good, that the offended
it is
super-
satisfaction the rule
one loves the gift
tendered by himself more than he hates the offence (sacrificium acceptissimum). rect
and worthy idea became
Thomas
This apparently corfatal
;
it is
also misjudges the suffering
and with
it
the full gravity of sin.
plain that
of punishment In the doctrine
regarding merit the reality (not the possibility only) of our reconciliation Ansoims Doctrine Extended,
was
to be expressed.
through the death of Christ Setting ° aside the doctrine of
the two natures the idea of
Anselm was
further car-
ried out, that the merit gained through the voluntary
suffering descends from the head to the "
caput
et
members:
membra sunt quasi una persona mystica,
et ideo satisfactio
pertinet, sicut
Christi ad omnes
ad sua membra".
FIDELES
But the idea
of
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF by that
faith is instantly replaced
SIN, ETC.
467
of love: " fides,
per quam a peccato mundamur, non est fides informis, quae protest esse etiam cum peccato, sed Thomas wavered est Jtides Jformata per caritatem"
Wavered
between the hypothetical and the necessary, between
(KS^fve
.
the objective (possible) and subjective (real), between •
•
t>.
^
Thomas
jectivl^edemption.
Duns drew
the rational and irrational redemption.
the consequences of the satisfaction theory in tracing
everything back to the arbitrary " acceptation of God.
The
arbitrary estimation of the Receiver gives the
value to the satisfaction, as
much
value as
God
also alone determines
The death
of Christ
allowed
to be ; at
the extent of the offence. of as
it
it
was any
Duns Made Redemp^rij^Ict
rate the idea of "infinite" is to be repudiated; for
neither the sin nor the death of a finite infinite
weight
;
besides
an
infinite
man can have
merit
unnecessary, since the sovereign will of
what
is
good and meritorious in his
fore a purus
deem us
;
homo would
for there
also
is
God
wholly decrees
There-
sight.
have been able
was needed only a
first
the rest in any event the self-sufficient
to re-
impulse,
man must
Duns indeed endeavored to show also that the death of Christ was "appropriate"; but this point was no longer of real importance Christ died, because God so willed it. Everything " necesaccomplish.
:
sary" and "infinite", which sion for the Divine,
was
here only an expres-
cleared away.
tinating arbitrariness of
works ruled dogmatics.
is
The
God and Duns in truth had
predes-
justification
by
already
destroyed the doctrine of redemption and annulled
^^Jy" Works.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
468
the Divinity of Christ.
Only the authority of the
Church kept up its validity should the former fail, Socinianism would be established. Acknowledging this authority nominalistic theologians advanced in ;
and blasphemous.
their dialectics to the frivolous
However, in the loth century there reappeared in connection with Augustinianism a more serious conception in Gerson, Wessel, even in Biel
and the Bernardine view
and
others,
of the suffering Christ
was
never lost during the Middle Ages.
The Scholastic Doctrine of the Sacra-
B.
ments. Hahn, Faith and
Theology Lived in the Sacraments.
The
L. v. d.
Sacramenten, 1864.
scholastic uncertainties
the doctrine of the the certainty with
work
and
liberties
touching
of Christ are explained
by
which scholasticism regarded the
benefit of salvation in the
sacraments as a present one.
Faith and theology lived in the sacraments.
The
Augustinian doctrine was here developed materially
and formally
the " verbum" however
was evermore disregarded in favor sacramentum" for since by the side of the awakening of faith and love as means of grace the old definition still retained ;
of the "
its
value
:
"
;
gratia nihil est aliud
similitudo divinae
quam participata
NATURAE",
no other form
of grace could really be thought of than the
magic-
sacramental form.
The
doctrine of the sacraments
was
for a long time
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OP
SIN,
ETC
469
developed under the embarrassment, that there was NugJc?I-° f
nothing settled regarding the number of the sacraments.
n ™ertain.
Besides baptism and the eucharist there were
an indefinite number of holy acts (compare even Bernard).
Hugo
Abelard and
St.
Victor laid stress upon
confirmation, extreme unction and marriage (five in
number), Robert fession
upon confirmation, con-
Pullus
and ordination.
Out
of a combination per-
haps in the contest with the catharists originated
number seven (Roland's book of tenets), which the Lombard brought forward as an "opinion". Even at the councils of 1179 and 1215 the number was not settled. The great scholastics first brought the same to honorable recognition and at Florence,
^JJJJJIjJ^
1439, there took place a decided ecclesiastical decla-
c|^'
the
ration (Eugene IV.
a
full
,
bull exultate deo)
.
'
^ön
However,
equalizing of the seven sacraments
was not
intended (baptism and especially the eucharist re-
mained prominent)
.
The
"
conveniens " of the num-
ber seven and the organism of the sacraments, enriching the whole
life of
the individual and of the
Church, were explained in
Indeed the very
detail.
creation of these seven sacraments
was a master-
piece of a perhaps unconscious politics.
Hugo began
the technical treatment of the doc-
trine, retaining the
sacramentum and
Augustinian distinction between res sacramenti
emphasis upon the physico-spiritual is
included.
B.) defined:
and the strong
gift,
which
really
Following him, the Lombard (IV.
"Sacramentum proprie
dicitur,
1.
quod
plter?
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
470
Signum est gratiae dei et invisibilis gratiae forma, ut imaginem ipsius gerat et causa existat. Non ergo significant tantum gratia sacramenta ita
" instituta sunt, sed etiam sanctificandi (in signifi-
candi gratia the Old Testament ordinances were hit upon). Still he did not say that the sacraments contain the grace (Hugo), but that they
make it
efficient;
he also demanded only a signum as a foundation, not Thomas,
Hugo
like
moderated the " continent further
:
Thomas
a corporate elementum.
God
" of
also
Hugo, he even went
indeed does not work
"
adhibitis sac-
ramentis" (Bernard), they confer grace only "per
God
aliquem modum".
himself confers
it;
the
sacraments are causae instrumentales, they trans-
a prima movente.
They are also causa et signa; thus the phrase " efficiunt quod figurant " must be understood. Still there is contained in the sacraments a virtus ad inducendum sacramentalem effectum. Later on the relation between mit the
effect
the
sacraments
The
latter only
and grace was entirely relaxed.
accompanies the former, for the mere
God combined them (Duns) by vir"pactum cum ecclesia initum". Thus the
arbitrariness of
tue of a
nomma li s tic
conception appears less magical and
PreiSSSs
P re P ar ed the
way by
zwingirs.
nent" for the sacramental doctrine of the forerunners
N
s"
?i"?cou
of the
its
it
protest against the " conti-
Reformation and of Zwingli.
But this change
did not originate in the interest of the " word" and faith, but, as
God.
The
remarked, in the peculiar conception of
official
doctrine remained as in Thomas,
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF i.e.
SIN, ETC.
471
returned to the "figurant, continent et confer-
unt" (Florentine council).
It
thereby holds good that
the sacraments, differing from those of the Old Testa-
ment
in
which
faith (opus operandi)
work "ex opere operato" bard)
that
;
is,
necessary,
Lom-
(thus already the
the effect flows from the administra-
The attempt
tion as such.
was
of the Scotists to place
the sacraments of the Old Testament on an equality
with those of the In
detail, the
doctrine are
still
New was
repudiated.
following points of the Thomistic DocSneof especially important: (1) In genere mSS".
the sacraments are altogether necessary to salvation,
in specie this
is
in the strictest sense valid only of
baptism (otherwise the rule holds good; "non defectus sed contemptus damnat").
(2)
sacraments must have a three-fold
In genere the
effect,
a
signifi-
Th
ld Efftct.
cant (sacrament urn), a preparative (sacr amentum et res)
,
and a redemptive
(res
sacramenti) in specie, ;
however, the preparative effect, the character, can be proved only in baptism, confirmation and the ordo.
Through these the
"
character of Christ", as capacity
for the receptio et traditio cultus dei, is implanted
in the potency of the soul indelebiliter, fore not capable of repetition
and
(stamping
is
there-
it,
as
it
;
(3)
In the definite discussion of the question, Form
"quid
sit
sacr amentum"
were)
the
same
is
,
it
was determined
that
not only a holy but also a sanctifying
sign; moreover that the cause of sanctification
is
the suffering of Christ, the form consisting in the
communicated grace and
virtues,
and the aim being
Must
qJJ™^
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
472
eternal
The sacrament must always be a res
life.
sensibilisa deo determinates (material of the sacra-
ment), and
go with
it,
"very becoming", that "words" also
it is
"
quodammodo
quibus verba incarnato
conformantur"
These verba a deo determinata
.
(form of sacrament) must be strictly observed, an unintentional lapsus linguae even does not allow the it is
rendered
void as soon as one does not intend to do
what the
sacrament to become perfect
o^saS Church ments Proven
is
does; (4)
proved by
"
The
;
of course
necessity of the sacraments
quodammodo applicant passionem
Christi hominibus", in so far as they " congrua
gratiae praesentialiter demonstrandae sunt " Duplication of Salvation
By
and gratia)
the effect (character
it is
in the sacrament to the general gratia
(5)
;
argued that
virtutem
et
donorum is still added quoddam divinum auxilium ad consequendum sacramenti fine?n" that as well "
;
in verbis as in rebus there
mental
virtus
is
contained an instru-
By
ad inducemdam gratiam.
de-
termining the relationship between sacramental grace
and the passio Christi
it is
plainly discernible that
the Catholic doctrine of the sacraments else
nothing
is
than a doubling of the salvation through Christ.
Since they conceived grace physically, yet were unable to join this physical grace directly to the death of Christ,
i.e.
deduce
it
strumentum separatum to the
from the
latter,
(the sacraments), in addition
instrumentum conjunctum
to be ascribed to
God
another in-
(Jesus),
the Redeemer.
But
had
if
still
one can
obtain such an understanding of the life and death
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF of Christ, that
it
SIN, ETC.
and
of itself appears as grace
rament, then the doubling
is
useless
473
and harmful
sac(G)
;
By determining the causa sacramentorum it follows that God is the Author, but the priest, as minister, the "
causa instrumental!'s"
'.
Everything which
h
A u°hor
the e
iStra-
is
de necessitate sacramenti (therefore not the prayers
must have been
of the priests, etc.)
instituted
Christ himself (appeal to tradition, while the
Lombard
still
by
Hugo and
deduced some sacraments from the
apostles
;
with some this latter continued until the 16th
century
;
the apostles cannot have been institutores
sacramenti in the Christ as
man was
strict sense of the
word
;
even to
due only the potestas ministerii
principalis sen excelentiae; he works meritorie et efficienter
and could have transferred
this extraordi-
nary potestas ministerii, which however he did not do)
;
bad
sacraments
;
priests also can validly administer the
they need to have the intentio only, not
the fides; but they incur a mortal sin
.
Even heretics
can transmit the sacramentum, but not the res sac-
ramenti.
These doctrines of Thomas are lacking in due
re-
opusoperatum Em-
gard for faith and pass lightly over the question
re-
prized,
garding the conditions of the salutary reception.
With the nominalists this of the relation of grace
that of the minister,
question, together with that
and sacrament
(see above)
became most important
case of each separate sacrament,
and
in the
and they came to the
decision to allow the factor of merit to encroach up-
on that of the sacraments and of grace,
at the
same
;
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
474
time, however, they conceived of the conditions of the
way and emphasized more strongly opus operatum. On the whole they dissolved
merit in a looser the
Thomism. They desired here also to apprehend the doctrine more spiritually and ethically the whole of
in truth they fell into a disgraceful casuistry
and
favored justification by works and likewise the magic Question
Regarding
D
Si "
tion
f
That some disposition was nee-
the sacraments.
essary to a salutary reception
all
assumed, but the
was wherein it consisted and what value should have. Some saw in it no positive condi-
question it
tioning of sacramental grace, but merely a conditio
sine qua non; they did not think of
it
as worthiness
and, therefore, declared roundly that the sacraments
were is
effective only
ex opere operato (the disposition
necessary, but has no causal importance).
—they were not numerous— declared
Others
that the sacra-
ments can procure grace only when inward repentance and faith exist;
these,
however, are caused
by God as interiores motus, so that no ex opere operante can be assumed
;
only announce the inward work of
justification
the sacraments
God
(preparing
way for the Reformation point of view) still, who gained the upper hand, taught the
.
demptive grace
is
Others that re-
a product of the sacraments and of
penitent faith, so that the sacrament itself only ele-
vates above the death-point, in order to co-operate at
once with the inner disposition. first
Here the question
became important, what then the disposition
should be (repentance and faith), in order to allow
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF the sacrament to have
475
SIN, ETC.
First of
its full effect.
all til
they answered with Augustine, that the receiver
must not
"
^?f yj"ew
Forward.
obicem contrariae cogitationis oppo-
Therefrom the older theologians had inferred
nere".
that a bonus
motus interior must
exist; indeed
also conceived this already as a merit
mum
of merit (against
must
exist, if
his pupils
grace
—that
mini-
for a
Augustine) certainly always
Duns and
be imparted.
is to
however taught
correct idea
;
they
— a vicious corruption of a
the glory of the
New
Duns
1
Vitiated
Conception.
Testament
sacraments consists in not requiring, like the
earlier,
a bonus motus as a pre-supposition, but rather only
motus contrarius malus (contempt Without the of the sacraments, positive unbelief). sacraments grace can be effective only where therethe absence of a
some worthiness
exists
is also effective
rius
requisite,
this appears
consummation ceiver a
!)
;
is
yonder
is
tabula rasa (as
if
a meritum de con-
here "solum requiritur opus exte-
cum amotione
where
sacramental grace, however,
where there
such a thing exists
gruo
;
interioris
impediments
mere obedient submission
of the sacrament
meritum de
co7igruo,
But
.
to the
becomes for the
re-
and therewith the
process of salvation begins, which, while the sacra-
mental collations increase, can finally be finished without the subjects ever overstepping the limits of the
meritum de congruo,
which
may
that
is,
of a certain merit
exist without real inner faith
and
love.
Sacramental grace transforms ex opere operato the attritio
into
contritio
and thereby furnishes a
Meritum de Congruo.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
476
supplement to the incomplete merits, rendering them
Upon
complete.
the steps of inner emotions,
which and
are constantly supplemented by the sacraments
are wholly vain, even irreligious (fear of punish-
ment, dread of
powerless dissatisfaction with
hell,
one's self), the soul rises to
God:
"
attritio super-
veniente sacramento virtute clavium efficitur suf-
Here the doctrine of the sacraments is subordinated to the worst form of a Pelagian docficiens".
trine of justification (see below). Baptism.
ßep ara f e
j7ie rial:
Sacraments.
Water; form: and that
Baptism
Baptism
of all hitherto
(mate-
This has
Institutional words).
reference to hereditary sin. guilt
1.
blots out such
committed
sins,
remits
the punishment (not however earthly punishments)
and regulates the concupiscence; that of
an innocent concupiscence
ligious view)
man
ders a
it is
was
"
was placed
regeneratio " without ridding
and lack
has in the Church fathers.
of
In theory
perfectissima, and children also received
it
meaning
asserted that the positive grace of baptism
ment
of justification in the full sense)
was only conceived as a sacrament
and only in baptism
re-
declared that baptism ren-
this conception of the obscurity it
allowed (not a
positive effect of baptism
under the head of
which
the idea
able to keep his concupiscence within
The
bounds.
and
is
is,
;
it
it
was
(sacra-
but in fact
of initiation,
this sense could the perfectness of infant
(belief of the
Church, or of good parents as
substitutes) be sustained:
Baptism establishes the
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
47?
process of justification only in habitu, not in actu.
In case of necessity a deacon
may
yes a layman,
also,
Detailed explanations concerning sac-
baptize.
ramental observances were made based upon a comparison with baptism. 2.
Confirmation (material: The chrisma conse-
crated by the bishop
;
form
:
Consigno
te, etc.)
Co
ma"
^n
The
.
sacrament, which like baptism cannot
effect of this
be repeated, was to give power for growth, strength to fight, the gratia
gained
in the process of
Only the bishop could administer
justification. it
gratum faciens
significance as a sacrament of the epis-
its
copal hierarchy alongside of the ordo;
whole
its
it
still
on the
significance resided only in the " character".
Doubts regarding the sacrament never died out in the Middle Ages
(
Wiclif)
was brought very it
.
close to the
had special reference
(the
Church
;
Beginning with Thomas
power
it
of the pope, since
to the mystical
body of Christ
not to the sacramental body) and ac-
cordingly the power of jurisdiction came into consideration. 3.
Eucharist (material: The elements form ;
institutional words).
The Thomist
:
The
doctrine here
gained a complete victory as against the attempt of the nominalist to shake the doctrine of transubstantiation; but the "heretical" opposition to this doc-
trine did not cease in the
Lateran council
(vid. p. 426).
Middle Ages after the
Realism
position of the orthodox theory lapses.
Everything that
is
;
is
the presup-
without this
it col-
sublime was said about
Eucharist,
478
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
which seeks
the eucharist; but faith,
surety,
went
empty-handed, and yet the sacrament of penance as sacrament and as sacrifice was finally far superior to the eucharist
:
Masses are
spiritual food blots out
theological problem
by reason DoctrSe.
trifling
no mortal
means, and the
The great
sins.
was transubstantiation
itself,
and
of its greatness they overlooked the insig-
Thomas gave form to the doctrine regarding the mode of the presence of the body of Christ in the sacrament (no new creation, no asnificance of its effect.
sumptio elementorum so that they become body, no consubstantiality)
;
the substance of the elements
disappears entirely, but not
per annihilationem,
yet per conversionem; the existence of the remain-
ing unsubstantial accidents of the elements possible
by the direct working of God
;
is
made
the body of
Christ enters totus in toto; in each of the elements is
the whole Christ, to wit
:
per concomitantiam as
regard his body and soul as well as regards his Divinity from the tutional
moment
of
pronouncing the
words (therefore also extra usum)
;
insti-
the pres-
ence of Christ in the elements has no dimensions,
how
was to be conceived became a primary problem for which Thomas and the nominalistic writers summoned absurd and ingenious theories of space. They thereby approached very closely but
this
either to the idea of the annihilation of the Duns.
occam.
primary
substance (Duns), or to consubstantiality and "im-
panation" (Occam);
they hit upon the latter be-
cause their metaphysics in general only admitted
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
479
SIN, ETC.
the idea that the Divine and the created
accompany
each other by virtue of Divine adjustment (similarly
Wesel, and with other motives Luther).
The con-
sequences of the formulation of the doctrine of transubstantiation were, ion (this
had
Cessation of infant
(1)
also other causes)
authority of the priests, (3)
two
(4)
1
commun- ^on" ?"
Increase of the of the chalice
Adoration of the
Corpus Christi,
elevated host (feast of last
(2)
Withdrawal
(determined upon at Constance),
Against the
,
1264, 1311).
and
results there arose in the 14th
15th centuries considerable opposition.
— In regard to
the representation of the eucharist as a sacrifice, the
Lombard was
still
se "
u ££?e s of
Repetition fice
-
influenced by the old ecclesiastical
motive of the recordatio; however, the idea of the repetition of the sacrificial death of Christ, confirmed
by Gregory bertus;
I.,
more and more (Hugo, Al-
crept in
Thomas
really justifies the theory only
the practice of the Church)
and modified
also the
canon of the mass (Lateran council, 1215). priest
was considered the sacerdos corporis
The attacks
of Wiclif
and others upon
The
Christi.
this entirely
away; during the 14th
unbiblical conception died
and 15th centuries one
by
really fought only against the
abuses. 4.
since
Penance
(great controversy over the material,
no res corporalis
chief sacrament, because
exists) is it
on the whole the
alone restores the lost
The theory remained yet for a long time shy of the hierarchical practice, which had been expressed in the pseudo-Augustinian writing, "de
baptismal grace.
Penance,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
480
vera
falsa paenitentia"
et
The Lombard still
.
con-
sidered the true penitence of a Christian in itself
and the
sacramental,
priestly absolution
clarative (ecclesiastical act) Lateran
sin.
Council.
;
for
God
merely de-
alone pardons
Hugo and the Lateran council, 1215, prepared way for Thomas. The latter recognized the ma.
the
terial of the itent, the
sacrament in the visible act of the pen-
form in the
priest's
words of absolution,
declared that the priests as authorized ministers are Doctrine
dispensers in the fullest sense, for the
necessity of
and gave as a reason
sacramental penance (before
the priest) the perverse sentence
:
"
Ex
quo aliquis
peccatum (mortal sin) incurrit, Caritas, fides et misericordia non liberant hominem a peccato sine paenitentia"
However, he added that the sacra-
.
mental absolution did not at once take away the reatus totius poenae together with the guilt of the mortal
sin,
but that
it
only disappeared " completis
omnibus paenitentiae actibus". paenitentiae as contritio
operis
—
The three partes already formulated by the Lombard
cordis,
confessio
oris,
satisfactio
—were originally not considered of equal value.
The inner perfect penitence was considered res and sacramentum, and still dominated with the Lombard Haiesius,
Bonaventura,
and Thomas the whole representation. Yet already Alexander Halesius and Bonaventura were of the
God precisely by the sacrament had the way to salvation, and they discrim-
opinion that facilitated
inated between contritio and attritio (timor servilis)
,
declaring the latter sufficient for admission to
:
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF In spite of
the sacrament.
SIN, ETC.
481
by
silent rejection
its
Thomas this view gained more and more ground: The sacrament itself will perfect the half -penitence by the Infusio gratiae. The attritio, gallowsin
became the bane
Church doctrine the 14th and 15th centuries (Johann von Palltz,
repentance,
Petrus de Palude and others 1886)
streit,
;
;
of the
,
was well known that the
it
only conditionally.
It
tritio often springs
from immoral motives and yet
— Thomas
heaven.
at-
it
and the sacraments steps up
is
the theologian of the confessio
to
oris; he placed the obligation thereto under the jus
divinum, stated of the
ance.
Dieckhoff Der Ablass-
the Tridentine council sanctioned
they built out of
GallowsRepent-
Confessio Oris
Thomas.
for the first time exactly the extent
new ordinance and deduced
ecclesiastic to hear confessions
the sole right of the
from the minister-
ium super corpus Christi verum
(in case of
need one
should confess to a layman, such confession, however, is,
according to Thomas, no longer sacramental).
The
Scotists essentially accepted all this.
— The sole
was also first strictly brought to an issue by Thomas. However, upon this sacrament the power of jurisdiction exerted right of the priest to grant absolution
an influence (reservance of cases for the pope).
Absolution:
Thomas.
Ac-
cording to the Scotists the priest by absolution simply induces
Thomas he
God
to fulfil his contract
according to
acts independently through the trans-
mitted pot est as ministerii.
factio
;
—By imposing a
satis-
the priest acts as medicus peritus et judex
aequus. 31
The
practice is an old one, the " mechanis-
Medicus Peritus.
482
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
ing " and the theoretical rating (alongside the contritio as a part of the penance) is comparatively
new.
The idea
is
that the satisfactio, as a constit-
uent part of the sacrament,
is
the necessary manifes-
works as are fitted to give an offended God, and which
tation of repentance in such
a certain satisfaction to
become the motive for the shortening of temporal punishment. In baptism God pardons without any satisfaction, but of those baptized
tain satisfaction,
who
renders
able to render Meritori-
ous Works.
which then as merit reverts Moreover the baptized
it.
it
he demands a
;
it
cer-
him
to
really
is
also contributes to his ref orma-
Meritorious are sin. and rprotects him against ° only such acts as are done in a state of grace {in tion
caritate,
hence after
works
absolution), but the
(prayer, fasting, alms) of those
who
are not in cari-
Thus finally attritio and imperfect meritorious works dominate the whole tate also have a certain merit.
territory of penance, that is of ecclesiastical life,
^ u ^ ^ie
fences
scholastics admitted also in practice the
and
idea of the personal exchange of satisfactions
of
personal substitution.
This led to the doctrine of
indulgences
Luther's
(Bratke,
Schneider, Die Ablässe,
7.
95
In theory
it
The
indul-
i.e.
to the
also
has nothing to do with the
reatus culpae et poenae aeternae; it
1884.
Aufl., 1881).
gence joins on to the satisfaction attritio.
Theses,
was not seldom joined with the
still
in practice
latter (even the
Tridentine council here complained of abuses)
.
The
indulgence rests upon the idea of commutation and
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF its
purpose was to ameliorate,
i.e.
SIN, ETC.
483
to abolish the tem-
poral punishment of sin, above all the punishment of purgatory.
Through absolution
hell
was
closed; Abc?oses° n HelL
but the homines attriti in reality neither believe in hell
nor in the power of grace, for only a contritus
knows anything of such things. But they are afraid of severe punishment, and they believe in the possibility of removing it by various " doings", and are even ready for some sacrifice for this end.
Thus pur-
gatory was hell to them and the indulgence became
To
a sacrament.
these feelings the
ity yielded; attritio,
Church
opera and indulgentia became
in truth parts of the sacrament of penance. still
in real-
Thomas
T
^mas
'
endeavored throughout to bring about a com-
promise between the earnest theory and the evil practice,
which he was unable to uproot
("
ab omnibus
conceditur indulgentias aliquid valere, quia im-
pium
dicere,
esset
faceret")
.
quod
With him
become a mockery
vane
ecclesiae aliquid
the indulgences had not yet
of Christianity as the religion of
redemption, because he really conceives them only as
an annex
to the sacrament.
Yet he abandoned the
old idea that the indulgence has reference only to
the ecclesiastical punishment imposed
by the
priest;
was he who handed down the theory of dulgences. The latter is composed of two ideas:
and
it
Pardoned sin its
also continues to
temporal consequences,
have an
still it
effect
in(1)
through
cannot remain
" in-
ordinata", and therefore the temporal punishment
must be expiated
;
(2)
Christ by his passion has ac-
T
of
^S-
gei
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
484
complished greater things than the blotting out of
and punishment ;
eternal guilt
within the sacrament, outside of
it
there is a surplus.
necessity benefit the it
But
but
in the absolution;
This surplus merit
operum super er ogatorior urn) must
(thesaurus
since
i.e.
this alone is effective
of
body of Christ, the Church,
cannot benefit Christ and the saints.
it
can no longer find any other occupation than
that of shortening
punishment of
and blotting out the temporal
sin.
It
can be turned only to the
benefit of those absolved,
in return
a
minimum
who must
(a
regularly offer
small performance)
;
it
is
administered by the head of the Church, the pope,
who however can Theor^ of Merits.
transfer to others a partial admin-
This theory of surplus merits, which had
istration.
a j on g p r j or history (Persians, Jews) became especially pernicious when no decisive weight was placed ,
upon the condition of repentant ness
was
faith, or
intentionally permitted
question as to
what
it
when
to rest
dark-
upon the
was that was blotted when the question, as to
really
out by the indulgence, or
whether the indulgence would not also be of benefit to committers of mortal sin
ad requirendam gra-
tiam, was answered in the affirmative as was like-
wise the question whether therefore
it
could not be
granted in advance, in order that one might use of tice).
*£££"
it
for
The
an occasional disposition
it is
(Scotistic prac-
theorj^of indulgences is comprised in the
bul1 ' " Vnigenitus",
here
make
Clement IV.,
of the year 1349;
also stated that the indulgence has refer-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
485
SIN, ETC.
ence only to the " vere paenitentes et confessi". Wiclif above
all
disputed the practice and theory;
he called the indulgences arbitrary and blasphemous, paralyzing obedience to the laws of God, a nefarious innovation.
But indulgence was not yet un-
when one proved
hinged,
it
to be unbiblical, the
usurpation of the hierarchy and a moral corruption.
One must show how a dormant
to be
awakened, a disturbed one to be comforted.
conscience
is
But neither Wiclif nor the other energetic contestors
wiciif,
do
Huss, wessei.
of indulgences (Huss, Wesel, etc.)
Wessei alone attacked indulgences at the
this.
for
were able
to
root,
he not only taught that the keys were given alone
to the pious (not to the
pope and the
priests),
and
also pointed out that forgiveness does not
depend up-
on arbitrariness, but upon true penitence
moreover,
;
that the temporal punishments for sin serve
for
man's education and therefore cannot be exchanged.
He
also
doubted the satisfactio operum: Satisfac-
tio has
no place anyhow where God has infused
his love; (the
it
would detract from the work of Christ
gratia gratis data).
which had to be "
yet indulgences,
approved at Constance, pre-
also been
vailed about 1500
And
more than ever; people knew them
abusus quaestorum", and yet made use
of
them.
Extreme unction (material: Consecrated form: A deprecatory word of prayer). Thomas
oil;
Christ, its promulgation
by
5.
serted its institution
James
(Epist. 5
:
14).
by
The purpose
as-
of this sacrament,
oration!
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OE DOGMA.
480
of repetition, is the remissio pecca-
which admits
torum, yet only of the venial.
As
this
sacrament
was evolved only because of the need of the dying, Theory had little init was also left to practice. terest in
oration
G>
ity
it.
Ordination of priests (from the impossibilof proving a perceptible material by the side "
of the form:
Accipe potestatem,
etc.",
—however,
one also thought of vessels of worship or of the laying on of hands and symbols, Thomas' Doctrine.
make
capital r
:
Hoc quod *
"
— Thomas knew how to
in aliis sacraconfertur J
mentis derivatur tantum a deo, non a ministro, qui sacramentum dispensat, sed
Mud quod in hoc
sacramento traditur,
seil,
derivatur etiam ab
qui sacramentum dat, sicut
eo,
spiritualis potestas,
potestas imperfecta a perfecta; et ideo efficacia
aliorum sacramentorum principaliter consistit in materia, quae virtutem divinam et significat et continet.
.
.
.
,
sed efficacia hujus sacramenti
principaliter residet penes eum, qui sacramentum dispensat"). P
in
conSo
The bishop alone
Controversies arose, tions
to each other, (2)
the relationship between the priest's
Kegarding
and the bishop's
ordination, (3)
Regarding the validity of ordina-
tions conferred
by schismatical or
(question of reordination; the of the stricter practice, chapter.
the dispenser.
Eegardingthe seven ordina-
(1)
and their relation
is
the entire existence of
was
heretical bishops
Lombard was
in favor
which however jeopardized the priesthood). Character
really the chief effect of this sacrament.
The
;
.
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
487
SIN, ETC.
episcopate could, on account of the old tradition, no
longer be counted as a special ordo; but there
an endeavor to vindicate
was
higher position as being
its
especially instituted
by Christ (on the ground
jurisdictional power)
;
of
Duns, taking into considera-
tion the real circumstances, desired to
acknowledge
a separate sacrament in the consecration of a bishop.
Matrimony
7.
(material
and form
:
The consent of
As with
those about to be married).
Jjjj"
the former
sacrament, so also with this, every provable redemp-
was wanting but
tive effect
;
difficult to
carry out at
the sacraments.
The
all
it
was here
still
the general doctrine of
treating of marriage as a sac-
rament was already with Thomas a chain of ties
;
with
in reality ecclesiastical it.
more
difficul-
law was alone concerned
There were painful deductions concerning
the import of the copula carnalis for the sacrament the priestly benediction
dam
was considered only
"
quod
sacramentale"
In the doctrine of the sacraments
;
the DJc t r™eSO f a
were confirmed by me nts con"fir mod by but in so far as they were subordinated Eugene iv.
authoritative doctor
Eugene IV.
Thomas was
;
his doctrines
to the doctrine of merits, a different spirit, the Scotistic,
gradually entered into
himself even
was obliged
to
Thomas
dogmatics.
all
emphasize the vulgar
Catholic elements of Augustinianism, since he
lowed the practice of the Church in his Later theologians went even dissolving of Augustinianism
much
fol-
Summa.
farther.
The
into dogmatics did
janlEfü?* into
Dogmatics.
not really take place from without
;
it
was
largely
—
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
488
the result of an inward development. elements,
which Augustine permitted
The
three
to stand in
and
by the side of his doctrine of grace, merit, the gratia infusa and the hierarchical priestly element, con-
work
tinued to
until
they had completely trans-
formed the Augustinian mode of thought.
The Revising of Augustinianism
C.
the
in
Direction of the Doctrine of Merits. Lombard
No
theologian had directly denied
ecclesiastical
Repeats
Augustine's
Teaching.
that grace
is
the foundation of the Christian religion,
but since the idea, "grace",
is in itself
ambiguous
God himself in Christ, a mysterious quality, love(?) — it could also be made subservient to different views.
The Lombard,
and
tion
in regard to grace, predestina-
justification, exactly repeated the
tinian sentences,
Augus-
but concerning free-will he
ex-
pressed himself no longer in an Augustinian, but in
a semi-Pelagian fashion, because he also had merit Anselm, Bernard, Abelard.
With Anselm, Bernard and above
in mind.
Abelard a contradiction between
all
the doctrine of
grace and of freedom can be verified, since
all
were
governed by the thought which the Lombard formulated thus
non
:
"
nullum meritum
est in
homine, quod
per liberum arbitrium". Therefore the ratio and the power of the will for good must have
Religious
View Supplanted by Empirical.
fit
remained unto
view
of
man
Augustine
is
after the
fall.
The
religious
replaced by the empirical, and
even Bernard failed to mark Augustine's discrimi-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
nation between formal and material freedom. ble is the
Nota-
attempt of the Lombard to identify sancti-
fying grace with the Holy Spirit.
had no consequences self,
489
SIN, ETC.
;
However,
this
God himwhich can become human
they did not want
but Divine attributes,
virtues.
From God
to
grace was God through ö ö
mental thought of Thomas, and yet
the funda-
Habitual Virtue.
finally it is hab-
The fundamental
itual virtue at which he aims.
Augustinian discrimination
fault lay already in the
between gratia operans and cooperans. alone procures bliss, but
it
The
latter
cooperates with the will
and together they cause merit.
Merits, however,
are the essential point, since the theologian can have
no other conception than that God values a reformation only
when
indicated by the habitus.
But
this
not the standpoint faith thus becomes of religion: r ° merely an act of initiation, and God does not appear is
'
as the almighty
Love and
therefore as the
Rock
Faith Becomes au
u
A<
"
taSon?
of
and Judge; he does
Salvation, but as the Partner
not appear as the personal Good, which as Father is
alone able to lead the soul to trust, but as the
Giver of material, perhaps very exalted blessings (communication of his nature) if
.
These theologians,
they thought of God, did not look upon the heart
of the
almighty Father, but upon an unfathomable x ^ 7
Being, who, having created the world out of nothing, likewise also causes
and substantial transforAnd when they thought of them-
knoivledge, reformation
mation to go
forth.
superabundant powers of
Theoiogians Lose f
p efS ono f
;
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
400
they did not think of the centre of the
selves,
which
ego, the spirit,
so free
is
human
and exalted that
it
gains a hold only upon a divine Person and not
upon the most glorious the gratia instead of
God, who
God and
God and personal communion with
gifts
;
they taught
:
In the beginning indeed
is the gratia.
the gratia (power of love) lay very close
together in their minds, but in the carrying out of
was more and more with-
the thought the gratia
drawn from God, until one finds it in magic- working idols. The double thought, "natura divina" and
"bonum
esse",
was the ruling one: Physics and
morality, but not religion. Thomas Hakes Law and Grace Basal.
Thomas made law and
grace, as the outer princi-
The former, even as new law, was not sufficient. The necessity of grace therefore was proved, partly by Aristotelian means. At the same time the intellectualism of Thomas comes out strongly Grace is the communimoral conduct, his basis.
ples of
:
cation of supernatural knowledge. tiae,
however,
is, it is
aim this
Lumen (iratiae is
also
Lumen Buperadditum.
of ;
is also
the
The lumen gra-
lumen super additum, that
not necessary for the accomplishing of the
man, but
therefore
it
for the reaching over
and beyond
furnishes the reason also with a
supernatural worth,
i.e.
sl
merit.
Man
in the state
of integrity possesses accordingly the capability of
doing by his
own
strength the
bonum suae naturae
proportionatum, yet he needs the Divine aid in order to acquire a meritorious bonum super excedens. After the
fall,
however, grace was necessary for both
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF accordingly a two-fold grace
is
SIN, ETC.
now needed.
491
Thereby
the difference between gratia operans et cooperans
was already established, and at the same time there was taken into view as the end of man a supernatural state, which one may reach only by the aid of the second grace, which creates merits. " Vita aeterna est finis excedens proportionem naturae humanae", but with the help of grace one can and must earn eternal life. Yet Thomas, as a strict Augustinian, did not admit the idea that a prepare himself for the
first
He
grace.
man
Eternal Life to be
Earned
-
can
recognized
grace alone for the beginning, not the merita de
The essence
congruo.
a manner, that, as a quality of the soul,
of grace he depicted in such gift,
i.e.
produces a peculiar
it
besides the auxilium, by
which God especially induces the
soul to good actions,
he infuses into the soul a supernatural quality.
Grace
is to
be distinguished,
first,
as the grace of
and as the grace of the second, as operans (praeveniens) and
salvation (gratum faciens) priestly office,
cooperans (subsequens)
mota non movensj source of grace,
;
in the former the soul is
mota movens. The which is deifica, is God himself, who in the latter
also creates the preparation for it in to render the
materia
one, however, is able to
man, in order
(the soul) "disposita".
know whether God
rying on the supernatural work within him. sentence
("
No
is car-
This
nullus potest scire, se habere gratiam,
certitudinaliter
")
and the superfluous speculation
about the materia disposita (inspired by Aristotle)
^SleS S
et
coope r-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
402 Effect <
(race
of
Two-
Fold: Justification, Blerits.
became
The
fatal.
effect of
grace
is
two-fold;
first,
justification, second, merits, i.e. the real justification
does not yet take place by the remissio peccatorum,
but one
may
say simply, because of the end in view,
But
that forgiveness of sin is already justification.
the gratia infusa is necessary for the forgiveness of sin
and therefore a motus liberi arbitrii
required.
Thus the gratia praeveniens
consists in
an indefinable
act, since
ready presupposes cooperation. Confusion
Thomas a
prevails with
here
is
in truth
every effect
al-
Looking closer, there
great confusion regarding
in
Doctrine.
the process of justification, because the locating of the
moment
ties
;
it
of the forgiveness of sin causes difficul-
ought to be in the beginning and yet
it
must
be placed later because the infusion of grace, the turning to
God
should precede
in love
it.
and the turning from
By the
"
opus
magnum
culosum" of the justificatio impii the
et
mira-
effects
weighed, which through grace more and more
sin,
are
fall to
They all come All progress must be so it is the work of grace, it
the lot of the one already justified.
under the head of merit. regarded that, in so far as is
gained ex condigno, but, in so far as the free
will of the justified is concerned in
ex congruo. Natural
Man Can Earn No Merit, Justified
Man
Can.
it, it
Therefore the opinion of
man after the justified man can do
takes place
Thomas was,
that the natural
fall
but the
so ex congruo (" con-
can earn no merit,
gruumest, uthomini operanti secundum suam virtutem deus recompenset secundum excellentiam suae virtutis")
;
whereas in regard to eternal salva-
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF tion there exists for
SIN, ETC.
man "propter maximam
493 inae-
qualitatem proportionis" no meritum de condigno. This
is
torious principle is always love;
this deserves the
On
augmentum gratiae ex condigno. trary perseverance in
merited
The meri-
reserved to the efficacy of grace.
:
"
the con-
grace can in no sense be
anc?Not
Perseverantia viae non cadit sub merito,
quia dependet solum ex motione divina, quae
est
principium omnis meriti, sedd eus gratis perseverantiae tur"
.
bonum
Mud
largitur, cuicunque
Hereby pure Augustinianism was
which Thomas
largi-
restored,
also admitted unabridged into his
doctrine of predestination, while not only the indefatigably repeated definition of
God
primum mo-
as
vens, but also the whole special doctrine of morals
shows the influence of
ried out the thought that virtue, of efforts
In the latter
Aristotle.
is car-
by the right ordering
and instincts, comes through the reason and
later is supernaturally perfected
by the
gifts of grace.
Virtue culminates in the fulfilment of the consilia v52£?üi These dustily; evangelica (poverty, chastity, obedience).
form the conclusion of the doctrine of the new law
;
but, on the other side, the doctrine of grace also cul-
minates in them, so that they, properly speaking,
form the apex
of the
"
whole scheme.
Praecepta
important necessitatem, consilium in optione ponitur ejus, cut datur" tains his cepts
still
aim
"
.
melius
Through et
" counsels"
expeditius"
;
admit of a certain inclination
man
at-
for the preto the
goods
of this world, the counsels wholly discard the same,
dience.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
494
so that in following the latter the shortest
given to eternal
By
life.
this
Bonum Superexcedens
Naturam.
thrown upon the original
dowment
of
man was
is
discrimination be-
tween precept a and consilia light Eternal Lite
way
The
state.
more
once
is
original en-
in itself not sufficient to attain
unto the vita aeterno,; the
was a bonum
latter
superexcedens naturam; but in the additional en-
dowment
of the justitia originalis
supernatural
gift,
unto eternal
life.
which enables him
—
possesses a
to really attain
Thus one may say that
appearance of sin (materialiter
formaliter
man
=
after the
concupiscentia
originalis justitiae)
defectus
y
the
precepta correspond to the restoring of the natural state of
tum Thomas' Doctrine DoubleFaced.
man, the consilia to the donum superaddi-
of the justitia originalis.
Thomas' doctrine of grace has a double aspect looks
backward toward
;
it
Augustine and forward
toward the dissolution of the doctrine in the 14th century.
Thomas wanted
his explanations
action
to be
an Augustinian, and
were already an Augustinian
against the
assertions of
re-
Halesius, Bona-
ventura and others; but he allowed
much wider
play to the idea of merit than did Augustine; he
removed
still
farther than the latter the doctrine of
grace from the person of Christ (the latter cussed before Christology
and the forgiveness of Faith
no Longer is
Faith.
Faith
is
!)
,
is dis-
and he permitted
faith
sin to recede still farther.
either fides informis, therefore not yet
faith, or fides
formata, therefore no longer
In fact faith as fiducia can find no place,
faith. if
the
;
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF effects of
grace are a
mation.
In
SIN, ETC.
new nature and a moral
meretur vitam aeternam", the mischief to
come lay already
The
refor-
" Caritas
ambiguous sentence,
the
495
of the time
concealed.
setting aside of the Augustinian doctrine of
grace and sin can be followed up in every point: Halesius already taught that
Adam
(1)
Steps in Dissolution of Augustine's
Doctrine.
in
paradise
by good works ex congruo merited the gratia
gratum faciens. The Scotists followed in his steps, at the same time discriminating between the justi tia originalis and such grace, and reckoning the latter to the perfection of
though
by the placed
this
human
nature
was an advantage, yet
fact that the merit ex
from
it
was
itself.
Al-
neutralized
congruo had been
the beginning alongside of the " only
efficacious grace".
(2)
Thomas no
longer squarely
admitted the sentence in regard to hereditary sin: "
Natur alia bona corrupta sunt",
defined the concupiscence,
which
in so far as he
in itself is not evil,
simply as languor et fomes, emphasized stronger than Augustine the negative side of sin and, because the ratio remained, assumed a continued inclinatio
ad bonum.
Duns, on the whole, separated the ques-
tion of concupiscence
from that of hereditary sin
the former no longer appeared to of the latter, but
him
the formale
merely the mater iale.
Thus as
regards hereditary sin there remained only the pri-
vativ of the supernatural good, which indeed brought about a disturbance of the nature of man, however
without any of the natural good really being
lost.
Thomas.
Duns.
496
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
Even
the
D uns
(against Augustine):
first
was very
by
loosely conceived of
Adam
only indirectly
commandment to love God and commandment to love his neighbor, and only the
transgressed the
sin
by compliance he overstepped the right Besides it was not at all a question of an
in so far as
measure.
offence against moral laws, but of not obeying a
Occam.
com-
mandment imposed, for the sake of probation. With Occam everything is entirely dissolved. As in the case of redemption, the reckoning
man
of
the
of
fall
appeared to him as an arbitrary act of God,
which became known to us by "revelation".
Small
were even possible in the original state (thus
sins
ready Duns)
.
The renouncing
al-
of everything ideal,
the Neo-Platonic knowledge of the world, led
i.e.,
the nominalists to decompose the conception of guilt
and
sin; here also they
back
made tabula rasa and
upon the practice of the Church
as a revelation, because history Hereditary
and concrete
they were
relations.
still
fell
viewed blind to
Duns and
(3)
his
successors considered the guilt of hereditary sin as finite.
sin
(4)
Duns saw
simply in the
the
flesh,
contagium
of hereditary
and argued against the
Thomistic assumption of a vulneratio naturae; the religious view of sin as guilt, jeopardized already
Augustine and Thomas, fully disappeared. A.'iHtrium
Mberium arbitrium possessed the widest
(5)
by
The
scope, since
the fundamental thesis had been sacrificed, that good exists only in
dependence upon God.
and the leading theologians after him
With Duns
free-will is the
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF
SIN, ETC.
497
second great power by the side of God, and whatever they correctly established in the sphere of empirical psychology, they
and positive religious
gave to
it
significance.
also
a material
It is
the inher-
ited fate of mediaeval dogmatics, that in the amal-
gamation of a knowledge of the world and religion a
more correct knowledge of the world became finally more dangerous to faith than an incorAgainst Pelagianism, which everrect knowledge. relatively
more unhesitatingly made use
"art language", Bradwardina
simply as an first
of Augustini anism
now
Bradwardina.
took a strong stand, and after that the reaction
did not any
more wane, but gradually increased dur-
ing the 15th century until Wesel, Wessel, Staupitz,
Cajetan and Contarini appeared. of justification
nal
life
and
(6)
In the doctrine
of the meritorious earning of eter-
the dissolution manifested itself strongly
:
Justifica-
tion and Meritori-
ous Works.
(a)
The gratia praeveniens became a phrase, the gratia cooperans was the sole comprehensible grace; (b) That which with Thomas was meritum de congruo became meritum de condigno; merita de congruo, however, were acknowledged in such affections as
Thomas had not of
view
;
(c)
placed at
all
under the merit point
Together with the meritoriousness of the
attritio the fides informis, the faith,
was
also valued
the perversion
became
the faith of the
more highly. greatest.
to
At
Duns
of
this point
Mere subjection
Church and the attritio became,
a measure, the fundamental
According
mere obedience
to Subjection to
in
principles of dogmatics.
the natural sinful
man
can
still
Church
Principal
Kequirement.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
•498
prepare himself for grace; he can begin to love God.
Therefore he must do
In truth, therefore, merit
so.
always precedes grace;
first
the
gruo, then after acquiring the
meritum de
grace the mer-
first
Thereby the
itum de condigno.
con-
first
and second
grace were reduced to the rank of mere expedients.
Indeed the Divine factor appears only in the accepta-
The
tio.
around,
latter,
— does
however
—here the conception veers
not in the strictest sense at
all
admit
The nominalistic doctrine ivas only in so
of merit.
far not simple moralism as it was less, i.e. its doctrine of God does not admit in any way of a Occam Takes Refuge in Arbitra-
strict
moralism.
This
is
plainest in
Occam, who
in
general affords the paradoxical spectacle of a strongly
riness,
of God.
developed religious sense taking refuge solely in the arbitrariness of God.
the Church defined
its
Eeliance upon the content, alone saved
Faith, in order to maintain
nihilism.
latter,
as
him from
itself,
found
no other safety against the inroad of the flood
of
science than the plank of the arbitrariness of the
God whom but
it
It
no longer understood him,
submitted to him.
Thus Church dogma and
it
sought.
Church practice remained standing, just because the philosophy of religion and absolute morality were Necessity of Supernatural
Habitus Based on Authority
washed away. of
According to Occam the necessity
a supernatural habitus (therefore of grace in gen-
eral) to
gain eternal
of Church.
life
cannot be proved by argu-
ments founded upon reason, since a heathen also through reason can arrive at a love of God. The necessity
is
established solely
by the authority
of
DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE OF the Church.
Occam and
moralists or rationalists
The Socinians were the
;
SIN, ETC.
499
were as yet no
his friends
they only appear so to us.
first,
for they first raised the
hypothetical tenets of the nominalists concerning
|^?Ra
S
tlonallsts
-
But thereby
natural theology to categorical rank.
they again gained a mighty reliance upon the clearness and power of morality, which the nominalists
had forfeited together with their inward confidence in religion.
If in the 15th
century
men
bewailed the
destruction of theology in religion, they had in
mind
the tenets which were put into practice, viz., that good
works are the causae for receiving eternal
life,
that
even the most trifling works done will ever be
re-
garded as merits, and because they considered submission to the ordinances of the Church a bonus
motus, which, supplemented by the sacraments, imparts the worthiness necessary for eternal
The
lax conception of hereditary sin
life.
showed
itself
dogma concerning Mary. Anselm, Bernard, Bonaventura and Thomas still as-
in the development of the
cribed hereditary sin to Mary, even
an especial reservation regarding
it
if ;
they admitted
but by the year
1140 at Lyons a feast of the immaculate conception of
Mary was
celebrated,
and Duns taught that the
immaculate conception was probable (retro-acting
power of the death of Christ)
The controversy between the Franciscans and Dominicans which then arose was not adjusted in the Middle Ages, but was .
H gf^g^{f
y
^Mary!
500 Extravapant n a of virgin
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
Sixtus IV. forbidden by J
The Dominicans did not
otherwise take a subordinate place in the extrava-
gant glorification of
the virgin.
Thomas indeed
taught that to her belongs not only "dulia", as to the saints, but " hyperdidia"
.
She also was credited
with a certain part in the work of redemption (queen of heaven,
inventrix gratiae, via, janua, scala,
domina, mediatrix). ists,
that she
The assumption
of the Scot-
had cooperated not only passively but
also actively at the incarnation,
was a natural
sequence of the adoration, especially as
taught
it.
con-
Bernard
BOOK
III.
THE THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
CHAPTER
I.
HISTORICAL SURVEY.
THEcame more prominentAugustinian Middle Ages, during
theology be-
elements of the
the
but they were gradually more widely sundered from
one another. to solve the
True,
Thomas undertook once again
enormous problem of satisfying within
the bounds of one system all the claims ecclesiastical
antiquity as expressed in
made by
its
body of
dogma, by the Holy Scriptures, by the idea of the Church as an ever-present, living Christ, by the legal organization of the
Roman
tine's doctrine of grace,
by the science of Aristotle
Church, by Augus-
and the Bernardine-Franciscan piety
;
but this
new
Augustine was not able to create a satisfactory unity.
His undertaking had in part the opposite conse-
The nominalist's
quence, as
it
the reason
and the mysticism
school to
were.
Thomas; the
of
criticism of
Eckhart went to
curialists learned
and so did the "Reformers". 501
from him
In the 15th century
Thomas
t^pjoblern.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
502
theological doctrine
But there
to be settled.
seemed
appeared at that time two plain tendencies
ism and the opposition
Divide
thereto.
Curialism taught that the usages of the
curiaiism:
Curial-
:
Romish
Church are Divine truth. It treated Church affairs and religion as an outward dominion and sought to maintain them by means of power, bureaucracy and After the unlucky course
an oppressive toll-system.
of the great councils a general lassitude succeeded.
The
who were striving for absolutism found match when they bargained with the curia to
princes
their
share with
it
They
in the shearing of the sheep.
gave back to the curia in ecclesiastical matters the absolute power, in order to share in the division of the resultant mixture (the bulls, " Execrabilis" of Pius II. in the year 1459, p^emeover of
Leo X.
and
"
Pastor aeternus"
in the year 1516, proclaim the
suprem-
The opinion
acy of the pope over the councils).
that papal decisions are as holy as the decrees of councils,
and that the right of exposition in
things belongs only to the Church, Decrees of Councils B d e
8
ii£S!
ually established J
ver y care
M
itself.
to compile
of laws, a closed
The
all
Rome, gradhowever, was
i.e.
curia,'
'
from these decisions a book
dogmatic canon.
Its infallibility
and sovereignty were secure only when it still had a free hand and when men were obliged to accede in every case to
its judicial
utterance.
The
old
dogma
was esteemed as formerly; but the questions which it
treated in actual life lay
province.
no more within
its
They were handled by theology.
own The
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 503 latter,
however, during the 150 years subsequent to
Thomas, came
to
the conviction of the
irration-
and therefore gave out the watchword, that one must blindly submit to the ality of the revealed doctrine
authority of the Church. curialism
;
long since in
This development favored
Rome men had
taught that
submission to the authority of the Church (fides implicita) would secure blessedness,
if
only one believed
besides in the Divine recompense. tic circles of
accept this
the curia
men
did not in truth wholly
hand pious sentiment
yet on the other
;
In the humanis-
revered the Divine in the irrational and arbitrary.
That
this entire
handling of the matter was a
burying the old dogma
way
The end toward which from the beginning the matter was directed
of
now
in the Occident
clearness
Dogma °
:
The curia
itself
is clear.
revealed
itself
with astounding
is institution,' is
respected the
is a code of J laws. P°S^. Institution.
same only formally;
practically there lay beneath, as in the case of all codes
in the hands of curia.
The
an absolute master, the politics
" tolerari
potest" and the "probabile"
worse secularization of the dogma
indicate a
still
and
Church than the "anathema
of the
of the
sit".
Yet
there lay a truth in curialistic ecclesiasticism itself as contrasted with those tendencies
which would
found the Church upon the sanctity of Christians.
Against the Hussites and the mystics did
Rome
pre-
serve the right of the conviction, that the Church of
Christ
men.
is
the domination of the Gospel over sinful
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
504 <
to curialism
The opposition
Opposition
cmiaiisiu.
was held together by a
negat i ve thought, that the usages of the
Church were become tyrannical and that
Romish they had
the testimony of ecclesiastical antiquity against
Here
them.
political, social, religious
and
scientific
Men reasoned accordingly that
motives met together.
papal decisions do not have the significance of articles of faith, that
Rome
not the only one authorized to
is
interpret the Scriptures
and the
fathers, that the coun-
hierarchy and in
cil
should reform the Church in
its
members, and that the Church, over against the
its
dogmatic, cultish and ecclesiastico-legalistic innova-
Retination
from»?-
tions of
Rome, must return
and
its
to
original °
to its original principles
attitude.
Men
believed them-
selves able to set aside the evolution of the preceding
centuries
and planted themselves in thesi upon the
Holy Scriptures and
ecclesiastical antiquity ; but in
praxi the reformatory aim was either wholly obscure or contained so
many
elements of the post-Augustin-
ian development that the opposition
Men knew
the start.
was crippled from
not whether they were to re-
form usages or misusages, and they knew not what they should do with the pope, whom they acknowledged and rejected, blessed and cursed with the same breath
(cf.
the pope).
was
still
Luther's
But
r
S?ty: 1
staupitX
attitude, 1517-1520,
toward
this highly inconsistent opposition
a power, save within the realm of doctrine;
for the latter al
own
was
discredited also within the circles
of tne anti-curialists.
watchword
of
was the Erasmus and of Au-
"Practical piety"
humanists like
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 505 gustinians like Staupitz. that theology safe
haven of
more
life
;
it
surfeited with
which reasoned over-much within the authority and rendered the truly pious
difficult.
"science", then ter
Men were
If the
was
it
Church doctrine were only
given for the sake of the
ought to step aside and make
way
for a
lat-
new
mode of thought (see Socinianism) But since the old dogma was more, it remained yet here also as a legal code. With the exception of a few bold .
—
leaders the opposition parties respected the
with the instinct it
still
ever, even
of if
of their existence.
controversies ful to
them
:
as
felt
obscurely, as the foundation
But they wished no doctrinal
Scholastic quibblings were as distaste-
monkish
free themselves
quarrels,
still
they wished to
What
from scholasticism.
The ultimate ground lay
diction!
dogma
They
self-preservation.
socinianism.
in the
cona contra- what tracuc-
enormous
tions!
dogma and the Christian conceptions whose expressed form was the life of the day. Dogma was the soil and the titlebreach which existed between the old
deed for the existence of the Church
Church dogma had then existed,
still
—but which old
for piety, as
a directly comprehensible sense?
the doctrine of the trinity, nor of the
Men thought no more Piety, as
it
developed
in Augustine, °
it
then
Neither
two natures.
after the
manner of the Greeks.
itself in
the 15th century, lived
Bernard and Francis.
Under the
Men Thought to
an old faith a new piety had been forming J^SiS mmsm during the past thousand years and therefore also a
shell of
-
new
faith.
Men
here and there thought to assist by
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
506
a return to pure Augustinianism.
Church and the obscure aim
of
Augustinianism
it-
piety,
sprang out of the
self.
The
premises.
This,
it is ;
is
true,
no forerunner of the Ref-
but the fact of the impossibility
by the means transmitted by
a reformation
Augustine
soil of
defects lay germinally already in their
ormation perceived of
thoroughly apparent.
rated Augustinianism is
how
crisis
between the dogmatic legal
at that time, the breach
regulations in the
Yet the
still
The disinteg-
Augustinianism;
then shall one permanently help out the
same
with the genuine? criticism
Still
the criticism
Beneficial.
which applied the revived Au± *
gustinianism to the disintegrated had in the 15th century a beneficial influence, without whose prepa-
work the Reformation and the Tridentine
ratory
The immoral, irreligious, yea, heathenish mechanism of the dominant Church was discredited by this Augustinianism; council were
inconceivable.
yes even more, the latter unfettered the sense of
freedom in religion and therewith the striving after real religion. forces
which
It
worked in union with
the
in the 15th century recognized the right
of the individual
and
of subjectivity,
break the spell of the Middle Ages. rest,
all
and sought It created
to
un-
an unrest which went beyond itself— How can
one be a free and at the same time a blessed
man?
But no one was able to formulate this question, because no one felt as yet its full force.
With
the close of the 15th century various issu-
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 507 ings of the crisis seemed possible
umph
of curialism, a
A complete
tri-
J^™!
triumph of revivified Augus-
poSSe.
:
tinianism, a sundering of the Church into diverse
groups of the most rigid curialism and of a ceremonial religion
verging toward a rationalistic and fanat-
which should discard the
ical Biblical Christianity
old
dogma,
whole, root
finally
a new reformation of religion as a
an evangelical reformation, which should
i.e.
up and discard the
point of Christ,
view
— God
dogma, because the new
old.
is
gracious for the sake of
and the right and freedom which have come
through him
—could
permit that only
to
remain in
theology which belonged to him.
In reality, however, the issuings were different.
They
all
remained burdened with contradictions:
Tridentine
Socinianism
Catholicism,
Evangelical Reformation.
In the
first
and
T
i(
nt ine
^ J^ 1^3X110.11" i
cism
*
the
curialism
prevailed, the monarchical institutional dispenser of
blessedness with
but
it
found
itself
its
sacraments and
compelled to
make
its
"merits";
a compact with
Augustinianism and to reckon with the same on the basis of the codification of the
had been extorted from
new dogmas which In Socinianism the
it.
socinianism.
nominalistic criticism of the understanding and the
humanistic
spirit of the
new
era prevailed; but
it
remained entangled in the old Biblicism, and in setting aside the old
dogmas
it
created for itself
new
Finally in the evan- ^fpSor-" gelical Reformation the infallible organization of the
ones in opposition to the old.
Church, the infallible doctrinal traditions of the
—
508
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
Church and the
to
canon of Scripture were in
aside and a wholly
principle set
secured
infallible
apply in each particular instance that which had
On
the thing itself (the Gospel)
demanded
men
it,
"word against
authority
dogma
as the es-
and under the
the Gospel
God" they returned the new doctrine of the
title
Over
to Biblicism.
hierarchical, cultish,
and monkish Christendom men saw in
dogma only
the expression of faith in
God
who is merciful in Christ, and failed to see that dogma at the same time is something entirely diff er-
KnÄedge en *> Y ^ z the world,
—not the
of
Pelagianistic
the old
the assumption that
retained the old
sential content of
Do|ma
standpoint
but sagacity and courage did not hold out
;
been secured in general.
is
new
-
'•
Philosophical
and rule of
faith.
under a new
title
cosmo-theistic knowledge
But that which men admitted
vindicated
been allowed, by a logic of
itself,
its
when once
own.
Men
the true theology, the theologia cruris, it
upon the lamp-stand
;
it
had
exalted
and placed
but in doing this under the
old ecclesiastical forms they obtained in the bargain
the accompanying knowledge and rule of faith;
and the doctrinal controversies of the evangelical parties appeared like a continuation of the scholastic
school-controversies, only with infinitely higher significance; for
now
they had to do with the exist-
ÄcXn-
ence °f the neiv Church.
Augsburg
beginning
Thus arose
at the very
— at least with the eucharistic controversy
Confession,
and the Augsburg Confession, which now began to pour the new wine into the old wine-skins— in the
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 509 reformed conception of doctrine a highly compli-
Only in the principles
cated, contradictory picture. of Luther,
and not in
all of
them, did the
display itself; outside of these
new, and he
who
it
new
spirit
contained nothing
to-day, in the 19th century, does
not take this spirit as his monitor, but rests quietly
beneath the stunning blow which
it
gave
itself at
the end of the 16th century, deceives himself in re-
own
gard to his
position
:
He
is
not evangelical, but
belongs to a Catholic sub-species where he
is free,
in
accordance with the principles of present-day Protes tantism, to select the Biblical, dogmatical, mystical Post-Tridentiue.
or hierarchical elements.
However, the resultants of the history of the
dogma
c
f
h"
c S m.
are clearly represented in the three following
creations
:
Post-Tridentine Catholicism finally com-
pleted the neutralizing of the old
dogma
in an arbi-
Socinian-
trary papal legal organization; Socinianism appreciably
disintegrated
and came
to
an end;
the
dogma aside and preserved them outright, looked away from them, backward to the Gospel, forward to a new formulaReformation, in that
it
both set the
tion of the Gospel confession
which
shall be free
from dogma and be reconciled with truthfulness and truth.
In this sense the history of
set forth the issuings of
tion
it
dogma.
dogma
should
In the Reforma-
has only to describe the Christianity of Luther,
in order to
make
the subsequent development com-
prehensible.
The
the history of
dogma
latter belongs either as
a whole to
(up to the present time)
,
or not
Re
^™ a
"
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
510 at
all.
It is
more
however, to exclude
correct,
entirely, for the old
dogma claimed
it
to be infallible.
This claim the Reformation, so to speak, disclaimed for
its
own
productions
the old dogmas.
—there
Therefore he
was
who
silence as to still
seeks for
a middle conception between reformable and lible
infal-
would perpetuate forever the confusions of the
epigonoi,
if
he should recognize dogmas in the
expositions of Protestantism in the 16th century.
CHAPTER
II.
THE ISSUING OF THE DOGMA IN ROMAN CATHOLICISM.
The Codification of the Mediaeval Doctrines in
1.
Opposition to Protestantism Decrees of Trent)
(Canons
and
.
Edition of the decrees, 1564. Earlier works in Köllner, Symbolik, 1844, later in Herzog, RE 2 sub verb. Tridentinum. ,
SSn
a nd
^"
s
N R° me ^ie y wished only
* doctrines, not to codify their
no
condemn strange
to
own they ;
also
wanted
But one was required of the curia by the In the coming together it became clear that
council.
princes.
the mediseval spirit had acquired strength from the
Reformation, humanism and Augustinianism, but that this spirit itself remained the stronger power.
The
curia accomplished the masterful work, of ap-
propriating the new, of condemning the Reformation, of justifying itself
and yet of setting aside thereby
the most glaring abuses.
In opposing the Luther
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 511 movement, they were obliged mediaeval doctrines
dogmas ^
into
—the
rees decrees of DecTrent
Trent are the shadows of the Reformation.
mind
originally to the
a misfortune
—the
be an advantage
whenever
it
The
f
Ärma°-
:
—proved
itself
They had a new rule of strictness,
seemed expedient, and which was, on
the other hand, so free
s
necessity of formulating and the
which could be applied with verbal
faith,
"What
of
of the curia appeared to be
compulsory return to Augustinianism, later to
many
to transform
ambiguous and
elastic as to leave
play for the arbitrary decisions of the curia.
and
latter reserved the right of interpretation
the council conceded this, and thus already did infallibility itself
The
curia
SgedJ
came
forth
improved.
accrue in principle to the pope.
was accordingly unchanged,
i.e. it
from the purgatory of the council with toms, practices, assumptions and sins condition of the Church as a whole
By reason of
improved.
its
;
all its cus-
but the inner
was nevertheless
inner untruthfulness and
because the doctrines of the Church of to-day have
been consistently developed in not a few points
(re-
cent rejection of Augustinianism, decision of the question, undecided at Trent, whether the pope be
the universal bishop and infallible), the Tridentine decrees are no longer an unobscured source of Catholicism.
Even
at Trent
into a dogma-politics, faith
down
and dogma is
:
were the dogma transformed
and the
it
from
Everything that has been handed
most holy as regard
in theology
laity debarred
its
verbal meaning, but
resolves itself into
an array
of
more or
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
512
probable meanings, which, in the case of any
less
controversy, are decided Re-Baptism e"
e
nouiced
They agreed
by the pope.
in the rejection of " re-baptism"
and
After reiterating the Constantinopoli-
Protestants.
tan creed, they declared in the 4th session, in order "
to guard the
puritas evangelii", that the apocrypha
are of like rank with the Old Testament, that the
vulgate
is to
be considered as authentic, and that
the Church alone tures. Tradition,
"
foe
permitted to interpret the Scrip-
is
By the side of the latter, however, traditiones sine scripto,
quae ab ipsius
ab apostolis acceptae aid ab ipsius
Ch?*isti ore
apostoliSy
they placed
sancto
spiritu
dictante,
per
quasi
manus traditae ad nos usque pervenerunt"
(in an-
other place the definition expresses the idea some-
what
differently).
In the 5th and 6th sessions the
decrees in regard to original sin
were formulated.
Here under the
awakened Augustinianism and
and
justification
spell of the re-
of the Reformation
they did not commit themselves to the nominalistic doctrine, but approached very near to
Thomas
deed their doctrine of justification, although born
of
politics,
is
a very respectable
it
;
in-
was
prodiact,
which an evangelical element is not wanting. But (1) lines were drawn here and there which led
in
Petenten-
Roman Church Laws.
to a Scotistic (semi-Pelagian)
made very
understanding of the
what was said m the chief sentence about sin and grace, when in the subordinate sentences the thesis was allowed, that the practices of the Roman Church are the chief doctrine, (2) it .
little
difference
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 513
By
law.
holiness
fuer at",
was admitted, Adam lost and righteousness u in qua constitutus became changed "in deter ins" in body and the
first
sin, it
" propagatione"
and perpetuated his sin
soul,
Yet
.
they also taught that free will was not destroyed, but
Free wni.
"viribus attenuatus" and that baptism really blots ,
out the reatus originalis peccati, but the concupis-
centia (forties), which
is
not to be looked upon as
remains (therefore the religious view was aban-
sin,
doned).
As
that
the act by which rftan passes from an un-
it is
regards justification
it
was explained
righteous to a righteous state (through baptism, the sacrament of penance)
it arises,
;
simply through the forgiveness
of
Justifies
i.e.
however, not sin,
but
also
through the sanctifying and renewing of the inner
man by a free acceptance man is incapable of freeing ion of sin per
On
Moysis.
of grace, although
the
himself from the domin-
vim naturae,
or
per litteram
legis
the one hand, justification appears as
the translatio from one condition to another, viz.
was looked upon as the determining power alongside of grace (" Christum proposuit deus propitiatorem per fidem in san-
to that of adoption,
and
faith
guine ipsius pro peccatis nostris") hand, the
;
on the other
appears as a sanctifying process through
it
inpouring
of grace
("
Christi
sanctissimae
passionis merit o per spiritum sanctum Caritas dei diffunditur in cordibus", so that
sin
in justifi-
same time with the forgiveness an inflow of faith, love and hope; with-
cation receives at the of
man
33
v^pg
;
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
514
out the last two,
man
neither perfectly united to
is
The
Christ, nor is his faith a living one).
view
the decisive, and accordingly the stadia of
is
(inception et seq.)
the process of justification pmeien,ens '
set fortn in
exhausts meritis) ed,
latter
a g eneral
itself ;
wav
The 9 ra ^ a praeveniens
-
in the vocatio (nullis existentibus
but therein
much more
is
the inception not exhaust-
does there belong to
minatio spiritus sancti, which enables
it
the illu-
man
to turn
toward the justitia and gives him therewith a position
and a
are
free surrender to
God.
In that
dis-
now
justificatio first ensues, the thought of the gratia
gratis data V ness of sin r
is vitiated.
Only in abstracto
forgiveness of sin inherently peculiar, is
true of justification in concreto ;
cess of sanctification tificatio
which
is
it is
is
the
and the same a gradual pro-
completed in the mor-
membrorum carnis and made
manifest
through manifold grace in an obedience to the com-
mands
of
God and the Church.
Unto an assurance
of the acquired grace can one not attain in this life
but the lack of this can be repaired through penance the process also does not need to be so far as faith has
remained in spite of the
loss of
The goal of the process bona opera, which God by virtue
in this
the justifying grace. opera the
life is
the
begun anew, in
of his
Goal.
grace receives as pleasing to himself and as meritorious.
Accordingly one must view these on the
one hand as gifts of
God and on
means
— The
is,
to blessedness.
that (in opposition to the
the other as real
most important thing
Thomas-Augustinian
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 515 tradition)
prima
the gratia
Therefore justification arises out of
only disposes.
No Augustinian
a cooperation.
against Protestantism.
29 are directed
Js^fjrL. operat
aliud
esse
divinae misericordiae peccata
remittentis propter Christum, esse,
Justinea-
In the condemnation of the
"fidem justificatem nihil
quam fiduciam solam
phraseology can
Of the 33 anathemas,
conceal this.
sentence,
does not justify, but
vel earn fiducian
qua justiftcamur", something more
was
implicitly condemned, viz. rigid Augustinian-
ism,
— therein
does the artfulness
of
the decree
consist.
In the 7th and following sessions the doctrine of the sacraments
was formulated and u
declared a sacramental institution
(
the Church
was
per sacramenta
omnis vera justitia vel incipit vel coepta augetur vel amissa reparatur") concerning the word and ;
faith there
was accordingly silence.
trine of the sacraments in genere 13
Instead of a doc-
anathemas were
formulated, which contain the real protest against Protestantism.
The
institution
the seven sacraments
was
by Christ
of all of
affirmed, as well as the
per solam fidem, without the sacraments. These " continent gratiam" and accordingly possess a mysterious power, which they bestow ex opere operato upon those "qui impossibility of being justified
obicem non ponunt". Thomistic
doctrine
In other respects also the
(character,
intention,
etc.)
is
everywhere preserved, yet the theological subtleties are laid aside, and the transition to the Scotistic form
Doctrine of Sacraments.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
510
of statement Departures
from <:s
of
At
the close of the
anathemas every departure from the once established usages of the Church was condemned. For the treat-
Church Condemned.
remains possible.
of the individual sacraments the bull of
ment
IV., Exultate
domino
The declarations
(1439), served as
in regard to baptism
tion are instructive only in that
persons are condemned sins "
who
Eugene
a prototype.
and confirma-
by the former those
teach that
all
subsequent
sola recordatione et fide suscepti baptismi"
can be forgiven, and by the latter that the bishop alone
is
proclaimed as minister sacramenti.
Touch-
ing the eucharist the Thomistic theologumena were Transubstantiation.
transformed into a dogma.
In virtue of the transub-
stantiation the entire Christ is present in each particle of
each of the elements, and such
before their reception
;
hence the host
the case
is
is to
be wor-
shipped ("in eucharistia ipse sanctitatis auctor
ante
usum
All usages were here designated
est").
as apostolic.
The
effect of the
highly insignificant
;
sacrament remains
those were expressly condemned
who held forgiveness to be the principal fruit. At the most contested point, the mass, the sum total
of tradition
was
sanctioned, a
few supersti-
tious misusages only being discountenanced.
Low
and high mass
pro
("
vivis et defunctis
sacrificium propitiator ium
nondum ad plenum purgatis ")
were as much justified— notwithstanding ples of Canones.
all
scru-
princes— as the withholding of the cup and
the Latin language.
matory movements
The canones under
the
place
all refor-
ban and thereby
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 517 rigidly exclude the
Church
of the
Church of the pagan mass-offering. penance
word from the The doctrine of
much more thoroughly handled than
is
that of the eucharist about which the theologians
alone contended.
Even unto
the materia and quasi
materia was the entire scholastic labor in respect
Hence a more extended
penance received as dogma. above, examination (see v
'
p. L
to
479)'
is
unnecessary. J
Yet
m
it is
worthy
of
remark that the attritio
cumspectly handled, and
is
as contritio imperfecta. gorically
was
very
cir-
everywhere looked upon So much the more
Equals
Co ^ntio ec a
pe
'
cate-
the confessio of every mortal sin be-
fore the priest encouraged
of the priest emphasized.
as with
is
Attritio
and the judicial character
The satisfactions were,
Thomas, considered just as necessary
for the
temporalis poena peccati as the indulgences.
Yet
men
The
spoke very reservedly about the matter.
Ind
en "
«!i!f
scholastic theory is not alluded to, the abuse is per-
mitted
ing
is
;
yet touching the thing itself absolutely noth-
conceded (whoever declares indulgences not to
be salutary
is to
be condemned)
.
In regard to the last
anointing, the orders and marriage they rushed to the conclusion that the Septem ordines were already
given ab ipso initio ecclesiae.
The
old contested
question regarding the relation of the bishops to the priests
was not
superiority.
decided, yet the former acquired a
Regarding marriage they discoursed
only homiletically and ecclesiastically, yet they con-
demned those who denied
On
that
it
conferred a gratia.
the questions respecting purgatory, saints, relics
Marriage,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
518
and images they spoke regretfully of the abuses, yet strongly maintained the tradition, indulging the spirit of the
the Church, in cial, priestly
Thus did
times in cautious language. its specific
secularization as a sacrifi-
and sacramental
institution,
round
itself
out by the Tridentine decrees and never once sur-
render
its idols
(See on the practice of benedictions,
sacraments and indulgences, Gihr,
d. h.
The
1887; Schneider, die Ablässe, 1881). rooted the
Church firmly
Ages and
of scholasticism
Messopfer, decrees
in the soil of the Middle :
Sacraments, obedience,
merit.
2.
The Post- Tridentine Development as a Preparation for the Vatican Decrees. Denzinger, Enchiridion,
Curiaiism
5.
Aufl., 1874.
The questions not wholly decided
at Trent
:
Curi-
or Episco-
pacy?
alism or episcopacy,
Augustinianism or Jesuitic
Pelagianism, moral law or probability, continued to agitate the three following centuries.
question became a double one
:
Pope or
The
first
council, papal
decision or tradition.
The Vatican
council decided
in favor of curiaiism
and therewith
also for Jesuit-
ism. cate-
chismus Romanus.
1.
ists
(a)
At Trent
the opposition between the curial-
and the champions of episcopacy, touching the
article respecting the
power
of the pope,
permitted to come to a decision at
all
;
was not
but the pro-
fessio fidei Tridentinae had already smuggled the
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 519
Romish Church and the pope Thomistic Catechismus
into its credo,
Romanus
and the
taught papal au-
tocracy as an article of faith (" necessarium fuit hoc
caput ad unitatem ecclesiae constituendam et conservandam"). Yet there arose a vigorous opvisibile
France of Henry IV. and Louis
position, viz., in the
XIV.
Men
reverted there (Bossuet) to Gallicanism
(in other respects also the Tridentine decrees
were not
Gaiiican-
ism; Bossuet
-
unconditionally accepted), partly in the interest of the king, partly in that of the nation and
its
(residence of the bishops divinojure).
As
meaning
of the primacy,
they were as
little
which was allowed
to the
to pass,
able to arrive at clearness
unanimity as in the 15th century; but settled that the
bishops
it
and
remained
king and the bishops should rule the
French church, that the pope has nothing to say about temporal things, and that in spiritual things also he is
bound by the decisions
of the councils (Constance),
his decisions consequently being unalterable only
the concurrence of the of 1682).
The popes
by
Church (Gallican propositions
rejected these propositions, but
did not break with France.
At
the end of his
life
Louis xiv.
the great king himself discounted them, without
They were in the 18th century still ever a power until the monarch who elevated them to constitutional law (1810) handed them over to the curia Napoleon I. The way in which he, with the consent of the popes, shattered
formally withdrawing them.
—
the
Church and
ecclesiastical organization
which
were overturned by the revolution, in order to rebuild
Napoleon
520
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
them
in
conjunction with the latter, was by a
surrender of the French church to the popes.
emperor did not intend Romanticists.
The romanticists briand et
cd.)
it
as such, but such
completed the work in union with the
Gallicanism was exterminated.
restoration.
far as France is Catholic to-day, it is papal
the
official
Febronius curialism Ems
1
Pro-
gramme.
politics also
;
(17G3)
In
made a vigorous
however
Germany
attack
upon
but since the one wanted an arch-episco-
pal national church (Ems'
"programme",
other state churches (Joseph II. et
Peace of Vienna.
;
In so
watches over the interests
ultramontanism in foreign lands.
of
was.
Chateau-
Bonald,
(de Maistre,
it
The
The
ally
came
of
the
new
plan for restoring
it.
old
al.),
1786). the
nothing actu-
Church organization and it
went down in the
whirlpool of the Napoleonic epoch.
In the peace of
Vienna a new Church emerged, which the Curia directed,
and in which the
latter
with the help of the
princes, the ultramontane romanticists, trustful lib-
and Metternich diplomatists crushed out the remnant of episcopacy and of national churchdom.
erals
Professio Fidei Tridentinae.
1.
(b)
The professio fidei Tridentinae had already
given tradition a far wider range than the Tridentine decrees
themselves (" apostolicas et ecclesiasticas
traditiones reliquasque einsdem ecclesiae obser-
vationes et constitutiones firmissime admitto et amplector ") and had raised it above the Scriptures. Jesuits.
The Jesuits subordinated the latter more and more to tradition and took particular pains on that account to formulate the
inspiration of the Scriptures in as
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 521
way
loose a
as possible, so that indeed the Vatican
decrees seem to have done
away with
the contradic-
tion.
Modern Catholicism, however, demands
—the
holding of Scriptural tradition as inviolably
sacred,
and
at the
cautiously upon
same time the putting of the its
and
insufficiency
More important was the development
Church
that there are no ;
finger
defects.
of the idea of
In theory the statement was firmly main-
tradition.
tained
its
both,
new
revelations in the
in reality the gnostic (secret tradition)
and
which how-
enthusiastic tradition-principle, against
was Bellarmine was as ever most boldly J contended for. yet timid but Cornelius Mussus, a member of the Tri dentine council, had already put forth the assertion that in matters of faith he believed one pope more than a thousand Augustines and Jeromes. The ever the Catholic Church once arrayed
itself,
;
quite
new
article, that all
Church are
Tradition,
practices of the
tradition, the Jesuits enlarged
Bella,r-
.
mine, Cormissus.
Roman by the
very newest, that every doctrinal decision of the pope is tradition.
Here and there
in truth they spoke
disparagingly in regard to councils and proof from tradition, or declared the best attested decrees as forgeries, in
order to vanquish history by the
cerning the pope.
The Church
tradition, the
Church however
fore the pope
is the
itself is
dogma con-
is
the living
the pope;
tradition (Pius IX.).
there-
And
he
by the proclamation the immaculate conception of the virgin Mary,
exercised this attribute in 1854 of
thus solving an old contested question (seep. 449).
u §J,
p*Jf
—
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
522
That which could not be accomplished by force at Trent, propter angustias
temporum,
rules to-day,
an heretical principle when measured by Catholic antiquity. Augustsianism Laid Aside.
In the Catechismus
(2)
Romanus
(1566),
which
^e Jesuits gladly adopted, Augustin ianism obtained monument.
its last official
Thenceforth they sought
to prove that the doctrine of grace received its sanc-
tion through the world-shaping practice of the con-
came
to pass
that Pius V. rejected the 79 articles of the
Lyons
Already in the year 1567
fessional.
professor, Bajus,
which
in the
it
main
set forth the
most stringent Augustinianism, although intermingled with foreign elements and otherwise unfavorable to the Reformation. Dominicans and Jesuits.
A long and heated contro-
versy arose between the Dominicans and the Jesuits.
The former resisted the Jesuit educational system, condemned the most objectionable articles of the Jesuits (Lessius
and Hamel) and sought
to
maintain
the Thomistic teaching in regard to the gravity of the
Molina Revives S.-mi-Pela-
gianism.
first
sin, in
regard to concupiscence and the
gratia praeveniens.
The latter laid particular stress
upon
" disposition ".
and the
free-will
Among them
Molina made the greatest sensation by his work: " Liberi arbitrii cum gratiae donis, divina praescientia (1588).
into
.
.
He
.
praedestinatione
attempted to read
Augustinianism
away
altogether.
troversy recourse
;
.
.
.
concordia"
semi-Pelagianism
in reality he gave the latter
In order to allay the stormy con-
was had
to
Rome.
She had no
in-
;
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OP HISTORY OF DOGMA. 523 terest in the thing itself, but only in the opportunity
the controversy however
was not about Augustine
and Pelagius, but about Dominicans and
Jesuits.
Politics required that neither party should be wholly "
The
sacrificed.
congregatio de auxiliis". which
congregatio
sat
from 1598
to 1607 (the
pope during the same time
De
{^^
being intimidated by the Jesuits) was finally dis,
solved without
its
arriving at a decision ("fore ut
sua Sanctitas declarationem
et
determinationem,
quae exspectabatur, opportune promulgar et") failure to decide
was
The Jansenist
.
The
in fact a victory for the Jesuits.
contest
was
still
In Catho-
worse.
jansenist
Con-
lic
France, which had expelled the Reformation after
fearful struggles, itself
an earnest piety gradually worked
out alongside the frivolous court and state
Catholicism and the lax Jesuitism.
work
of
(1640),
brought the same to an historical and theoThis piety rose right up in order to free
Church from the Church, the
tional Christianity,
"
faith
from
and morality from the
The
and lax morality. seemed
The posthumous
Bishop Jansen of Ypres, "Augustinus"
logical halt.
the
troversy.
(Pascal's Letters: !
")
.
The
able to hold out against this form-
by assuming the offensive and by branding the pure Augustinianism of Jansen and The popes his friends as heresy ("Jansenism"). idable attack only
allowed themselves to gain the day.
("In eminenti"), but above
confessional
enemy
Ecce patres, qui tollunt peccata mundi
was
refined
confessional of the Jesuits
to it to be the real
order of Jesus
tradi-
all
Urban VIII.
Innocence X.
("
Cum
A
p^J
d;
"
:
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
524
and Alexander VII. ("Ad sancti b. Petri sedem") forbade, i.e. condemned Jansen' s book. occasioned)
Innocent indicated besides five articles of Jansen 's
Then arose a
as objectionable.
The
"
violent opposition
Jansenists" refused to acknowledge the incrim-
inating articles as Jansen's and to Alexander VII., Clement XI.
condemn them.
it, and the crown supBut Alexander VII. required * ported him. After a temporary compromise (silen-
tium obsequiosum, 1668, Clement IX.), Clement XI. renewed (1705) the sharp bull of his predecessors.
Unigen-
Port Koyal was destroyed.
Augustinianism, how-
ever, received a still harder
blow by the constitution
"Unigenitus"
of
Clement XI.
In this 101
(1713).
itus.
articles
from a devotional work on the
New
Testa-
ment by Paschasius Quesnel, which the Jesuits had Among them were not extracted, were proscribed. only ("
many
pure Augustinian, but also Pauline ideas
— "fides est fons omnium aliarum" — "prima
Nullae dantur gratiae nisi per fidem"
prima gratia et gratia, quam deus concedit torum remissio" —
peccatori, est pecca-
peccator non est liber nisi ad
malum sine gratia liberatoris", opposition in France Netherlands.
arose in France.
etc.)
.
Again a storm
Those receiving ° and those opposing rr °
tne kull were arrayed against each other.
ever in Catholicism
—the one finally surrendered with
a sullied conscience, the other
and fanaticism. arisen,
But as
went under in ecstasy
Only in the Netherlands had there
through the Jansenian contest, a schismatic
old Catholic
Church.
firmed by several popes,
The is
bull Unigenitus, con-
the victory of Jesuitical
— :
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 525 dogmatics over Augustinian, and hence
word of
of the Catholic history of
a doctrine of
last
remnant
As
faith).
dogma
is
the final
(in the sense
in the 19th century the
of Grallicanism has been destroyed, so
also has that of Jansenism, or the "after-mysticism",
which was necessarily evolved out of Augustinianism and quietism and is assuredly a peril to the Catholic
The proclamation of the immaculate conception of the virgin Mary by Pius IX. marks the conclusion. As in a formal way (see sub 1) it marks Church.
Dogma
of
Immacu11 "
option
the definite exaltation of the papacy, so in a material
way The
it
marks the expulsion
of Augustinianism.
indestructible impulse toward inwardness, con-
templativeness and Christian independence Jesuitical
Catholicism
now employed with
sensuous media of
every kind, with toys and miracles, with fraternities, disciplinary exercises
thereby kept (3) v '
it
and scheduled prayers, and
harnessed to the Church.
had the Already J in the Middle Ages °
casuistic spirit of the
Romish Church
-juristicJ
perniciously
influenced the confessional, ethics and dogmatics.
The nominalistic theology had one in this juristic casuistry
{i.e.
of its strong roots
in probability).
The
manner cultivated it, this, which several times had jeopardized the pope himself and even the members of their own order Jesuits took
it
up and
in a
(Döllinger and Reusch, Gesch. der Moralstreitigk. seit d. 16.
Jahrh. 1880).
mäus de Medina was
the
The Dominican Bartholofirst to
ity" " scientifically" (1577).
expound
" probabil-
The formula runs thus
Jesuitical Casuistry.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
526 "
Si est opinio probabilis, licitum est earn sequi,
licet
probability Dominates,
Seldom has a word
opposita sit probabilior".
was the freeing
so set things on
fire.
from morality,
of religion
It
from
of morality
Already
religion.
about 1G00 probability was evidenced as the dominating view, but was especially cultivated by the Jesuits.
Within the realm
itself, (1)
As
of
faith
exhibited
it
laxity (in respect of the granting of
absolution) (2) ,
As attritionism (fear of punishment).
A great array of sub-species was deduced
Lax, pure,
:
and rigorous probability, aequi-probability, greater
and stringent prudence.
probability, lax
among
ences
the
slight; the last
—which
pressly rejected Doctrine
is
whole system
first six
differ-
are fundamentally very
alone
is
ethical
by Alexander VIII. in
is
The
Talmudic;
— was
ex-
The
1690.
very likely from the
Middle Ages on there has been an actual connection between the two.
Jansenism, above
all
Pascal,
rose in opposition to the destruction of morality.
brought
it to pass that "
It
probabilism" was repressed
after the middle of the 17th century.
Several popes
forbade the laxest moral-theological books
;
Innocent
XI. condemned, in 1679, 65 articles of the "proba-
among which were
bilists",
true knavish tricks (see
Denzinger, Enchiridion, pp. 213 seq. 217, 218 seq.). T
G onSe1
The worse seemed to be warded off at the time wnen in tlie Jesuit order itself, Thyrsus Gonzales >
again revived the doctrine eral).
Still
blended.
(in
1687 he became the gen-
Jansenism and
anti-probabilism were
As
the former
fell
the latter
was
neces-
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 527
The popes had as regards " attritionism" also reduced it to a mere neutrality. Out of this fountain probabilism burst forth anew in the 18th century. The founder of the " order of redempsarily
weakened.
tionists",
Alphons Liguori
(beatified 1816, canonized
Aiphons Liguori.
1839, doctor of the
Church
1871),
became through
his
books the most influential teacher in the Church.
He
succeeded in modern Catholicism to the place
once occupied by Augustine.
an aequi-probabilist,
came
forth
He
probabilist,
i.e.
was, however,
and no Pascal
any more.
3.
The Vatican Decrees.
The Church which had destroyed episcopacy and
x ,
Augustinianism within
itself built
up probabilism
and the Church which, in union with the action and romanticism,
had exalted the pope
him as the the dogma of
ing tradition was finally ripe for
the
is
real
and
*
The bishops acknowledged
infallibility of the pope.
primacy
Pope
to liv-
the Vatican
alli " f
political re-
lordship over herself and proclaimed
through
^
council
(18G9-70),
direct, that the
that
the
pope possesses
immediata as plena et suprema over the whole Church, and that this power is episcopal in the fullest sense. Of this universal bishop they confessed on the 18th of July, 1870: " Docemus Ju^th, et divinitus revelatum dogma esse definimus: Rothe potestas ordinaria et
manian Pontificem, quum ex cathedra loquitur id est
quum omnium Christianorum pastoris
et doc-
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
528
munere fugens pro suprema sua qpostolica auctoritate doctrinam de fide vel moribus ab universal, ecclesia tenendum definit, per assistentiam toris
divinam, ipsi in
b.
Petro promissam, ea infalli-
qua divinus redemptor ecclesiam suam in definienda doctrina de fide vel moribus bilitate pollere,
instructam esse voluit, ideoque eiusmodi pontificis definitiones ex sese,
sensu ecclesiae, irr efor mobiles
Romani
non autem ex conSi quis au-
esse.
tem huic nostrae definitioni contradicere, quod deus avertat, praesumpserit, anathema sit" (FriedGesch.
rich, protest
d.
vatic.
Concils, 3 Bde.
1877
seq.).
The bishops who spoke in opposition soon submitted. The number of those who refused to accept the new dogma was and is small (see Schulte, Der AltkathoThe new doctrine is in reality the licismus, 1887). Others
cap-stone of the building.
may
follow, e.g.
the temporal dominion of the pope as an article of faith
;
but
it
has revealed
can have no effect. itself
as the autocratic dominion of the
pontifex maximus possession of the
The Romish Church
—the
old
memory
Roman
empire taking
of Jesus Christ,
founded
upon his word and sacraments, exercising according to need an elastic or iron dogmatic legal discipline,
encompassing purgatory and heaven in ad-
dition to the earth.
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 529
CHAPTER
III.
THE ISSUING OF THE DOGMA IN ANTI-TRINITARIANISM AND SOCINIANISM. 1.
Historical Introduction.
Erbkam, Gesch. d. protest. Secten, 1848. Carriere, die Weltanschauung d. Ref-Zt. 2. Aufl. 1887. Trechsel,
philos.
,
die protest. Antitrinitarier, 2 Bde.
,
1839
f.
Sozzini was an epigone like Calvin.
Socinianism,
'
viewed from the standpoint of the history
Church and of dogma, had
socinianism.
of the
for its presuppositions the
great anti-ecclesiastical agitations
the Middle
of
Ages but the Reformation also influenced it. It was evolved out of these agitations; it explained them and reduced them to a unity. A ScotisticPelagian element and a critico-humanistic are blend° ;
ed in tic
it;
besides one perceives also an anabaptis-
element (pantheistic, enthusiastic, mystic, social-
istic
elements are wanting)
rationalistic
of the 14th
In
.
it
the critical and
thought of the ecclesiastical theologians
and 15th centuries
also
have a
velopment; at the same time, however, result of the impulses of the
The
new age
freer de-
it is
also the
(renaissance).
characteristic thing in the anti-trinitarian
Socinian agitations of the 16th century represent the very
which
it
same destruction
were possible
results of scholasticism
to effect
that they
of Catholicism,
upon the basis of the
and the renaissance, without
ever deepening and reviving religion. 34
is
and
In this sense
scotistic,
Pelagian,
Cr ü al andi ^ HuElements,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
530 is
Socinianism also an issue of the history of dogma.
Therein the middle age and the modern strike hands
The apparently unreconscholasticism and the renais-
across the Reformation. Scholasti-
cism and Renaissance Blended.
cilable, the
union of
sance, is here actually accomplished.
On
that very
account there is also not wanting therein a prophetic-
In these agitations a great deal was
al element.
anticipated with marvellous certainty
which
in the
evangelical Churches, following transient articles,
seems entirely suppressed, since in them the interest in religion under a concise form absorbed everything for the space of
a hundred and
fifty years.
trinitarianism and Socinianism are
and
free
(aufgeklärt)
than
Anti-
more enlightened
ecclesiastical Protest-
antism, but less capable of development and poorer. Anti-Trinitarian and
Anabaptist Groups.
Only a hasty review will here be given. to all the anti-trinitarian
Churches
is
Common
and anabaptist groups
of
the violent break with history, the re-
nunciation of the Church as
it
then existed and the
conviction of the right of the individual.
From
the
most diverse starting-points they not seldom arrive at the same results, since the spirit which animated Schwenkfeld, Gior-
dano Bruno.
them has been the same. itself
first
group
allied
with the pantheistic mysticism and the new
creation of the renaissance
not formulas but letter
The
but the
life,
spirit.
:
Not notions but
facts,
not Aristotle but Plato, not the
The inner
light
was placed
alongside the Bible, free conviction above the formal statement.
The Church dogmas were either modified
or allowed to lapse.
Freed from the burden of the
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 531 past and guided by the Gospel,
the free
kingdom
many swung out
of the Spirit, while others
caught in the meshes of their own fancies.
into
Sebastian
were
Thamerl
1
To these
belong Schwenkfeld, V. Weigel, Giordano Bruno,
and
above
its
Sebastian
Franck and Theobald
A second group that cannot be overlooked
Thamer.
had
all
strength in
opposition to political and
its
Minorites, Walclensians -
sacramental Catholicism and over against the same it
carried on a
new
social-political
system (apocalyptic and
world and church
chiliastic).
"Within this the
minorite, Waldensian,
enthusiastic
continued to flourish. Carried forward in
churches
Their badge was rebaptism.
many
ormation principles,
etc.,
respects
this
by means
of Ref-
baptismal Christianity
played a very important role until the catastrophe at
Münster and even afterward.
Romance (Italian) group, of
In a
third, really a
the consequent development
was carried forward humanism submission to the ;
Church ceased; moralism, interpreted cally
humanisti-
and in part evangelically, survived.
dogma and sacramentarianism were an
historical element
was admitted
The
old
cast aside; but :
Return to the
primitive sources, to the philological sense, to respect for the classical in everything that antiquity.
The
is
called
religious motive in the deepest sense
was wanting in these Italians; and they did not carry the movement forward to a national agitation. This and the
first
Hu-
manists.
nominalistic scholasticism
under the influence of
Italian
group stand in
many
respect* in
Strong contrast, in so far as the former did
homage
;
532
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
to speculative
thought.
mysticism and the the humanistic
Still
united them by a lative
common
latter to rational
interests
not only
bond, but out of the specu-
mysticism a pure mode of thought was devel-
oped through experience, upon which stress was laid and, on the other hand, the temperate Italian thinkers under the influence of the
crudities of that fanciful earlier is Michael Servetus.
stripped off the
mythology in which the
nominalism had paraded.
This combination
most significantly represented by the Spaniard,
Michael Servetus. best of all that if
new era
came
In his theology to
is
united the
maturity in the 16th century,
one speaks only of that which lay outside of the
evangelical Reformation. Attitude
Toward Catholic
Authority
and Trinity.
With reference to all these groups the history of dogma should keep two main points in view Their relation, (1) To the formal authorities of Catholicism, (2) To the doctrine of the trinity and Christology. Concerning the first point they did away with the :
authority of the Church, the present and the future, as a teacher and a judge.
The
Scriptures remained obscure.
attitude toward the
Men
played them
off
against tradition and stood with unheard-of steadfastness by the letter; on the other hand, the authority of the Scriptures was derived from that of the inner reveBible
Made Foundation.
lation, yes, they
were
also wholly set aside.
a rule their unique value remained unshaken
ianism planted
itself
firmly upon
Still as ;
Socin-
the Scriptures.
Against these rocks also the Reformers of the 16th
century— certain remarkable
men
excepted
who
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 533
what the freedom
really understood
man
is
— did
not dare to get seriously jostled.
contradiction in
involved
A
formers: set
The which Protestantism had become
found,
is
of a Christian
most of the Re-
is true, in
it
comprehensive collection of Scriptures
up as an absolute norm, but the right understand-
ing of the same dividual.
left to
the painful efforts of each in-
— As regards
anti-trinitarianism the devel-
tarianisin.
opment was carried forward in different ways.
Anti-Trini-
In the
in all four groups, but
group
first
was not
it
aggressive, but latitudinarian (as with the earlier
mystics
who
also indeed recognized only "
modi"
in
the trinity, considered the incarnation as a special
saw
instance and veiled
truth)
.
in the
In
the
dogma
in
any event only
anabaptist group
second,
**»DäptlStS.
anti-trinitarianism
as a rule a relatively subordi-
is
nate element, although
wanting.
it is
perhaps nowhere entirely
It is scarcely to
be found in the impor-
tant reformer Denck, on the other in Hätzer, plainer
still
Melchior Hoffmann, their
own
the trinity i.e.
in
hand
clearer
Campanus, D. Joris and
who moreover
doctrine of the trinity.
was
it is
all
constructed
The doctrine
of
in reality grappled with at its root,
at the Divinity of Christ, only
(Pietro
Menelfl), that
group.
The union
of
is
to
by the
Italians
say, within the third
humanism and
the nominal-
istic-Pelagian theological deposit produced in Italy
as a real factor in the historical
movement an
anti-
trinitarianism in the sense of adoptionism or Arianism.
The
setting aside of the doctrine of the Di-
.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
534 Divinity of Christ Rejected.
and
vinity of Christ
of the trinity .
was considered
n
h ere as the most important purification and emanciits
place stepped the created
God;
in support of the same,
In
pation of religion. Christ and the one
Scripture proofs were sought for
Roman
and found
Theodotians of antiquity)
(cf .
the
A whole herd of
.
learned and for the most part very respectable antitrinitarians drove Italy in the
century beyond
middle of the 16th
own bounds: Camillo
its
Renato,
Blandrata, Gentilis, Occhino, the two Sozzini,
etc.
In Switzerland the contest about the right of antitrinitarianism Calvin.
in
the
churches
evangelical
Calvin decided against
fought out.
it
was
and burnt
In Poland and Transylvania the doctrine
Servetus.
found freedom. There anti-trinitarian churches arose, indeed in Transylvania
it
was permitted
to Blan-
drata to secure for his confession a formal recogni-
Within
tion. Unitarianism.
also
and exalted ance.
it,
to
saw
Unitarianism, as Blan-
in Christ a
God.
The left wing and the worship
Its chief Fausto
anarchy freedom of conscience
found a place of abode.
drata taught
also
this
A split
man
soon
chosen by
made
its
God
appear-
rejected the miraculous birth of Jesus
(non-adorationism)
champion was Franz Davidis.
For the pur-
pose of counteracting this tendency, Fausto Sozzini
Sozzini. Of
(Socinius)
suppressed
went in 1578 to Transylvania and actually it.
There and in Poland he constructed
out of the anabaptist, socialistic, tinistic
chiliastic, liber-
and non-adoration congregations a church
upon the basis of a comprehensive Biblical dogmatics.
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 535 After a history rich in dramatic episodes Poland unitarianism in union with Netherland Armenian-
ism found in England and America an abode and brought forth remarkable men. inspired there
Nevertheless
was
it
more and more by the evangelical
spirit.
2.
Fock,
cler
The Socinian Doctrine.
Socinianismus, 1847.
Socinian Christianity ^
Catechism correct
seen best in the Racovian
is
Religion
(1009).
the complete and
knowledge of the doctrine of salvation.
This
be obtained from the Holy Scriptures as an
is to
more
outer, statutory revelation,
the
is
Racovian Catechism.
New
The Christian
Testament.
theology of the
particularly from
New
religion
Testament, but
it
is
is
the
at the
same time a rational religion. The Book and the reason are the stamina of the Socinian doctrine. Hence the proof of the certitudo sacrarum litter-
arum
is
a principal problem of this supernatural
^PfjgJ"
It succeeds to the place formerly occu-
tl0nahsm
rationalism.
-
The claims of the Old Testament was only passed
pied by the proof from tradition.
New
Testament
(the
along) should be demonstrated to the reason, not to piety.
since faith "
New
The
quantum
Testament however
which works through love satis" within
faith in the existence of
nominalism)
however are
;
love
is
it.
sufficient,
is
comprised
This faith however
God and
in his rewards
is
(cf.
The Scriptures one considers them with
the moral law.
also plain, if
is
jj^^JJi.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
536
the understanding
("
cum sacras
itaque
litteras
ad solidem dicimus, rectam rationem non tantum non excludimus, sed omnino includimus") The way of salvation man cannot of himself find,
sufficere
.
Old Catholic
Element.
since he
is
God's
mortal (old Catholic element).
image within him consists
solely in his
over the beasts of the
Not temporal, but
nal death
came
however,
man
field.
into the world
is
dominion
through sin.
not able to discover the
eter-
Finally,
way
of sal-
vation, because he " ex solo dei arbitrio ac concilio
pependit"
;
therefore
outer revelation (cf
and Notitia
trust
tia dei
must
it
be given through an
nominalism)
.
we have nothing
to do,
and the law of the holy
.
With
fear, love
but only with noti-
life,
which must have
Dei.
been revealed.
God
The notitia dei
as the supreme
Lord over
is
all
the knowledge of
who "pro
things,
arbitrio leges ponere etpraemia ac poenas statuere potest" Knowledge is to important"
(cf.
nominalism).
The most important thing
apprehend God's unity; hut " nihil prohibet,
unus deus imperium potestatemque communicare possit et communicaverit"
Qriiominus ille
cum (cf
.
aliis
the old subordinationists and Arians)
tributes of
God
.
The
at-
are developed, without reference to
faith in salvation, out of the conception of the " su-
premus dominus" and the "summe Justus" nominalism). Very necessary to salvation, if absolutely necessary,
is
(cf.
not
the perception of the value-
Ante legem per legem did men already apprehend the creation of the world through God, the providence of God de
lessness of the doctrine of the trinity. et
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OP HISTORY OF DOGMA. 537 singulis rebus
( !),
the reward and the Divine will (in
the decalogue).
The notitia Christi divides itself into knowledge of his person and of his office. In respect of the first
it
is
God
concerned with the perception that
redeemed us through a
Jias
man
(cf
.
Notitia Christi.
the hypothetical
was a mortal man by the Father, endowed with
articles of
nominalism)
who was
sanctified
Christ
.
Divine wisdom and power, raised from the dead, and finally exalted to like
power with God.
exegetical result of the
him
in order to
New
men up
lift
Testament. into a
new
exalt the mortal unto immortality (early cf
.
especially the Antiochians)
trary decree of God,
is
God
state,
the
sent
i. e.
to
Church idea;
This was an arbi-
.
and the bringing
to pass (miraculous birth, resurrection)
arbitrary.
This
of the
was
A„n M° c hi> '
anism.
same
quite as
Christ as a prophet completed the trans-
mission of the perfect Divine law (explaining and
deepening of the decalogue), declaring with certainty the promise of eternal
life
and verifying by
the example of a perfect moral
life,
his death
after that
he had
complied with certain sacramental ordinances.
By
his preaching he gave a strong impulse toward the
observance of the Divine will and at the same time established the general purpose of sins of the penitent
more uprightly
(cf.
and
God
to forgive the
of those striving to live
nominalism).
Inasmuch as no
Nommaiisru.
one can perfectly keep the Divine law, justification comes, not through works, but through faith. faith,
however,
is trust in
the Law-giver,
who
This has
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
538
us a glorious end, eternal
set before
awakened through the Holy
it
is
reliance on
who, clothed with Divine power, truly frees
those from sin Elements
and has
Spirit the future cer-
tainty of this life; furthermore, Christ,
life,
ticular is
who
put their trust in him.
noteworthy
(1)
:
The
refined, in
In par-
many
re-
spects, excellent criticism of ecclesiastical Christology
from the standpoint of the Scriptures and the reason
—the
Scripture statements in regard
existence of Christ raised,
—
,
(2)
The attempt
it is
true,
some
work
to set forth the
to the predifficulties
of Christ in
and
accordance with the scheme of the three
offices,
the acknowledged inability to extend
beyond his
prophetical
office.
Within the
it
limits of the latter
everything was in reality handled
:
"
Comprehendit
tum praecepta, tum promissa dei perfecta, tum denique et
Praecepta.
ac rationem, qui nos et praeceptis
promissionibus dei confirmare debeamus"
yond "
modem
this,
.
however, Socinianism knew nothing.
Be-
The
praecepta" are the interpreted decalogue, with the
addition of the Lord's prayer, and the special com-
mandments
of the sure
and steadfast peace
in
God
through prayer, praise and reliance on God's help, abstinence from love of the world as well as denial and patience. Baptism special and Lord's supper.
symbol
Thereto are to be added the
ceremonial commands, 7
Lord's Supper. ;
The former
viz.
is
the forgiveness of sin
:
and the Baptism r
confession, duty
was
and
also thought of
for the sake of the Scriptures in a disgraceful
ner,
self-
manand infant baptism was discarded, yet endured
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 539 (because
it
has to do with a ceremony)
Supper, by the laying aside of
The Lord's
.
was conceived of as an ordained memorial meal. The promissa dei are the promise of eternal life and of the Holy Spirit. In setting forth this last Socinall
other views,
ianism did great service, contrary-wise
gave
it
Promissa Dei.
to the
forgiveness of sin an ambiguous meaning. In opposition to the evangelical no,
view it taught
simul comprehensa
This eternal
life
:
"
In vita aeter-
peccatorum remissio".
est
was only very superficially
described,
and the fundamental Catholic thought in Socinianism crops out in the
that the
article
Holy
Spirit is
granted only in proportion to moral progress. question as to the
how
commands and
Christ has effectually guaranteed the promises,
Through his sinlessness, Through
his death.
(2)
The
the satisfaction-theory
latter
was
was
replied
:
(1) (3)
was considered as a an extended manner
contested.
the strength of Socinianism.
many
it
Through his miracles,
proof of his love, and then in
accept a great
To the
Herein
Christ's Sinlessness,
Miracles,
Death.
lies
Although one cannot
of its arguments, because they
are founded upon the Scotistic idea of God, yet one
must acknowledge that the theory
is
here really answered.
merit of Christ
is retained.
juristic
satisfaction-
The thought
of the
But how meagre is it when
more reverting to faith, explains D j5jJSJ of " Fides obedientiam nostram deo commendatiorem
the catechism, once
:
gratioremque facit et obedientiae defectus, modo ea sit vera ac seria, supplet, utque a deo justificemur efficit". This is in complete contrast with
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
540
That which
evangelical ideas concerning faith.
afterward said about justification
*t cSSt*
accommodation
of Pauline ideas.
are, in general,
not infrequent.
is
a
is
worthless
Accommodations
—In
connection with
tne P r i es tty office of Christ the permanent priesthood of Christ is emphasized, while that which transpired Christ's dominion
once is fundamentally discarded. over
beings and things
all
very briefly touched
is
upon. Doctrine of Church.
At and
the close the catechism reverts to the Church
defines
it
once more as a school
"
:
Coetus eorum
hominum, qui doctrinam salutarem tenent sary to the Church
Dogma.
is
said about ordinais
plified
and unclear.
upon Catholic
tralization.
soil,
as in
dogma Romanism
is
exem-
the neu-
Religion, in so far as
apprehensible, is swallowed there
Still
is
In the place of tradition the external rev-
elation in the Bible steps in. it
The
contested.
In Socinianism the dissolution of
ism Dissolves
but nothing
on the visible and invisible Church are
reflections
Socinian-
;
and the episcopal succession
indefinite
pro-
Pastors (doctors) and deacons are neces-
fitentur."
tion,
et
remain
fortunate
up
in moralism.
inconsistencies
and
Socinianism presents, even apart from these, a pleasing side
:
(1) It
had the courage to simplify the ques-
tions concerning the reality
and
to discard the
(2) It
and content
burden of the
of religion
ecclesiastical past,
broke the contracted bond between religion and
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 541 between Christianity and Platonism,
science,
(3) It
helped to spread the idea that the religious state-
ment is to
of truth
must be
have power,
clear
and apprehensible,
(4) It tried to free the
Holy Scriptures from bondage
CHAPTER THE ISSUING OF THE DOGMA 1.
to the old
if it
study of the
dogmas.
IV. IN PROTESTANTISM.
Introduction.
Post-TRIDENTINE Catholicism and Socinianism are
many
in
modern phenomena, but
respects
their religious kernel they are not
as regards
Reformation Restorat n of j?
.
modern, but much
rather the consequences of mediaeval Christianity.
The Reformation Luther
of
is still
phenomenon, not
by
as represented in the Christianity in
many
respects an old Catholic
to say also a mediaeval; yet
its religious kernel, it is neither,
but
judged
much
rather
a restoration of Pauline Christianity in the spirit of
a
new
age.
On
this account
it
hai3pens that the
Reformation cannot be judged solely by the results
which its
it
two generations of did not begin as a harmonious
gained during the
existence ; for
it
first
and consistent manifestation.
Luther's Christianity
^^gj.
was the Reformation; within the periphery of his existence, however, Luther was an old Catholic-mediaeval phenomenon. The period from 1519 to 1523, the most beautiful years of the Reformation when it stood
Reforma-
in living relations with all
men and seemed to
intro-
tion.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA,
542
duce a
new
was only an
order of things,
episode.
Luther soon drew back again within his limitations. These were not, however, a mere thin
shell, so
that
Melanchthon and the epigonoi could have forgiven the shrinkage; but Luther realized that they were
bound up with the very sinews asserted Luther's Message.
them with
of his
power and he
this understanding.
Luther's greatness consists in the knowledge of
God which he re-discovered in the Gospel. Living faith in God who in Christ says to the poor soul: "Salus tua ego sum", the certain assurance that
God
the being upon
whom man may
absolutely
— that
was Luther's message to Christendom. He restored the religious view of the Gospel, the
rely Restores Gospel
is
Religion.
sovereign right of religion in religion, the sovereign
worth of
the historical
Christianity.
Person
Jesus Christ
in
In doing this he went back beyond
the Church of the Middle
Ages and
the old Catholic
times to the ISTew Testament, yes, to the
Gospel
But the very man who freed the Gospel Jesus Christ from ecclesiasticism and moralism
itself.
of
strengthened the force of the latter under the forms Revivifies
Catholic
Dogmas.
of the old Catholic theology,
yes,
he gave to these
forms, ivhich for centuries had lain dormant, once again a value and a meaning.
He was
the
dogmas and he gave them back to faith. One must credit it to him that these formulas are even until to-day a living power in the faith of restorer of the old
Protestantism, while in the Catholic Churches they are a dead weight.
One
will
do justice to the
" en-
—
;
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 543 Luther " only by allowing
tire
his two-fold relation
to the old Catholic theology to stand
and by
try-
Luther turned his contemporaries aside from the path of the humanistic, Franciscan ing to explain
and
it.
and compelled them to inthat which was most foreign to
political Christianity
terest themselves in
them
claimed the "
and the old theology. He proGospel anew and was able to defend the
the Gospel
Quicunque vult salvus
esse " of the Athanasian
creed with a full voice.
In order to understand his attitude, one to the following:
there
was
(1)
The
difficulties
may J
refer
about which
contests Mediaeval Doctrines -
a contest flowed especially from mediaeval
theology, and Luther's historical horizon shut
down
about the time of the origin of the papal Church that which lay back of this
many
was blended
for
him
points with the golden horizon of the
at
New
Luther never contended against erö roneous theories and doctrines as such, but only Testament, '
(2) v '
contends for Puritas
Evan ^ehl
against those theories and doctrines which plainly vitiated the
puritas evangelii; in him there did not
dwell the irresistible impulse of strives after theoretical clearness
the thinker ;
much
who
rather did
he have an instinctive dislike and an inborn distrust of that spirit which,
guided solely by knowledge,
shrewdly corrects errors sessed all the
;
he also by no means pos-
endowments and
— the age " sublimement borne,
critical facilities of
gauchement savant,
terriblement naif", this hero has been called by one
±ccepta Old
who knows men,
Dogmas.
(3)
The
old
dogma corresponded
to
-
; :
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
544 the
of the Gospel
new conception
which he preached
he wanted the correct faith and nothing else ; the ancient dogma, however, in contradistinction to the mediaeval, represented Christianity not as a conflu-
ence of faith and works (the latter did not belong to
and merit, but rather as the act of God through Jesus Christ unto the forgiveness Luther saw only this of sin and eternal life.
the
dogma)
,
of grace
dogma ; he
element in the old Reforman
j.
Hence he conceived jj.
all else.
his mission as that of a reformer
necessary only to place upon the lamp-stand
jg
that
overlooked
which the Church already
among
sight of
possesses, but has lost
other possessions;
its
it
is
neces-
sary to restore the Gospel of the free grace of in Christ tes^uitsof
"Yy as
Labors.
of
by a rehabilitation of the ancient dogma.
jie
rea rjy
the Gospel
Men
dogma? is true
r ight?
insist
with more or
viz.,
not do
infallible
Gospel be
Wherein
upon
his
even to-day,
this
less uncertainty
Church
office,
And must
still
and
ele-
But did he
his
How
What
infallible
conception of
clothed with the old
dogma?
far did his
did he retain?
altogether consistent, or is
present state of Protestantism, consistencies
it
and with the
with the
consists that conception?
attitude
—
the infallible Church tradition,
criticism of tradition go?
Was
conception
the ancient
the doctrine of justification.
canon of Scripture? the
new
his
Luther added an important
away with
with the
Did
in naturally with
fall
qualification, that
ment,
God
errors, to
which
is
the
so full of in-
be traced back to him?
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OP HISTORY OF DOGMA. 545
2.
Luther's Christianity.
Luther's Theologie von Köstlin, Th. Harnack, Lommatzsch. Herrmann, der Verkehr des Christen mit Gott, 1886. Ritschi,
Rechtfertigung u. Versöhnung, Bd. I. u. III. Kattenbusch, Luther's Stellung zu den ökumenischen Symbolen, 1883. Gottschick, Luther's Anschauung von christl. Gottesdienst, 1887. Zur altprotest. Rechfert. Lehre, cf. Loofs und Eichhorn
—
i.
Stud. u. Krit. 1884 u. 1887.
d.
In the cloister Luther thought he was fighting
with himself and his sins
;
but in reality he was
wrestling with the religion of his Church.
Luther Wrestles Jlgion of his Church.
In the
system of sacraments and observances, to which he subjected himself, he did not find the assurance of
peace which he sought.
Even
which should
that
have given him consolation revealed as an object of terror. to
itself to
In such distress
him slowly and gradually through
it
him came
the corroded
ecclesiastical confession ("I believe in the forgive-
ness of
sins")
and the Holy Scriptures, what the
truth and power of the Gospel really
form of
was
belief
also a
concerning the
first
guiding star to him.
Augustine's tiding
is.
and
last things
But how much
firmer did he grasp the essence of the thing
which he here learned, that which he with
was
all
!
That
laid hold of
the strength of his soul as the sole thing
the revelation of the gracious
God
in the Gospel,
The same experience which made Paul Luther underwent, and while it did not come i.e.
to
in Christ.
the latter so violently and suddenly as to the
former, yet he also learned through this experience 35
—
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
546
God who bestows faith:
that it is
God
to reveal his
"
Since
it
pleased
Son in me."
That which he experienced he afterwards learned
simplifies Religion.
s-
and
express,
to
there
resulted,
when
measured
by the multifarious things which the Church
prof-
fered as "religion", primarily a stupendous reduction.
Out
of a multiform system of grace, perform-
and reliances he extracted religion
ances, penances
and restored
it
tian religion
is
The
to its simple greatness.
Chris-
God who
living faith in the living
has revealed himself in Jesus Christ and laid bare his heart
—nothing
Christianity object-
Christ, subjectively
Subjective-
*s
it is
faith
its
;
is
it
Jesus
content, however,
the gracious God, and therefore the forgiveness of
S
Faith
Objectively
else.
sin
which includes sonship and blessedness.
in this circle the whole of religion
The
Luther.
living
mystical abstraction gracious
God
God — not
was
With-
enclosed for
the philosophical or
—the revealed, the
assured, the
Un-
apprehensible to every Christian.
wavering heart trust in him who has given himself to us in Christ as our Father, personal confidence
who stands by was for him the sum
work
in Christ
his
that
total of religion.
all
anxiety and sorrow, above
all
in our stead
Above
the artifices of as-
ceticism, above all prescriptions of theology he pressed
on
to Christ that
self,
and in
this act of faith,
the work of God, he
which he recognized as
won an independence and
steadfastness, yes a personal assurance
as no mediseval
God him-
he might lay hold upon
man had
and
ever possessed.
a
joy, such
From
the
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 547 perception
"
:
By our power nothing
the highest inner freedom.
him now no
Faith
is
done", he drew
—that meant for
longer an obedient acceptance of eccle-
siastical teaching, or historical facta, not
Faith
is
Assurance
FoSwe-
supposing
and not doing, not actus initiationis upon which a greater thing follows
;
but the certainty of the for-
giveness of sin and therefore personal and absolute
surrender to
God as the Father of
Jesus Christ, which
transforms and renews the whole man.
Faith
is
a
makes man glad and joyous toward God and all creatures, which as a good tree surely brings forth good fruit, and which is ever ready to serve and to suffer. The life of a conscious trust, which then
Christian
God.
is
in spite of all evil, sin
and
guilt hid in
Because this certainty animated Luther, he
also experienced the
freedom
of a Christian
man.
Luther Experiences
Freedom
-
This freedom was not a bare emancipation, or a certificate
manumission, but
of
to
him
it
was the
triumph over the world through the assurance that
when God is for us no one can be against us. He next won for himself the right of the individual he ;
But a
experienced the freedom of conscience. conscience for ance,
him was bound up with
free
inner allegi-
and the right of the individual he understood as
a holy obligation to courageously throw oneself upon
God and
to serve one's neighbor in reality
and in
self -forgetful love.
Therewith
him
—the
is
already said what the Church was to
fellowship
of believers
Spirit has called through the
word
whom of
the
Holy
God, enlight-
^u^S, Believers.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
548
ened and sanctified, built
who more and more
up through the Gospel in true
faith,
are to be
awaiting
God and so his own place.
the glorious future of the children of
serving one another in love, each in
This confession concerning the Church effected an
enormous reduction. Fundamental
Church
It rests
wholly upon the
lowing simple fundamental thoughts:
Hol y
Spirit
of God,
(2)
(3)
That
this
God
word
is
the proclamation of
in Christ in so far as
it
awakens
That the Church, therefore, has no other
province than that of faith, that it the
That the
founded the Church through the word
the revelation of faith ;
(1)
is,
however, within
same the mother upon whose lap man
unto
fol-
faith, (4)
That because religion
is
attains
simply faith
no particular performances and no particular province,
of
be
life,
it
now
the open cultus, or the chosen course
are the sphere in
which the Church and the
individual can verify their faith, but the Christian in the natural ordering of his life is to prove his faith
through the loving service of his fellows. Contends Against Abuses in Church.
With
these
four
sentences
Through the
against the old Church.
stored the tvord of
Luther stood over
God according
to
first
he re-
a sound judg-
ment to the fundamental place in the Church. Through the second he restored, in opposition to all the theologians, ascetics and sects of the Middle
Ages and
of the ancient
Gospel and exalted the
Church, the Gospel to the "
consolationes in Christo
propositae" to be the sole norm.
Through the third
he reduced very greatly the idea and scope of the
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 549 Church, but brought the Church back to
Through the
its faith.
fourth, finally, he restored the natural
status of marriage, of the family, of secular calling
and of the
state;
he emancipated these from the
guardianship of the Church, but subjected them to the spirit of faith and of love.
down
Thereby he broke
the mediaeval and ancient ecclesiastical concep-
tion of the world
and of the ordering
and thus transformed the idea of
of
human
life,
religious perfec-
ts
tion as no other Christian since the apostolic age has
In the place of the combination of monastic r withdrawal from the world and ecclesiastical domindone.
Denounces Monasti-
cism
'
ion over the world, he set the Christian the great
task of verifying his faith in the ordering of his natural
life
ful love
He
:
is to
serve his neighbor in self -forget-
ness of the natural course of
Luther a realized ideal
—he
life
was
should pass
and
faith so
away with
its
righteous-
in no sense for
had eschatological
conceptions and awaited the day
ness
The
and hallow his occupation.
when
pre-
the world
its lust, its pain, its devilish-
course of life
—but
because he
grand and so sovereign he suffered
was foreign mighty preaching
in religion nothing that
to
ingly through his
all
it.
made
for
and
Accord-
the vagaries
were dissolved. He wished to Middle As:es ° teach the world nothing else than what it signifies to possess God; yet in recognizing this most im-
science,
of the
portant realm in its peculiarity, everything else to its true relations, viz.
:
state, charity, civil calling.
came
science, the family, the
In that he raised to the
Family,
S
e
j^ me^-' "
t
,
:
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
550
rank that which beneath the rubbish of refined
first
and complicated esteemed
—humble
fatherly provision
ideals
had
hitherto
been
least
and safe reliance upon God's and loyalty in one's calling
new epoch in the history of the world. He who takes his position here can hardly
—he
created a
per-
suade himself that Luther brought to the old " sound"
dogma
only a couple of
new
doctrines
Luther's theology should be treated in close connection with the above-mentioned development of his fundamental views. In theological terminology he was surprisingly unhampered and used the doctrinal formulas very freely. The traditional theological scheme he as a rule treated so freely that in each
when
correctly understood, he discovered the entire This can be proven from his doctrine of God (God without and within Christ) from his doctrine of Providence (the first article, rightly understood, is the whole of Christendom) from his Christology (" Christ is not called Christ because he has two natures, but he bears this glorious and comforting name on account of the office and work which he took upon himself Christ is the mirror of the Father's heart") from his doctrine of sin (sin is "to have no God"), from his doctrine of predestination and of the will's lack of freedom (religious experience does not arise conjointly out of historical and sacramental acts, which God performs, and subjective acts, which are in any sense man's, but God alone works the willing and the doing) from the law and the Gospel (distinguishing between the possibility and the reality of redemption) from his doctrine of penance (this is the humility of faith, hence the entire life is a continuous penance) from his doctrine of justification. In each of these doctrines Luther expounded the whole— the free grace of God in Christ— but he made himself most at home in the Pauline scheme of justification "propter instance,
doctrine.
,
,
;
,
,
,
Christum per ftdem". The fine- pointed formulas concerning the justitia imputativa and the scholastic sundering of justification and sanctification (faith and love) did not originate with him or with the Melanchthon of the earlier days yet each of these men gave the provocation to the same. Everywhere ;
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOOMA. 551 he was concerned with faith
'
dom
which
" Where s assurance of salvation. forgiveness of sin, there is also life and blessedness". there is In this conviction he won his religious independence and free-
as against everything
pendence and freedom alone are forgiveness of sin in Christ
was
is
not from
to
God
;
for inde-
The assurance
life.
him
the
sum
of the
of religion.
Therefore did he bring religion back to this. But the positive side of the forgiveness of sin was for him the sonship through which the Christian comes to a self-sufficient existence as over against the world, needs nothing and stands neither under the slavery of the law, nor in dependent upon men a priest before God and a king over the world.
—
3.
Luther* s Strictures on the Dominating Ecclesiastical Tradition
and on
the
Dogma.
Luther always went from the centre
to the circum-
ference in his criticism, from faith to institution,
and did not attack doctrines as such, but doctrines
which obscured or destroyed right (1)
He
set aside the
dominating doctrine of
vation&s destructive (Apol. IV.
quum nequequid fides,
living.
init.
:
"
sal-
Adversarii,
remissio peccatorum, neque quid
neque quid gratia, neque quid justitia
intelligant, misere
contaminant locum de
sit,
justifi-
catione et obscurant gloriam et beneficia Christi et
eripiunt piis conscientiis propositas in Christo
and in truth showed his opponents doctrine of God (sophistic philosophy and
consolationes") that their
,
subtile reasoning), their Christology (they speculate
about the two natures and do not
know
the beneficia
Christi), their doctrine concerning the truth, right-
eousness and grace of
God
(they do not attain unto
"consolation" and hence err in blind reason), their
gjjjjjjg f
sSivaUon.
—
552
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
and
doctrine of sin of justification
means
to
merits)
and
faith (they
and of good works were
With
scholastics,
Perfection,
it
and misleading Luther en-
but
also
the
Augustine himself, therefore
fathers, yes
the whole ancient Catholic (2)
false
this bill of particulars
countered not only the
oi^catho-
do not know what
have a gracious God, and they rely upon
to the soul.
Church
(they are Pelagians),
free-will
Church teaching,
Luther attacked the old Catholic (not simply
mediaeval) ideal of perfection
and of
blessedness.
In destroying the idea of a dual morality to
its
very
roots
he put in the place of monastic perfection the
faith
which
relies
upon the forgiveness of
sin, in the
place of the conception of blessedness as a revelling in holy sentiment
and
of a free conscience cathoiic sacra-
in holy
knowledge the comfort
and sonship with God.
Luther destroyed the Catholic doctrine of the sacraments, not simply the seven. Through the (3)
ments.
three sentences
:
(a)
The sacraments contribute unto
the forgiveness of sin and nothing else
;
(b)
Sacra-
menta non implentur dum fiunt, sed dum creduntur; (c) They are a peculiar form of the redemptive word of God (of the promissio dei) and therefore have their virtue in the historical Christ
formed
the sacramental elements into
lie
trans-
sacramental
ordinances and recognized in them only one real sacrament, viz. AulSstfne.
:
the
pardoning word of God.
He
^ ere opposed Augustine no less than the scholastics, and in combining the Christus praedicatus, the forgiveness of sin and faith in the closest unity he
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 553 excluded
all else
Mystical revelling, material good,
:
the opus operatum, the haggling for the sake of the
Not as " instruments" grace, which secretly prepare future life in men
effect
of
and the
dispositions. L
God works Faith
T
h
worf
and by the transfusion of love make good works possible,
did he apprehend the sacraments, but as the
verbum
which God himself co-operates
visibile, in
with us and gives himself to us in Christ.
God works through
rament faith and confidence,
As
giveness of sin.
to be
one with
word in the he works the
the
i.e.
him sacfor-
regards the Lord's Supper and
But he struck the
baptism Luther carried this out.
Catholic Church the severest blow by his criticism
He
of the sacrament of penance ; for (a)
restored the
sovereign efficacy of heart-felt penitence, without
doing away with confessio and satisfactio, interpreted,
(b)
opposition to
He
the
if
rightly
conceived of this penitence in attritio,
which was
to
him a
satanic work, in the strictest sense as hatred of sin
springing out of the perception of the greatness of the blessing which has been forfeited: thee, thee only,
have
I
sinned"
;
(c)
constancy of trustful penitence
He
and
"Against
promoted the thereby
ex-
plained the penance done before the priest as a special
He did away with the necessity of the priestly cooperation; (e) He taught the absolute union of
act
;
(d)
contritio and absolutio, both of which are included in the fides;
(f)
He
did
away with
chief connected with the sacraments in regard to temporal
and eternal
:
all
the mis-
Computations
benefits,
purga-
c £
gaS
penance,
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
554 tory,
worship of saints,
meritorious
satisfactions
and indulgences, in that he reduced everything to Thus did he destroy the tree of the eternal guilt. Catholic Church by creating from its roots light and
and a new impulse.
inclination Hferarchica üy
s>tem
W) Luther destroyed the entire hierarchical and priestly ecclesiastical system, denied to the Church the right of jurisdiction over the key the word)
declared the episcopal succession to be a
,
and proclaimed the right
fiction
of the special priest-
In that he
hood alongside of the general. one
over
(i.e.
the preaching of
office,
left
but
the Gospel, to stand,
he dissolved the Catholic Church of the popes not only, but also of Irenseus. y with Tra-
(5)
Luther did away with the traditional cultus
ditional
Cuitus ordinances.
ordinances as regards their form, aim, content and ° 7
He would know
significance.
nothing of a specific
Divine service, with special priests and special ings.
He discarded the sacrificial idea
lieu of the
is
nothing
else
the individual's reverence for
He who
in general, in
one sufficient sacrifice of Christ.
worship of God
attributes to
of influencing God,
it
offer-
The
than the simplicity of
God
in time
and space.
a special merit, for the sake
commits
sin.
It
has to do only
with edification in faith through the proclamation of the Divine of prayer.
word and with the general praise-offering The true service of God is the Christian
life in reliance
ity
and
upon God, penitence and
fidelity in duty.
Unto
faith,
humil-
this service of
the public service should contribute.
Here
God
also he
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 555 shattered the Church, not only of the Middle Ages,
but also of the ancients.
Luther destroyed the formal external author-
(6)
of Catholicism; he did away with the distinction between thing and authority. Because to him ities
Destroys External
U of cathoTlcism.
the proclaimed Christ (God in Christ, God's word)
was the thing and the
authority, he cast the formal
Even
authorities overboard.
During the very time
Scripture he did not hesitate.
when he was contending
against the absolute author-
and
ity of tradition, of the pope set that
before the letter of
of the councils, he
which Christ did over against the
letter of Scripture
clear
and did not shrink from speaking
of errors in the Biblical writers in matters
of faith.
Luther conceded to his opponents their dog-
(7)
matic terminology only so far as he did not
dis-
Declares
Dognfauc ogy Misleading.
card
it.
He had
the liveliest feeling that the whole
terminology was at least misleading.
proven from his expositions
(a) of
This can be
the various con-
ceptions of justification sanctificatio, vivificatio,
regenerato, tio, (f)
(c)
etc.,
(b)
ecclesia, (d)
the
of
sacramenta,
he declared to be
Catholic theologians
itself,
false, that of
God and
is
of the
the old
and
cold.
that he distinguished in
in Christology between that
and that which pertains to the thereby clearly indicating what the doc-
which pertains thing
homousion,
to be unprofitable
But the most important the doctrine of
(e)
satisfac-
The terminology
trinitas and unit as.
scholastics
conception
to us
trine of faith really
is
and what
is
a matter of
OUTLINES OE THE HISTORY OP DOGMA.
556
reason,
speculative
or at best the indemonstrable
secret of faith.
ctolSK St
C1
jty
by
1 "
geiicai.
Luther did away with the old dogmatic Christianity
and put a new evangelical conception in
The Reformation
dogma This :
explicitly.
is
in reality
its place,
an exit of the history of
the foregoing survey teaches clearly and
That which Augustine began, but was
He estab-
not able to realize, Luther carried through.
lished the evangelical faith in the place of the
dogma
by doing away with the dualism
of dogmatic Chris-
tendom and practical Christian
self- judgment
and
independence, and thus freed Christian faith from the trammels of the ancient philosophy, of secular
knowledge, of heathen ceremonies and cunning morality.
The doctrine of faith, the true doctrine,
he restored to its sovereign right in the Church to the terror of the humanists, ecclesiastics,
ciscans and rationalists (Aufklärer)
The
.
—
Fran-
true the-
ology should have the deciding power in the Church. In
r£skf
•
But wtiat a task
contradiction
:
To
J
-^
appeared
call
all subtile
almost like a
restore the significance of faith as
the content of revelation to
against
still
its
central position as
reasoning and doing, and thus to
out the repressed theoretical element
;
and
still,
on the other hand, not simply to take that faith
which the past has constructed, but rather to indicate the form in which it is life and creates life, is practice yet the
practice
of
religion.
From
the
— THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 557 greatness of the problem
is
explained also the insolv-
ency of those elements in Luther's theology which perverted the same and must qualify the declaration, that the Reformation
was the end
of the history of
dogma.
The Catholic Elements Retained with and
4.
within Luther's Christianity.
However much tained
—
it
or however
little
Luther here
re-
belongs indeed to the "entire Luther",
How
but not to the " entire Christianity" of Luther.
was Luther able to retain Catholic elements, and what elements did he conserve? Of these two questions, which should be answered, the first has already been answered in part (see
p. 543)
;
only a few things
need to be added here.
Luther defended faith as against the
(1)
corre-
sponding works, the doctrina evangelii as against justifying penances and processes.
Faith Opposed to
Works.
Hence he stood
in danger of adopting or of tolerating every state-
ment
of faith,
works. the
He
if
fell
only
it
into
seemed
free
this pitfall.
Church was perverted thereby.
ambiguous as the idea
from law and
His It
idea
of
became as
of the doctrina evangelii
(fellowship of faith, fellowship of pure doctrine)
.
{'I)
Luther thought in general only of contending against the doctrinal errors and abuses of the
Church, and since he traced
all
Chief Attack Against Popes.
mediaeval
misfortunes to the
imorantof pope, r r ' he formed too high ° an estimate of the ante- Old Catho papal ancient Church.— (3) Luther knew the old UcChureh
—
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
558
Catholic Church very slightly and ascribed to
an obscure manner
decisions in caiied^ catholic.
ity.
—
still
its
a certain author-
Luther always reckoned himself and his
(4)
un(j er taking as within the one Catholic Church,
claimed that this Church gave him the title-right to his Reformation,
and hence he had a
lively interest
This proof
in proving the continuity of its faith.
most securely
seemed Not a logian
formulas.
—
(5)
supjftied
in
the old
Luther was no systematic theologian,
but romped in the Church like a child at
had no longing
—
(6)
home he ;
after the holiness of a well-ordered
doctrinal structure
weakness.
faith
;
but his power was likewise his
Luther was able to express his entire
Christianity within the scheme of the traditional doctrines, "press
and hence he was
— Luther tionally — a mediaeval
ms" formulas.
Tmditionai
(7)
at peace
with the old
was in concreto
—not
inten-
exegete; he found therefore
Doctrines.
many traditional doctrines in the
Scriptures, although
they are not contained therein.
As
regards history
he had in truth intuitive perception, but he developed
no method.
word
of
—
God
(8)
His perception of the essence of the
did not entirely destroy his Biblicism,
but rather did this return after 1523 more strongly.
That ments stm Means of Grace,
—
" it
(9)
tor
him a power,
Also as regards the sacraments there remained
him
grace
stands written", remained to
mitherein
still
" (instead as the
a superstitio as
"means of
one grace) and this had the ,
weightiest consequences for his doctrinal work. (10)
He was
unable to rid himself of remnants of the
nominalistic scholasticism, and these influenced his
:
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 559 doctrine of God, of predestination and of the sacra-
ments.
— (11) After
his struggle with fanatics,
and went
reason,
against
had learned wisdom in he was distrustful of the
that he
far
beyond distrust
to
Reason
-
antagonism
He
as a prop of self-righteousness.
it
Di strustfui
in
truth hardened himself against reason in clever con-
and retrograded
fidence,
at several important points
which recognized the
of questionable Catholic belief
Divine wisdom in paradoxes and absurdities, before
which man must bow.
Especially his haughty re-
pulsion of the "enthusiasts",
who
possessed true in-
sight into not a few points, and his aversion to ad-
vancing along with secular civilization struck the
Reformation
its
severest blows.
The consequence
of this conduct
was
that so far
Luther's
System
as Luther left a system of theology to his adherents it
Fin JJit ^
appeared as a highly confused and unsatisfactory
picture
:
Not as a new building, but as a modification
of the traditional structure.
(according to Sec. finality,
but only
3)
Accordingly
it is
clear
that Luther introduced no
made a partial beginning of a
reformation even according to his oivn principles. The following are the most important confusions and problems in his legacy (1)
The confounding of the Gospel and the doc-
trina evangelii.
Luther in truth never ceased
to
Co n f
G
s
ds
,S
Doctrina Evangelii.
consider the articuli fidei as a manifold testimony to that
with which the Christian faith
concerned
;
a value of
is
alone
yet along with this he gave the same its
own.
Accordingly the
still
intellectual-
.
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
560
ity of scholasticism, so
not rooted out title
;
burdensome
rather did
it
soon become, under the
of pure doctrine, a fearful
became a theologians' and
was
to faith,
power and the Church
pastors'
Church
(cf.
the
history of the confessional in the Lutheran church)
The consequence was
that Catholic mysticism again
crept in to counterbalance Luther's peculiar teaching (especially that of justification)
and the evangelical
was beclouded (see Ritschi, Gesch. des Pietismus, 3 Bde.). Thus to the future, instead of ideal of life
a clear and simple bequest as regards faith, doctrine
and the Church, was rather maintain the
and yet
"
left
to free it
and
to
above
:
all
To
from everything which spiritual
submis-
stamp the Church as the fellowship
without giving
faith,
viz.
teaching" in the true Lutheran sense,
cannot be appropriated through sion,
a problem,
it
of
the character of a theolog-
ical school.
c
nds °Evan-
Fafthaid Dogma,
The confounding of evangelical faith and the old dogma. Since Luther expressed his new re(2)
demptive faith in the language of the old dogma,
was not its old
possible to prevent the latter
claims and
ther developed the
its
old aims,
it
from asserting
—yes, he himself fur-
same within the original scheme
of
Christology, viz., in his doctrine of the Lord's Supper.
In that he however poured the
new wine
into
the old wine-skins, there arose a speculation regard-
ing the ubiquity of the body of Christ which ranged over the loftiest heights of scholastic inconsistency.
The sad consequence was that Lutheranism imme-
°
,
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 5G1 diately maintained as nota ecclesiae the most ex-
Nota Ecclesiae.
treme scholastic teaching which any Church has ever maintained. This fact is not strange; for howcan one without absurdity include within the scheme
two natures the
of the doctrine of the
faith-idea that
man Jesus Christ is the revelation of God himself, so far as God has given us in him to know his own
the in
fatherly heart, laying
it
Even because
bare to us?
Luther first really made earnest work with faith in the
God-man must the
(the oneness of ßerdßa
God and man
in Christ)
the speculation regarding the
"natures" have the most distressing consequences.
The same can be shown as regards the reception of the "
Empim-
Augustinian doctrine of the original state and of orig-
Paradoxes
Here
inal sin.
sizes
also Luther could only increase the
paradoxes and absurdities, in that he sought to express in these formulas his evangelical conviction that sin is godlessness
that
when
and
Everywhere
guilt.
the evangelical faith
is
it is
all
plain
thrust into the
dogmatico-rational scheme which the Greeks, Augustine and the scholastics created, formulas,
—yes,
first
makes
this
it
leads to bizarre
scheme wholly
irra-
Therefore the Reformation of the future
tional.
has the task of doing away with this cosmo-theistic philosophy and of putting in
its
place the simple ex-
pression of faith, the true self -judgment in the light of the Gospel (3)
and the
real import of history.
The confounding of
Sacred Scriptures.
the ivord of
God and
the c °^™
Luther, as has been remarked,
never overcame his wavering between a qualitative 36
and
(
8
J
Bible.
-
562
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
and a
literal
estimate of the Holy Scriptures, and the
controversy regarding the Lord's Supper only con-
him in the latter view. He had not yet broken bondage of the letter. Thus it happened that his
firmed the
church arrived at the most stringent doctrine of
in-
spiration, while it never quite forgot that the content
of the Gospel is not everything that is contained be-
tween the
lids of the Bible,
mation of the
free grace of
but that
God
it is
the procla-
in Christ.
Here also
remains to the Church of the Reformation the task of dealing earnestly with the Christianity of Luther as against the "entire Luther", confounds a d
a ns
of Grac e
The confounding of grace and the means of grace (sacraments). The firm and exclusive con(4)
ception
Holy
which Luther formed
Spirit, the
word
of
God,
of
God, Christ, the
faith, the forgiveness
of sin
and
justification (grace) is his greatest service,
above
all
the recognition of the inseparableness of
the Spirit and the word.
But by an apparently
slight modification he arrived at very doubtful conclusions, in that
pertains to the
he
word
finally transferred that
which
(Christ, the preaching of the
Gospel) to the idea " vocale
verbum et sacr amenta
".
Rightly did he contend that Christ himself works
through the word and that one
is
not to accept an out-
ward union of word and Spirit, sign and thing signified. But not only by the setting apart of certain ^leSai
3
ordinances and " means of grace" did he return to the
narrow saken
circle of the
—the Christian
Middle Ages which he had lives, as
for-
he himself best knew,
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 563 not by means of grace, but by personal communion
whom
with God,
he lays hold of in Christ,
measure by the
in still greater
means
infant baptism as a sense, (B)
To
effort,
(A)
—but
To justify
of grace in the strictest
accept penance
still
of grace in the initiation, (C)
also as the
To maintain
means
the real
presence of the body of Christ in the eucharist as the essential element of the sacrament.
Note on (A) v
The forgiveness °
.
and
being inseparably united, infant baptism
faith
then not a sacrament in the fide
of sin (grace) \o J
baptismus
Baptism
J$[Soi
strict sense (" abseilte
nudum et inejficax Signum tantum-
modo permanet"
,
says Luther himself in his Larger
In order to avoid
Catechism).
is
Justifies
this
conclusion,
Luther resorted to subterfuges which mark a relapse into faith)
Catholicism
The worst
.
mission
(fides implicita,
— in
of
it
was
substitutional
that he granted the per-
order to preserve infant baptism as a
complete sacrament
—to
justification (objective
separate regeneration and
and
subjective)
.
Infant bap-
tism thus became a sacrament of justification (not of regeneration)
;
the worst confusion set in and that
glorious jewel of evangelical
fication
,
Christianity,
became externalized and hastened
come a dogmatic locus along with the
justito
be-
others and
lost its practical significance.
Note on
Faith and true penitence are accord- j£ggS?m ing to Luther one, yet so that faith is prius: In so f Grace. (B).
far as the Christian lives continually in faith, he lives
continually in penitence;
special penitential
—
;
564
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
have no value, and without true faith there is Thus Luther preached absolutely no true penitence. acts
The
of a believing Christian.
from the standpoint
danger that this doctrine might lead to ethical laxity is
quite as clear as the other danger, that thereby
one could convert no Turks, Jews, or vile sinners.
Melanchthon
first,
then Luther
But
felt this.
in-
stead of distinguishing between pedagogical mis-
sionary principles and the statement of faith, they
because the Catholic sacrament of penance
enced them
— carried the former
still influ-
over into the
latter,
and accordingly encouraged an ante-faith penitence,
which could no longer be distinguished from the attritio,
and then permitted the sacrament of pen-
ance (without obligatory oral confession and satisfactions) to enter as
an act
of forensic justification.
True, Luther along with this always retained his Restores S s
co nfe&-
old
correct
view; but the idea, when
once
al-
lowed entrance, developed with frightful rapidity
and created a
was more
lax,
practice,
which was worse, because
than the Romish confessional
it
(see
was externalized, even to mere attendance upon Church the old accepted efficacious means of grace ex opere operato came to the front very slightly decked, and the reaction of pietism)
.
In
it
the justification of the sinner
the idea of faith
was jumbled
into
an
outer forensic act, a conscience-soothing Divine judg-
ment, which crept in inevitably solved the sinner frivolity,
in foro.
the back-door of
when
the priest ab-
In order
to repress
the Catholic idea
was
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 565 opened, and the frivolity
The thought, however, and the
became great!
that justification
now
is
the sphere
was
hopelessly-
only as the justificatio
Therefore must the pious look about for a
only a
Here
passed
it
new means is
first
edification of the Christian
obscured;
impii.
now
lies
of edification, (repetitious)
to-day
Note on
now
"objective"
his justification initiation
act.
the fundamental curse.
Numberless times did Luther recog-
(C).
nize that one
still
if
may
seek in the
word and
in the sac-
rament only for the assurance of the forgiveness sin,
and with
thing which
rament. tion,
"
grim contempt" did he
men
He
then
Mai
ns
R^j Eucharist!!
of
reject every-
made dependent upon
the sac-
also never surrendered this convic-
which does not
alloiv the question
concerning
body of Christ in the eucharist to crop out as a theological question at all. But when he saw the
that
first
Karlstadt, then Zwingli
and others
per-
mitted the sign and the thing signified to be separated and thus endangered the certainty of the for-
giveness of sin in the sacrament, he sought, influenced likewise by mediseval tradition, to securely establish the latter
by laying hold
of the real presence in the
sacrament, and he defended this with
increasing
temper and complete stubbornness as though the question
was as
to the reality or non-reality of
One can understand Luther's position in the controversy only when one recognizes this quid pro quo, and when one further realizes that Luther instinctively sought for a means of ridding the forgiveness of sin.
*£*)&&
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF DOGMA.
560
himself of spirits
whom
who crowded about him and
in true self -protection
—in
to
the interest of his
evangelical perception and of his standing as a re-
former Bibilcfem.
—he
thing had
name
But the
could not extend the hand. its
own
While contending
logic.
of faith for the
one point, the
in the
real presence,
which did not express the nature and peculiarity his
own
the mediaeval interests in
faith, all
were aroused which
him
seemed to have been over-
Here awakened Biblicism
come.
of
(" est", " est" ),
here
scholastic doctrinarianism in the place of the fides sola, here a perverse interest in sophistical specula-
an unheard-of regard for the sacrament
tions, here
alongside of and above the
word, here a leaning
toward the opus operatum, and above hearted
and
statement to be
Revives
view.
a narrow-
regards
the
of the doctrine itself, it could not fail
was not
declaration of
one an(j
As
temper!
more paradoxical than the
stantiation Occam's
loveless
all
^e
recognized, but the hypothetical
Occam and
same
visible elements
Transub-
Catholic.
other nominalists, that in '
S p ace (with,
by,
and the true body
and beneath) the of Christ are en-
The same man who earlier had derided the scholastics now explained " The sophists speak correctly here", supplied his Church with a Christology closed.
:
which in
scholastic inconsistency far exceeds the
Thomistic (ubiquity of the body of Christ), eliminated faith
from the sacrament so completely that he raised
the doctrine of the
manducatio infidelium
articulus stantis et cadentis ecclesiae
("
to the
the body
THREE-FOLD ISSUING OF HISTORY OF DOGMA. 567 by the teeth") and trumped the irof the doctrine as a stamp of its Divine
of Christ is bitten rationality truth.
Through the form which Luther gave
to the doc-
Luther's
Weakness
he
trine of the eucharist later
is partially to
Lutheran church in
blame that the
Christology, in
its
its
trine of the sacraments, in its doctrinarianism
the false standard by
doctrine
become a scrawny twin saints,
is
and in
which it measures departures
and proclaims them
Catholicism
doc-
in
heretical, threatens to
of the Catholic
Church; for
not the pope, nor the worship of the
nor the mass
—these
are consequences,
—but
the false doctrine of the sacraments, of penance, of faith
and
of authority in matters of faith.
The form which the churches of the Reformation took in the 16th century, was not homogeneous, or definite
:
This the history of Protestantism indicates
even to this day. pel,
placed
dogma
to
it it.
Luther once more
lifted the
Gos-
upon the lamp-stand and subordinated It now remains to hold fast to and
carry forward that which he began.
Gott schenke uns nur
Demuth und Geduld
ein
!
FINIS.
festes
Herz, Muth,
Luther's Strength.
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